Thunder Good-Oil
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Never mind...I misread the comment. Thought he was talking about 50+ age people downsized from their job.Why is that sad?
We downsized from about 3000' to 2150 and 350-400 of that is a finished room over the garage. Dear wife at 59 YO no longer wanted to clean a large house. And no one else can meet her expectations.
I think they have performed well over last 90 days.
Unsure of the tariff impact with the Waltons.
You're not wrong. The issue though is that the kinds of homes you purchased in 1980 aren't being built today, and there are a variety of reasons for that.
In certain parts of the country (you can guess which ones), the zoning laws make it hard to build those types of houses. As far as existing homes that could be considered starter homes, so many folks have incredibly low mortgage rates on them that there just aren't that many for sale. Many of them get snapped up by investors who pay all cash and then rent them out.Out of curiosity, can you articulate what those reasons. My starter home in 87 was similar in size to Walkenvol's, mine was a 1600 sq foot 3 bedroom/2bath that I bought for 119k. Although a bit small, it was fine for my wife and I.
Two years ago, I helped a young couple buy their first home. They wanted a much larger 4 BR/3BA house. They bought a 10 year old house and immediately renovated family room and kitchen. I am guessing that they are not atypical. True?
Which ones?In certain parts of the country (you can guess which ones), the zoning laws make it hard to build those types of houses. As far as existing homes that could be considered starter homes, so many folks have incredibly low mortgage rates on them that there just aren't that many for sale. Many of them get snapped up by investors who pay all cash and then rent them out.
And yes, part of it is just a preference for larger homes on the part of buyers. I don't think that's the biggest reason though.
California, for one. That article talks about a whole bunch of others.Which ones?
Nashville is making changes to allow several living conditions. In law suites, townhomes in single family, etc. Prices are still crazy high though.
I doubt Williamson Count/Brentwood/Franklin are. You'll find very few homes under 1 million there. Neither is Wilson Co/Mt Juliet.
