If Nobody Can Afford A Home... Who's Going To Buy Them?

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  • Опубликовано: 7 май 2024
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    #realestate #finance #investing
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    Fewer young people than ever before are going to be able to buy a house in their lifetime, and at the same time homes are getting more expensive every year… But if nobody can afford to buy a house then how do they keep getting more expensive?
    A family home should be the bedrock of your financial life, it gives you somewhere to live while building up equity in a place that you can one day call your own. Owning a home with a thirty-year mortgage is cheaper out of pocket every month in most cities than renting, so if you can buy your own home, you will be richer now and richer in the future.
    You already know this, but if you are in the seventy-five [75%] of my audience that doesn’t own a home it’s probably because you can’t afford one. According to a report by Redfin only twenty one percent [21%] of homes that went on sale in 2022 were considered affordable, that’s down for SIXTY percent [60%] of homes on sale in 2021. That means in just one year two thirds of ALL affordable housing became too expensive for the average American.
    The team conducting this survey concluded that housing affordability is at its lowest point in history. But what’s the end game here? If people can’t afford a home, then house prices can’t go up anymore… Right? Wrong… I don’t want to make another one of those stupid finfluencer videos about how the housing market is going to crash in three point five days but there are three reasons why it could get a lot worse before it gets better. The first reason is that houses do not need to be affordable for you to buy one. If you think that can’t make sense, there is an entire industry working to make it true. You don’t save money to buy a house, you save money for a down payment. Wages have not kept up with house prices but a twenty percent [20%] down payment only grows at one fifth [1/5th] the rate in absolute terms so people are still able to get into the market. According the Zillow the average home sold in America in 2020 traded for two hundred and thirty thousand dollars [$230,000]. At the start of 2023 the average home price was THREE hundred and thirty thousand dollars [$330,000] a jump of one hundred thousand dollars [$100,000] in less than three years.
    According to Forbes the average American makes a salary of fifty-nine thousand dollars BEFORE tax [$59,428] after federal tax and FICA that leaves them with a take home of forty-nine thousand dollars [$49,000]. If this average person saved a ridiculous SEVENTY percent [70%] of their take home pay, to buy a house they would be just as far away from their goal after three years because the price of the average house grew just as fast as their savings. The average home earns as much as the average person. But most people only save for a down payment so seventy percent [70%] becomes fourteen percent [14%] or seven percent [7%] if it’s a dual income household where the other partner also earns the average salary.
    That still a major savings commitment when fifty seven percent [57%] of American can’t afford a one thousand dollar [$1,000] without taking on debt. Fourteen percent [14%] of your take home pay should be more manageable than seventy percent [70%] but remember this is ONLY how much you would need to save JUST to keep up with price increases, this doesn’t actually get you any closer to your goal of buying a home. Lenders and banks with a vested interest in real estate assets across the country know this is still too hard for most families who also need to pay for food, rent and other essentials that are also outpacing wages. So they have moved the goal post.
    A report by the national Association of Realtors found that the average down payment for a first home buyer was just SEVEN percent [7%] and the average down payment for a REPEAT purchaser that has had time to build equity in their previous home was only seventeen percent [17%].
    Well, it’s time to learn How Money Works to find out if this circus really can go on forever.

Комментарии • 10 тыс.

  • @HowMoneyWorks
    @HowMoneyWorks  8 месяцев назад +1272

    ☕ Get a free bag of fresh coffee with any Trade subscription at drinktrade.com/howmoneyworks

    • @JosiahTaschuk
      @JosiahTaschuk 8 месяцев назад +3

      Thanks for the video! Glad the hard work is being rewarded! Keep killing it!

    • @electricaviationchannelvid7863
      @electricaviationchannelvid7863 7 месяцев назад

      Charging interest rate is a tool to exploit the masses...it is a virtually printed money, does not cost anything other than feeding the bankers-parasites...!

    • @hefv5662vsm
      @hefv5662vsm 7 месяцев назад +3

      Hey I know you do the “mistakes” on purpose to increase engagement. But this video had too many, to the point where it feels amateur and I’m considering unsubscribing.
      I’m a big fan of the vids in general, but please limit the mistakes to one or two. Otherwise it just gets annoying and unprofessional-ish

    • @matthewdancz9152
      @matthewdancz9152 7 месяцев назад +5

      It should be illegal to speculate on homes.

    • @Metal0sopher
      @Metal0sopher 7 месяцев назад +3

      @@matthewdancz9152 Exactly. Mortgaged residences for private ownership should be off limits to institutional investors. There are tons of apartment buildings and commercial property they can play with. Real capitalism can only function if we all have a relatively even start. When a group of a few thousand individuals can own over 20% of all private residences we are no longer capitalism but modern feudalism. They own our homes, they own our jobs, and eveything else in between. I don't like being a serf perpetually in debt, working for the same people to whom I have pay that debt, yet still be in debt to them my whole life. This is where we're heading.

  • @sirfrancis8732
    @sirfrancis8732 7 месяцев назад +14406

    My biggest financial mistake was not investing in a house in 2008 and instead learning multiplication in elementary school

    • @Zedetir
      @Zedetir 7 месяцев назад +985

      Same. Shouldn't have been so busy with learning my colors.

    • @kiyomi5583
      @kiyomi5583 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@ZedetirI always knew I shouldn't have been coloring inside the lines and focused on coloring outside of them.

    • @williamsingleton7478
      @williamsingleton7478 7 месяцев назад +746

      damn government had me learning useless skills in first grade when I should have been out in the mines working on my first down payment.

    • @Frostbiker
      @Frostbiker 7 месяцев назад +359

      Beginner's mistake. But don't you worry, in the next "once in a century" economic downturn you won't have the money to buy a house anyway, so it all balances out.

    • @Professor__S
      @Professor__S 7 месяцев назад +155

      You should have quit school at the age of 14 and started your own business.

  • @thomasmcd5862
    @thomasmcd5862 8 месяцев назад +37767

    The endgame is to make home ownership so unaffordable that we are all forced to rent from the nobility class like a bunch of feudal serfs!

    • @st3pp3nw0lf86
      @st3pp3nw0lf86 8 месяцев назад +1226

      Like Germans

    • @maxscott3349
      @maxscott3349 8 месяцев назад +1087

      What's the difference? Pay your rent monthly to a landlord or pay it yearly to the state in the form of property taxes

    • @TheMysteryDriver
      @TheMysteryDriver 8 месяцев назад +3475

      Rent costs more than a mortgage though

    • @MinimalObzerver
      @MinimalObzerver 7 месяцев назад

      Yeah, going full circle back to the middle ages! Check mate from the aristocracy on us.

    • @seifer447
      @seifer447 7 месяцев назад

      ​​@@maxscott3349owning a home is a huge asset and unless you mess up, your landlord cant just refuse to renew your lease and force you back into the market.

  • @Stranger11105
    @Stranger11105 6 месяцев назад +1770

    My mom loves telling me how easy it'll be to buy a house if I'm just frugal with how I live.
    I swear to god I am going insane

    • @lightworker2956
      @lightworker2956 6 месяцев назад +250

      It's not weird to feel that you're going insane if you're constantly being gaslit. That's what gaslighting does to a person.

    • @johnnyvivic8730
      @johnnyvivic8730 6 месяцев назад +39

      Even today, there are decently-priced homes available if you search. Of course, these homes probably will not be inside of a major town. If you can live rurally, in a very small town, you will be able to afford a home. Find a career that allows you to work remotely, so you don't have a long commute into town for work.

    • @Stranger11105
      @Stranger11105 6 месяцев назад +68

      @@johnnyvivic8730 perhaps. Trying to be optimistic, but the job options are very limited, housing is limited, I am not currently in school because I don't want to be indebted with no goal.
      Just, the push for going to college for some vague, "well-paying" degree felt like it took huge precendence over every other sectjon of life. I wish I was taught more, about everything.

    • @Lamtitude
      @Lamtitude 5 месяцев назад +56

      Your mom is out of touch. She would be right if she said that 10 years ago, but in 2023, that just isn’t possible unless you have a dual income household with both making upper middle class salaries.

    • @SmokeNGunsBBQ
      @SmokeNGunsBBQ 4 месяца назад

      @@Stranger11105 do you want to know why things really are the way they are?

  • @thevikingbear2343
    @thevikingbear2343 6 месяцев назад +434

    Bonus Reason 5: companies buying hundreds of houses and turning them in AirBNB's. This has even created "dead zones" in cities where nobody lives in enitre blocks of apartments in most touristy cities and are all airbnb's owned by one company. This in turn has desteoyed the local commerce because tourists dont need to buy groceries from the local bodega for example.

    • @MrBear10mm
      @MrBear10mm 2 месяца назад +1

      Name one. Investors hold less than 3% of all single family homes in the US.

    • @stuffystuffsityas6302
      @stuffystuffsityas6302 2 месяца назад +68

      ⁠​⁠@@MrBear10mm 3% is 4.32 million homes bud. That’s a lot. Considering then all the upper middle class families owning two or more homes and renting some out or using them for bnbs and it gets even higher. In New Zealand, where I’m from, Airbnb’s are a serious issue, and internationals buying up properties and renting them out form across the world is too. It’s an undeniable problem that’s driven the price of purchasing your own home way up to the point where sectors of our biggest city, Auckland, are locally being called “retirement villages” because only the old can afford to retire there. Towns that used to raise young families are now caring for overwhelming amounts of elderly. There’re consequences to lucky people making a good buck off the backs of hard workers staying in their homes.

    • @thebravesirrobin.
      @thebravesirrobin. 2 месяца назад +13

      The AirBnB plague is overstated imo but still needs to be dealt with seriously regardless. Catering to tourists is kind of like a get-rich quick scheme for cities since you're extracting money from the wealthy of other places with minimal guarantees that it will be distributed equitably. Tourism economies fall into shambles when recessions hit the global economy. The opportunity cost of ignoring better long term land uses and economic development is significant.

    • @relativexistence505
      @relativexistence505 Месяц назад +7

      @@MrBear10mmbut what isn’t said in that statistic is that they are buying out whole areas, not just 3% scattered through the country, places in the sunbelt, and southern east coast have much higher numbers than the original 3% (Forgive me, I’ve forgotten the number) but they are slowly buying whole neighborhoods so that they can control local housing markets entirely

    • @felixwestergom963
      @felixwestergom963 Месяц назад +3

      "Adam Something" made a great video about it. Prague is already a good example for this.

  • @codacreator6162
    @codacreator6162 8 месяцев назад +9273

    Everything is moving toward “subscription” model -- you rent everything in your life so others may profit more and more. It’s a sickness.

    • @WanderingExistence
      @WanderingExistence 8 месяцев назад +711

      Even wage labor is renting yourself via "self ownership". Employment is literally renting another human being as if they're property. The employer-employee relationship is a very insidious dynamic. Employment is a rental contract, like if you rented capital (say, a chainsaw from Home Depot), you pay rent for the "time preference" (basically the cost of time) for a piece of property. Capitalism is based on a principle of self ownership, which sounds empowering, until you realize that most people don't own enough capital goods to make enough income other than themselves, and must rent out the authority over themselves as pieces of "human capital". This is a process of dehumanization where human beings are valued for their return on investment as capital goods. This is why, at the very least, capitalism needs unions and safety nets (or abolishment), or else the system won't value people for their human value. Importantly we must also think about our sick, elderly, and disabled people, as they can't provide competitive economic return for the investor class to value. We must figure out a way to change this economic system if we wish to value each other.

    • @TheMysteryDriver
      @TheMysteryDriver 8 месяцев назад +46

      Actually it's about a stable and consistent profit. Doesn't have to be higher. It's about reliability.

    • @d33pblu3
      @d33pblu3 7 месяцев назад

      @@WanderingExistencethe only person who successfully abolished capitalism was Adolf Hitler.
      There are two ways to make someone do something, either force em or reward them. Whatever your favourite breadtuber is proposing will not work.

    • @divinesleeper
      @divinesleeper 7 месяцев назад

      usury is yes. It's in the bible.

    • @drewidlifestyle7883
      @drewidlifestyle7883 7 месяцев назад +317

      @@TheMysteryDrivernah even consistent reliability isn’t enough companies lose if they’re not constantly growing just endless growth forever Totally sustainable 🙄

  • @Goodchicken_lameducks
    @Goodchicken_lameducks 7 месяцев назад +6564

    It's pretty crazy how it's gotten to this point so quickly. My grandparents came here from Italy. Didn't speak English, no money, no education. They were able to buy a small home that they raised 4 kids in on just my grandfather's income. Sure, they weren't rich and struggled to get by but they made it work and it beat living under Mussolini's rule. My grandparents lived in that house for the rest of their lives. Now, 2 generations later we are talking about dual income, educated, natural born citizens who can't even afford to buy a home. Pretty sure my grandparents wouldn't have come to this country if they knew this would be the future for their grandchildren.

    • @leamubiu
      @leamubiu 7 месяцев назад +492

      Your grandparents took their chances ; their grandkids will have to take their own. And hopefully every generation will be their own people, instead of clinging to broken dreams.

    • @chosenlyric
      @chosenlyric 7 месяцев назад +183

      What’s an immigrant descendant to do? Go back home? I think about going to my Grandma’s homeland all the time.

    • @tronbonn
      @tronbonn 7 месяцев назад +319

      Weirdly Italy is in a slump and needs people and workers so it’s a good time to move for the opportunity. Plus you’d get EU Citizenship to boot.

    • @sn1tchseek3r45
      @sn1tchseek3r45 7 месяцев назад +79

      If your grandparents were political dissidents and didn't leave, you might not even exist

    • @jasminecontreras7341
      @jasminecontreras7341 7 месяцев назад +71

      my parents immigrated here from Algeria and I don't think they regret their decision.. even though things are more difficult financially for me I know I'll figure my situation out and I'm extremely grateful that my parents decided to move to the US

  • @Al-eb9mi
    @Al-eb9mi 4 месяца назад +165

    I tried to escape this madness with my partner last year. We live in Italy, we both love nature and hate the city, we bought a cheap house in a small town in the forest, no mortage and I work remote, super happy of my decision so far

    • @Ralphfili
      @Ralphfili 3 месяца назад +8

      How fortunate do you feel to be able to work remotely?

    • @Al-eb9mi
      @Al-eb9mi 3 месяца назад +30

      @@Ralphfili I don't feel fortunate. I looked for that and took also hard decisions. I have friends that could do the same but they prefer not. Personal choices no fortune. Also, not everybody is fine living in a small village in the nature, it's pretty impossible also here to buy a house in city center.

    • @birmax5420
      @birmax5420 Месяц назад +1

      In che regione abiti?

    • @marblox9300
      @marblox9300 15 дней назад +2

      Partner - as in same sex.???

    • @androidunit56
      @androidunit56 13 дней назад +6

      @@marblox9300 What is your problem why are you asking this? Partner could mean male and female, but not married. Get off his/her butt...

  • @ericz.1270
    @ericz.1270 6 месяцев назад +879

    "This can't last forever"
    "...before it gets better"
    I firmly believe that this housing situation cannot and will not ever get better. Prices will continue to rise in perpetuity because market forces know that housing is a necessity, so they now have an incentive to make it a luxury to line their own pockets.

    • @hobomike6935
      @hobomike6935 6 месяцев назад +60

      Agreed. My parents said it will go down for about 3 years and that hasn’t happened, I don’t see it happening for another 3 either.

    • @user-do2ev2hr7h
      @user-do2ev2hr7h 6 месяцев назад +36

      Prices will go down, just not nearly as much as some are assuming.

    • @darkwing3713
      @darkwing3713 6 месяцев назад

      Once they've made half the population of the US homeless and completely wrecked the economy, then housing prices will go down.

    • @thewhitefalcon8539
      @thewhitefalcon8539 6 месяцев назад +125

      There's always a limit even if the system doesn't see a limit. When this happened in France they had a famous revolution.

    • @TheAwesomes2104
      @TheAwesomes2104 6 месяцев назад

      Oh it will, it just has to get bad enough to get a revolt coming, and honestly class consciousness is on the rise. All we would have to do to bring these in power begging on their knees is a debt strike and a general strike. Debt strike wouldn't even be hard, as the main lifestyle is living paycheck to paycheck and most of us own nothing. We don't own our homes, our clothes, hell even the clothes on our backs are designed to need replaced like a subscription service, and we are never going to keep good credit as we're just about all a single $500 emergency away from not having money to pay the bills, so screw it. All we have to do is act together

  • @elikirkwood4580
    @elikirkwood4580 7 месяцев назад +4303

    Corporations, especially foreign ones should be outright banned from owning residential property. If not through laws, then through force.

    • @noneofyourbusiness4830
      @noneofyourbusiness4830 7 месяцев назад +168

      A progressive property tax may be better.

    • @TheNefastor
      @TheNefastor 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@noneofyourbusiness4830taxing the wealthy ? When and where does that ever happen ?

    • @Shadow1986
      @Shadow1986 7 месяцев назад +33

      How much do you think is foreign owned

    • @handleyobusiness
      @handleyobusiness 7 месяцев назад +396

      @@noneofyourbusiness4830 And you know who that tax will be passed on to? The average American making 40k that’s already struggling to pay rent. 😒

    • @noneofyourbusiness4830
      @noneofyourbusiness4830 7 месяцев назад +144

      @@handleyobusinessWe're kind of in an auction now. If taxes don't raise the rent, then investors/speculators most likely will anyway. However, progressive property taxes would tax the big owners more than smalltime owners, thus discouraging concentration of wealth and property speculation.

  • @clairet5636
    @clairet5636 7 месяцев назад +3921

    We need to ban corporate ownership of single family homes...

    • @awesomerpower
      @awesomerpower 7 месяцев назад +397

      Immediately. It’s a war on the middle class and the serfs don’t have a chance.

    • @russetwolf13
      @russetwolf13 7 месяцев назад +392

      Or do what Austria did: nationalize 60% of your housing market and charge only maintenance costs. Private sellers can't overinflate the value of their property if you have a bunch of basic apartments almost anyone can afford.
      Public options both establish a floor for the market and lower the ceiling on the private market.

    • @WildNightBloom
      @WildNightBloom 7 месяцев назад +103

      Corporations should not pretend to own and profit from the land that never belonged to them in the first place, but we don't want to address that, right...

    • @Deverik1981
      @Deverik1981 7 месяцев назад +93

      Corporations control the government which make the laws. They can do whatever they want, and nothing you say will change that. If you don't want to die on the street, grabbing at rubbish for food then get out while you can. If you don't, you're sealing your fate. Don't expect sympathy from anyone, as we don't care about human life; only profit matters.

    • @reedraikes7471
      @reedraikes7471 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@russetwolf13damn that's so fucking based. Too bad all Republicans would have e to say is "communism" and their brain dead supporters would smile and take it up the ass

  • @selfloathinggameing
    @selfloathinggameing 2 месяца назад +44

    My parents bought a house in 2010 for $250,000. They listed it last year for $900,000. Even with the renovations they put into the house that's still an absurd increase

    • @kungfoochicken08
      @kungfoochicken08 11 дней назад

      I bought homes quite heavily from 2011-2017 for 50-70k. They're all work 200-240k now. I thought for sure that interest rates would push prices down, but it just isn't happening.

  • @smithlenn
    @smithlenn 24 дня назад +338

    This seems like the worst period.Even the markets are very unpredictable.started investing recently when the market prices were a bit high,today i am more than 60% down

    • @belljoe
      @belljoe 24 дня назад +3

      I thought about investing in the real estate market, I heard that people make millions , but I lack good knowledge and a strategy to outperform the market and generate good yields. I have $460,000 but it's hard to bite the bullet and do it. Money is hard to come by

    • @dawsondanny990
      @dawsondanny990 24 дня назад +1

      I don't have a full-time job; instead, I'm self-employed with a variety of sources of income. Regardless of how much money I generate each month, I maintain the same budget and adhere to my means-tested lifestyle.

    • @rannyorton
      @rannyorton 24 дня назад +2

      Biden should go

    • @latanyaconlontl5849
      @latanyaconlontl5849 24 дня назад +1

      The best course of action if you lack market knowledge is to ask a consultant or investing co-ach for guidance or assistance. Speaking with a consultant helped me stay afloat in the market and grow my port-folio to about 65% since January, even though I know it sounds obvious or generic. I believe that is the most effective way to enter the business at the moment.

    • @smithlenn
      @smithlenn 24 дня назад +1

      Fantastic! Can you share more details?

  • @iriya3227
    @iriya3227 8 месяцев назад +3395

    Crazy to think 160 years ago they were better at housing people than we are now. Housing should be for housing, not an investment!

    • @justsomeguy3077
      @justsomeguy3077 8 месяцев назад +154

      Population goes up, quality of life goes down.

    • @lukabosanac2671
      @lukabosanac2671 8 месяцев назад +555

      ​@@justsomeguy3077it's got nothing to do with population increase and everything to do with capitalism

    • @RandomButBeautiful
      @RandomButBeautiful 8 месяцев назад +215

      it's all a grift now. Making money by doing actual work? No no no.

    • @jamesbeyer
      @jamesbeyer 7 месяцев назад

      @@justsomeguy3077population has nothing to do with it. You can fit the entire world’s population in the land mass equivalent to Texas with room to spare. The problem isn’t population it’s greedy capitalists and law makers. We have to the space to increase the inventory but no one wants to see their home values crash. Government laws written by left and right politicians keep from us from zoning new homes. The homes they do zone are for single family homes which isn’t an efficient way to house people. If there is any problem with population it is going to be the massive decrease from the current generation choosing not have kids because it’s too damn expensive. The reason that’s a bad thing is all the reasons he explained in this video. Even with a decrease in demand and an increase in inventory all that will do is make sellers not want to sell like we’re dealing with right now.

    • @silasbishop3055
      @silasbishop3055 7 месяцев назад

      We have 7 Million new "Asylum seekers" you think that doesn't put pressure on housing? Population growth increases demand. @@lukabosanac2671

  • @omegajesus97
    @omegajesus97 7 месяцев назад +1585

    Born in 1997. Not having a say-so on my birth date is the worst financial decision I’ve ever made.

    • @jasminecontreras7341
      @jasminecontreras7341 7 месяцев назад +62

      haha! born in 98' same here

    • @omegajesus97
      @omegajesus97 7 месяцев назад +37

      @@jasminecontreras7341 what humble fools we are!

    • @SAM17898
      @SAM17898 7 месяцев назад +183

      96, should of bought a home instead of fooling around in middle school.

    • @MurakamiTenshi
      @MurakamiTenshi 7 месяцев назад +88

      I entered the workforce in 2008... most of us never had a chance to live the American dream debt free

    • @handleyobusiness
      @handleyobusiness 7 месяцев назад +26

      I’m a early 90’s conservative millennial that was born poor and refuse to be a victim. Spend your money wisely and stop blowing it on stupid stuff.

  • @markelmore66
    @markelmore66 6 месяцев назад +68

    If I didn’t have my VA loan, I don’t know how I could have got a house… my heart aches for all those who struggle. I worry for my children.

  • @SheilaYilmas
    @SheilaYilmas 5 месяцев назад +734

    Distinguishing between money management and the accumulation of wealth is crucial, and the educational gap in schools could be a factor contributing to people's challenges in sustaining financial prosperity. The instances you shared are pertinent, and personally, I found value in navigating the market crisis, as I have a tendency to embrace difficult situations rather than avoiding them, a sentiment shared in jest by my advisor.

    • @ScottRich9
      @ScottRich9 5 месяцев назад

      Earning a substantial income exceeding 450k is incredibly gratifying. While it requires a significant investment of time, the satisfaction derived from the process keeps me consistently engaged. I attribute this financial success to the expertise provided by my guide.

    • @MarioRo1
      @MarioRo1 5 месяцев назад

      I fully recognize the significant advantages of collaborating with a pro, but thus far, I haven't identified the right one for myself. Could you provide more details about the fiscal guide who has been guiding you?

    • @ScottRich9
      @ScottRich9 5 месяцев назад

      I've enlisted Stacey Lee Decker as my fiscal guide, and her expertise contributes significantly to the fiscal industry. Acknowledged as a reputable authority in the field, she holds a deep understanding of portfolio diversification. I encourage further exploration of her credentials. With her extensive experience, she proves to be an outstanding guide for those aiming to grasp the complexities of the fiscal market.

    • @ConfettiHunter5060
      @ConfettiHunter5060 5 месяцев назад +23

      Bro what are you yappin about you said a whole lot of nothing using big words when plain simple English would suffice this ain’t a college course canvas discussion page

    • @danielondaatje1891
      @danielondaatje1891 5 месяцев назад +22

      @@ConfettiHunter5060its just setup for a “advisor” scam lol

  • @RS-cs9wf
    @RS-cs9wf 7 месяцев назад +1546

    The phrase "You will own nothing, and your will like it" is too accurate for the housing sector.

    • @Wartooth6
      @Wartooth6 7 месяцев назад +62

      mr fink of blackrock said that

    • @10HW
      @10HW 7 месяцев назад +99

      Thank you for bringing back this infamous phrase. I do need to correct you tho - "you will own nothing and be happy" is the correct citation hihi

    • @Aqueox
      @Aqueox 7 месяцев назад +36

      ​@@Wartooth6He has a name and an address.
      Crazy, isn't it?

    • @tommyadams7767
      @tommyadams7767 7 месяцев назад +65

      Wake up everybody there's more of us than there are of them

    • @emptyshirt
      @emptyshirt 7 месяцев назад +9

      Money is free speech, and you owe 300k

  • @nonyabeeznuss304
    @nonyabeeznuss304 7 месяцев назад +1852

    Some guy bought a 2 acre lot in our neighborhood, crammed as many of the ugliest, cheapest plywood boxes as could possibly fit onto the plot, then sold each for $450,000 each. These are tiny 1 and 2 bedroom homes that were built with sub-par materials in like 6 weeks. They don't even have yards or garages, or a view. They're just crammed together like a shanty town AND PEOPLE BOUGHT THEM SIGHT UNSEEN AT ALMOST HALF A MIL EACH BEFORE THEY WERE EVEN BUILT.
    How the fuck is my working class ass ever going to afford to compete in that market?

    • @laulaja-7186
      @laulaja-7186 7 месяцев назад +167

      Must have been a desirable neighbourhood for that crap to actually sell. Smarter, bigger investor should have put in a ten or twenty story apartment block. But maybe he couldn’t get a big enough loan or for that, or find a builder with the skills.

    • @Houshalter
      @Houshalter 7 месяцев назад +127

      You're not, serf.

    • @evanfunk7335
      @evanfunk7335 7 месяцев назад +189

      ​@@laulaja-7186most places are zoned only for single family. Apartments not allowed

    • @crossdressingthug3443
      @crossdressingthug3443 7 месяцев назад +92

      It's people that buy these houses that contribute to the problem and make it bigger. "I cAn AfFoRD tHe DoWnPaYmEnT, nO nEeD tO wOrRy"
      Every idiots solution is taking out a loan.

    • @whitfieldpalmer7122
      @whitfieldpalmer7122 7 месяцев назад +7

      sounds like Orlando

  • @conniechloe53
    @conniechloe53 5 месяцев назад +35

    The amount of new home construction in my southeast city is unbelievable. It seems like every inch of available land is being built on, but most of it is rentals, apartments and tall/skinny homes.

    • @bendegeus5576
      @bendegeus5576 Месяц назад +1

      I’m from rural MN where these issues are seen but not as extreme as anywhere else - I’m just interested in this because I recently was near Cape Coral FL and the amount of new construction even after the hurricane was pretty crazy. And to think a large percentage of them are empty AirBNBs. Where in the SW are you specifically speaking?

    • @conniechloe53
      @conniechloe53 Месяц назад

      @@bendegeus5576 Nashville.

    • @conniechloe53
      @conniechloe53 Месяц назад

      ​@@bendegeus5576Nashville

  • @joelballard4955
    @joelballard4955 2 месяца назад +72

    Revolution is needed

    • @kungfoochicken08
      @kungfoochicken08 11 дней назад

      If you can't even manage your household budget, how are you going to manage a revolution?

  • @TheRosswise
    @TheRosswise 7 месяцев назад +1598

    15 years ago I built a sub-1000 sq.ft house myself. Nowadays what I did isn't even allowed here anymore due to red tape and changing zoning laws and building codes. That is another huge root of this problem, smaller affordable 'starter' homes are getting phased out by bureaucracy.

    • @zenastronomy
      @zenastronomy 7 месяцев назад

      deliberately by the 0.1%-construction-banking housing cartel

    • @bradleypost8971
      @bradleypost8971 7 месяцев назад +168

      Regulations ensure that you’ll own nothing, be happy! 🤡🌎

    • @thomasemond2173
      @thomasemond2173 7 месяцев назад +35

      Let builders build

    • @TheSimba86
      @TheSimba86 7 месяцев назад +91

      exactly, my area has a "land bank" that is property that has been taken by the state for unpaid property taxes and they have so many stipulations when you buy it, like you must build a 1500 square foot house within a certain period of time or they fine you for every day it's not done, no farm animals allowed, must have paved driveway ect. tiny homes are outright illegal in many areas due to zoning restrictions making it illegal to build anything under 1500 square foot

    • @rexx9496
      @rexx9496 7 месяцев назад

      Homewowner's groups are the ones that push for this regulation because they don't want upzoning in their neighborhoods. If the price of your home is in the stratosphere there is no incentive for you to want to build more housing and potentially lower the cost of your house.

  • @FunkBastid
    @FunkBastid 7 месяцев назад +2036

    If corporations, and especially foreign corporations, were barred from buying single family homes then this problem wouldn’t exist

    • @-my4skinwastakeninasickjew426
      @-my4skinwastakeninasickjew426 7 месяцев назад +1

      If jews were barred from the nation like other nations have done thousands of times this would happen either.

    • @WhiteBuddha22
      @WhiteBuddha22 7 месяцев назад +125

      That’s really all there is too it. It’s that simple

    • @Silentfox88
      @Silentfox88 7 месяцев назад

      @@WhiteBuddha22 The largest corporations in the world are the ones controlling the western governments though so that would never happen

    • @user-mc6dg6qe8l
      @user-mc6dg6qe8l 7 месяцев назад +255

      Who thought letting foreigners who don't even live in the country buy multiple homes would be a smart idea? In basically every other country it's not allowed.

    • @user-mc6dg6qe8l
      @user-mc6dg6qe8l 7 месяцев назад +64

      @@jackjones4824 you can't even put up a wood fence in your yard without some stupid permit

  • @SilveraStarbreeze
    @SilveraStarbreeze 5 месяцев назад +18

    It's not just USA, it's all over the world. The only difference is the average salary and price of real estates. In Serbia, prices really skyrocketed when pandemic started, then even more with the influx of young Russians and Ukrainians with money fleeing the war. Now the price per square meter is about 3-4 times greater than in 2019. And the 20% downpayment is just ridiculous.

    • @QuantumPhyZ
      @QuantumPhyZ Месяц назад +1

      Same goes to Portugal. Is not even the prices of the house, is also the rent prices. I had to quit my university degree because the rent prices where to high, even if I worked part time, that wouldn’t be enough.

  • @NotSure416
    @NotSure416 5 месяцев назад +20

    The government is going to need to limit the number of rentals a landlord can own.

    • @sithlord5149
      @sithlord5149 21 день назад

      That might make it worst since they will now have fewer rentals that’s cost more and or sham companies that’s will go around the limit

  • @matthewhermon2677
    @matthewhermon2677 7 месяцев назад +3209

    I think what's also pretty insidious is the comodification of property. I watched another video where the creator made a good point: the shift came when houses started to be seen as an investment vehicle as opposed to a place where people and families live. This led to massive growth in rental real estate and less focus on people being able to own property.

    • @thefrostychemist
      @thefrostychemist 7 месяцев назад +245

      Agreed, houses shouldn't be used as private property for a landlord to live off of the renter's labor

    • @patrickfrost9405
      @patrickfrost9405 7 месяцев назад +238

      This also means that modern houses are made ugly on purpose. Cheaper materials to make a glorified human containment unit and still sells like an architect had its name written on the blueprint. Apartments are giant cubes that are painted bright colors to distract from how cheaply they are made.

    • @BZB33
      @BZB33 7 месяцев назад +29

      THIS 100%

    • @BurgerTime7441
      @BurgerTime7441 7 месяцев назад +34

      Yes. It happens even worse in other countries where there are far fewer trustworthy and successful investment opportunities (countries with a lot of corruption). In those, the ratio of RE prices vs average incomes is stratospheric. Totally insane. A house can only be bought by a family of 2-3 generations (often plus aunts/uncles also) acting as a team.

    • @ruirodrigues2938
      @ruirodrigues2938 7 месяцев назад +75

      Said the same to my mother, houses are for living, not investments.
      This problem requires a tough hand to be solved.
      In my country housing has been the main target of forign investment, how ridiculous is that

  • @CaraMarie13
    @CaraMarie13 8 месяцев назад +1401

    I truly detest homes being viewed as an investment vehicle. That's the roof people sleep under. Save and invest. Leave homes out of it.

    • @marcoalejandro1407
      @marcoalejandro1407 7 месяцев назад

      Financially irresponsible leeches (Anyone over the age of 50) wasted their chance to save and invest during the best economic conditions ever in history, thus they voted their way into high housing prices that they can leverage for their retirements, the rest of us be damned

    • @brianmattei7134
      @brianmattei7134 7 месяцев назад +51

      I hate to say it, but it's because you realistically don't want to be "negative" when you do your inevitable sale. Selling and buying a home costs money, from your own pocket. A lot of it! And it isn't just the down payment, realtors take 2-5% of the sale on top of other costs. As does maintaining it. Most people that rent don't live in one place long enough to realize that replacing HVAC is like a $15,000 job. Roof? About that or more. Flooding? Fucking forget it.
      Not to say homes need to appreciate the way they have been, but after spending X amount of dollars to keep your home nice, you'd hope you get some of that money put into it back when you go to sell. So long as housing costs money to buy and maintain, people will naturally want to "make" something off of that rather than just pissing the money away. Do you know how awful it would be to put $50k+ into a house for maintenance over 10 years (or less), and then go to sell it and OWE MORE MONEY?

    • @feedninjacat3206
      @feedninjacat3206 7 месяцев назад +134

      @@brianmattei7134 what about cars? We buy them for 30, 40, 50k spends thousands more on Maintenance each year and parts to replace the ones that break, just like with a house. Lots of people also put aftermarket upgrades in their cars. Upgraded suspension, better tires, a more powerful engine. And yet with the only exceptions being super rare sports cars, your car will almost always depreciate in value. The longer you have it the more it does.

    • @seyeolajuyin
      @seyeolajuyin 7 месяцев назад +68

      ​@@feedninjacat3206they need to take the investment angle from housing. That's the only solution. Housing should be like buying a car. I don't hear about a car ownership crisis.

    • @brianmattei7134
      @brianmattei7134 7 месяцев назад +33

      @@feedninjacat3206 Most people are not buying cars for 30, 40, 50k. That is not nearly the average price people are paying for a car, not to mention that maintenance on them is MUCH much cheaper comparatively. Plus, the used car market exists. Every house is "used" in one way or another, there's no comparison there.
      Also, they're something that is way easier to replace. It's a bad comparison frankly.

  • @dimitristripakis7364
    @dimitristripakis7364 5 месяцев назад +40

    The endgame is to work all your life for a 10x10 room.

    • @aiodensghost8645
      @aiodensghost8645 Месяц назад +1

      More like a 2ft x 3ft x 8ft BOX

    • @world_still_spins
      @world_still_spins Месяц назад

      ​@@aiodensghost8645
      A lot of people can't even afford that.

    • @VNBSlash
      @VNBSlash 13 дней назад

      I'm 36 and all the guys in my family grandfather, great grandfather only lived to be 72 so at least my life is half over with. Only 36 more years of work to go.

  • @MoneyShack
    @MoneyShack 8 месяцев назад +1706

    I really believe that some markets need to be off-limits to corporate, company ownership. Especially housing but more specifically single-family homes.

    • @FishOfTheSea
      @FishOfTheSea 8 месяцев назад +189

      Be prepared to get called a anti American by the right

    • @me0101001000
      @me0101001000 8 месяцев назад +248

      Even Adam Smith, the father of capitalism, said landlords are the worst

    • @WanderingExistence
      @WanderingExistence 8 месяцев назад +72

      Maybe we need to reevaluate the structure of the corporation. Maybe _cooperation_ needs to be explored, like worker and consumer co-ops, community land trusts, and credit unions.

    • @willblack8575
      @willblack8575 8 месяцев назад

      wrong, the right supports this @@FishOfTheSea

    • @jaredyoung5353
      @jaredyoung5353 8 месяцев назад +36

      Amen! Our government job is to specifically help ppl not corporations.

  • @Ant0nAL0g
    @Ant0nAL0g 7 месяцев назад +413

    I’ll just say, my parents bought a home in 2013 for $230k and just sold it in 2023 for $650k. It’s insane.

    • @MacMac548
      @MacMac548 7 месяцев назад +118

      Your parents’ house made $20/hour working full-time over the past 10 years. It’s crazy how some people’s HOUSES are making 2x the minimum wage…

    • @Amoechick
      @Amoechick 7 месяцев назад +23

      We bought in 2015 and sold for exactly double in 2022. We wouldn’t have been able to afford the house we lived in!

    • @dakidlrg
      @dakidlrg 7 месяцев назад +5

      how much they pay in property appreciation taxes

    • @Ant0nAL0g
      @Ant0nAL0g 7 месяцев назад +10

      @@dakidlrg They paid nothing in capital gains taxes, thankfully. Those taxes are only paid in their state if you own the house for 2 years or less.

    • @JoMcD21
      @JoMcD21 7 месяцев назад

      Damn, that's why I'm fucked. Sellouts.

  • @Wreckitralph1976
    @Wreckitralph1976 17 дней назад +3

    I live in a fairly new development in a suburb of Des Moines Iowa. Literally in the past month three houses have went up for sale. Within a block of my house. All three bought by an investment company. Not to mention a bunch of condos were bought near me by the same investment company. This has happened all over the Des Moines metro. Then they jack up the rent which has caused even a 1 bedroom studio to go from 1,000 a month to 1300 a month. Houses rented from 1800 a month the 2400 a month. I am older 47. Bought my first house that I live in three years ago. I had to save and save staying a sub par duplex for decades. Put a 50% down payment and my intrest rate was locked in at 2.2%. The house was a 265k house when I bought it now is worth 350k just 3 years later. I have investors hounding me daily to sell. Banks hounding me to refinance daily. It's all about the corporation not the small guy renting out houses or the homeowner now.

  • @ginafarducci1600
    @ginafarducci1600 2 месяца назад +4

    When we bought our home, just a couple years ago, we made an offer that was $80,000 below the asking price. The realtor said there were others who are also interested in the property. We said, we don't care, submit the offer. 2 hours later, he called. The seller accepted our offer.
    The next 4 homes in this neighborhood sold for up to $60,000 ABOVE asking price. With the younger people buying homes without knowing how to negotiate a deal, it's no wonder prices are out of control. Most only want to stay 3 - 4 years and then sell for a nice profit, only to find they have to stay longer or sell for less than they hoped for.

  • @mikea5745
    @mikea5745 8 месяцев назад +2642

    It's amazing how the housing crisis is such a self-inflicted issue in the US. Huge amount of space, low population density, yet houses are extremely unaffordable due to artificial restrictions on building and planning

    • @yamumhasthebiggay2582
      @yamumhasthebiggay2582 8 месяцев назад +338

      Boomers obv

    • @Moses_VII
      @Moses_VII 8 месяцев назад +353

      When capitalism becomes a cult

    • @TheMysteryDriver
      @TheMysteryDriver 8 месяцев назад +64

      It's the young people's fault for not just living where it's cheaper

    • @zc7873
      @zc7873 8 месяцев назад +382

      @@Moses_VII problem is due to government in bed with corporations, wouldn’t happen in a free market

    • @nowave7
      @nowave7 8 месяцев назад +254

      @@zc7873 Yeah, because then the market would "regulate" itself?

  • @nisibonum7634
    @nisibonum7634 7 месяцев назад +440

    Honestly I am sick and tired of homes being simple viewed as an investment and not the basic necessity it is. You need shelter to survive, like food or water. The greed is insane.

    • @JoMcD21
      @JoMcD21 7 месяцев назад +35

      Oh, don't forget the cost of those is getting ridiculous too..

    • @kiromi790
      @kiromi790 7 месяцев назад

      food and water are profited on just as much as housing. people die from starvation and thirst as much as they die from homelessness. when will you realize they have always been using us as pawns and monololizing everything that involves humanity

    • @dominostimes2119
      @dominostimes2119 7 месяцев назад +4

      People just lost their mind or never had one. They do what they’re told buy their house and think it’s their investment, « buy low sell high » finally play like the big corps they work in and are indoctrinated all day long without getting the big picture and keeping in touch with reality.
      Irresponsibility is at an all time high.

    • @nisibonum7634
      @nisibonum7634 7 месяцев назад +21

      @@dominostimes2119 could you imagine people doing such a thing for Water, food or medicine? Can't we as a society recognize the inherent evil of it?

    • @bullishongamestop
      @bullishongamestop 7 месяцев назад +13

      @@nisibonum7634 Oh that will come later when the shortages kick in.

  • @personman480
    @personman480 2 месяца назад +4

    i am 29 and was very lucky to be able to purchase a house last year, I had to make a lot of sacrifices to do it- I never bought a car, I saved money instead of going to college, saved every penny while living with my sister and then moved very far away from my family to a more affordable location. And even then I was only able to get a small place that cost less than 100k, totally worth it since I'm sure things would only get worse

  • @SophiaAphrodite
    @SophiaAphrodite 2 месяца назад +5

    it should be noted Zillow buys several houses in an area and raises demand. Them offering you this deal makes them money even if never paid back based on the increase in unsold homes value around it.

  • @RandomButBeautiful
    @RandomButBeautiful 8 месяцев назад +1283

    The name of the game is to keep you in debt for life. You owe your soul to the company store! They don't want you paid off and free. That is exactly what they do not want!

    • @KRYMauL
      @KRYMauL 7 месяцев назад +11

      We all owe our souls to the company store, that's literally the trade-off of civilisation. The more civilised one becomes the more freedom they must give up.

    • @the_expidition427
      @the_expidition427 7 месяцев назад

      No. Civilized nations are not full of endentured servitude @@KRYMauL

    • @arealponibean1223
      @arealponibean1223 7 месяцев назад +86

      ​@@KRYMauLNo, that's mostly just capitalism left unchecked. Look at Denmark and Finland.

    • @imwrongbutlisten
      @imwrongbutlisten 7 месяцев назад +2

      The way you just described "debt" is the way we keep you down.
      Debt is good. Debt is leverage.
      The people buying all the real estate up are putting down vary small amount of money up-front. But are controlling a large asset and creating yield or income.
      Also crazy to think. With morgage rates at 7%. A loan sounds like a bad deal.
      But high interest rates also cause high interest rates in your savings account. 5%.
      So instead of paying the home off. You can put that money Into a savings account yield 5% the mortgage is 7%. Meaning your real interest rate is 2%.
      🤔

    • @KRYMauL
      @KRYMauL 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@arealponibean1223 They still owe their store to the man. In both those cases, though, the man is the King.

  • @siobahnhurley85
    @siobahnhurley85 7 месяцев назад +737

    Minnesota is putting a bill through now, to ban investors from buying single family homes. It would help things here, but other states need to stop these investors. We also need to build more homes. There is an inventory shortage across the US. Even if all the investor homes were put back on the market for sale, it still wouldn’t fix things.

    • @pappi8338
      @pappi8338 7 месяцев назад +61

      No more new single family homes!!!! I'm sick and tired of hearing that. Demolish them and install triplexes and apartments.

    • @alvideos2145
      @alvideos2145 7 месяцев назад +3

      @@pappi8338 Agreed.

    • @alvideos2145
      @alvideos2145 7 месяцев назад +65

      Sounds great, they should not be able to buy a home unless they are going to live in it.

    • @XTreme-ko9dw
      @XTreme-ko9dw 7 месяцев назад

      @@pappi8338 Agreed

    • @TheAJmoviemaker
      @TheAJmoviemaker 7 месяцев назад +129

      @@pappi8338 Ah yes, cram families into tiny box apartments where everyone is stacked together like rats
      Terrible idea

  • @HanGhost99
    @HanGhost99 6 месяцев назад +5

    Right now I'm m literally thinking about buying land & building a small home away from major cities & towns, my closet neighbor being half a mile away from me, with fences surrounding my humble small home

  • @nnefasu
    @nnefasu 26 дней назад +3

    I just had to rewatch the Housing cost part multiple times..
    In Germany for me to take 49.000$ home, I had to earn 81.000$ before tax and FICA.. And houses start at 300.000$ even far from the cities.. Guess I'm screwed 😂

  • @JL-ly7me
    @JL-ly7me 7 месяцев назад +386

    My neighbor next door passed away last year. The house never became available for sale and right after her death it showed as sold on zillow for a lot less than the value of the house, I mean, by at least 30-40% less than the value! I looked up and it was sold to a company. It made me feel that this market is full of scams and the good priced houses never even become available because investors buy them before we even know

    • @annnee6818
      @annnee6818 7 месяцев назад +94

      That's because that's exactly what's happening. But regulations are communist to y'all, so you're gonna have to enjoy it as is

    • @emptyshirt
      @emptyshirt 7 месяцев назад

      Go back in time to 2018, start a reverse mortgage company and hire all of your cousins to distribute the profits. Shut down for covid, collect PPP money and enhanced unemployment, aquire the homes of all of the dead boomers, then run for Senate.

    • @s0nnyburnett
      @s0nnyburnett 7 месяцев назад +60

      @@annnee6818 Big corporations lobby for regulations that benefit them or make it impossible to compete.

    • @MoisesMoralesGarcia
      @MoisesMoralesGarcia 7 месяцев назад

      Look it up dude Zillow is one of the biggest home buyers. That’s why the Zestimate is a scam that benefits them.

    • @CrimsonA1
      @CrimsonA1 7 месяцев назад +11

      @@s0nnyburnett It may sound counterproductive, but lobbying AGAINST these big corps in government seems to help somewhat. Use their own tactics against them.

  • @merxanity1625
    @merxanity1625 7 месяцев назад +2724

    Glad I was born just in time to be the first generation in America that can save 70% of their income and still live like a slave. I'm managing nearly that much in savings and I can confirm, I still feel like a broke college kid. I genuinely, from the bottom of my heart, wish the absolute worst on everyone who contributed to America reaching this point in history.

    • @Jesse-jp8bt
      @Jesse-jp8bt 7 месяцев назад +226

      Mf spitting

    • @mr.frandy7692
      @mr.frandy7692 7 месяцев назад +27

      And how old are you? I mean if you're saving that much money then you SHOULD feel like a broke college kid... You're not spending money. lol. which is good of course

    • @M0M0M0M0M
      @M0M0M0M0M 7 месяцев назад +290

      ​@@mr.frandy7692it's not good, saving money is useless because fiat is worthless and beind devalued further every second

    • @Jesse-jp8bt
      @Jesse-jp8bt 7 месяцев назад +288

      @@mr.frandy7692 boomer logic, get out of here gramps lol

    • @MidwestBoom
      @MidwestBoom 7 месяцев назад +2

      Skill issue

  • @ItsYaboiiZac
    @ItsYaboiiZac 2 месяца назад +4

    allowing corporations to buy family homes is gonna end up with a system where they own most of these homes and everything is rent and no one owns anything…

  • @mikej191919
    @mikej191919 2 месяца назад +11

    Did i miss something in this video, or was lack of home building mentioned?

  • @MrShitthead
    @MrShitthead 7 месяцев назад +710

    Same thing happened in ancient Rome, real estate got bought up by investment seekers to the point that common folk were completely priced out of affording a place to own, and it was absolutely horrible for anyone that wasn't mega rich. History repeats itself, and we're not even at the worst point yet....

    • @jordan.na.dzielni
      @jordan.na.dzielni 7 месяцев назад +55

      That's interesting! Care to share some references? I'd love to read more about that.

    • @neanda
      @neanda 7 месяцев назад +86

      yeah but look at what happened to ancient Rome. if the people are totally disillusioned, we'll side with the babarians at the gates

    • @ArawnOfAnnwn
      @ArawnOfAnnwn 7 месяцев назад

      @@jordan.na.dzielni The Roman case was more about farmland and large farming estates. Look up 'Latifundium' . Basically smallholder farmers steadily declined and were forced to move to big cities and servitude. The Gracchi brothers tried to change this. They ended up dead.

    • @NeoAcetalos-yw1ws
      @NeoAcetalos-yw1ws 7 месяцев назад +11

      Could you go into more depth on that? Sound interesting

    • @MrShitthead
      @MrShitthead 7 месяцев назад +206

      @@NeoAcetalos-yw1ws Yeah, sure thing! It's a really big topic, but the simplified version is that something very similar happened back then that is happening today, the mega rich were just buying out everything, and the more they bought, the more expensive everything else got.
      What was especially egregious was that their favorite targets were low class soldiers during the time of the Roman Republic. Senators would conscript low class farmers and land owners to fight in their profit driven wars, and when they would come back they would be behind on debts (because they were off fighting), and often disabled. Even with the loot they would bring back it was rarely enough to keep them afloat so they'd be forced to sell their lands and move into the ghettos of the city while the rich just scooped up their lands and had their slaves farm them for cheap.
      Roman senators like Crassus were infamous for getting rich off of real estate. He was basically the Jeff Bezos of that time, except his fortune was owning most of the real estate in Rome and eventually war profiteering.
      What's sad is that despite how tight of a grip the most evil people in society had on the system, there were people who did try to make things fair. The Gracchi brothers were by far the most famous of them. They fought for giving veterans pensions, ensuring they had land, and breaking up the monopolies and dispersing land back to the lower classes. Of course, with senators being senators the Gracchi brothers didn't have a healthy career, they were both openly and brutally murdered by the senators, one beat to death by the senators themselves, and the other killed by mercenaries hired by the senators.
      Funny thing is that the senators who fought so hard to resist any legislation that would make life better for the lower class were so good at spinning things and put so much money into propaganda campaigns that there was still a sizeable percentage of the population that supported them, even if it meant through violence. It wasn't a majority, but it was enough to make these senators very dangerous and difficult to deal with.
      Things never change....

  • @kelvinjohnson4
    @kelvinjohnson4 7 месяцев назад +1569

    This happened with the 2004 housing boom - home prices were greatly inflated, meaning people couldn't sell later because they owed more on the house than they could sell for. I know quite a few people who bought then, thinking they were making a good investment to sell later, but it's taken until the COVID housing boom for the prices to come back to those original amounts.

    • @KelvinWallace
      @KelvinWallace 7 месяцев назад +1

      You're right. I was able to diversify my 450K portfolio across markets with the aid of an investment coach, and I was able to use high dividend yield stocks, ETFs, and bonds to generate a little over $830K in net profit.

    • @KelvinWallace
      @KelvinWallace 7 месяцев назад +1

      You can employ another adviser, but Colleen Janie Towe, is my one who provides guidance. She has years of knowledge in the financial markets, and her approach has worked for me in the past, leading to my success. She offers points of entrance and exit for the securities I prioritize.

    • @jamesolivito4374
      @jamesolivito4374 7 месяцев назад +17

      The last time , in 2008 , they bailed out the banks who funded the fiasco . The auto industry is also out of control on car and truck prices . It is just a matter of time history repeats itself, except it will be a bigger bail out for the banks who are already in trouble .

    • @bobshimits
      @bobshimits 7 месяцев назад

      Could you build back then? Canada is doing the same dumb shit.
      The Feds have locked down a huge percentage of America through the wetlands and Nexus of Water laws. (Thanks Obama).

    • @pappi8338
      @pappi8338 7 месяцев назад +29

      ​@@KelvinWallaceshill

  • @ilgatto7327
    @ilgatto7327 6 месяцев назад +18

    Reason #5 - Towns and Cities have added multiple layers of regulations and extra costs to new developments further driving up the costs. While this may not be the case in the United States it is certainly true here in Canada.

  • @whtkngofc
    @whtkngofc 2 месяца назад +2

    Ignoring the fact Blackrock and Vanguard are buying up residential property indiscriminately , not maintaining it or renting it out. Since not being an individual they have no reason to sell it, buy it cash with an outrageous offer and sit on it, especially worse in areas where property taxes are low or where govt dont tax vacant homes or give cuts to corporations who own housing.

  • @daviswatkinsyt
    @daviswatkinsyt 7 месяцев назад +1802

    It's because people look at houses as growth stocks. The trend has been to buy as many properties as you can right now, rent them out at inordinate prices, hold onto them for decades, and make a considerable profit. They're not "single-family homes" anymore, they're gold bars to investors.

    • @Mariobrownio1989
      @Mariobrownio1989 7 месяцев назад +83

      That's the way it was since the beginning of human civilization, and why we call people who own property landLORDs.

    • @bullishongamestop
      @bullishongamestop 7 месяцев назад

      Won't be when the riots start forming.

    • @daviswatkinsyt
      @daviswatkinsyt 7 месяцев назад +105

      @@Mariobrownio1989 That's true, but I'd argue that it's become much more popular within the last 10ish years. That's just my opinion though.

    • @ChipChapChop
      @ChipChapChop 7 месяцев назад +8

      ​@@Mariobrownio1989Henry George was right.

    • @JREAMSWILLNEVERDIE
      @JREAMSWILLNEVERDIE 7 месяцев назад

      ​​​@@daviswatkinsytTo be fair you're not wrong.
      It's just the way the system was built.
      And unfortunately if you live in the USA, there's a high expectation of your potential income levels that is, for the average American, unrealistic.
      Yes, we do live in a 1st world country.
      Yes, there are limitless opportunities to grow our income here in the USA.
      But realistically speaking, the average American props up the system by working at a dead end job which will never yield the income to sustain a mortgage for a decent house.
      Fortunately, I gave in to societal pressures to get an education and suffered through school debt, then worked my ass off to get to where I am today with a $170k income and buy my first home at $500k.
      Even now I'm still struggling in some ways with finance.
      So when you extrapolate that to the general population, logistically something is wrong.
      Average Americans working average jobs yielding average income, but in a market of premium home prices?
      I'm not an economist but something isn't adding up here.
      Realistically, in order to afford a home at average income, you'd have to relocate to a less-populated state and HOPE that your income remains largely the same in order to secure the lower home prices.
      In a lot of situations, other states pay less than that of highly popular/populated states. So relatively, it's only marginally better UNLESS you were able to secure the same (higher) income in a lower average income state.

  • @paulschumacher4308
    @paulschumacher4308 7 месяцев назад +1357

    I got pressured by family to buy a home vs renting back in 2013. I'm super glad I listened to that advice.

    • @Lem0nsquid
      @Lem0nsquid 7 месяцев назад +81

      2013 was a different time. Not that any of us knew what the future had in store. Congrats to you though

    • @clevertaghere3297
      @clevertaghere3297 7 месяцев назад +12

      A crappy landlord and changing family situation made me move around the same time. So glad I did, cause where I am now would be completely out of reach to me now.... and it's just a mid sized townhouse.

    • @fortheloveofnoise9298
      @fortheloveofnoise9298 7 месяцев назад +37

      I graduated high school in 2013...... 😅 born too late

    • @perfectly22smith38
      @perfectly22smith38 7 месяцев назад +4

      That’s was then now is now. Home prices are unaffordable. Dint buy here now. Rent.

    • @zuzanazuscinova5209
      @zuzanazuscinova5209 7 месяцев назад +4

      ​@@pliktlhaha, same listened to my own advice and bought in 2019

  • @EntreCamaradas
    @EntreCamaradas 14 дней назад +3

    We’re a nation that makes nothing tangible. The bread and butter of our economy is the ability to incur debt, therefore the plan is to increase the value of assets to the point where you will “buy” them (via debt) but never actually own them.. it’s just a way to keep the machine running.

  • @LordPadriac
    @LordPadriac 5 месяцев назад +10

    This is why I'm glad I bought my three decker in fourth quarter 2007 when the crash was just beginning. I was only underwater with the mortgage for about three years before the market corrected but even underwater I had the home and my equity was only going to go up and I was able to lock in a 6% fixed mortgage. The terms I was able to get stipulated that my mortgage can never be sold by the bank on top of it. Now the city and Zillow think my house is worth three times what I paid for it and I have foreign investor backed jackals constantly trying to get me to sell it so they can jack up the rent to five times what I'm charging now. Absentee landlords should never have been a legal thing. Ending that would end virtually all of the housing problems in this country overnight.

  • @someguy5927
    @someguy5927 7 месяцев назад +643

    These large corporations need to be regulated. Unfortunately these large corporations also control our politicians.

    • @mikem1917
      @mikem1917 2 месяца назад +4

      Just vote ones like that out then. Stop rewarding bad behavior

    • @williamrelue
      @williamrelue 2 месяца назад +67

      @@mikem1917yeah it’s THAT simple

    • @sadscientist9995
      @sadscientist9995 2 месяца назад +2

      That’s always the issue. The meta problem

    • @sadscientist9995
      @sadscientist9995 2 месяца назад +19

      @@mikem1917and vote in the need stooge that also takes corporate money? They all take it to finance their campaigns.

    • @MrBear10mm
      @MrBear10mm 2 месяца назад +1

      They own less that 3% of all single family homes in the US. Historically speaking, roughly a third of Americans will never own a home and that statistic holds true today. It is you, not the market or investors.

  • @CyphDragon
    @CyphDragon 7 месяцев назад +184

    A simple solution that probably has more complexity than I realize: ban institutional investment in single-family homes, period. Let them squabble over the prices of commercial and industrial real estate, while letting the actual market of actual people that will actually reside in those homes decide their value, not some faceless corporation that's looking to "extract value" from residents.

    • @DiscutirconPablo
      @DiscutirconPablo 7 месяцев назад

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    • @BossItUp911
      @BossItUp911 7 месяцев назад +2

      Nope. Just invest in something else. Stocks, Your Own business, Crypto, etc. as you see fit. This idea of a home as an investment - which is really a forced piggy bank - is dumb. Btw, I'm under 40, never owned a home (I rent) and worth $2 million, so it's working for me

    • @CyphDragon
      @CyphDragon 7 месяцев назад +40

      @@BossItUp911 soooo...you own nothing. Congratulations? I guess? Good luck eating your crypto when whatever coin you've been conned into inevitably crashes to nothing.

    • @BossItUp911
      @BossItUp911 7 месяцев назад

      @@CyphDragon I own the business that bought the home you can't afford. Ever heard of a REIT? I don't own any crypto and never will. sorry you're poor.

    • @CyphDragon
      @CyphDragon 7 месяцев назад +27

      @@BossItUp911 so you "own" a tiny, insignificant portion on paper of a massive investment firm that has no idea who you are, and literally couldn't care less. Again, congratulations? I truly hope you never have a significant life event that will teach you *exactly* how much that paper is worth, but when statistics catches up with you, I hope someone shows you exactly the same amount of consideration as you've shown here.
      By the way, I have more equity in my home than I owe on the note, have 2 vehicles paid for in the clear, and have been doing alright for myself, despite being jobless for almost a year at this point. Have the day you deserve.

  • @Brennanoliver775
    @Brennanoliver775 2 месяца назад +1266

    The Market have been suffering over the past month, with all the three indexes recording losses in recent weeks. My $400,000 portfolio is down by approximately 20%, any recommendations to scale up my returns before retirement will be highly appreciated.

    • @AaronZak-js
      @AaronZak-js 2 месяца назад +1

      Yes, I've been in constant touch with a Financial Analyst for approximately 8 months. You know, these days it's really easy to buy into trending stocks, but the task is determining when to sell or keep. That's where my manager comes in, to help me with entry and exit points in the industries I'm engaged in. Can’t say I regret it, I’m 40% up in profits just in 5months with my initial capital of $160k.

    • @AaronZak-js
      @AaronZak-js 2 месяца назад

      @@LarryE.Zamora
      I work with Alicia Ann Jordan, a licensed fiduciary. Simply look up the name. The information you need to work with a letter to schedule an appointment would be included.

    • @LenaSchweizer-ff8xy
      @LenaSchweizer-ff8xy 2 месяца назад

      thank you for sharing; I just looked up the broker you recommended on Google and was really impressed with her qualifications. I will immediately send her an email.

    • @theundergroundeconomist
      @theundergroundeconomist 2 месяца назад +1

      There’s Bitcoin.

    • @brentanbrown2773
      @brentanbrown2773 2 месяца назад +5

      How tf you lose 20% in a month while the S&P grew 4%… might wanna look for a new FA

  • @nedkelly2035
    @nedkelly2035 2 месяца назад +2

    I was looking at houses again recently, renting right now, in probably the last place in the U.S. with anything like reasonable rent. Anyway, a run down 2 bedroom, 1 bath 800 sq ft. fixer upper needing a roof, floor replacement because the existing one is rotting through is around 200K. But there was also something weird- at 400K you can buy a very nice house, that needs no work at all, twice the size on a 4 times larger lot, with nice appliances, better built, etc. The 400K place is WAY more value for money than the 200K place.

    • @Mrfinch9999
      @Mrfinch9999 2 месяца назад +1

      Because everyone wants the cheap homes. Which is raising the price for cheaper houses while more expensive houses have not gone up as much for there is less interest in them.
      So the gap between a high end home and a bottom tier home has stayed the same or shrunk.

  • @dimagass7801
    @dimagass7801 8 месяцев назад +199

    The part you forgot to add the part where they are building extremely low quality homes that are extremely overpriced and very low quality

    • @hardlife507
      @hardlife507 7 месяцев назад +6

      Then they buy down rates instead of discounting so homes don't bring down property value.

    • @thatclutchgaming1059
      @thatclutchgaming1059 7 месяцев назад +22

      Why would they worry about quality when people buy them anyway?

    • @ladyabaxa
      @ladyabaxa 7 месяцев назад +26

      @@thatclutchgaming1059 Exactly. Build them as cheaply as possible, sell them for as high a profit as possible, then walk away leaving the buyer to deal with the inevitable problems caused by how the place was built.
      Caveat Emptor

    • @arnvonsalzburg5033
      @arnvonsalzburg5033 7 месяцев назад +4

      Ain't that great? Houses that fell apart by the time you finally paid them off /s

    • @machupikachu1085
      @machupikachu1085 7 месяцев назад

      This. In Texas, some new homes don't even have wood walls in the interior. Just 1 sheet of drywall nailed to the studs. These homes come with a ONE year warranty. Let that sink in....

  • @quantum7046
    @quantum7046 8 месяцев назад +611

    I just assumed we'd reach a dystopian nightmare future where homes are traded between monopolistic corporations while everyone else huddles on roads homeless. Just me?

    • @shuki1
      @shuki1 8 месяцев назад +64

      I don't see why not. Large corporations just keep getting larger through buyouts and consolidation, so why won't apartment building landlords branch out into cottages and bungalows to add another revenue stream?

    • @MinimalObzerver
      @MinimalObzerver 8 месяцев назад +101

      We're almost there, except the side of the roads we would huddle on would be owned by the corporations and we would have to pay rent.

    • @SkellyHertz
      @SkellyHertz 8 месяцев назад +21

      Or where the corporations that own the homes and land start trading the residents around as well like serfs.

    • @RandomButBeautiful
      @RandomButBeautiful 8 месяцев назад

      @@SkellyHertz it's already well under way. 97% of youtube channels do not get monetized, which means that most people are working for free building big tech's platform for them. But the casino has to have a few winners. See the scam yet? ;)

    • @Knitschi656
      @Knitschi656 7 месяцев назад +33

      Don't you worry about that. You will be given a fair chance to work-of the rent for your spot on the side-walk on the land lords estate. He always needs people to build his new palace or work his plantages. And if you do not like that there is always the option to join the space force and help the emperor to colonialise mars.

  • @mattorama
    @mattorama 5 месяцев назад +2

    The problem isn't wages keeping up, the problem is supply keeping up, because it's simply not economical to build a ~$250,000 house in most parts of the country any more. A growing number of people are fighting over a dwindling number of "starter homes."

  • @Dlow-kc6jv
    @Dlow-kc6jv 5 месяцев назад +5

    Move to where you can afford one. I left Illinois for that exact reason.

    • @lepidoptera9337
      @lepidoptera9337 5 месяцев назад +3

      I had a colleague in the city who told me that he wanted to have bigger bedrooms and a large yard for his children. He quit and moved to a small community some 20 or 30 miles from Denver, I believe, where he got it all. Large lot, large house, good schools and a better job title at a smaller company. He didn't get any more money, but he was much happier with the new arrangements than with his cramped and expensive lifestyle in the city.

  • @daylenstone9871
    @daylenstone9871 7 месяцев назад +456

    Saving for a house down payment that grows at a rate faster than my paycheck is like trying to reach for the remote while running on a treadmill that steadily increases its incline.

    • @noona514
      @noona514 7 месяцев назад +18

      I don't know about others but I'm probably not going to buy a home in the United States. Maybe I'll live in another country after retirement.

    • @handleyobusiness
      @handleyobusiness 7 месяцев назад +5

      Stop spending your paycheck on stupid stuff or grow your skill set. I was born extremely poor and I refuse to live my adult years that way.

    • @shawnk7720
      @shawnk7720 7 месяцев назад +76

      @@handleyobusiness you can refuse all you want. reality is reality.

    • @Macheako
      @Macheako 7 месяцев назад +35

      @@handleyobusiness bro, “stupid stuff” means whatever the hell people want to these days 😂❤

    • @emilyfeagin2673
      @emilyfeagin2673 7 месяцев назад +4

      I’m not sure where you live
      But not all mortgages are 20% down.
      If you live in a rural area, USDA offers a no money down mortgage
      The buyer still has to have enough for closing costs and the property has to be in decent shape
      FHA mortgages are 3.5% down
      FHA 203k are mortgages for homes that need renovation
      VA like and are also no money down but you need to be a veteran
      PA has a program offered in conjunction with the PAFHA called K-fit that can get you into a home with very little money.
      Of course, anything less than 20% down you will be paying PMI
      Talk to a knowledgeable Realtor in your area. They can start you in the right path

  • @yiukins
    @yiukins 7 месяцев назад +238

    When everyone can’t buy a house, they buy apartments, then smaller and smaller apartments. I was born in Hong Kong, saw it with my eyes

    • @CyphDragon
      @CyphDragon 7 месяцев назад +39

      Too bad current zoning and other laws pretty much prohibit high-density apartment buildings like you would find in most of the rest of the world. Stupid laws like those requiring "3 parking spaces per studio apartment" make those projects literally impossible to build here...I wonder if that's by design...

    • @raymondcanessa7208
      @raymondcanessa7208 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@CyphDragon everyone has a car

    • @CyphDragon
      @CyphDragon 7 месяцев назад +14

      @@raymondcanessa7208 False

    • @SusCalvin
      @SusCalvin 7 месяцев назад +3

      @@raymondcanessa7208 But three cars,, including potential visitors?
      They've been building new houses on top of parking here. There was large plots of mostly empty car parks by the train station and campus.

    • @legendaryshaggy7728
      @legendaryshaggy7728 7 месяцев назад +9

      ​@@raymondcanessa7208coz u NEED a car. It's not by choice

  • @tragicpixieishere5107
    @tragicpixieishere5107 5 месяцев назад +1

    wow, I actually did learn something about money and the housing market, thanks for such a good explanation

  • @dplj4428
    @dplj4428 2 месяца назад +1

    Own home but equity in the form of future higher price for resale is not guaranteed.
    Plus insurance, plus maintenance, plus utilities, plus disaster recovery, plus intrusion security, plus buffer in case all of those increase or if there's a major medical or other event.

  • @MaximusR93
    @MaximusR93 7 месяцев назад +1575

    People have already said it, but developers want to price people out of home ownership so everyone has to rent. We need some type of intervention before another housing crisis gets to a breaking point.

    • @gamesguy
      @gamesguy 7 месяцев назад +1

      Developers want to sell houses, people like you are seriously ignorant.

    • @maximo6037
      @maximo6037 7 месяцев назад +68

      Developers want to turn a profit on development. The real problem is that it is not economical anymore to build "starter homes"

    • @Stryqwills
      @Stryqwills 7 месяцев назад +211

      ​@@maximo6037the "starter homes" mindset is the problem. The fact that homes aren't built to be lived in, but to be sold.

    • @maximo6037
      @maximo6037 7 месяцев назад +25

      @Stryqwills that's not my point. Because development costs are so high....builders need to build bigger homes (more square footage) to make it worthwhile. In 1950s they were building 1000 Sq ft 3 bedroom 1 bathroom homes. Now, those homes are hardly built. Result are larger homes and young people are priced out or forced to go condo route

    • @the_expidition427
      @the_expidition427 7 месяцев назад +71

      It is not starter homes. It is a house. Housing used to be considered a consumer good instead of investments. Want to fix this turn housing into a consumer good again

  • @mrmatejator
    @mrmatejator 7 месяцев назад +75

    If you scalp PS5s it's a crime. If you scalp homes it's a smart investment 🤓

  • @luke5100
    @luke5100 5 месяцев назад +2

    Bought a little 80s townhome in 2009 when prices were still dirt cheap thanks to the recession. Somehow had found a credit union still doing 100% loans when those were nearly unheard of. Sat on that til 2017 when we bought a larger single family home. Proceeds from the sale of the first place not only gave us our 20% down but we had a ton left over. Once you get over that first hurdle it gets so much easier

    • @WulfieZi
      @WulfieZi 2 месяца назад +3

      Dang, I should've bought a house in 2009 instead of wasting time going to elementary school. 😅

    • @luke5100
      @luke5100 2 месяца назад +1

      @@WulfieZi yeah geez man. What were you thinking? Lol jk

    • @rocky_mochiii
      @rocky_mochiii 2 месяца назад

      @@luke5100 I knew I should’ve just dropped out in the 1st grade and entered the work force instead wasting my time learning how to multiply what was I thinking 🤣

    • @luke5100
      @luke5100 2 месяца назад +1

      @@rocky_mochiii what are they teaching you kids?? Lol. Everyone knows that when you’re in first grade you should go take out a half million mortgage. Come on 😂

    • @rocky_mochiii
      @rocky_mochiii 2 месяца назад

      @@luke5100 Ik i really messed up worst part is I got a second chance in 2018 but decide to take my SAT and ACT 🤣🤣

  • @ShubhamSingh-dv6nb
    @ShubhamSingh-dv6nb 15 дней назад +1

    9:29 thank you Uncle Joe for those heart touching words

  • @loggrad9842
    @loggrad9842 7 месяцев назад +545

    The really big problem is the large rental companies buying houses well over asking. This artificially drives prices up to where only large rental companies can afford them anyway.

    • @Blundabus1337
      @Blundabus1337 7 месяцев назад +11

      And... who owns those companies?

    • @G32352443
      @G32352443 7 месяцев назад +23

      Free market is the way, am I right?

    • @Micro-Lander
      @Micro-Lander 7 месяцев назад +24

      ​@@Blundabus1337uhhhhh Israelis

    • @dw1894
      @dw1894 7 месяцев назад +3

      Y'all really don't understand how real estate and rental acquisition works. You can't just buy a property for way over asking and then hope it's profitable. An overpriced home cannot be profitable for a rental company.

    • @johndavey2340
      @johndavey2340 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@dw1894as someone who worked for those company's, it absolutely is.

  • @doubleutubefan5
    @doubleutubefan5 7 месяцев назад +1895

    Not only can I not afford a house, I can't afford to keep a positive bank balance. I'm paycheck to paycheck on a full time 50 hours per week job that pays $28 an hour. This is literally madness

    • @TheRiderofBlood
      @TheRiderofBlood 7 месяцев назад +106

      Stay strong brother

    • @doubleutubefan5
      @doubleutubefan5 7 месяцев назад +290

      @@who_k_nows I swear we are working to pay taxes 5 times over and then maybe just maybe have enough for food. The best years I ever had was 2015-2019. I had a minimum wage job as a Valet parking guy and I was able to save enough money to take a vacation to Europe for a month! LIKE HOW!? $7.25 an hour + some modest tips!? and I went to Germany/Norway!
      Now I struggle with rent $1300 a month with utilizes plus gas and food.
      I've been in an apartment this whole time, idk what else I'm supposed to do. being homeless seems cheaper rn

    • @claytonangotti1784
      @claytonangotti1784 7 месяцев назад +68

      Same here, it’s absolutely ridiculous. Im so close to giving up completely.

    • @GarrettMBey
      @GarrettMBey 6 месяцев назад

      Where do u stay? I'm making 52k and looking in the Chicagoland area.@@cowmath77

    • @user-te7wc7lh4r
      @user-te7wc7lh4r 6 месяцев назад +31

      Yeah I am getting hammered also. I have cut back on basically everything also. Vancouver is just too expensive.
      It's more costly than NY

  • @jonschreiners5006
    @jonschreiners5006 Месяц назад +1

    @omegajesus97 I feel that. I was born in 1992, but made the decision to enlist in the military for 6 years. After getting out and finally having a lifestyle where I actually can buy a home, they have become completely unaffordable.

  • @anuragtumane5227
    @anuragtumane5227 18 дней назад +2

    Unaffordability of housing can be down to lack of real estate awareness.

  • @xirvin92
    @xirvin92 7 месяцев назад +518

    I think their end game is for everything to be rental, that way they keep their high earnings

    • @flatmoontheory
      @flatmoontheory 7 месяцев назад

      Sure, and why not? You get all these low income hogs to vote for neoliberal capitalists, and this is what you get.

    • @sw3604
      @sw3604 7 месяцев назад +33

      Effectively yes.
      And anyone who wants to live a cozy life without having to worry about it all dissappearing because of illness or loss of employment is pretty much forced to invest in things that reliably increase in value at a greater rate than inflation, indefinitely.
      This means real estate. There are other investments, but none as reliable.
      You want to live a cozy life without existential economic threat? Own multiple properties and rent them out.
      This mentality alone will keep buying opportunities low, and the vast majority priced out of ownership.
      Regulations limiting the number of properties individuals and businesses can own, how many can be short term rentals, and serious investment into mass building homes for individual ownership is the only way to counter this.

    • @imnotusingmyrealname4566
      @imnotusingmyrealname4566 7 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@sw3604We simply need to make owning multiple homes illegal. It's okay if you bought a house and this secures your wealth. But we can't have investment firms and billionaires eating up the entire housing market.

    • @Freakazoid12345
      @Freakazoid12345 7 месяцев назад

      "...their end game..."
      Lol, who's, "they" and who's forcing people to have kids on an already overpopulated planet?
      Idiots.

    • @tatsuya2112
      @tatsuya2112 7 месяцев назад

      Which is foolish, such acts have led to multiple revolts in the past, the most obvious being the revolutions that took place in the 17th century.

  • @dave9309
    @dave9309 6 месяцев назад +925

    The endgame is a return to mass rental, in centuries past homes were built by factory owners for the use of their employees, ownership in the grand scheme is relatively recent. The intention is to return to that state, "starter homes" are being priced beyond any new home owner could possibly afford, but it's a pittance to entities like Blackstone, and as you pointed out, mortgage payments are far less than rent, and commercial landlords like Blackstone don't need to get a mortgage, they have the investment funds to purchase outright, so they also avoid crippling interest. We are being herded back into renting, because like everything else right now, existence is a subscription service.

    • @menoyuno8430
      @menoyuno8430 4 месяца назад

      Very well said. That’s why they keep pushing the idea that socialism and communism is a good thing in schools… it’s to make us “own nothing and be happy” like the world economic forum cucks said.

    • @RedShipsofSpainAgain
      @RedShipsofSpainAgain 3 месяца назад +114

      "Existence is a subscription service." Damn this is so true. Do I permission to use this phrase?

    • @__-pz4hc
      @__-pz4hc 3 месяца назад +4

      well said

    • @AlbionTarkhan
      @AlbionTarkhan 2 месяца назад +10

      I just brought my first house after working and saving and living cheap. And I’m just a carpenter living in Sydney Australia which is the second most expensive housing market on earth.
      We in western society have lost sight of the fact that life is competitive. It’s supposed to be. Anything worth achieving takes hard work sacrifices and intelligent planning.

    • @kawnah3519
      @kawnah3519 2 месяца назад

      @@RedShipsofSpainAgainyes - for a monthly subscription of $14.99

  • @alexmaclean1
    @alexmaclean1 2 месяца назад

    We bought in 2018. If we were 5 years behind in age/being ready and were looking a couple years later we would not be home owners. In 2018 we paid 238k. Last spring my realtor contacted me asking if we were interested in selling... We weren't but let him come for appraisal and he said he's sell today at $489k.
    Selling made no sense as anything else was up that much too, but it really shows how ridiculous this system is right now.
    In those 5 years the only capital improvement was 15k for 2 heatpumps and to replace the electrical panel as it had screw fuses😂
    Other than that we've done no significant upgrades and in 5 years went from 238 to 489. Insane.

  • @beataomelkova6251
    @beataomelkova6251 3 месяца назад +1

    In Czech Republic interest rates are high.Some people don't even reach to saving for downpayment.
    Houses and apartments in Prague are too expensive so some people can’t affrord it or even rent for some people is too high.They also sell houses that would need demolition for a lot of money.

  • @mattooi4322
    @mattooi4322 7 месяцев назад +446

    People dont get it. They dont WANT you to be able to afford a house. They want you to rely on on them and where you reside

    • @r3dp1ll
      @r3dp1ll 6 месяцев назад +9

      indeed but they will fail. Never worked long term in History.

    • @dancingbanana627
      @dancingbanana627 6 месяцев назад +11

      I don’t know who ‘they’ are, but you’re right.

    • @megagames4989
      @megagames4989 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@dancingbanana627landlords

    • @MISSMADISONMEDIA
      @MISSMADISONMEDIA 6 месяцев назад +13

      I think we get it but its so debilitatingly terrifying that we kinda block it out. I had the same thought immediately after reading the title. We know why. The system is working as intended. And here we are.

    • @superspooky4580
      @superspooky4580 6 месяцев назад +5

      @@dancingbanana627I’ll give you a hint. Tiny hats

  • @greenalien8503
    @greenalien8503 Месяц назад +1

    What the average is $330k?
    Here in California simple 1 story houses coust $800,000+ for the smaller ones in bad areas

  • @Nobodyspecial5150
    @Nobodyspecial5150 5 месяцев назад +1

    The end game is I keep saving my money like I have been the past 2 years and in another 3 years when the markets at Rock bottom then I buy😁 Every crash we have ever had has always taken at least 3 to o 5 years to hit bottom this will be no different the writings on the wall you just have to learn how to read it.

  • @Seanpfree
    @Seanpfree 7 месяцев назад +79

    We're seeing the end of first time home ownership and the death of the middle class. 35 in middle Tennessee we've been priced out for 2 years. No home means no marriage, no kids.

    • @rexx9496
      @rexx9496 7 месяцев назад +8

      Why do you have to buy a house to be married or have kids? Because that's what your culture tells you? For almost all of human history people have married and had kids without living in large single family detached homes.

    • @pikebasss
      @pikebasss 7 месяцев назад +29

      @@rexx9496people want to raise their kids in the same or better lifestyle they grew up in. If you grew up in a single family home with 2 cars in the garage how can you raise kids in a 1 bedroom apartment?

    • @rexx9496
      @rexx9496 7 месяцев назад +6

      @@pikebasss that's a want, not a need. Not having a single family detached house should not stop anyone from getting married.

    • @NeumaghAnon
      @NeumaghAnon 7 месяцев назад

      @@rexx9496go ahead and advocate for living standards to drop. It will make you look good.

    • @delanorrosey4730
      @delanorrosey4730 7 месяцев назад +2

      What's it like, living in Tennessee? Any form of DECENT people there? Is the communities at least have some semblance of sanity?
      I'm living in Idiocracy purgatory, surrounded by zombified idiots.

  • @lucassatie
    @lucassatie 7 месяцев назад +1722

    It's still crazy to me that home ownership is still viewed as an investment. Even in this video he mentions how important it is to "build equity". Considering that shelter is part of the base foundation in the Maslow's Hierarchy, it should never have become a retirement vehicle.

    • @NoxDeadly
      @NoxDeadly 6 месяцев назад +19

      Its cheaper than renting, all money used to pay the loan can be recouped during the sale, the higher the interest the less you’ll recoup so you want around 3%, thats why the market is essentially frozen cause its is around 8% rn

    • @ginglebret
      @ginglebret 6 месяцев назад +175

      ​@@NoxDeadlyYou totally missed the point.

    • @kirito3082
      @kirito3082 6 месяцев назад

      What is truly retarded is this culture we have of getting out of the parent's home before you have money to buy your own, I moved out because of family problem, but why the fuck is everyone else doing this shit? Do their parents want their children to be slaves to some landlord?

    • @NoxDeadly
      @NoxDeadly 6 месяцев назад +3

      @@ginglebret what was the point?

    • @ginglebret
      @ginglebret 6 месяцев назад +144

      ​@@NoxDeadly"Considering that shelter is part of the base foundation in the Maslow's Hierarchy, it should never have become a retirement vehicle."

  • @lifeofdolly5206
    @lifeofdolly5206 25 дней назад +1

    You have convinced me that the best skills to learn now are how to survive while living in your car. Being nomadic looks to be the future.

  • @Dragonaut111
    @Dragonaut111 5 часов назад

    I bought my house just under 4 years ago in lockdown, I was told it was a bad time and house prices were likely to crash soon. I had my house valued again recently and it's appreciated by £65,000 in under 4 years, that's £16,000 a year which is way more than my mortgage payment. Needless to say I would not be able to afford my own house today, which in under 4 years is truly shocking, I would welcome a house price crash if it meant young people and families could actually start their lives properly.

  • @whensomethingcriesagain
    @whensomethingcriesagain 7 месяцев назад +180

    Short answer is, I think, there isn't one. Industries nowadays generally don't think ahead in any long- or even moderate-term way. They just want to make as money now as they possibly can because the current system incentivises short-term profits to the detriment of quite literally everything else.

    • @nyalan8385
      @nyalan8385 2 месяца назад +6

      That’s what I’ve been saying. Companies do not make smart, rational decisions. All companies do is choose what makes them more money by the end of the current hour

  • @chrisraymond4804
    @chrisraymond4804 7 месяцев назад +244

    I remember when I was in middle school, my parents bought a beautiful home for 300k in California. I checked how much it sold for in 2021 and it sold for 1.4 million dollars…
    I bought a home in 2013 for 199k in idaho. It recently was on the market for 750k. This is ridiculous

    • @johanneslebrecht3097
      @johanneslebrecht3097 7 месяцев назад +57

      Way of the future baby!
      Children are being born into a world with no chance.

    • @TheKnellBelle
      @TheKnellBelle 7 месяцев назад +14

      The home my parents built for 150k in 1990 sold for over 700k in 2019. Pure insanity.

    • @Nerdnessable
      @Nerdnessable 7 месяцев назад +2

      yes inflation is a thing that exists. what's your point

    • @Musicdudeyoutub
      @Musicdudeyoutub 7 месяцев назад +61

      @@Nerdnessable That would be an inflation rate of 30% for ten years. That's is unsustainable. What's your point?

    • @maxxomega6599
      @maxxomega6599 7 месяцев назад +19

      @@Musicdudeyoutub - The point is on the top of his head, LOLOLOL.....

  • @richardtaylor6341
    @richardtaylor6341 Месяц назад +1

    I am a little too familiar with one REIT. Like any other industry, they basically have an industry standard. Thst mark was 450k per house would still make them a great profit. If you are in an area where the average house price is less than that, they are there, and prices will rise to that point.

  • @TechTusiast
    @TechTusiast 6 месяцев назад +1

    Austria has good laws, which have kept prices of houses reasonable even in a city as magnificent as Vienna.

    • @Barbershoppod
      @Barbershoppod 5 месяцев назад

      Because of all the taxpayers from the usa paying for Europe’s defense. We don’t have “free healthcare” here

  • @PeterParker-df6ce
    @PeterParker-df6ce 7 месяцев назад +49

    Someone said it best when they said "the cost of buying a house is going up, but the average income hasn't moved in years. That means these houses are debt, not assets."

    • @xhali6173
      @xhali6173 7 месяцев назад +4

      Any home you buy to live in is a liability. But in the long run is always better than renting.

    • @alohastateofmind3565
      @alohastateofmind3565 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@xhali6173 Always eh?

  • @leighfoulkes7297
    @leighfoulkes7297 7 месяцев назад +326

    My father's first house in the US was around $50,000 in the 1980's, he sold it for $150,000 in the 1990's and in around 2020, saw it was listed for $250,000. His job pay was around $25,000 dollars a year (he got promoted a few times) and that job today is at the same wage (maybe up to $30,000 a year if it still exists). It was a nice house but it isn't worth $250,000 and he was being underpaid for the amount work he was doing back then.

    • @carolynridlon3988
      @carolynridlon3988 7 месяцев назад +7

      I so agree! My parents last home they bought was $28k in 1971 (central valley of CA) - my brother sold the house in late 2021 for over $320k (definitely needed a lot of work !!) - the new owner is renting it out at $1,250 / month. I saw the pictures & I know many of the bad stuff is still there (plumbing, electrical, heating,....) they just repainted the interior & put new cheap flooring over the hardwood floors & 1940's linoleum (with asbestos subfloor!😮)
      I'm thankful that my hubby & I are content with nothing fancy & used part of his rolled over 401k $ to purchase a small house on 1/2 acre in full (totally a smaller area of the country & with lower housing prices for now )

    • @cobrafan1403
      @cobrafan1403 7 месяцев назад +14

      yeah it's crazy that people still make what my friend's parents made 20-30 years ago but stuff is 200% more expensive

    • @jordang8730
      @jordang8730 7 месяцев назад +5

      Underpaid is relative to what your money can buy. If homes were available at 2x his salary, then that means the cost of everything was much cheaper. If being well off in modern society is making 100k, then by comparison there should be many homes in the 200k price range today, but there aren't

    • @Simpleliving08
      @Simpleliving08 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@carolynridlon3988my man that's nothing. If you calculate it only give a return of 6.5%. Which is nothing to what S&P 500 has given in 40 years.

    • @Simpleliving08
      @Simpleliving08 7 месяцев назад

      @leigh it has only given 12 % cagr which is good if you live there rent free for 10 years.

  • @pauls4522
    @pauls4522 6 месяцев назад +4

    My wife and I got in at just the right time for our house... 3.1% interest right at the beginning of covid right before house prices went up. Literally a month after we put our offer on the house (march 2020), the estimated home price in my area on all realty websites went from 265000 to 340000 . Today that price is at 370000...!
    Our only regret now is that this 1650sq ft 2 story house was truly meant as only our starter home. Our goal was to eventually upgrade to 2k or 2250 sqft for our ideal living house, however with prices the way they are now, it just is not even worth it. I will repeat at least we have a home at a pretty stable 1150 a month mortgage including property taxes.
    Our plan now is to wait until the house bubble bursts. While we would not be selling out place at 370k, we hope we can sell it for roughly what we paid for it, so when we move to our more permanent residence we only have to throw a couple hundred k onto it instead of easily over 400-600k.

  • @shaun2072
    @shaun2072 2 месяца назад +2

    In recent centuries Dynasties and Nobility classes have limited spans and tend to end in heavy bloodshed when the masses have had enough.

  • @TheStanglehold
    @TheStanglehold 7 месяцев назад +351

    Tells us not to mistake Blackstone for BlackRock, 10 seconds later he mistakes BlackRock for Blackstone.

    • @hefv5662vsm
      @hefv5662vsm 7 месяцев назад +68

      The creator does these “mistakes” on purpose to increase comments and engagement.
      It’s annoying that he does it so protest by not engaging

    • @TirnanHealy
      @TirnanHealy 7 месяцев назад

      @@hefv5662vsmreminds me of when creators would try to cram a joke or something in a space of 0.1 seconds so you have to rewind the video and play it again, to increase engagement.

    • @arealponibean1223
      @arealponibean1223 7 месяцев назад +28

      ​@hefv5662vsm Actually if you care you'd want to spread awareness and demand a change with a unified people that agree with that statement.
      I personally am getting tired of channels that just comment on what's going on and seem to be profiting from it without really trying to change anything...
      Probably because RUclips hates actually advocating to work against corpos

    • @neanda
      @neanda 7 месяцев назад +3

      🤣 i noticed that

    • @Apocolypse007
      @Apocolypse007 7 месяцев назад

      Rick and Stone in the heart!

  • @1984Phalanx
    @1984Phalanx 7 месяцев назад +157

    An old house was bought and renovated very close to mine. When completed, it was listed at $680,000. It hasn't sold for over a year now, and the price has gradually come down to $510,000. No other house in our neighborhood has sold for over 400k in the past.

    • @emilyfeagin2673
      @emilyfeagin2673 7 месяцев назад +10

      Once it reaches equilibrium, it will sell

    • @aaz1992
      @aaz1992 7 месяцев назад +16

      Good

    • @Freakazoid12345
      @Freakazoid12345 7 месяцев назад +2

      So then, for some people, prices are actually coming down.
      Do you mind if I ask what state this is in?

    • @jasper5902
      @jasper5902 7 месяцев назад +2

      Is this in alaska?

    • @kevinc8955
      @kevinc8955 7 месяцев назад

      @@jasper5902It’s like this in most flyover states. A home just sold 2 doors down from one of my rentals for $270k in Pittsburgh in a neighborhood with a phenomenal school system. It was a nice place too, well kept. The value of my rental hasn’t really moved more than $10-20k in 10 years.
      If you live on the coast though like I currently do, prices just go up. Constantly.
      If you’re starting a family, move inland. Coast is for the upper class, Airbnbs, and retirees.

  • @tntori5079
    @tntori5079 5 месяцев назад

    Lol, that map segment showcased the Flathead Valley. Just. Feel that knife dig in a little deeper.

  • @makemesmellbad3844
    @makemesmellbad3844 Месяц назад +7

    "You don't save money to buy a house, you save money for a down payment."
    Yes, this is correct. The problem is that if houses get more expensive, so will down payments. You can say that it'll only be 1/5 as bad, but it's still going up. I made a 30% down payment on my home and am still barely making ends meet due to insurance prices going up every year.
    The fact that the governments allow mortgage and insurance companies to make these increases (yes, it is the government passing these bills - all my insurance policies are through government companies due to the lowest possible pricing) is absolutely appalling. Those who are well off don't care to let anyone else own property. You take property from the people, and you take one of their inalienable rights.

  • @matthewdenckla6567
    @matthewdenckla6567 17 дней назад

    Thank you for this video!

  • @gabrieljordan8015
    @gabrieljordan8015 7 месяцев назад +209

    I'm 40 now and when I was 20 years old I bought a run down house which I still live in to this day and it's probably one of the few wise decisions I made back then.

    • @tr3m0r36
      @tr3m0r36 7 месяцев назад +1

      Did you fix it up...?

    • @Chuked
      @Chuked 7 месяцев назад +11

      ​@@tr3m0r36he likely did and the house is probably worth over tenfold to what he payed

    • @TheBLACKboard65
      @TheBLACKboard65 7 месяцев назад

      I sure wish I had made that wise decision.

    • @aztec1040
      @aztec1040 7 месяцев назад

      What a miserable 20 years though

    • @partyrockificatiable
      @partyrockificatiable 7 месяцев назад

      Not a good thing to live in a dump if you respect yourself

  • @Longhunter393
    @Longhunter393 7 месяцев назад +145

    I’m fortunate enough to buy a house now. But I’ve realized that I’m buying almost exactly what my in-laws bought in the early 90’s but for $300k more. Same yard, same square footage, no pool, nothing fancy. If I was determined to spend what my in-laws spent on a home, it would have to be much, much smaller, in worse condition and in a worse location.
    Proof that our standard of living is deteriorating right before our eyes.

    • @DiscutirconPablo
      @DiscutirconPablo 7 месяцев назад

      John Desmond Heppolette has been a significant step in my financial life journey, providing valuable knowledge, actionable advice, and motivational content. His supportive community has boosted my confidence, work engagement and has inspired me to strive for excellence. His assistance is a secret weapon for serious financial growth, and his online presence is a must-see if you are looking to improve their financial situation. Look up his name and see his online presence..

    • @meursaultroquentin
      @meursaultroquentin 7 месяцев назад

      If that‘s adjusted for Inflation, Jesus Christ.

    • @burningsinner1132
      @burningsinner1132 7 месяцев назад +7

      @@meursaultroquentin No, not really. Inflation explosion happened only recently, houses rose in prices faster than the hedge funds.

    • @thecozyintrovert
      @thecozyintrovert 7 месяцев назад +15

      @@meursaultroquentinWe bought our house for 140,000 10 years ago, now houses around us are going for 300k- that’s not normal inflation. Wages have not matched and it’s going up exponentially. I feel sorry for gen z because they’ll never own a house at this rate.

    • @jamesgravil9162
      @jamesgravil9162 7 месяцев назад +9

      "Proof that our standard of living is deteriorating right before our eyes."
      The best proof of that is the show _The Simpsons._ In the 90s/early 2000s, Homer Simpson was a lower-middle-class loser with a three-bedroom detached house who owned two cars and was able to support a wife and three kids on a single income. _And_ took his family on occasional holidays to Europe and drank at Moe's Tavern every night. He even went into space one time. Today, his lifestyle is unattainable for most people, even intelligent, educated, hard-working people like Frank Grimes.
      We're at the point where Homer Simpson is wildly successful. Let that sink in.

  • @MiiMiiInATree
    @MiiMiiInATree 2 месяца назад +1

    I kind of feel like we've been playing this game for so long the people with all the money forget the people without money can still flip the entire card table over and say they quit.

  • @TheBreadPirate
    @TheBreadPirate 6 месяцев назад +1

    Nice. A new excuse to live with my parents!