I do have my core stock holdings/ my favs... It`s just better for me psychologically to be diversified as I prefer the hedge & to be long a degree of hard assets ... Iv`e always had excellent timing in RE, knock wood, as I have a set criteria when I purchase.
I was one of those that saw this whole thing RE debacle unfold before it did in `06... All the signs were there... this is when most sheeple couldn`t even imagine a foreclosure on every corner across the nation... I have builder friends that still thank me to this day for my April `07 Easter speech on what was going to unfold with option arms resetting, over levered lenders, etc. They still tell me I save their lives... I`m not one to pump my own tires & boast but this is one I will give myself as I was the only one that I knew that went out on a limb & was " talking crazy" at the time.
Wow!!!Its the Fed. Demand will surge. The people that aren't coming back to work because of Covid, they aren't building homes anyway. Multi-family is on fire.... I could do the B1 and find a few posts I wrote about this over the last 6 months... both pre and post Covid.
Here's the other thing. As it stands right now.... who is going to put their aging parent into an old folks home? I mean for real.
"Sorry mom, you have to move out of your house of 40 years and move into the Sunrise@Coral Gables Phase II assisted living."
"!@#$#$%$%"
"!!!!... No I'm not trying to kill you!".
So a lot of these houses are not going to enter the market.
There is no option. Build more. Both single and multi-family.
Like I always say.... buy the right land. In a tax-free state.
Anyone see those new home #'s?

US: New Home Sales increase by 16.6% in May vs. 3.5% expected
NEWS | 3 minutes ago | By Eren Sengezer
- New Home Sales in the US rebounded sharply in May.
- US Dollar Index stays deep in red near mid-96s after the data.
New Home Sales in the US rose by 16.6% in May to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 676,000, the data published jointly by the US Census Bureau and the Department of Housing and Urban Development showed on Tuesday.
This figure followed April's decline of 5.2% and beat the market expectation for an increase of 3.5% by a wide margin.
"The median sales price of new houses sold in May 2020 was $317,900," the press release read. "The average sales price was $368,800."