Quote from EMRGLOBAL:
"... Good buying opportunity right now!
Quote from Scataphagos:
Maybe, maybe not.
Bob Hoye of Institutional Advisers relates the story of how in 1930 some high profile property in New York was "a good buying opportunity"... only to default. New owners bought it cheaper and they too defaulted. As did a couple more. Property price didn't turn positive for good until early 1950s.
Japanese RE market after their credit bubble pop... some lost 90% of their value.
I suspect those "getting a bargain" today may wish they'd waited...
Quote from Scataphagos:
Maybe, maybe not.
Bob Hoye of Institutional Advisers relates the story of how in 1930 some high profile property in New York was "a good buying opportunity"... only to default. New owners bought it cheaper and they too defaulted. As did a couple more. Property price didn't turn positive for good until early 1950s.
Japanese RE market after their credit bubble pop... some lost 90% of their value.
I suspect those "getting a bargain" today may wish they'd waited...
Quote from Scataphagos:
Maybe, maybe not.
Bob Hoye of Institutional Advisers relates the story of how in 1930 some high profile property in New York was "a good buying opportunity"... only to default. New owners bought it cheaper and they too defaulted. As did a couple more. Property price didn't turn positive for good until early 1950s.
Japanese RE market after their credit bubble pop... some lost 90% of their value.
I suspect those "getting a bargain" today may wish they'd waited...
Quote from peilthetraveler:
This is interesting actually because interest rates are so low that your payments are not very high. But if you wait longer, when interest rates rise, property would go down in value and you get to buy for cheaper, but finance at a cost that would be the same monthly payment as a higher price with low interest.
Quote from peilthetraveler:
This is interesting actually because interest rates are so low that your payments are not very high. But if you wait longer, when interest rates rise, property would go down in value and you get to buy for cheaper, but finance at a cost that would be the same monthly payment as a higher price with low interest. So you look at other factors that might or might not come into play. Inflation for one. If inflation gets high, then the property value does not go down and you are better off buying now as interest rates will rise and with inflation so you see a flat commerical real estate price for years to come, even though the value of the dollar starts dropping. (the good news is that as that happens you get to charge higher rents and cash flow more) So it seems buying now is a good idea as long as you dont put all your eggs in one basket and dont leverage to the hilt in 1 place.