House Shopping.......
#21
Well if it's only going up then in 5 years a house at 250 000$ with an appreciation of 17.5% will cost.... 559 924$
So in 5 years we will either all living in Apartments and broke or something will give.
My wage hasn't gone up 17.5 per year.
It'll burst soon. Just wait.
BTW at 17.5% per year in 10 years it'll be 1 254 061$.
I doubt people will either earn that much more or be able to afford that much.
I have not bought a house yet so I'll keep saving tons of RRSP's and put that towards my first house once things get undumb.
X
So in 5 years we will either all living in Apartments and broke or something will give.
My wage hasn't gone up 17.5 per year.
It'll burst soon. Just wait.
BTW at 17.5% per year in 10 years it'll be 1 254 061$.
I doubt people will either earn that much more or be able to afford that much.
I have not bought a house yet so I'll keep saving tons of RRSP's and put that towards my first house once things get undumb.
X
#22
Originally posted by Xiph0id:
Well if it's only going up then in 5 years a house at 250 000$ with an appreciation of 17.5% will cost.... 559 924$
So in 5 years we will either all living in Apartments and broke or something will give.
My wage hasn't gone up 17.5 per year.
It'll burst soon. Just wait.
BTW at 17.5% per year in 10 years it'll be 1 254 061$.
I doubt people will either earn that much more or be able to afford that much.
I have not bought a house yet so I'll keep saving tons of RRSP's and put that towards my first house once things get undumb.
X
Well if it's only going up then in 5 years a house at 250 000$ with an appreciation of 17.5% will cost.... 559 924$
So in 5 years we will either all living in Apartments and broke or something will give.
My wage hasn't gone up 17.5 per year.
It'll burst soon. Just wait.
BTW at 17.5% per year in 10 years it'll be 1 254 061$.
I doubt people will either earn that much more or be able to afford that much.
I have not bought a house yet so I'll keep saving tons of RRSP's and put that towards my first house once things get undumb.
X
#23
Originally posted by Back-2-Bassiks:
But Id like to build new and build the house I like and I want not move into someone elses house they built and then spend the next 5 - 10 years changing the things I dont like about it. If I build new I can get what I want right from day 1 and never worry about being unhappy with it or what to change it.
But Id like to build new and build the house I like and I want not move into someone elses house they built and then spend the next 5 - 10 years changing the things I dont like about it. If I build new I can get what I want right from day 1 and never worry about being unhappy with it or what to change it.
Thats what I'm doing. My house is beyond repair.. but the lot and garage are amazing.. so the house will be wrecked when I can afford a new house in the lot. The cool thing about these older lots is that there is PLENTY of space available.. since real estate was cheap many years ago. So its not un-common to see these lots the size of a gymnasium with these older houses from the pre 1960's.
#24
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Originally posted by MegaHurtz:
I was talking to a buddy last night, and he says really how long can the market stay like this, eventually people just won't be able to afford houses at the rate things are going, and the market will just have to give.
Sux2bu, you think that house is 50 years old? Doesn't seem that old by looking at it. Not that I'd buy it, but it's like 2 blocks away from where I work and a block away from my school, so great location, and call me crazy but I really like Abby [img]tongue.gif[/img]
I was talking to a buddy last night, and he says really how long can the market stay like this, eventually people just won't be able to afford houses at the rate things are going, and the market will just have to give.
Sux2bu, you think that house is 50 years old? Doesn't seem that old by looking at it. Not that I'd buy it, but it's like 2 blocks away from where I work and a block away from my school, so great location, and call me crazy but I really like Abby [img]tongue.gif[/img]
Judging on the exterior of the house you linked (classic stucco and the 3 window front door) I would put it at 30-40 years old. Based on the lot, the new roof, etc. it's not a bad deal in that area.
My house assessment just came in at $323,000 and I paid $212,000 8 years ago. Reality though is that you can't get a house in my neighborhood for under $350k so I'm all smiles [img]smile.gif[/img]
As for "rural" Alberta, ie Ft.Mac and GrandePrarie, no WAY I would look at buying in that inflated market..
#25
The problem where I live is all these dam albertans ( [img]tongue.gif[/img] )have decided that Vernon is the perfect spot for there summer homes. We have townhouses down the road from me going for 600,000+ and are seasonal use only. Not only are you paying $600,000 for a townhouse, but you can only live in it 6mnths of the year!!!!
Then you have the new deveoplment across the lake from me, 2300 new homes a gold course a winery etc...someone from New York just spent $600,000+ on a LOT. And its not even lakefront!
People are buying million doller lakefront homes and tearing down the house to build new ones.
All this in a 45,000 pop. town 5hrs from vancouver.
Wacko.
Then you have the new deveoplment across the lake from me, 2300 new homes a gold course a winery etc...someone from New York just spent $600,000+ on a LOT. And its not even lakefront!
People are buying million doller lakefront homes and tearing down the house to build new ones.
All this in a 45,000 pop. town 5hrs from vancouver.
Wacko.
#26
Paul.. Grande Prarie isn't too expensive... $190k will get you a fairly nice starter home..
Fort McMoney on the other hand... whewf... wow thats nuts. Paying $300k ++++ for a trailer.. WOW.
I honestly dont understand how there is a "BUBBLE" in real estate... its not related to a fickle thing like the stock market.
PEOPLE NEED HOUSES. And with a constantly growing population... there are always going to be people to buy them. Its not like the population is going to take a huge hit and there will be an influx of houses on the market. how could that happen?
I dont get what people say when they figure that houses will go down in price. its all about supply and demand. I can only envision a continually steady incline of house prices. It wont be as steep as it now is.. in places like Calgary, Fort Mac and so on given about 5+ years... when the oil production slows down. but even then.. how long have real estate prices been astronomical in Toronto and Vancouver?
Same thing with New York and so on..
Fort McMoney on the other hand... whewf... wow thats nuts. Paying $300k ++++ for a trailer.. WOW.
I honestly dont understand how there is a "BUBBLE" in real estate... its not related to a fickle thing like the stock market.
PEOPLE NEED HOUSES. And with a constantly growing population... there are always going to be people to buy them. Its not like the population is going to take a huge hit and there will be an influx of houses on the market. how could that happen?
I dont get what people say when they figure that houses will go down in price. its all about supply and demand. I can only envision a continually steady incline of house prices. It wont be as steep as it now is.. in places like Calgary, Fort Mac and so on given about 5+ years... when the oil production slows down. but even then.. how long have real estate prices been astronomical in Toronto and Vancouver?
Same thing with New York and so on..
#27
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^ Ah but housing in more rural areas of Alberta like FtMac, Lloydminster, Grande Prarie, etc IS overinflated because of the current oil upswing. I can remember the last two times oil took a plunge - houses up for cheap, new trucks with skidoos in the back for sale on every corner.. It can be devastating to people that live at the limit of their income and naturally most people do.
Of course, nobody predicts oil coming down but then they didn't the last two times either.
Remember - nobody actually WANTS to live in Northern Alberta, they're just there for the $$$
Larger cities of course have more infrastructure and a diverse income base but they get affected too, just not as drastically.
Of course, nobody predicts oil coming down but then they didn't the last two times either.
Remember - nobody actually WANTS to live in Northern Alberta, they're just there for the $$$
Larger cities of course have more infrastructure and a diverse income base but they get affected too, just not as drastically.
#28
Yep, those communities are largely 1-resource funded and when that crashes.....look out. I remember the one I think in 1987 and then one in the mid-early 90s?
Out here there only seemed to be one price drop after a big upswing and that was about 1980. Interest rates went to about 22% too..... I think that was nation-wide though.
Out here there only seemed to be one price drop after a big upswing and that was about 1980. Interest rates went to about 22% too..... I think that was nation-wide though.
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