Is Real Estate Actually a Good Investment on Average?
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@Dashrender said in Is Real Estate Actually a Good Investment on Average?:
Scott mentioned privately to me that NYC has tons of empty or near empty building where they can have apts - so there is no need to build houses/apt buildings.
Is that a national norm?
No, NYC is special in that it is a shrinking market. Most of the US is growing and that is why there is a housing construction boom of epic proportions. Most of the country is building like crazy which, when you can't build fast enough, contributes to a housing bubble. Once the construction catches us, you have a crash.
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@Dashrender said in Is Real Estate Actually a Good Investment on Average?:
You build a house/apt building and it has these huge costs - we've already talked about how frequently rent is often not high enough to cover the mortgage on place... so how did rentals become a thing?
Well, normally one of two ways (but others exist.)
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A rental company builds properties specifically designed to be rentals. This have different construction costs and financing to make renting them make more sense. They are designed to be rented and designed to work in volume.
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Someone buys a house or property that was never intended to be rented and they end up in a situation where they don't need to use it so they rent or sell. These are not designed to be rented, not built with the intention of being rented.
As you can imagine, purpose built are also purpose located.
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@Dashrender said in Is Real Estate Actually a Good Investment on Average?:
is that where most rentals have come from?
Most rentals existed long before 2008. The rental market has always been very large.
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@scottalanmiller said in Is Real Estate Actually a Good Investment on Average?:
@Dashrender said in Is Real Estate Actually a Good Investment on Average?:
is that where most rentals have come from?
Most rentals existed long before 2008. The rental market has always been very large.
Oh, I'm sure it's been longer than 2008 - but when? When did mass rentals enter the scene?
I guess they really started in the beginning when companies built factory based towns. The company built the houses for their employees so they would have some place to live. etc. -
@Dashrender said in Is Real Estate Actually a Good Investment on Average?:
Oh, I'm sure it's been longer than 2008 - but when? When did mass rentals enter the scene?
I'm sure before the advent of "America". The idea of rentals predates modern history. Renting places is standard in literature, for example, hundreds of years before there was an America. I'm sure they had rentals in ancient Egypt, for example. Rentals aren't a new construct, it's just how shelter is purchased along with outright purchase, once you pass the caveman "everyone builds their own shelter" phase of civilization.
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@Dashrender said in Is Real Estate Actually a Good Investment on Average?:
I guess they really started in the beginning when companies built factory based towns. The company built the houses for their employees so they would have some place to live. etc.
What? That makes no sense as rentals already existed when concepts like factories and companies were new things.
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A good example of why I like to rent... our massive earthquake last night. As a renter, my level of worry is much smaller when something like that happens. All those cracks and plumbing breaks and whatever aren't my issue.
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@Dashrender said in Is Real Estate Actually a Good Investment on Average?:
@scottalanmiller said in Is Real Estate Actually a Good Investment on Average?:
@Dashrender said in Is Real Estate Actually a Good Investment on Average?:
is that where most rentals have come from?
Most rentals existed long before 2008. The rental market has always been very large.
Oh, I'm sure it's been longer than 2008 - but when? When did mass rentals enter the scene?
I guess they really started in the beginning when companies built factory based towns. The company built the houses for their employees so they would have some place to live. etc.A really long time ago (in the US). Most people used to be renters but after WW2 the majority have been homeowners.
Right now (2022) it's sits at around 65%.
Data is from U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.
https://www.huduser.gov/portal/Publications/pdf/HUD-7775.pdf -
@Pete-S good info. I kind of forgot that, but I've seen that before. Home ownership for the bulk of society is a relatively recent thing. For a long time, something like 1% of England owned all the homes and everyone else has to rent.
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@Pete-S said in Is Real Estate Actually a Good Investment on Average?:
@Dashrender said in Is Real Estate Actually a Good Investment on Average?:
@scottalanmiller said in Is Real Estate Actually a Good Investment on Average?:
@Dashrender said in Is Real Estate Actually a Good Investment on Average?:
is that where most rentals have come from?
Most rentals existed long before 2008. The rental market has always been very large.
Oh, I'm sure it's been longer than 2008 - but when? When did mass rentals enter the scene?
I guess they really started in the beginning when companies built factory based towns. The company built the houses for their employees so they would have some place to live. etc.A really long time ago (in the US). Most people used to be renters but after WW2 the majority have been homeowners.
Right now (2022) it's sits at around 65%.
Data is from U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.
https://www.huduser.gov/portal/Publications/pdf/HUD-7775.pdflol - it was almost the majority for the first half of the chart... the increase is way under 50% increase after the war.
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@Dashrender said in Is Real Estate Actually a Good Investment on Average?:
@Pete-S said in Is Real Estate Actually a Good Investment on Average?:
@Dashrender said in Is Real Estate Actually a Good Investment on Average?:
@scottalanmiller said in Is Real Estate Actually a Good Investment on Average?:
@Dashrender said in Is Real Estate Actually a Good Investment on Average?:
is that where most rentals have come from?
Most rentals existed long before 2008. The rental market has always been very large.
Oh, I'm sure it's been longer than 2008 - but when? When did mass rentals enter the scene?
I guess they really started in the beginning when companies built factory based towns. The company built the houses for their employees so they would have some place to live. etc.A really long time ago (in the US). Most people used to be renters but after WW2 the majority have been homeowners.
Right now (2022) it's sits at around 65%.
Data is from U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.
https://www.huduser.gov/portal/Publications/pdf/HUD-7775.pdflol - it was almost the majority for the first half of the chart... the increase is way under 50% increase after the war.
By "almost the majority" you mean it was the clear minority? Almost the majority is a very, very weird way to stay that renting was the absolute dominant option up until 1950.
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For example, if you have a group of ten options and first and second place are way ahead of all the others, you might say that second place was nearly the leader.
But when you have a field of two, and second place is the clear loser in last place, it's weird to say.
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@scottalanmiller said in Is Real Estate Actually a Good Investment on Average?:
@Dashrender said in Is Real Estate Actually a Good Investment on Average?:
@Pete-S said in Is Real Estate Actually a Good Investment on Average?:
@Dashrender said in Is Real Estate Actually a Good Investment on Average?:
@scottalanmiller said in Is Real Estate Actually a Good Investment on Average?:
@Dashrender said in Is Real Estate Actually a Good Investment on Average?:
is that where most rentals have come from?
Most rentals existed long before 2008. The rental market has always been very large.
Oh, I'm sure it's been longer than 2008 - but when? When did mass rentals enter the scene?
I guess they really started in the beginning when companies built factory based towns. The company built the houses for their employees so they would have some place to live. etc.A really long time ago (in the US). Most people used to be renters but after WW2 the majority have been homeowners.
Right now (2022) it's sits at around 65%.
Data is from U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.
https://www.huduser.gov/portal/Publications/pdf/HUD-7775.pdflol - it was almost the majority for the first half of the chart... the increase is way under 50% increase after the war.
By "almost the majority" you mean it was the clear minority? Almost the majority is a very, very weird way to stay that renting was the absolute dominant option up until 1950.
I do not agree with you, Scott.
I think that "almost the majority" is very legit term 45%-48% and this subject (housing). These are not presidential elections so that you have "loser" with 47,8%.It is not weird to say that 47,8% is "almost the majority" especially when you take into account that many people are forced to be renters.
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@Pete-S
I think we should understand few things, for USA home ownership rates from 1890.-1940.:- Number of owned units (not rented) rose from 6,1 million in 1890. to 15,2 million in 1940. - thats 2,5x more units owned
- Much smaller percent of people have had an oportunity to choose between buying and renting. Mortgage loans were not broadly available to working class before WW2. Retail sector in commercial banking developed with IT developement and cheaper data and financial processing in banks. So
- Many people (now and before) buy homes later then they would like to, because they want to save more money for buying, or they wait for better or safer jobs etc.
I want to say that statistical percentage of ownerhip does not tells us what people prefer, they just show us actual situation.
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@scottalanmiller said in Is Real Estate Actually a Good Investment on Average?:
@Pete-S good info. I kind of forgot that, but I've seen that before. Home ownership for the bulk of society is a relatively recent thing. For a long time, something like 1% of England owned all the homes and everyone else has to rent.
England was feudal country and global imperial country with rich aristocracy. So it is common that small percent of aristocracy owned almost all of the real estate.
It was not choice for other 99% of populationUSA has completely different history of housing.
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@Mario-Jakovina said in Is Real Estate Actually a Good Investment on Average?:
I want to say that statistical percentage of ownerhip does not tells us what people prefer, they just show us actual situation.
I think he posted that in response to @Dashrender asking where rentals had come from as if they were a recent invention and that they had not existed in any number before the last few decades. He was just showing that they've been common historically and are not some new thing that just popped up recently.
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@Mario-Jakovina said in Is Real Estate Actually a Good Investment on Average?:
USA has completely different history of housing.
Not all that different actually. In super rural areas the poor had chances at housing. In cities and the east coast colonial areas, the landed aristocracy was still a thing.
But the POINT was that rentals were more than 50 years old.
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@Mario-Jakovina said in Is Real Estate Actually a Good Investment on Average?:
It is not weird to say that 47,8% is "almost the majority" especially when you take into account that many people are forced to be renters.
It's a misleading term to evoke a false emotion plain and simple. It's not "almost a majority", it's not even half. Saying "last place is almost first place" is in any situation weird and misleading.
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@Dashrender said in Is Real Estate Actually a Good Investment on Average?:
How do rentals come into being?
Renting is normal for every assets.
If someone has extra appartment, and I want to use one, we can either sell/buy or rent.Renting is not universaly better or worse than owning. It depends on your personal situation (plans, desires, financial abilities...)
Same for money. If you need money, you go to bank, and they rent you a money (interest is renting income for money)
Some people who have extra money invest in real estates for renting (that is main part of this topic)
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@Mario-Jakovina said in Is Real Estate Actually a Good Investment on Average?:
These are not presidential elections so that you have "loser" with 47,8%.
I have no idea what that means. The presidential elections are not a yes or no choice where one wins and one doesn't. And when discussing if something exists historically being the majority is a huge deal when the supposition is that it wasn't invented yet.
Here in the real world when looking at two options, the "loser" or "last place" is anything with less than 50.anything. Black and white. There's no grey area there. Pretending that the minority choice is "almost" the majority choice is crazy. The more you try to make the loser sound good, the better the winner sounds because now we can say "sure, buying was nearly the majority, but renting was ahead by a landslide"
What?