f wrote:
how would you loose your life savings, and your job, if prices went down 10 or 15%?? funny as prices just went up, for the glass is half full kind of people there is ample literature in the paper this week of stable housing and balanced market in the gta.
I was referencing more the U.S. situation in terms of losing everything.
You can pretend that didn't happen but I have a relative in the states who has been affected.
Imagine buying a house and finding out two months later it's worth 100K less and plummeting even more.
It's not fun for them.
If you're a half full kind of person then all those empty houses in the states just have owners who went on long vacations.
Those bank foreclosure/for sale signs are just lawn ornaments.
Even for people here who have put 10% down on a 400K house would not a 10% to 15% loss in a year be significant?
First time home buyers that use up to 25K in RRSP for downpayment because they didn't have enough cash...is that a significant amount to lose?
In terms of refinancing a mortgage, how does one gain back that value if the bank will only finance for less than what is actually owed on the house?
These are not hypothetical situations. It's happened in the states and it can happen here.
You're fortunate if you can endure a 50K to 100K loss.
It's not doom and gloom if people are prepared.
Just for you 'f'...there's nothing wrong with Canadian real estate.
I hear Vancouver has a bunch of condos for sale. Snatch them up while you can since they'll only go up in price.