Dabills wrote:
so basically what you are saying is people will have to make choices based on extreme amounts of debt and a new era. sorry, i think that is just ridiculous. I actually dont even think what you just outlined is possbile, lol. That being said i wouldnt think dumpy bungalows in oakville could be sold to 30 year olds for 700K
Well, I hope you are right.. and that a 700k dumpy bungalow in Toronto drops down to 200k and then I will prosper, I can move in tomorrow and throw away my massive commute!!! And unless I take a similar pay cut around 50% of my pay, it will be nothing to pay down.
Unfortunately, I think if that dumpy 700k bungalow in Toronto drops to 200k, I won't be the only one trying to snatch it up! I think there will probably be 100 people (if not 1,000) just like me, similar incomes, living on the outskirts commuting long distances who will rush to put an offer on the house.
What do you think will happen then? It will go to the first person for 200k? Nope, price war! Up it goes! Back up to 700k? Hmmm maybe not... Back up to 600k? for sure.
It's still supply and demand and there are still a lot of people who want to live closer to the city and right now, the only thing keeping the balance is the "current price". If prices were lower, more people would be buying, more houses sold. If prices were higher, less people would be buying, less houses sold.
Everything is in check right now market wise (supply/demand). Maybe not debt wise, but market wise.
Interest rate rises will pull some demand out (especially on the higher prices houses) and that will put downward pressure on prices. We've seen this rate sticking and I personally don't think we will see it move any more than .25 per quarter over the next 4-5 years hitting a probably 4.5 or 4.75 in the end. By the slow steady increase many 5 year terms will come up and relock in, many will move from variable to fixed, some will move from fixed to variable and some will split. In the end, it won't cause the crash we saw in the states.
Without a 40/35 year term, a 500k house will cost a lot more to carry per month at 6-7% vs. 4%. That "different" in payment will likely be the difference in house prices you will see. There will be some buyers who no longer qualify at the new rate (although the government is already forcing buyers to qualify at the posted rate which is in the 5.5% range now anyways) which will take some demand out, but at the same time, the softer prices (not declining prices) will allow some people to upsize their houses.
And yes, believe it or not the 30 year olds are the ones buying the expensive houses, heck, they have 35 working years left to pay it off!
