Showing posts with label housing affordability. Show all posts
Showing posts with label housing affordability. Show all posts

Jun 14, 2023

Conor Dougherty on transferring low-rate mortgages to new home buyers

Because so little is for sale, home prices have remained stable, and even resumed their ascent, despite a huge increase in borrowing costs.  The refrain among real estate agents and economists is that anyone who secured a mortgage rate of 3 percent or lower owns a valuable asset that they are loath to give up. 

But every asset has a price.  And now an emerging cadre of investors and real estate agents are trying to, in effect, sell mortgage rates from several years ago by transferring them to new buyers. 

Redfin, the real estate brokerage, has seen a steep rise in listings like Mr. Kilboy’s that have comments like “beautiful home with assumable loan at 3.25 percent.”  Facebook groups have popped up to find buyers for them, while new companies are pitching services to speed up the transfer. 

“Homeowners with mortgages that are capable of being assumed have something valuable that many home buyers want and would be willing to pay for,” said Daryl Fairweather, chief economist at Redfin.  “For people who bought when home prices were near the peak but mortgage rates were still low, it may be an attractive way to get out of a remorseful purchase.”


~ Conor Dougherty, "The Hot New Thing Is a Loan From 2021," The New York Times, June 11, 2023



Feb 23, 2009

Barney Frank on the GSEs: "We see entities that are fundamentally sound financially" (2003)

The more people, in my judgment, exaggerate an issue of safety and soundness, the more people conjure up the possibility of serious financial losses to the Treasury - which I do not see - I think we see entities that are fundamentally sound financially and withstand some of the disaster scenarios. And even if there were a problem the federal government doesn't bail them out, but the more pressure there is there, then the less I think we see in terms of affordable housing.

~ Representative Barney Frank (D-MA), September 10, 2003

Jan 20, 2009

Thomas Sowell on government attempts to create "affordable housing"

The ultimate irony is that increasing government intervention in the housing market over the years has generally made housing less affordable than before, by any standard.

A hundred years ago, Americans spent a smaller percentage of their incomes on housing than they do today. In 1901, housing costs took 23 percent of the average American's income. By 2003, it took 33 percent of a far larger income.

In particular places where government regulations and restrictions have been especially severe, such as coastal California, rents or monthly mortgage payments have averaged as high as 50 percent of the average person's income.

~ Thomas Sowell, "Lured to Disaster," Townhall.com, January 20, 2009