
The Millennials Are Moving!
Kenneth Harney recently reported in the LA Times that the millennials that appeared to hold out on purchasing real estate...
Kenneth Harney recently reported in the LA Times that the millennials that appeared to hold out on purchasing real estate...
The issue is how accurate is Zillow. Not very. The average Zestimates have an error rate of 8% nationally says Spencer Rascoff Zillow’s CEO. What Rascoff did not share is that the localized error rate sometimes far exceeds 8%.
That’s a problem!
The localized error rate in Manhattan is 19.9%, in San Francisco 11.6% (it’s actually much higher since approximately 25% of San Francisco’s listings do not ever go on the MLS which is where Zillow gets its data), and error rate is an astounding 26% for some rural counties in California?
Zestimates are hardly gospel – and often far from it!
He’s a wild and crazy home collector, but Steve Martin has lately been letting some real estate go. The comedian...
Here’s an update on housing trends. Or, more precisely, here’s an update on what people think the trends will...
The “Bus Home” is a shelter. Created by Dennis Oppenheim and featured in Time Magazine. The Bus Home was erected just south of Santa Barbara in the community of Ventura, California in 2002.
Time Magazine called the Bus Home, ” A sculptural roller coaster!” The artist shares that, “The Bus Home is a shelter. The work depicts the metamorphosis of a bus becoming a house. This frozen animation of one image into another takes the form of a looping corkscrew entering the ground, and coming up again. It slowly transforms a bus into a house.
For the tired and often alienated traveler, the experience of waiting is to be intervened by the realization that the transaction will be complete. The passenger will arrive at their destination. They will arrive home!”
Homeownership has gotten a bad rap, said The New York Times. ” Since the housing bust, renting has been in and owning a home has been out, especially among young adults who in earlier decades would have been first-time buyers.” Today just 64.3 percent of Americans own homes – a 20-year low! That’s a shame since homeownership long has been central to Americans’ ability to build wealth.
In 2013, the median net worth for homeowners was $195,400 compared with just $5,400 for renters. Buying a home simply forces people to save – for both the initial down payment and monthly mortgage payments. And while the housing bust proved how risky homeownership can be, the lesson of that debacle is not for individuals to avoid homeownership or for policymakers to devalue its importance.
A wiser path is to foster conditions that allow more middle and lower-income Americans to climb onto the housing ladder, including smarter regulations governing lenders, better consumer protections, and more robust wage growth. Renting can make sense as a lifestyle choice or because of income constraints. As a means to building wealth, however, there is no practical substitute for homeownership!
The Mission in Santa Barbara, aerial photography by Technopanorama 1. There is less competition from other Sellers. 2. Fewer options...
Mortgage Rates You’ve probably seen the many commercials on television where actors (Fred Thompson & Henry Winkler) plug reverse mortgages....
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