chrissyk said:I also don't want to live in a house that I suddenly can't resell for what I paid for it because #1 I overpaid and #2 there are loads of new homes being built, loads of existing homes on the market, and no incentive to buy an existing home over a new home. That has happened in parts of TX, and I feel like it could happen here. Maybe I'm wrong, though.

Texan Mouseketeer said:One builder we liked and considered buying a new home with them. In less than two months the home we had picked had gone up over $15,000 in price. Then, there was no way we could buy it. Why do it when you know you could have had it for so much cheaper?
I have to admit I haven't seen that happening here. We had one new house in our neighborhood that went down $50,000 over a year. But it was a strange house on a HORRIBLE lot. Most houses around us are selling at the asked price, relatively quickly.Texan Mouseketeer said:In less than two months the home we had picked had gone up over $15,000 in price.
bananiem said:I have to admit I haven't seen that happening here. We had one new house in our neighborhood that went down $50,000 over a year. But it was a strange house on a HORRIBLE lot. Most houses around us are selling at the asked price, relatively quickly.
chrissyk said:It's happening on the new construction in a lot of areas. This month it costs $500K, next month it costs $520K for the SAME HOUSE. These houses aren't built yet...they're just lots. The builder puts out a new "price sheet" weekly, twice-a-week, monthly, whatever, and the prices always go up significantly for the same houses vs. the last price sheet. IMHO it creates artificial demand to "buy NOW" so you don't end up paying more next month. I hate that kind of pressure.

mrsltg said:They're not doing this to put pressure on you to buy now. They are doing it because of the demand. If the market wouldn't/couldn't bear the prices, they would drop.

chrissyk said:That's true too, but I wonder how many of the people buying these rapidly-inflating places will be forced to sell when their "creative financing" becomes a burden. Some of these places actually have the housing plans on one page and "creative financing" options on the second page! I'm talking like 0% down, interest-only, negative-amortization, etc. kinds of mortgages![]()
chrissyk said:That's true too, but I wonder how many of the people buying these rapidly-inflating places will be forced to sell when their "creative financing" becomes a burden. Some of these places actually have the housing plans on one page and "creative financing" options on the second page! I'm talking like 0% down, interest-only, negative-amortization, etc. kinds of mortgages![]()
AllyandJack said:When I refinanced, this company wanted to charge me $12,000 in closing costs. I told them to take a hike!