It
is easily the question most asked by anyone moving into their first
home or downsizing into retirement. Should I buy or should I rent?To get
more housing news, you can visit shine news official website.
For
nearly a decade the answer has been buy. The crash in home prices,
combined with record-low mortgage rates made buying and owning a home
both cheaper than renting one and a better investment.
Fast-rising
home prices and higher mortgage rates have shifted the calculation to
rent. The monthly costs of buying and owning a home that you occupy are
up 14 percent over the past year, more than three times the annual
increase in rent rates nationally, according to realtor.com. Rents are
up just 4 percent. The number of local housing markets where it is
cheaper to rent than buy is growing by the day.
"Even
setting aside big upfront expenses like a down payment, rising
month-by-month costs are likely keeping many people from purchasing,"
said Danielle Hale, chief economist at realtor.com. "Today only 41
percent of people live in a county where the median-income family can
afford to buy a home at the median list price, and affordability
declined significantly over the past year."
Home
prices fell dramatically after the financial crisis and the subprime
mortgage crash. Millions of homes went into foreclosure and were sold
off at bargain-basement prices. Home values finally bottomed out in 2012
and then began to take off. In the last three years, the gains
accelerated dramatically, and now homes in most of the nation are worth
more than they were at the inflated peak of the housing boom in
2006.It's normal," said Richard Bernstein of Richard Bernstein Advisors
on CNBC's "Squawk Box." "Housing is an early cycle sector. Interest
rates are low, incomes start to grow, so in an early cycle environment
you can buy, but in a later cycle, interest rates go up, home prices go
up, it's harder to buy."
The
recent acceleration in home prices has been due to a supply imbalance
in the market: too much demand and too little supply. That has shifted
the equation back to rent, even though rents have increased a lot in the
last few years.
According
to July home and rent prices, buying a home was cheaper than renting in
just 35 percent of the nation's counties. That is down sharply from 44
percent just one year ago.
And
it's not just cheaper to rent, it may also now be a better investment.
Renting and reinvesting the savings from renting, on average, will
outperform owning and building home equity, in terms of wealth creation,
according to new research from Florida Atlantic University and Florida
International University faculty. That is the first time renting
outperforms buying since 2010.
In
16 of the 23 major metropolitan markets covered in the research,
renting is a better investment than buying. These cities include
Atlanta, Dallas, Denver, Houston, Los Angeles, Miami, San Francisco and
Seattle. It is still, however, better to buy than rent in much of the
Midwest and Northeast, with Chicago and Cleveland showing the best
ownership scores.
By | buzai232 |
Added | Sep 10 '18, 11:33PM |
The Wall