Dear MarketWatch,
I’m from New Jersey. My daughter and I are looking to invest in a multi-family unit for our family. I’m retired and live in a luxury apartment paying $2,000 a month for rent, soon to increase to $2,200.
My daughter is a homeowner and her property currently has $75,000 to $100,000 in equity.
We would like to know if it would make sense for my daughter to sell her home (she would make at least $75,000 at the rates homes are selling in her area), and we move together into a rental home for $3,300 a month, and plan to wait a year for the housing prices to go down before purchasing a multi-family?
Thank you.
Timing the market
‘The Big Move’ is a MarketWatch column looking at the ins and outs of real estate, from navigating the search for a new home to applying for a mortgage.
Do you have a question about buying or selling a home? Do you want to know where your next move should be? Email Aarthi Swaminathan at TheBigMove@marketwatch.com.
Dear Timing,
Given the headwinds in the housing market right now, I’d say, go for it: Sell now, and slowly start looking for a home to buy.
As a buyer, the environment isn’t great. The number of homes for sale is low, as homeowners are locked in to ultra-low mortgage rates. They’re not going to give that up easily, so you have few options. That will also keep prices relatively high in New Jersey.
Plus, mortgage rates are still above 6% still, which means you’re gonna have to budget for higher monthly payments.
Interest rates may fall this year. “I think 2023 will be a year of volatility. The economy is already performing better than many expected, which is giving the Fed less of an incentive to cut rates,” Mohannad Aama, a portfolio manager at Beam Capital, recently told MarketWatch.
But as a seller, this same environment presents a great opportunity.
“We have an extreme lack of inventory that is causing the market to favor sellers at almost every price point,” Melissa Rubenstein, a Realtor for Christie’s Real Estate New Jersey, told MarketWatch.
“‘We have an extreme lack of inventory that is causing the market to favor sellers at almost every price point.’”
But do adjust your expectations. The house may not fetch the price you both have in mind. According to one study by Wharton, some homeowners list their home prices higher than the market rate. As a result, homes stay on the market longer and, as the Wharton report notes, listing a house at above the market rate creates a “psychological dependence on the original purchase price [and] generates an aversion to losses that is 2.5 times larger than the prospect of gains.”
Timing the sale before the spring may work out for you. Spring is generally the start of the home-shopping season.
“I would take advantage of that situation and get the most money possible for your daughter’s home before any rush of inventory in the spring,” Rubenstein added.
So yes, it may make sense to move ASAP on selling the home. But wait before you buy, either for rates or prices to drop, or inventory to rise.
Plus, homeowners are starting to turn to the rental market for cash flow, so you may actually get a discount on rents too, in New Jersey.
But be warned: There are no guarantees when trying to time the market.
By emailing your questions, you agree to having them published anonymously on MarketWatch. By submitting your story to Dow Jones & Company, the publisher of MarketWatch, you understand and agree that we may use your story, or versions of it, in all media and platforms, including via third parties.
Fifteen residential properties, 14 in Brickel, were recorded as sold during the period of Decemer 5-9. Each property on this list was sold for under the asking price, meaning that Key Biscayne and Brickell are solidly ensconced in the housing market correction happening across the US. However, housing peaked during the pandemic, driving up home values, so even if you were to sell your home today, you’d likely still be able to recoup a nice profit despite prices dropping a bit.
Key Biscayne
$775,000
1 bed/1.5 bath/895 square feet
199 Ocean Lane Drive, Apt. 602, Key Biscayne, FL 33149
1974 one-bedroom unit was listed in August for $869,000.
Brickell
$920,000
2 bed/2.5 bath/1,265 square feet
68 SE Sixth St., Apt. 711, Miami, FL 33131
Corner unit at Reach within the Brickell City Centre featuring a wraparound balcony and luxurious finishes. This property was listed in June for $940,000.
$410,000
1 bed/1 bath/704 square feet
950 Brickell Bay Drive, Apt. 300, Miami, FL 33131
Brickell Plaza one-bedroom with wood flooring was listed in June for $450,000.
$765,000
2 bed/2 bath/1,369 square feet
999 SW First Ave., Apt 2206, Miami, FL 33130
Brian Rokicki with Compass represented both the seller and buyer of this luxurious two-bedroom within the Nine residences featuring a 1-acre amenity deck. This property was listed in September for $785,000.
$385,000
1 bed/1.5 bath/710 square feet
31 SE Sixth St., Apt. 2506, Miami, FL 33131
Both the buyer and seller were represented by agents with 477 International Realty. This one-bedroom was listed in September for $410,000.
$1,520,000
2 bed/2 bath/1,523 square feet
1425 Brickell Ave., Apt. 63A, Miami, FL 33131
This Four Seasons Brickell two-bedroom with direct views of Biscayne Bay was listed in April for $2 million.
$410,000
1 bed/1.5 bath/1,058 square feet
41 SE Fifth St., Apt. 312, Miami, FL 33131
Brickell on the River loft was listed in May for $435,000.
$655,025
2 bed/2 bath/1,188 square feet
2451 Brickell Ave., Apt. 21E, Miami, FL 33129
This 1963 built, two-bedroom Brickell Townhouse sold quickly. It was listed in November for $690,000.
$925,000
2 bed/2 bath/1,137 square feet
1451 Brickell Ave., Unit 2005, Miami, FL 33131
This sleek 2017 built, two-bedroom unit was listed multiple times in 2021 and 2022 before selling.
$1,115,000
2 bed/2.5 bath/1,265 square feet
68 SE Sixth St., Apt. 3301, Miami, FL 33131
Reach at Brickell City Centre two-bedroom unit came on the market in August priced at $1.25 million.
$1,030,000
1 bed/1.5bath/1,126 square feet
1451 Brickell Ave., Unit 903, Miami, FL 33131
Snazzy one-bedroom featuring a den, spacious terrace and unique marble flooring throughout the unit. This property was listed in April for $1.2 million and was last sold in January 2021 for $725,000.
$420,000
1 bed/1 bath/791 square feet
2101 Brickell Ave., Apt. 608, Miami, FL 33129
One-bedroom unit located at Skyline on Brickell was listed in September for $450,000.
$410,000
1 bed/1.5 bath/665 square feet
60 SW 13th St., Apt. 2611, Miami, FL 33130
Two-story loft at the Infinity at Brickell was listed for $420,000 in October.
$855,000
2 bed/2 bath/1,012 square feet
475 Brickell Ave., Apt. 4313, Miami, FL 33131
Corner unit in the Icon Brickell features a large terrace and water views. This two-bedroom was listed in March for $968,000.
$790,000
2 bed/2 bath/1,460 square feet
2333 Brickell Ave., Apt. 2717, Miami, FL 33129
German Grudny with Home Wiz USA handled this sales transaction for both the seller and buyer. The spacious two-bedroom unit features luxurious marble flooring throughout the unit and lovely water views. It was listed in August for $849,000.
To read last week’s real estate listings, click here.

A duplex apartment in one of the most prestigious co-op has sold for $19 million.
JACOB ELLIOTT
Text size
A duplex in one of the most prestigious co-op buildings in San Francisco has sold for $19 million, the highest price paid for an apartment in the city so far this year, according to the Multiple Listing Service.
The four-bedroom residence was listed in January for $30 million, and the price dropped to $19 million in August. It went into contract in early November and closed last week, according to listing records and Sotheby’s International Realty–San Francisco Brokerage, whose agent Gregg Lynn represented the seller, while Mary Lou Castellanos represented the buyer.
“At over 7,000 square feet, the apartment is one of the largest in San Francisco and is located in its most revered cooperative building,” Mr. Lynn said in an email.
The sales price reflected the market condition in 2022, whereas fewer buyers are competing for large apartments and able to find opportunity, Mr. Lynn said.

The was designed by architect Conrad Alfred Meussdorffer in 1924 in his signature Beaux-Arts genre, featuring a grand entrance and a porte cochere.
JACOB ELLIOTT
“If they are to sell, other listings will be—or have already been—reduced to their right price for today’s market,” he said. “San Francisco remains a desirable location for full- or part-time residence, and there hasn’t been in recent memory a better time to purchase.”
FROM PENTA: Billionaire Businessman Ronald O. Perelman’s Design Collection Heads to Auction
The cooperative building, located in the tony Pacific Heights neighborhood, was designed by architect Conrad Alfred Meussdorffer in 1924 in his signature Beaux-Arts genre. It has 10 full-floor apartments and features a grand entrance, a porte cochére, private gardens and an attended lobby.
The apartment has a central foyer with Versailles-patterned hardwood floors, a circular floor plan for entertaining, a large living room with a fireplace and large windows framing panoramic views of the Golden Gate Bridge, Alcatraz and Russian Hill, a great room with a fireplace and views of the Bay, a library and a conservatory that opens to one of the terraces, the listing said.
The primary bedroom suite occupies the second floor and comes with dual marble baths and two private dressing wings, according to the listing.
William Oberndorf, founder of the investment firm SPO Partners and a local philanthropist, and his wife, Susan, purchased the home in 2018 for $25 million, property records show.
The buyer was listed in the property records as a limited liability company.
Both parties could not be reached for comment.
This article originally appeared on Mansion Global.

The back of the residence has a park-like presence.
TODD GOODMAN
Text size
The Los Angeles-area estate that interior designer Morgan Brown styled as an experiential retreat sold Tuesday for $16.55 million, a West Hollywood record.
Ms. Brown, who is the longtime girlfriend of Scottish actor and film producer Gerard Butler, bought the estate for $3.325 million in 2015 and originally listed it in August 2020 for $18.995 million, according to records on Redfin, which shows that it is the highest-recorded sales price for a single-family residence in West Hollywood in at least the last five years.
The California compound is owned by a limited liability company that is named for one of her design projects, according to property records. Compass co-listing agents Alyson Richards and Carl Gambino confirmed that Ms. Brown is the seller in a statement when they relisted the property in August for $16.995 million.

The West Hollywood estate comprises four connected buildings.
Todd Goodman
The Mediterranean-style residence was built in 1924. It and three related buildings, totaling 9,495 square feet, occupy two-thirds of an acre. They are linked by a courtyard and a saltwater pool. The estate has eight bedrooms, seven bathrooms and three half bathrooms.
The primary home has two sitting rooms separated by a wood-beamed kitchen, according to the listing. Another features a large open-plan kitchen with three suites, one of which opens to a courtyard; a spiral staircase leading to a bar and a Moroccan-style home theater. A third building is an open-style casita that leads to the fourth, which has a private terrace.
Other features include an indoor-outdoor office, a swimming pool, games deck, a gym, a fire pit, a hot tub, fountains, a gazebo and a backyard skate ramp.
When the estate was listed, Ms. Richards said that double lots such as Ms. Brown’s are rare in West Hollywood.
“This property is one of my favorite homes in Los Angeles,” Ms. Richards said in August. “The moment you step through the gates, you feel as if you’ve been transported to a European countryside all the while you are in the heart of West Hollywood.”

The pool is a calm, relaxing space.
TODD GOODMAN
Mr. Gambino, in a statement at the same time, added that “there is a specialness to the place that is hard to explain unless you visit. Everyone that walks in is blown away by what Morgan has done with the property.”
More: French Country-Style Mansion in Bay Area With a Hidden Speakeasy Lists for Nearly $10 Million
Ms. Brown, who took over her father’s commercial real estate business after his death in 2004, built her first house when she was 27 and since then has completed seven other estates, according to her website. The website also says that for the last several years, she has been focusing on “refurbishing historical trophy properties around Los Angeles.”
Her website describes the West Hollywood compound as the “first and largest” in the community. Besides her residential projects, in 2020, she bought 220 acres in Joshua Tree, California, where she is building a boutique hotel in the desert that has bungalows shaped like stars and crescent moons.
Mansion Global was not immediately able to identify the buyer, and the co-listing agents, who represented Ms. Brown as well as the buyer, were not available for comment.
This article originally appeared on Mansion Global.
Be the first to know about the biggest and best luxury home sales and listings by signing up for our Mansion Deals email alert.
The longtime Palm Beach home of the late conservative commentator Rush Limbaugh is being quietly shopped for sale with an asking price of $150 million to $175 million, according to people familiar with the offering.
The roughly 2.7-acre waterfront property, located on Palm Beach’s tony North Ocean Boulevard, includes multiple structures, including a large main house built in West Indies style, according to public records and people familiar with the property. The property has roughly 250 feet of ocean frontage and direct access to the beach, records show.

Rush Limbaugh and Kathryn Adams Limbaugh in 2020.
Photo:
Patrick Semansky/Associated Press
Mr. Limbaugh, a talk-radio icon and a ring-wing media stalwart, died last year at age 70. Records show the property is owned by a trust tied to his widow, Kathryn Adams Limbaugh. Ms. Limbaugh didn’t respond to requests for comment.
Mr. Limbaugh purchased the property for $3.9 million in 1998 through a limited liability company, records show.
The main house spans roughly 24,000 square feet, according to the 2010 book “An Army of One” by Zev Chafets.
“Largely decorated by Limbaugh himself, it reflects the things and places he has seen and admired,” Mr. Chafets wrote. The house had a vast salon meant to suggest Versailles, he wrote, and a massive chandelier in the dining room was a replica of the one in New York’s Plaza Hotel. The main guest suite was modeled after the Presidential Suite of the Hotel George V in Paris, while the library was a scaled-down version of the library at the Biltmore Estate in North Carolina, with wood-paneled walls and cherubs dancing on the ceiling, the book said. It wasn’t clear if the property has been updated since the book was published.

An aerial view of the compound.
Photo:
EagleView
While the main house is in good condition, real-estate agents said it might be considered a teardown since today’s buyers prefer more contemporary architectural styles.
If it sells for $150 million or more, the property will be among the most expensive ever sold in Palm Beach, where the luxury real-estate market posted record levels of activity during the pandemic.
Last month,
billionaire Larry Ellison purchased a $173 million home in nearby Manalapan, Fla., setting a record for the area, according to property records and a person familiar with the deal.
Write to Katherine Clarke at Katherine.Clarke@wsj.com and E.B. Solomont at eb.solomont@wsj.com
Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8
Home builders are feeling jittery.
That’s according to a June survey of home builder sentiment by John Burns Real Estate Consulting. Demand for new homes is cooling as buyers cancel orders, and builders are slashing prices to offload homes, the survey found.
“Scary times,” a home builder in Nashville, Tenn. told the company. “Hoard cash and hang on for the ride!”
Sales of new homes fell 31% this June as compared to last year. Cancelation rates jumped in June to 14.5% nationally, up from 6.5% a year ago, as seen in the tweet below.
The monthly survey was based on 320 participants in 84 metro areas.
Texas saw the highest rate of cancelations (when buyers terminate a contract for a new home), followed by the broader Southwest, and Northern California.
A quarter of home builders are reducing their prices, according to the John Burns Real Estate Consulting survey.
There are couple of reasons that homebuyers are pulling back: Mortgage rates have risen considerably since last year, which has made borrowing expensive, on top of rising inventory levels.
Other surveys have suggested that home builder morale is sinking. Builder confidence fell for the sixth straight month in June, according to the NAHB/Wells Fargo U.S. Housing Market Index. This month’s numbers will be released on Monday.
Home builders surveyed by John Burns expressed frustration over the slowdown.
“Someone turned out the lights on our sales in June!” one builder in Atlanta, Ga. told the company.
“Sales have fallen off a cliff,” an Austin, Texas builder said. “We’re selling 1/3 of what we sold in March and April.”
A Boise, Idaho builder said that builders are slashing new home prices by 15% to 20%.
Write to MarketWatch housing reporter Aarthi Swaminathan at: aarthi@marketwatch.com
Billionaire internet entrepreneur Jim Clark is selling an oceanfront estate near Palm Beach, Fla., for around $175 million, he said.
The deal is expected to set a record for Florida, which has yet to see a home sell for more than $130 million, according to real-estate appraisal firm Miller Samuel.
The off-market deal is expected to close this week, said Mr. Clark, who bought the estate and a nearby vacant island for just over $94 million in March 2021, records show. He declined to identify the buyer.

The roughly 16-acre property is located on a barrier island in Manalapan.
Photo:
Eagleview
The roughly 16-acre property is located on a barrier island in Manalapan, just south of Palm Beach. It was previously owned by the Ziff publishing family.
Mr. Clark said he and his wife, Kristy, bought the property as a “spur of the moment purchase” when they thought they were going to live in Florida most of the time. They fell in love with the aesthetics of the home and features such as a botanical garden, he said. But as the year went on, they decided to stay in New York—they have homes in Bedford and Manhattan—and enroll their two young daughters in school there, he said. Mr. Clark also sensed headwinds in the world economy and thought it made sense to sell, he said.
“In the end, we sort of thought, ‘How much will we come down here?’” he recalled. “I knew there was someone who wanted it and I beat them to it, so I thought, ‘Let’s see if they want it again.’” He said
Lawrence Moens
of Lawrence A. Moens Associates brokered the deal.
Mr. Clark said he updated some mechanical systems, but made no major changes to the estate. “Look, it’s a phenomenal piece of property,” he said. “You can’t find anything like that in Florida.”

Jim Clark in 2017.
Photo:
Sean Zanni/Patrick McMullan Agency/Getty Images
The property spans the width of the barrier island, with about 1,200 feet of ocean frontage and around 1,300 feet on the Intracoastal Waterway. The compound has several structures, including a roughly 62,200-square-foot, main residence clad in coral stone. It also has a seven-bedroom guesthouse, two cottages on the beach and a manager’s house. The structures are connected via tunnels that run underneath a road that bisects the property. The estate also has a pool, a dock, a sports complex and a three-hole golf course.
Mr. Clark co-founded Netscape and several other startups, most recently the digital security company Beyond Identity. He has bought and sold several other luxury homes in Florida, and said he tends to over-invest in his homes. “I’ve never made money on real estate until now,” he said.
So far, Palm Beach seems largely immune to a recent slowdown in luxury sales. Earlier this month, an oceanfront mansion in Palm Beach closed for around $85.9 million, less than a year after selling for $64 million, records show. In May, the number of contracts signed on single-family Palm Beach homes priced above $10 million more than doubled compared with May 2021, according to Miller Samuel.
Write to E.B. Solomont at eb.solomont@wsj.com
Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8
A beachfront home in Seagrove Beach, Fla., is hitting the market for $26.5 million, making it the most expensive listing on the Emerald Coast.
Located about a mile from the resort community of Seaside, the roughly 0.3-acre property has about 90 feet of beach frontage on the Gulf of Mexico, according to Jonathan Spears of Compass, who has the listing with colleague Lyndon Jackson.
The house measures about 9,000 square feet across four levels.
David Warren
A bar room on the fourth level opens to a plunge pool.
David Warren
Wooden beams in a family room adjacent to the kitchen.
David Warren
A spiral staircase in a 50-foot-high atrium.
David Warren
The primary bedroom.
David Warren
The home is being sold by Tennessee residents Chuck and Jo Ellen McDowell. Mr. McDowell is founder and CEO of the Wesley Financial Group, a financial services company, and Wesley Mortgage, a mortgage broker. His wife, now retired, is the former vice president of event management at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum.
The couple said they bought the newly built house as a vacation home in late 2020 for $14 million. They spent just under $2 million designing the interior of the home, they said, and most of the furniture is included in the listing price.

The primary bathroom has heated chaise longues.
Photo:
David Warren
The six-bedroom, roughly 9,000-square-foot house is whitewashed with Cycladic architecture inspired by homes on the Greek Islands, Mr. Spears said. Inside, there are limestone floors imported from France, arched doorways, an atrium about 50 feet high, a spiral staircase, beamed ceilings and Venetian plaster walls. Amenities include a home theater, a fitness area, a sauna, a bar room on the fourth floor, and an elevator. The primary bathroom has a massage table and heated chaise longues.
A rooftop plunge pool comes complete with lounge chairs to watch the sunset. “When you sit in those, all you see is sky and ocean,” Ms. McDowell said. “It is surreal. It is just so peaceful. The birds fly right past you.” Another pool on the first floor has a built-in dining table and seats.
The McDowells said they decided to sell because they have purchased a smaller home in the area that is more suited to their needs. They had eyed the house several years ago, he said, but it sold. When it came back on the market recently, they bought it.

The roughly 0.3-acre property has about 90 feet of beach frontage.
Photo:
David Warren
Property values along the Emerald Coast have gone up substantially over the past two years, Mr. Spears said. In the first quarter, the average sales price on the Emerald Coast was $1.85 million, up from $1 million during the first quarter of 2021, he said.
Last month, Mr. Spears listed another home in Seagrove Beach for $25 million. He said another home he has listed for $25 million is pending.
Write to Libertina Brandt at Libertina.Brandt@wsj.com
Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8
I have enough money to put down on a second home — I need a slightly bigger place and another bedroom. I currently live in Portland, Ore., but I am planning to move outside of Portland.
However, I’m contemplating whether I should sell or rent the house I currently have. I bought the house for $188,500. I have refinanced twice and got cash out last time. My interest rate is 2.75%, and I still have 18 years to pay it off. I can rent it for $1,800 to $2,000. But I don’t know if this is the best option because I could also sell it for close to $500,000, which is the highest value currently.
It would be great to have the tenants pay my second mortgage, but I don’t know if it’s worth dealing with tenants and repairs they may ask for all the time. After all, it is an old house. What should I do?
Sincerely,
Packing up in Portland
‘The Big Move’ is a MarketWatch column looking at the ins and outs of real estate, from navigating the search for a new home to applying for a mortgage.
Do you have a question about buying or selling a home? Do you want to know where your next move should be? Email Jacob Passy at TheBigMove@marketwatch.com.
Dear Packing,
The completive housing markets has many homeowners considering the very move you’re thinking of making. Homeowners see rising rental rates, and many are taking advantage. In February, rents were nearly 18% higher compared with a year ago nationally, according to real-estate website Apartment List, representing record growth.
To some extent, homeowners are fueling that rent growth by converting their starter homes into rentals. Those homes would have otherwise provided much-needed supply to the home-buying markets. Instead, there are so few homes for sale that many Americans are being forced to rent for longer than they had hoped because they can’t find a property to purchase. More people renting means more competition for rental units, and thus rents are rising.
Just because so many homeowners are going this route doesn’t mean you should though. “It makes sense to convert a home to a rental property if and only if you understand all of the potential issues that exist with becoming a landlord,” said Michelle Gessner, founder and owner of Gessner Wealth Strategies, a financial advisory firm based in Houston.
It’s easy to imagine the benefits of being a landlord — using the extra income to pay off your second mortgage and perhaps once that’s paid off pocketing the money to save for retirement. But if the pandemic has taught us anything, it’s that being a small mom-and-pop landlord isn’t for the faint of heart.
You’ve already hit on some of the challenges in being a landlord. You’ll need to interact with tenants and work with them to maintain the property. And chances are, tenants won’t treat the home as nicely as you might have, forcing you to pay to fix it up regularly. That’s just the tip of the iceberg.
“‘It makes sense to convert a home to a rental property if and only if you understand all of the potential issues that exist with becoming a landlord.’”
It sounds like you’re financially stable, but could you afford to pay both the mortgage on your first home and your new home yourself? Many landlords found themselves facing foreclosure and bankruptcy on their rental properties in recent years as tenants struggled to pay their rent due to the pandemic. In the end, many of these property owners opted to sell the homes to cut their losses.
If you don’t think you’re up to that stress, then I’d strongly reconsider becoming a landlord. There are other financial reasons to think twice. When someone sells their primary residence, they get to exclude up to $250,000 of capital gains (or $500,000 if married and filing jointly.) So, if for instance, you sold the home for $500,000, but only paid $300,000 to purchase it originally, you wouldn’t face capital-gains taxes on the $200,000 in profit you earned.
Should you opt to convert the property into a rental home and then later decide to sell, you might face a steep tax bill. To take advantage of the exclusion on capital gains, you must have lived in the home for two of the last five years, but it doesn’t need to be the two most recent years. So, in essence, you have a bit of a grace period. And there are tax deductions you could tax as a landlord.
Let’s say though that you rented the home for six years and then decided to sell. You wouldn’t get the $250,000 (or $500,000) exclusion then, so all of the money you make from the sale would be considered taxable income. There are ways you could avoid that tax hit — in particular, you could reinvest that money into another rental property through a Section 1031 exchange. Otherwise, the tax bill will be larger.
Another financial consideration is whether your mortgage lender would even allow you to convert the property into a rental in the first place. Mortgages typically include clauses that require the borrowers to live in the home for a set period of time. Should you attempt to move out and rent the property before that timeframe has expired, you could be engaging in mortgage fraud. Given that you refinanced fairly recently, you should study your mortgage documents carefully.
You have a better sense of your tolerance for risk and financial complexity than I do. If you’re still interested in moving forward with this plan, definitely consult with an accountant and a financial planner who can help you map out the best approach. My gut instinct is that you’re not sold on this idea. If that’s the case, then I’d consider other options. After all, the money you make from selling the home would likely go a long way toward paying down debt or other financial goals.
Plus, being a landlord isn’t the only way to invest in real estate. “Additional proceeds can be invested to generate income or growth or even in real estate-related securities,” said Kashif Ahmed, president of American Private Wealth, a financial advisory firm in Bedford, Mass. Investing in a real-estate investment trust, for instance, could broaden your portfolio, but is much more liquid than having all that money tied up in a house.
Ultimately, I feel that you can’t go wrong by making the choice that feels the most comfortable to you. So whatever choice that is, I wish you the best of luck.
By emailing your questions, you agree to having them published anonymously on MarketWatch. By submitting your story to Dow Jones & Company, the publisher of MarketWatch, you understand and agree that we may use your story, or versions of it, in all media and platforms, including via third parties.
The red-hot U.S. housing market finally ‘offers hope’ for buyers and sellers, according to this real-estate economist
Home prices are up 14% compared to this time last year, and mortgage rates have driven the average monthly payment 50% higher over the same period, so affordability remains a key concern for people looking to move.
Nearly half (49%) of sellers said they plan to sell their home at $500,000 and below, with 15% of them aiming for $200,000 or less, according to a report released Tuesday by real-estate site Realtor.com.
This year’s sellers “are looking to buy their next homes at more approachable price points,” the report noted, with more than half (53%) of sellers aiming to buy a property priced at $500,000 and below, and 17% looking for one costing $200,000 or below.
Roughly 29% of sellers are trading up, and 32% making a lateral price move. (This is the first year Realtor.com asked these specific questions.)
An encouraging sign
There are signs that the housing market is slowing. Sales of new homes fell in April for the fourth month in a row to the lowest level since the pandemic owing to high prices and soaring mortgage rates.
Mortgage rates jumped from just 2.75% in the fall for a 30-year fixed to more than 5.25% in mid-May. Low mortgage rates had made it easier for buyers to purchase a home despite record prices.
“The distribution of sale prices points to an encouraging sign for many buyers who found last year’s housing market highly frustrating due to escalating prices,” the poll of more than 3,000 home buyers and sellers said.
“An increase in the number of affordably-priced homes for sale would be welcome news for markets,” it said, adding that nearly one-third of homeowners plan to sell their homes in the trade-up range of $500,000 to $1,000,000.
George Ratiu, senior economist and manager of economic research at Realtor.com, said the report “offers hope” for seller-buyers, who’ve been helped by the rise in remote work, which shows significant staying power.
“Many move-up buyers are leveraging newfound flexibility to employ creative strategies, such as relocating to an area offering homes that meet their family’s needs without breaking their budgets,” he said.
(Realtor.com is operated by News Corp subsidiary Move Inc., and MarketWatch is a unit of Dow Jones, which is also a subsidiary of News Corp.)
Doubled-edged sword
However, the shift to remote work is a double-edged sword: Working from home also explains over half of the 23.8% national increase in house prices between 2019 and November 2021, an economic study released last week concluded.
That rise in house prices has pleased those homeowners who have been able and willing to sell, but it has also caused heartache for millions of first-time buyers who yearn to get a foot on the property ladder.
The median sales price jumped to $450,600 last month from $435,000 and hit the highest level on record. The average home price was even higher at a record $570,300, underscoring that the majority of properties for sale are on the more upscale side.
What’s more, nearly three-quarters of homeowners surveyed by Realtor.com who plan to sell their home in 2022 are also buying a home at the same time, Ratiu said, which he said adds “complexity to an already challenging task.”
“While sellers stand to cash out record-high equity upon closing on their home, they are also facing higher prices and interest rates on their next home,” the report said.
The Dow Jones Industrial Index
+0.60% ,
+0.95%
+1.51%
DJIA,
S&P 500
SPX,
and Nasdaq Composite
COMP,
were all clinging to positive territory in early afternoon trading Wednesday as ongoing stagflation fears continued to worry investors.
(Jeffry Bartash in Washington, D.C. contributed to this report.)
Related:
Airbnb hosts use income from the platform to pay for food, rent and mortgages — but these 3 U.S. states are more lucrative than others
‘Anybody that’s middle class and below, we’re screwed’: Housing costs rise at the fastest pace in decades — but some Americans are already feeling the brunt
‘Millions of families struggle to keep roofs over their heads’: Biden administration has a plan to tackle America’s housing shortage — but will it be enough?
Source link