Half of the US can't afford to pay rents??? Hmm..tough to believe!.

Discussion in 'Wall St. News' started by S2007S, Feb 2, 2024.

  1. notagain

    notagain

    The preservation of a countries wealth comes at the expense of the publics buying power.
    Biden inflated housing, energy, food, while Trump only inflated stock prices.
     
    #21     Feb 2, 2024
  2. Specterx

    Specterx

    Great for landlords? Where I live (coastal metro) rental yields have never been lower, at least during my lifetime.

    In any case, the USA has plenty of land. The only actual shortage is desirable property in a desirable area - partly because such is always absolutely scarce (desirable is relative to some degree) and partly because only about 1% of American neighborhoods are walkable, convenient to jobs & amenities, aesthetically pleasing/attractive, and free of undesirable neighbors. But at the end of the day, those things are luxuries rather than the bare necessities of four walls, a roof and running water.

    In other words and in my view, the apparently high rents are less about feudal exploitation of the workingman and more about aspirational upper-middle-class competition for status and luxury goods.
     
    #22     Feb 2, 2024
    nitrene, ElCubano and murray t turtle like this.
  3. %%
    MAYBE;
    + how many home oWners get coffee @ home don't play the lotto[a stupid tax on people that cant do math:caution:] Wonder which group persistently pays credit card interest??
    Dave Ramsey budget helps.[Edit ,wonder which group plays blame game= victim??]
    Big difference in wise + stupid choices ..........
     
    #23     Feb 2, 2024
  4. Specterx

    Specterx

    The funny thing is that if they saved more, it would only mean stiffer competition to buy Silicon Valley houses and S&P 500 shares.
     
    #24     Feb 2, 2024
  5. kandlekid

    kandlekid

    Here in NY (NJ) a landlord can't legally just throw out a tenant. There is an eviction process. Eviction easily takes months, possibly longer.
     
    #25     Feb 2, 2024
  6. %%
    THAT can be a good thing;
    some people don't like to live in herd cities. Some do.
    A herd is not an automatic bad thing , I like a herd of bison ,TX longhorns or water seals; polar bears have to eat very now + then LOL:D:D
     
    #26     Feb 2, 2024
  7. expiated

    expiated

    The article doesn't say they're not paying, it says they are paying more than they can afford, but perhaps someone else already pointed this out. (I only read the first few posts). It is possible to live beyond one's means—often for a relatively extended period of time—especially if relying on credit cards and/or loans from family/friends.

    And from what I understand, there IS a story that's unfolding under the surface, but it's not the case that no one has a clue about it, because I've heard from various individuals who pay attention to such things of a number of warning signs that an eventual "collapse" is eminent.
     
    Last edited: Feb 2, 2024
    #27     Feb 2, 2024
    long and murray t turtle like this.
  8. S2007S

    S2007S


    Sounds quite wild, welll no need to worry since rates are at 5% the fed can have multiple emergency rate cut meetings to take the funds straight back to 0% on top of that they can issue more qe and free handouts to millions of Americans......the market would probably dip a few percentage points and skyrocket from there.
     
    #28     Feb 2, 2024
  9. S2007S

    S2007S



    Also if anyone can afford cash advances and paying 18-30% APR I give them huge props.

    Some.people don't mind having a credit card with a balance of a few thousand at 28%
     
    #29     Feb 2, 2024
  10. expiated

    expiated

    According to Google (Capital One), here's the average:

    Screenshot_2.png

    Obviously, some people have a lot more and some people have a lot less.
     
    #30     Feb 2, 2024