It’s clear that one of the best investments from the past decade has been real estate. Whether one’s own home or almost any type of real estate (perhaps excluding retail or mall retail specifically), since ~2012 it has been a straight line up.
This has only accelerated post-Covid as low rates combined with a shift of spend from services / experiences to “things.”
Here’s the dramatic price rise in housing just from 2020 to today:
But things are changing, namely interest rates. The mortgage payment to service the debt on these higher home values is rocketing higher:
And average mortgage payments will likely will continue to rise as the Fed has made it clear it is moving aggressively on rates. Citi is out this morning with a bold call on rates:
We now expect the Fed to raise rates 275bp (up from 200bp) in 2022 with 50bp hikes in May, June, July and September and 25bp hikes in October and December, reaching a policy range of 2.75-3.0% at the end of 2022.
Citigroup
What does that mean overall? I’m no prognosticator but I am a fan of getting out of the way of something that has gone up a lot over a short period of time, relatively speaking. We haven’t made any new real estate investments in a few years and are letting our existing real estate investments run off.
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[…] written about my aversion to allocating more to “housing” in the past here and here. Housing, whether single family homes or apartment complexes, has had an incredible 10 […]