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Should You Wait For Lower Prices or Lower Interest?

By
Real Estate Agent with RE/MAX

Right now, buyers have the best of both worlds -- home prices have risen, but they're still below the bubble of 2005, and mortgage interest rates are just above record lows. Yet, many buyers are still waiting for a sign that it's the right time to buy.

 

Should you wait for prices to go down or for lower interest rates? We advise that you do neither. The price of a home is fixed, so it makes sense to wait for prices to go lower, but you may not realize is that prices have to drop significantly to beat a minor fluctuation in mortgage interest rates.

 

Home prices have been rising for the past five years, sometimes in the double digits. Between January 2014 and January 2015, home prices rose over six percent. If sales continue at the current pace, it's more likely that the home you don't buy today could be more expensive later.

 

In the time you wait for price reductions, you could effectively build equity, or ownership in your home. Few homeowners keep a loan for 30 years anymore. People change jobs, get divorced, move up, downsize, refinance and have other reasons for not keeping their original mortgage. So the time is now.

 

So let's look at a few what-ifs and see when it's best for you to buy a home. Using round numbers, on a $200,000 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage at 4.00 percent, your monthly payment starting May 2015 will be $955. At seven years, the average length of time that most buyers occupy their homes today, you'll pay $52,898 in interest and the remainder of your loan will be $171,738.

 

 

If you wait around and interest rates go up, you'll be paying more monthly, plus you won't build equity as quickly. At 4.5 percent, your monthly payment will be $1,013 and you'll pay $59,828 in interest. Your loan remainder is higher - $173, 692. A half a point increase in interest will cost you $58 more per month, $6,930 more in interest, and you'll end up with $1,954 less in equity.

 

If your home dropped 5% in value and you were able to get a loan for $190,000 and 4.5% interest, your payment would be $963, a difference of $51 less per month than if you'd paid $200,000.

 

But what if you're wrong and prices go up by five percent? At $210,000 and 4.5 percent interest, you'll pay $1064 per month, $62,820 in interest, and the remainder on the loan will be $182,376. That's a difference of $109 more on your monthly payment and $9830 more in interest, plus you'll lose $10,638 in equity.

 

Why not buy now when both prices and interest rates are lower? 

 

 

Written by Blanche Evans

http://www3.realtytimes.com/rtnews/nlpages/20150430-Should-You-Wait-for-Lower-Prices-or-Lower-Interest.htm?open&Vol=49&ID=sharonsigman

 

 

William Feela
WHISPERING PINES REALTY - North Branch, MN
Realtor, Whispering Pines Realty 651-674-5999 No.

Waiting is a great idea if you want to be left holding an empty bag.

Apr 30, 2015 10:23 AM
Michele Cadogan 917-861-9166
Fillmore Real Estate 2990 Av U, Bklyn , NY 11229 - Brooklyn, NY
Licensed Real Estate Associate Broker -

In some markets its a catch22- with rising rental rates and other expenses potential buyers are having a hard time saving to a point where they are really ready to buy.  Most are trying to max out their 401ks, save enough for an emergancy fund and then save for the downpayment on their first home.  Even with such programs offering 3.5% down most buyer want to be able to more that than down towards the purchase of a home.  On the selling side even tough rates are low and home prices are going up , inventory is quite low... In some markets there is not much for buyers to choose from...

Apr 30, 2015 11:04 AM
Larry Johnston
Broker, Friends & Neighbors Real Estate and Elkhart County Subdivisions, LLC - Elkhart, IN
Broker,Friends & Neighbors Real Estate, Elkhart,IN

What's everyone waiting for.  They missed the low prices and the low interest rates.  Their still low, by industry standards, so don't let it pass you buy.

Apr 30, 2015 01:58 PM