Quote:
Originally Posted by Stonemans_rowJ
There are people who disagree and think that the entire reason condos are absent is due to insurance rates, but...
The mortgage world was much more freewheeling for condos back then.
The numbers don't really pencil out that well FOR BUYERS, and this is before we get the moonshot of rental inventory that is coming.
It is absolutely cheaper to rent (same store) if you don't have 20% down. People who think it's not should really run an analysis.
|
It's not just insurance rates but rather
why the insurance rates have been so punitive. If you develop a larger project lawyers can have a party trying to eat your shorts. It's their contingency fees that benefit only them that make the risk unattractive in a market where there's no shortage of alternative investments.
I recently read (somewhere) that insurance adds about $15,000 per unit. How much of that was bcuz of litigation risk wasn't defined.
Pre-recession the mortgage industry was indeed freewheeling but we've also had non-freewheeling markets where condos sold just fine.
Can't speak specifically to how condos might pencil but those that are being built seem to be selling quickly. Buying of course gives one ownership of a potentially appreciating asset with fixed P&I payments (assuming a fixed rate mortgage).
Quote:
Originally Posted by Stonemans_rowJ
I don't think anyone is ignoring this study.
The study you reference lists 3 peer cities: San Francisco, San Diego, and Dallas.
|
Couple of issues with that study. It's rather dated at this point. While dated through part of 2013 the data goes back to 2000/2003 and too much has changed since the recession.
But
bunt is absolutely correct that it boils down to politics and special interests (on both sides). That's not to say there aren't rational (sounding) arguments on each side. Such is the nature of politics. I could counter your own points and back and forth we could go.
Sometimes it's best to pull away from the noise and look at the bigger picture. How 'bout we take a more common sense and rational approach that merely levels the playing field with other cities where the litigation risk is normal or sane and then let the market do what it wants to do?