BiggerPockets Real Estate Podcast - 979: BiggerNews: What Happens to The Housing Market if Mortgage Rates Stay High?

Episode Date: June 28, 2024

Mortgage rates were supposed to be going down by now, but what happened? Even in late 2023, many housing market experts predicted that we’d be seeing high to mid six percent mortgage rates at this p...oint and hovering around the high five percent rate mark by the end of the year, but the Fed isn’t showing any sign of lowering rates soon. Some experts even believe rates could go UP again this year as the job market stays hot and the economy sees unprecedented strength. This begs the question: What IF mortgage rates remain high? It’s a reality many of us don’t want to see, but 2024 could end with minor, if any, rate cuts, keeping monthly mortgage payments high and affordability low. So, what should an investor do in this situation? Sit on the sidelines? Invest in a different asset class? Pray to Jerome Powell? While that last option may be worthwhile, top real estate investors are saying that NOW is the time to buy BEFORE rates fall. What do we mean? We’ve got the entire expert investor panel from On the Market here to give their take on what investors should do IF rates don’t fall. From house flipping to long-term buy and hold rentals, our nationwide panel of investors shares exactly what they’re doing to make money even with high interest rates. Plus, we’ll give our predictions on when rates could fall, what will happen to housing inventory, what young people should do NOW to get their first house, and why investors need to “reset” if they want to thrive in this high rate housing market.  Support today’s show sponsor, Rent App: the free and easy way to collect rent! In This Episode We Cover Mortgage rate predictions and when interest rates could finally start falling  What should investors do IF mortgage rates stay high throughout 2024 The “lock-in effect” and whether or not high rates are leading to lower inventory  The homes that are flying off the market in many areas (and the ones that are sitting) How young people can creatively get into their first home or investment property Why investors MUST “reset” their expectations if they’re to build wealth in this housing market  And So Much More! (00:00) Intro (04:45) When Could Mortgage Rates Fall? (13:48) Inventory is Getting Gobbled Up (19:56) Can Young People Make It?  (24:19) Investors Must "Reset"  Check out more resources from this show on BiggerPockets.com and https://www.biggerpockets.com/blog/real-estate-979 Interested in learning more about today’s sponsors or becoming a BiggerPockets partner yourself? Email advertise@biggerpockets.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey, everyone, and welcome to the Bigger Pockets Real Estate Podcast. On today's episode, we are actually going to do a little bit of a crossover event. We're bringing you a show that aired back in April on our sister podcast on the market. It's one of our most popular shows we've ever done on that show. And in it, we discussed what happens if mortgage rates stay high. And given everything that's going on, that is becoming more and more of a reality, or at least a possibility. Since that show aired, we've heard a little bit more, so I just want to fill you in on what's happened just to make everything in this episode makes sense.
Starting point is 00:00:36 On June 12th, the Fed signaled we would be seeing only a single rate cut this year, which is a deviation from the four the market had predicted and hoped for at the beginning of the year. Inflation is still pretty high. It's above 3%, and it's feeling like it's going to be a long time until we get towards that 2% goal. And last update here is that as of today, according to Mortgage News Daily, the rate on a 30-year fixed mortgage is just above 7%. Other than those couple updates, the conversation and contents of this episode are just as relevant right now as they were back in April. And they might even be more relevant because interest rates have stayed high and we have no idea if and when they'll fall. So I think there's going to be plenty of good information and tactical advice that you can use in your investing. portfolio from this episode.
Starting point is 00:01:29 Our bigger news episode today is brought to you by Rent app. This is a free and easy way to collect rent. And if you want to learn more, go to rent.app slash landlord. Let's jump into it. At the beginning of the year, there was a lot of optimism that we would see mortgage rates decline over the course of the year. So far, that hasn't happened. So the question we're going to dive into today is what happens if interest rates stay high?
Starting point is 00:01:55 What does this mean for housing inventory? First-time homebuyers, investors. Today, we're going to be digging into it all. What's up, everyone? I'm your host, Dave Meyer, and today I have Kathy, Henry, and James with me to discuss where we think the market will go if interest rates stayed elevated for longer. Now, I know we were all feeling optimistic, and it hasn't really happened the way most people were expecting.
Starting point is 00:02:19 Henry, have you lost hope? Are you still confident that you can navigate this situation? No, I feel like we can definitely navigate the current climate. I am optimistic at some point, rates will come down, but I'm more optimistic in my ability to find opportunities in any market, and there have definitely been great opportunities to buy great deals right now. Speaking of any climate, Kathy, can you just fill in our audience a little bit about what the climate actually is and where mortgage rates are right now? Well, it's not a climate that a lot of us were expecting or like at this time.
Starting point is 00:02:54 The job market has just been so strong. It has shocked so many economists, and wage growth has been strong. It's slowing down a little bit now. But just this last week's jobs report was it beat expectations again. And what that generally means is the economy is doing well. And when the economy is doing well, interest rates tend to stay high. And inflation is still high. So this is unexpected.
Starting point is 00:03:19 This means that a lot of Fed presidents have been saying, we're not going to cut rates anytime soon, maybe not even this year. And a few of them have even said, hey, we might be raising rates. So there's a lot of uncertainty. However, I do have an opinion on where that might go in the next few months. Ooh, I like that. Okay. Well, we're going to ask you that in a minute.
Starting point is 00:03:39 But first, James, I need to ask you, are you just sick of this whole conversation? Or are you ready to dive in and talk about the Fed a little bit more? I'm sick of the hype around the conversation, kind of similar to Henry. rates are what they are, go find the deal that makes sense with the rates. And I think sometimes when you overthink a deal, and this is what's happening, people are overthinking things. There's all this fear. You stay on the sidelines and you miss out on good opportunities. And that's what's happened in the last 12 months.
Starting point is 00:04:08 People have missed some really good deals just narrowing in on this rate and trying to predict it. But as we all know, we predict wrong a lot. So it's a... Well, that is definitely. Definitely true. And we're not alone. Some of the biggest teams with, yeah, they're wrong too because it's surprised everybody. Yeah, it has been very surprising.
Starting point is 00:04:30 But I do, you know, I have this run a show that we use to ask questions. It's sort of our outline for the show. And the number one question is making you guys predict where rates are going to go. So even though you just said that you're wrong, I'm going to ask you, Kathy, do you think that we're still, let me just ask a more general question rather than something specific. But sort of the idea at the beginning of the year was that rates were going to trend down. A lot of people were saying they were going to get into the high fives. I'm happy to say I never actually expected that. But the idea that they would trend down made a lot of sense to me.
Starting point is 00:05:05 Do you still think that general concept holds true, even though the first quarter of the year hasn't seen that actually start to happen? Yeah, I can say with all certainty, rates are going to come down someday. We just don't know where that day is. Our predictions are just going to get more and more general. They just take all specificity out of them, and we might be right. Well, what the Fed is really looking at is jobs. And one thing that I follow housing wire a lot, and Logan Motishami basically pointed out that if there had been no COVID, the number of jobs that they would have today would be between 157 and 159 million.
Starting point is 00:05:45 So right now we're at 158 million. So a lot of this massive job growth is just really jobs coming back from a crazy pandemic. But it looks, it's skewed. Everything is different because of a time that we've never experienced where suddenly no one was working and then jobs came back. So if we're at 158 million today and we would be right around here if there was no pandemic, I am predicting, along with Logan, that it's going to start to slow down. And we're already seeing wage growth slow down. So when the Fed has some confirmation
Starting point is 00:06:22 that we're not going to be just on this train ride of the economic train that's been moving so fast and so speedy in creating inflation, once they see that slowing down, then we'll get back on that rate cutting plan and mortgages will likely come down too. So that's my prediction, is that they will come down. and if it's not this year, it'll be next year and no one can predict exactly when that will be. So your plan just needs to have that in mind that, yeah, they're probably going to come down. We don't know when. So what you buy needs to make sense today. And it's going to make even more sense later when you can refine to something lower.
Starting point is 00:06:58 Well, that's a great point. And thank you for providing that context, Kathy. I actually saw something recently that said that the Fed is going to be paying less attention to jobs than they had been saying that because even though hiring has been really strong and inflation is still higher than they want it to be. Inflation hasn't like re-accelerated. It hasn't started growing with better jobs reports. It's sort of just staying at this low threes. They want to get into the twos,
Starting point is 00:07:25 but they are seemingly willing to tolerate a stronger than they had anticipated labor market. James, what about you? Do you still like expect rates to come down? Are you basing your business decisions right? now on the fact that rates may stay flat or perhaps even go up? You know, I still think rates are going to start ticking down towards the end of the year. You know, I'm seeing the housing market get really tight right now. And that is, you know, one thing that I'm also looking at.
Starting point is 00:07:59 Obviously, there's tons of factors that go into the Fed's decision, what is going to have the interest rates. And part of it is housing and the housing cost, which does drive up inflation as well. You know, what I'm seeing in the market right now is people are bidding stuff up, affordability on their pricing is getting really tight and they're going to need to do something to fix that besides try to figure out where a new inventory for come from but you know as investors if I think that rates are going to be lower in six to nine months that's just upside to me in the deal I don't look at any deal today based on I don't we don't speculate it's if we like the deal on today's numbers, we will buy. And if the rates do go down in nine months, that's just upside.
Starting point is 00:08:45 And what I can feel a little bit more confident is if rates even do tick up a little bit, what we're seeing is rates are high, inventory is low. And even to my own disbelief, I thought pricing was going to have to come down and it is going up. And so I can feel fairly confident in my buys today because I'm seeing properties get bid up 10% over list at rates where they're at now and we're pumping past before when the rates were at three and a half percent. And so maybe it won't matter as much, but, you know, I think the concern about the interest rates that's going to crash the economy or the housing market really isn't coming to fruition. If it does go down, it's going to be from something that we're not even talking about on
Starting point is 00:09:29 this show. That's a really good point. Like the things that we know are really pointing in a fairly clear direction about the housing market. Like, it would take what people would call a black swan event to probably alter the course in a dramatic way. If you've never heard that term, back swan event is basically an event that happens sort of outside the normal variables that impact any industry. So, like, this would be something like 9-11 or the Russian invasion of Ukraine or the COVID-19 pandemic where all the forecasting, all the data analysis you want to do, you can't predict those types of things. And I think,
Starting point is 00:10:06 you know, just going with traditional data analysis here. I agree with you, James. It doesn't look like rates are going to bring any sort of significant nationwide crash into housing prices. Henry, let's just, you know, I got to, I put James and Kathy on the hook, so I got to ask you as well. Do you think rates are going to come down through the end of this year? In all honesty, Dave, I don't care. Your questions bore me. Ask me something else.
Starting point is 00:10:36 But here's why. It's exactly what James said. So what happens when you have the environment like we have now where rates are, what people consider higher is, yes, I'm going to still buy deals that make me money now. And James is right. We're only underwriting deals, maybe 90 days back max. Like it's what's happening today, maybe 60 days ago. Like that's how we're evaluating what's going on and how we should value our properties. So what that really does from an investment standpoint is, it might slow down our growth. You know, when I was, when I was buying properties at a lower interest rate, they were cash flowing more, they were making me more money. So I could afford to do more. Since interest rates are higher, cost of money is higher, those things, the cash flow isn't as high, which means I can't buy as many properties. So it may slow me down a little bit because you still have to be able to sustain the things
Starting point is 00:11:31 that you were buying, but we're not stopping buying because of those rates. And it's exactly right. I am going to get icing on the cake when rates come down because weights will come down. It may be five years from now, but they will come down eventually. All right. Well, I, first of all, I just want to say what James and reiterates, sort of what James and Henry said, is I strongly, strongly believe that you need to be underrated based on today's rates. Because as we've seen over the last few years, no one really knows what's going to happen with rates.
Starting point is 00:12:01 And as I've said many times of the show, I love putting myself in a situation where I benefit from being wrong. It's the best of both worlds, right? If you find a deal where rates stay the same and it works and then you're wrong about rent growth, you're wrong about rates going down and you make even more money, that's a great situation. I love that kind of situation and you can definitely underwrite that way to make sure that your deals work out in such a way. I will just jump in and say and just sort of provide my own thoughts. I will be a little bit more specific. I do think that rates are going to come down a little bit from where they are. The right now, as of this recording, which is like, what are we at here? We're on April 8th.
Starting point is 00:12:42 We are recording this. They are at around 7% today. I do think by the end of the year will be somewhere between, let's say, 6.25 and 6.75. So they're going to come down a little bit, but not into the fives. And I've sort of been believing this for a while because this is a complicated topic. and rates just always come down slower than they go up. And I think that that's number one. Number two, even if the Fed does lower rates, bond yields have climbed a lot over the last couple of weeks and they could stay high even if the Fed cuts rates. So there's all sorts of things that are suggesting that we are not going to see as much
Starting point is 00:13:21 movement in rates as people predicted. And so because no one knows, maybe to sort of flesh out our conversation, here, let's use this as a straw man. Let's just use this, you know, assumption and talk about what might happen throughout this year. If I'm right, I'll probably be wrong. But I think it's, you know, a reasonable guess that we're going to be somewhere around six and a half at the end of this year. Now that you've heard our predictions about the market or maybe us skirting around making predictions, we're going to talk about the state of the housing market if rates do stay high. Stick around. Have you ever lost a DSCR deal because the financing just took too long?
Starting point is 00:14:05 Red flags popped up late. The lender needed more time. The deal fell apart. Well, our friends at Dominion Financial just launched a program to help prevent that. With their new Express rental loan, you can close in 10 days or less. And they still offer their price beat guarantee so you can get great pricing and a timeline you can count on. Fast, simple, reliable. That's Dominion Financial.
Starting point is 00:14:28 Check them out at Bigger. BiggerPockets.com slash dominion. That's biggerpockets.com slash dominion. You just realized your business needed to hire someone yesterday. How can you find amazing candidates fast? Easy. Just use Indeed. When it comes to hiring, Indeed is all you need. That means you can stop struggling to get your job notice on other job sites. Indeed, sponsored job posts help you stand out and hire the right people quickly. Your job post jumps straight to the top of the page where your ideal candidates are looking. And it works. Sponsored jobs on Indeed. get 45% more applications than non-sponsored post.
Starting point is 00:15:03 The best part, no monthly subscriptions or long-term contracts. You only pay for results. And speaking of results, in the minute I've been talking to you, 23 people just got hired through Indeed worldwide. There's no need to wait any longer. Speed up your hiring right now with Indeed. And listeners of the show will get a $75-sponsored job credit to get your jobs more visibility at Indeed.com slash rookie.
Starting point is 00:15:27 Just go to Indeed.com. slash rookie right now and support our show by saying you heard about Indeed on this podcast. That's Indeed.com slash rookie. Terms and conditions apply. Hiring Indeed is all you need. If the new year means getting rentals back in order, listings are a good place to start. Avail. Part ofrealtor.com makes it simple to list a rental for free and get it in front of millions of renters. One listing, one click, posted across 24 top rental sites. Avail even helps generate listing titles and descriptions to save time. More visibility means fewer days sitting vacant and getting your property rented quickly. It's a fast, free way to find renters without the usual hassle.
Starting point is 00:16:05 Get started at Avail.co.com slash bigger pockets. That's A-V-A-I-L-C-O-Slar Bigger Pockets. Managing properties can feel like a full-on circus. You're juggling vendors, tracking payments, chasing approvals across multiple properties, and maybe a few HOAs, all while trying to keep tenants happy and owners confident. One delay can throw everything off, and suddenly your day is all clean up, no progress. That's why hundreds of property managers rely on bill to streamline their finances. Bill for property management lets you add all your properties, assign permissions, pay bills,
Starting point is 00:16:42 and receive payments quickly and efficiently, without the usual bottlenecks. It syncs with platforms like QuickBooks, Zero, NetSuite, and Sage intact, so your accounting stays aligned. You can automate bulk payments across properties and HOAs, choose, flexible payment methods like same-day ACH, international wires, card, or check, and set custom roles in approval policies. There's even a dedicated bill inbox for each property to keep everything organized. Ready to simplify your workflow, book your free demo at bill.com slash bigger pockets and get a $100.com Amazon gift card. That's bill.com slash bigger pockets. Welcome back to the show. Kathy, what do you see happening with housing inventory? Because
Starting point is 00:17:27 that's sort of been the big story here this year other than rates is like we're seeing a little bit of an increase in inventory, but not that much. And if rates don't come down, we may not see the lock and effect break. So do you think we'll see that trend reverse or more of the same? What do you think will happen? Well, you know, over time, people do start to get used to the status quo. So maybe that will maybe people will just start to realize this is where we are. We're in the sixes and sevens, it's not that unusual. You've got to find property that works for that. And because wages have going up more and more people will be able to afford, even at those higher rates. The affordable, you know, more affordable housing will be less affected by these higher rates.
Starting point is 00:18:13 Yet you've got the high-end market where people just have money and they don't care about rates. So the super high-end, maybe it's just not as affected and affordable housing, not so much. because when you really look at the difference in payment, it's not massive. You know, I'm talking about $100,000 or $200,000 house. So it seems like kind of the middle class might be more affected. What is the median home price now in the 400s? So you're getting into five and sixes, you can, in terms of price, you can feel that. But if I were to guess, I would say we're going to continue to have this inventory problem for a while.
Starting point is 00:18:51 And if you just look at the number of people in the U.S., There's 330 million people in the U.S. I haven't checked recently. But there's a lot of Americans. And now I think over 3 million more immigrants just in the last few years. And typically a good housing year of sales is about 4 million houses. Three to five million houses trading hands, but usually about 4 million. So you don't need to have that many home sales compared to the amount of household formations to keep housing stabilized. So I just, I don't think, you know, I think it's going to be continuing. to be the supply versus demand story. There's more demand than supply. And there's enough people who can't afford, even at these high rates, that housing will stay strong. And we're seeing that, right, guys? You're still seeing buyers all over the place. Absolutely. Yeah. So James, I mean,
Starting point is 00:19:38 Kathy mentioned sort of people with money that I would describe Seattle as a wealthy city. There's a lot of high earners in that area, one of the highest median incomes in the country. Tell us what's happening in your market. Are you know, we do see little, upticks in new listings, but are they just getting gobbled up? Like, are they just coming off the market quickly? They're gone. I've seen the data about uptick and new listings, but the absorption rate is so fast right now. There's so much pent up demand in our market where you can go out two, three miles and not find
Starting point is 00:20:13 one house for sale. Well, in areas, especially if it's in a more affordable price point. And then even if you want to talk about even more expensive market, Newport Beach, where I am, That market moves and it moves with cash. And these homes are appreciating at 5%, 10%, and it has became one of the most expensive markets in the whole U.S. And I saw something come out that said the average price per square foot is now at $2,000 a foot in Newport Beach. So I'm really happy that I just bought a house for 1,100 a foot. Whoa.
Starting point is 00:20:48 Wow. And that's the biggest thing right now is you have to buy on the now and figure out where the demand. is. And if there is no inventory and there's high absorption rates, then people are affording it. And it is to my own surprise. Twelve months ago, I thought there was going to definitely be a pullback, which there was, but it rebounded back. That pullback was based on fear. It wasn't based on actual affordability. And that fear caused this like blip in the market, but we are seeing it race back. And it's really hard to find deal flow. And, you know, and I think what people have to do is they have to look at the new investment strategy. Everyone goes back to these old rules, the 1% rule. You can do it this way, the house hack, you can do a bur. Those are strategies
Starting point is 00:21:29 you can implement, but the math is going to change. How we were buying back in 2008 was a lot different than we were buying in 2015. And how we looked at deals was a lot differently. And now how we're looking at them today has to be different. And it's about how you cut the deals up. And if you get stuck in that old way of underwriting properties, you're going to make old returns. They're not going to do that great. And so you have to shift with a that market and rates are probably here to stay. Inventory is locked up. I didn't think it was going to be this locked up at all.
Starting point is 00:22:00 I thought there was going to be more inventory coming to market and it is compressed. Henry, are you seeing changes in the type of demand that you're seeing? Like, is it the same kind of transaction? Is it mostly at the higher end of the market? Yeah, no, we're seeing demand really across the board. So the types of properties that go quickly here are your typical first-time homebuyer property. So your three bed, two bath, 1,200 to 2,200 square foot home. If it's done right, it's gone.
Starting point is 00:22:29 We also have a influx of people that are looking to buy that next tier home, right? The three to five bedroom, you know, three to four bathroom, 2,000 to 3,000 plus square foot house because of the corporations that are here bringing in the high earners. And so they're either building those houses or they're snapping the good ones up off the market. the luxury flips are taking longer, right? The things that are above those price points. But if you've got something in a desirable neighborhood nearby one of these employers that's in that mid-tier and it's done right, gone. If it's under $250,000, it's getting looked at and it's probably getting snapped up. That's not what I was expecting you to say, to be honest.
Starting point is 00:23:11 I thought you were going to say, like, luxury things were doing well, sort of what James was alluding to. But that just shows how regional differences do make sense. And it sounds like what's fueling your market is people who are either coming in or landing some good jobs given the really strong job growth and high wages that are coming to your market. Correct. Kathy, what do you think this all means for sort of the younger generation? Maybe the people who don't already have enough money to spend $2,000 per square foot, which is like all 12 of James's neighbors and no one else in the whole country. or the people who are getting jobs like in Henry's market. Like, what does this mean for the average young person who just wants to buy their first home?
Starting point is 00:23:53 Oh, that's been an age-old question. It's never been easy really to buy your first home. Honestly, you know, I got to go back through the decades. That's always been an issue. The one time that we had rates so, so low and it was so easy for anyone to get in the housing market, that sort of blew up, as we know. So you would just have to educate yourself. That's the best thing I could say. People are doing it. People are doing it every day. Just an anecdotal example. I was speaking to a babysitter. She's 24 years old. She's going to buy her first house. She's doing it with other people. And she makes $24 an hour. So, you know, there's ways. And you have to get creative and understand the power of it that let go of all the other things you're spending your money on, the things that you can let go of and put it into assets that are going to inflate over time and are going to make you wealthy over time. It does take sacrifice. You know, many of us
Starting point is 00:24:51 sacrifice to get to where we are. We shared our house with three or four of their families, the first house we bought. We carved it up different rooms and had friends move in, and that's how we made it work. So, you know, not everyone is going to get out of college and get a $100,000 salary. And those who are, are probably an expensive markets where they can't afford in that market, even with a $100,000 salary. So again, you just have to get creative, you know, and there's ways. We all know. There's so many different ways to do it.
Starting point is 00:25:18 You just have to learn how. I think an important thing you said is that it's always been difficult. And that is true, especially, you know, I hear this term. Like, people always say, like, oh, we're becoming a renter nation. The data does not support that idea, actually. You can Google it. I encourage you to if you just look at the homeowner percentage in the United States back into the 60s.
Starting point is 00:25:38 It's always been between 63. 69% right now we're at 66%. So right in the middle there. But obviously that can change. And with the affordability issue here, Henry, I'm curious, do you think there's going to be, it's going to be harder for people than it has historically to afford a starter home? And does that mean that there's going to be more demand for rentals? Or what are some of the implications for this challenged affordability? It's hard not to think it's going to be more difficult because we just keep seeing prices climb. We keep seeing rents climb. And yes, there are more jobs out there and people are getting more high paying jobs.
Starting point is 00:26:16 And that's going to help some of the affordability. But I think there is. There's going to be a subset of people who continue to be priced out of being able to buy a home. And I think not only is that going to play into that, but you've also got the additional costs potentially for some people with having to, you know, pay for a realtor out of their own pocket to come and buy some of those homes. Right. And so I think it is going to be challenging. And I think you're going to start to see or hopefully start to see some ways for people to be able to jump on the affordability train. I think education has to be key here.
Starting point is 00:26:51 There's never been or there's not really a lot of formalized education for people in terms of helping them understand where can they go and look for first time home buyer programs that can help them offset some of these costs. Right. In almost every state, there's typically a program. but unless you know someone who knows this information, a lot of lot of people have access to it. So education is key and helping people put together plans and budgets for being able to buy a home. I think a lot of people don't truly understand how much they need to have set aside and how much they need to be making to be able to afford it. A lot of people don't really even start thinking about that until they're ready to start making
Starting point is 00:27:30 offers. And so I just think education and access to resources and programs to help them understand will go a little bit of the way, but there are going to be several people just priced out. Yeah, I unfortunately agree. I wish it was easier for people to afford and there wasn't this affordability problem. But it does seem like it's here for at least the foreseeable future and hopefully something will come along to make it a bit easier. We have more on this conversation right after this quick break. If you own a large or complex rental property, congrats. And I'm also sorry.
Starting point is 00:28:04 One day you're building a portfolio. The next, you're reconciling six accounts, five states, four LLCs, three partners, two property managers, and running your portfolio starts to feel like running a median-sized accounting firm. And if you got into this to get your time back, that's not ideal. That's when you need Stessa Pro. Stessa Pro is built for investors who've outgrown other tools. One dashboard, every property, every entity, real-time performance, clean reporting, tax-ready documents in a click. If your portfolio has grown up, it's time your tools did so too.
Starting point is 00:28:38 Go to stessa.com slash mkTG slash bigger pockets to try Stessa Pro and get six months free. Tired of traditional lenders holding you back. Host Financial is here to change the game. They've ditched the DTI restrictions and they zero in on what really matters, your property's income potential. So no more chasing papers for tax returns. or personal income statements. Think about it. A lender that values your property's worth
Starting point is 00:29:01 over your paycheck, that's the host financial difference. Approved in 47 states, they are ready to help you make your next big move. Curious if you qualify, just head over to hostfinancial.com and find out.
Starting point is 00:29:13 Stop letting outdated lending practices hold you back. That's hostfinancial.com where your property's potential meets unlimited financing. Real estate investors, the April 15th tax deadline is coming fast.
Starting point is 00:29:24 If you own rental property and haven't done a cost segregation study yet, you could be handing thousands of dollars to the IRS that you don't have to. These studies let you write off as much as 25% of your building and generate huge tax deductions. Costsegregation.com is an online self-guided software that makes cost segregation fast and affordable. So it finally makes sense for smaller rental properties purchased for as low as $100,000. With pricing under $500 and an average savings of over $25,000, it's just just a no-brainer. What's more, audit support is included by the number one cost segregation company
Starting point is 00:30:02 in the U.S., but you must complete it before the tax deadline. Go to costsegregation.com and use code tax deadline to get 10% off your first report. Don't overpay the IRS. Head to costsegregation.com before April 15th. Welcome back to On the Market. James, I want to ask you sort of the flip side of this question, which is do you anticipate fewer investors being in the market? because as you said, you sort of have to change tack. You need to look for different strategies. You need to underwrite deals differently. Do you think the average investor is willing to do that,
Starting point is 00:30:40 or people are going to bail and put their money somewhere else? You know, we definitely saw investors bail out a lot in 2023. But I feel like the goal rush just came back because, again, the fear has loosened up. We broke our record last month for lending hard money. and we were down on volume for a while. We lent nearly 2x what we had lent in the last five months per month. And there's this mass surge going on.
Starting point is 00:31:10 I think investors will continue to buy. I think they're going to have to buy differently. And if they want to put in the time and work, then the activity will go on. But you have to cut, again, you've got to cut up your deal differently. You've got to look at it different. How is it, it's more about how you look at it right now. Like if I'm looking at a rental property, I'm not looking at my cash flow. I'm looking at my return on equity.
Starting point is 00:31:32 What can I create? There's my true return. And I still can't find anything that's going to get me 100% return on my money in 12 months with equity. You know, maybe Bitcoin, if you just get lucky, I don't know. Yeah, like why is 100% return the benchmark? If you find it 100% return, sign me up. But like, I think the normal benchmark would be 8%, which, which is the stock market.
Starting point is 00:31:58 Well, and that's the thing. You can still make those returns in today's market, right? Like, if you can flip a house, you can create 20, 25% equity. That's what you need to be profitable on a flip. And if you're putting in $50,000 and you create $50,000 in equity, that's 100% return in value right there. And I think if people switch their mindsets, they're going to continue to buy. And at the end of the day, investing in real estate, if you think it's going into high
Starting point is 00:32:24 inflation, like Kathy said, it will go up. And so I think investor activity, it goes in surges. The fear has gone away. We're seeing a surge again. If there's anything else that happens to the economy, which could happen, right? There's a lot of weird things ruined in the background. Then you'll see an exodus again. And so that's what I have really learned is buy when people are freaked out because that is when you get the best deals.
Starting point is 00:32:49 Yeah. I mean, 100% I agree with you, James. I think what this economy is doing is for investors anyway. is it is creating stronger investors because of the economic climate. And it's forcing investors who are staying in the game who got in when things were so much, you know, easier. It's forcing them to learn how to pivot. And it's forcing them to be fundamentally sound investors, right?
Starting point is 00:33:18 Nowhere have we ever said that this is a business where you're going to make a whole bunch of money. in the first 60 days of you owning a property or the first year of you owning a property. Like being a landlord anyway, right? So being a landlord has always been a long-term game. We've just been really spoiled over the past three to five years because we've had great rates. We've had prices going up. We've had rents going up. And you've been able to make great returns. But now in a more, I don't want to call it normal market, but a probably more realistic market, the fundamentals are more important. You have to, when you're underwriting a property, you actually have to scroll down to the bottom of the calculator and look at the 30 year cash flow prediction. Not just the year one, am I making the money today?
Starting point is 00:34:07 But what's this going to look like in three years, five years, seven years, ten years, right? Because it is a long-term play. And can you sustain owning that property until you get the payoff that you want? And if you can't, then that's probably not a deal you need to do, right? These are the things that we have to do now when we're underwriting our deals that maybe a lot of people did. do over the past five years because they're like, oh, where it's not paying me $7,000 a month cash flow on day one, get it out of here. I'll go get another one, right? It's just not that game anymore. I want to say that in some ways, I think it's easier than it's been because there's
Starting point is 00:34:38 always forces at play whatever is happening in the market. And during COVID, there was so much competition because rates were so low. It was, you know, remember you guys, it was like multiple offers on everything. And that's, that's hard. That's a hard. That's different skills than today, where today now there's a lot less competition, and in some cases, none. And you also have certain people in distress under the current situation. So in my opinion, it's easier today than it was a few years ago. Just because interest rates were lower than doesn't mean it was necessarily easier to find the deal. I think we all just do this sort of like industry-wide resetting of expectations. And like the reason I asked you, James, about like the 100% return is I was talking to
Starting point is 00:35:29 someone over the last week and they were talking about, you know, deal, cash flow is hard to find. This is hard. I was like, yeah. And it's still a way better investment than anything else that you can do with your money. And I went to the point of just like doing all of this math and analysis. And I decided to just take an on market deal in a market that I invested in the, in a market that I invested in the Midwest and just find a random on-market duplex. I just pulled it down. I ran the analysis for it, and what it showed, this is buying full asking price on-market deal. And it returned, if you add up the amortization, the value add, the cash flow, which was only like three or four percent, and the tax benefits, it still yielded a 12 percent annualized return. The stock market offers an
Starting point is 00:36:19 eight percent annualized return. And if you know anything about compounding, the The difference between 8% and 12% is actually enormous. If you invested, sorry, I'm going to go on a rant here because I did this all this week. This is why I spent my weekend doing is if you invested $100,000 in at 8% stock market, after 30 years, you'd have a million dollars. Pretty good, right? If you invested that $100,000 into my on-market random deal, instead of a million, you'd have $3 million.
Starting point is 00:36:48 You would have triple the amount that the stock market return. and that's my boring regular on-market deal. So I think people just need to start forget. Yeah. Was it easier to find cash flow 10 years ago? Yes. Does that matter? Absolutely not because it's about where you need to put your resources right now.
Starting point is 00:37:05 And it's still the best asset class to put resources in. So there's my rant. Sorry, I had to say that. Soapbox Dave is my favorite Dave. I just, I understand why people are. frustrated. We all wish it was, you know, if it was super easy, but it's still a really good way to build wealth. And I just think we all need to remember that and sort of normalize these types of returns because they're still really good. Amen. Yeah, let's just remind everybody that
Starting point is 00:37:38 where else can you have somebody else paying down your debt for you? The government subsidizes this investment for you, gives you tax breaks. And if you just let someone else pay off your debt in 30 years, you own the property free and clear. Now, I know 30 years sounds like a long time from now, you can do it faster by taking a lot of the cash flow and paying down the loan faster, but there's nothing that compares. And then if you decide, you know, I want access to this money, you can just refinance that property and take cash out tax-free people. So again, yeah, nothing compares.
Starting point is 00:38:12 All right. Well, it sounds like at least the four of us are coping with the idea that interest rates might stay higher. and at least admitting to the fact that we don't know what's going to happen, but are still investing anyway. So thank you all for sharing your information and your feelings about what's going on right now. And thank you all for listening. If you also like Soapbox, Dave or some of the answers that everyone else gave, we do always appreciate when you get on your soap box and tell either a friend about this show that you really like this podcast or tell the whole world by writing a review for us
Starting point is 00:38:48 either on Apple or Spotify. I'm Dave Meyer for Bigger Pockets, and on behalf of James, Kathy, and Henry, we appreciate each and every one of you, and we'll see you for the next episode of On the Market. Thank you all for listening to the Bigger Pockets Real Estate podcast. Make sure you get all our new episodes by subscribing on YouTube, Apple, Spotify,
Starting point is 00:39:27 or any other podcast platform. Our new episodes come out Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. I'm the host and executive producer of the show, Dave Meyer. The show is produced by Ian K. copywriting is by Calico content, and editing is by Exodus Media. If you'd like to learn more about real estate investing or to sign up for our free newsletter, please visit www.w.w.com. The content of this podcast is for informational purposes only.
Starting point is 00:39:50 All host and participant opinions are their own. Investment in any asset, real estate included, involves risk. So use your best judgment and consult with qualified advisors before investing. You should only risk capital you can afford to lose. And remember, past performance is not indicative of future results. Bigger Pocket's LLC disclaims all liability for direct, indirect, consequential, or other damages arising from a reliance on information presented in this podcast. Thank you.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.