Wednesday, January 17, 2018

10 Real Estate Trends to watch in 2018 (Part 2)

Are you thinking about selling your home and moving up to your dream home in 2018? Finally investing in rental properties? Or maybe selling and downsizing?

You'll definitely want to read about these trends so you can make well-informed decisions that put the most money in your pocket!

For the third year in a row now, we've combed the best research by economists, analysts, and experts and summarized it for you with these ten real estate market trends to watch in 2018.

In part one of this series, we covered our first six market trends to watch in 2018, and here are the next four:

7. The GREAT news – the real estate market is expected to cruise, not lose

Across the country, real estate analysts and financial experts are generally in consensus with two predictions for the housing market this year: it will slow down just a measure from its hot pace, and that's also probably a necessary and healthy correction.

In fact, although historical data points to a turning of the real estate cycle to that of contraction, not expansion, within the coming years, our housing market is far different than the conditions circa 2007 that precluded the crash and recession.

For instance, housing is still in short supply, especially in the range of homes for first-time buyers and working-class families, which, conversely, stimulates demand. Unlike the record-high homeownership rate we saw in the mid-2000s thanks to the loosening of credit standards and widespread availability of no-money-down and subprime loans, our banks are issuing a vast majority of conservative 30-year fixed-rate loans these days. 

Interest rates have climbed a tick but still remain extremely low if you zoom out to a historical perspective, which incentivizes home buying, too.

Rents are also rising in most metro areas around the country, making home buying more attractive, and the changes we see from the new tax bill aren’t expected to have such a significant effect to be a detriment for the housing market.

Sure, home prices can’t keep climbing forever, but it looks like we’ll have a “soft landing” in 2018, with moderate home price appreciation in many areas – including Sacramento.

Markets are driven by tangible economic factors like jobs (or unemployment), interest rates, growth, and supply and demand, and those are all point to a gentle shift – not a screeching halt – in the housing market.

8. House tech fantasy finally becomes reality

Every year, real estate and home design blogs (like this one!) optimistically predict that THIS is the year when we see a wave of hi-tech innovations that transforms the common home. And while technology marches on, it’s been adopted reluctantly and incrementally for the common homeowner.

However, THIS is the year when we see a wave of hi-tech innovations that transform the common home!

But this wave of home technology isn’t necessarily just coming in consumer goods like appliances, televisions, built-in computer systems, and electronics, but in construction practices, itself.

In fact, a lot of the advancements we'll see are born from necessity, as builders look at new ways to fill the housing shortage with prefab homes, 3D printed homes and construction materials, and automation that makes beautiful and practical structures far more affordable as well as practical.

But yeah, whole walls that turned into TVs and computer screens would be nice, too!

9. Tax bill shakeup

No matter where you sit on the political spectrum, the recent passing of a historic tax bill still poses more questions than it does answers.

Will a rising economic tide “lift all boats” – including the real estate market? Did saving (although capping) the Mortgage Interest Deduction make it a non-factor for homeowners? Or, will the sting from new property tax rules further slow homeownership rates? We’ll find out in 2018!

The good news is that under the new tax bill, that deduction cap will be reduced, not eliminated. So new homebuyers will still be able to deduct the amount of mortgage interest they pay on the initial $750,000 of their mortgage loan. (Down from the current $1,000,000 cap on MID.)

(It’s worth noting that this only applies to new home purchases going forward, but current homeowners will be “grandfathered in” with the old rules.)

How much of an impact will this make? Most likely, it will have only modest or negligible effect on homeownership and the cost of owning, since the national median home price is only $254,000 (far below the $750,000).

Capital gains were also left intact, so when homeowners sell their primary home (one they’ve lived in at least two of the past five years), they can exclude $250,000 of profits from taxation, or $500,000 for married couples.

But under the new tax codes, homeowners will be able to deduct only up to $10,000 in state and local income and property taxes OR sales and state and local property taxes.

April 15 will be interesting this year – but owning real estate is still one of the best investments you can make, no matter how you add it up!  

10. Inventory better, but still lagging

We still don’t have enough houses for sale around the country to serve demand, whether new construction or existing homes. In fact, while more projects that were initiated in 2016 and 2017 are finished in 2018 and available for a resident, the inventory shortage still has a long way to go. Somehow, rental prices are surging in most metro markets at that same time as home prices because of this shortage, and that double-edged sword is especially true in the Sacramento area.

Of course, no one could have anticipated the additional home shortage caused by the myriad natural disasters we suffered through in 2017. In some cities and states around the country, millions of homes were lost – for both owners and renters – due to flooding, tornados, wildfires, and more. 

But the need for housing also presents incredible opportunities for landlords, investors, savvy homeowners, and even first-time buyers who put in the time and work to find the right home this year.


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