- Joined
- Jul 18, 2021
I'm not sure I would say "totally fucked over". Looking at current rates I see 30-years in the 6.0-6.5% range depending on d/p. For comparison, I was paying around 7% as a first-time homeowner in the 90's, and my parents' generation was paying similar or higher rates back in the 70's. Even with the recent rise, mortgage rates are still lower than historical averages.Sadly, we've been in a bull market for so long (until recently) that it really screwed up expectations on what rational investments should actually be. Now us potential first time home buyers get totally fucked over on a chance to even give this a go without a serious burden of risk if things go south. If say you bought a few years ago and managed to refinance to a sub 3% rate... you effectively won the lottery in life. Gotta be great to make massive returns on a property and doing fuck all to get there.
To borrow your phrase: we've been in an artificial low-rate regime for so long that it really screwed up expectations on what rational interest rates should actually be. Remember that the lender on the other side of the transaction needs to guard against both inflation risk and repayment risk,
My advice to anyone considering buying their first home, basically agrees with your final paragraph. Prices are massively inflated right now, I would say wait a few months and see if prices start dropping. They should, because of reduction in demand - and already have started in some areas. And second, plan on holding it for 7-10 years or more like you said. Long-term investment, and don't bite off more than one can chew. If it means buying a smaller house, then buy a smaller house. Most people don't need a 3000-4000 sq. ft. McMansion.
But eventually one of two things will happen: either rates will continue rising (see early 1980's) and you'll be thrilled to have locked in that nice, low 6% rate while your new neighbor is paying 10% - or rates will drop again and you'll be able to refinance like I did a few years after the GFC.
