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by JPKab 2757 days ago
Keep in mind that you'll see a corresponding increase in rents as more buyers in a given area hold off on buying. The demand ends up just shifting. That's been the effect in Boulder, CO.

It all comes down to this: If you are looking at housing as an investment, you are buying into a decades long market aberration driven by super low interest rates and government policies.

Otherwise, if you look at it in terms of the specific supply and demand curve in your geographic area, you can better steer your decision making. My area (northwest of Denver, CO near Boulder) has local government policies which have seriously constrained housing supply. That made me choose to buy despite a less favorable macroeconomic landscape to home ownership.