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by gowld 2149 days ago
This is only true in places where investment capital has taken over the market, not in places where individuals are scraping together funds to buy in an economically growing neighborhood.
1 comments

I meant more along the lines that people don't take into account all the costs that they should when calculating their break-even price.

This is generally true regardless of the location, with the caveat that hot markets are more likely to have more professionals participating that know how to include those costs.

Often people see those higher prices as greedy profit (or as artificially high in order to gentrify, etc.), and developers do need to make a profit, but often times a large part of the elevated price is just including hidden costs that homeowners don't account for.

But looking at it from the other side, developers/investors are only going to enter markets where they believe there's a margin for profit. Which generally means those neighborhoods are a bit underpriced to begin with.