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by ameister14
1557 days ago
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Yeah but that's an overall lowering of debt servicing as a percent of disposable income. The only part that hasn't dropped much is consumer debt. Plus while reverse amortization might be less common, ARMs generally are still very popular and you'll see a hike in overall debt service associated with rising interest rates. I don't know what's gonna happen with the housing market and I don't think it'll crash either but I think part of the reason is because private equity has bought a huge amount of housing - BlackRock bought what, 10-15% of the houses sold in 2020? |
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And metrics like credit card delinquencies are at historic lows: https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/DRCCLACBS
ARMs actually aren't very popular - fewer than 15% of new mortgages are ARM.
> BlackRock bought what, 10-15% of the houses sold in 2020?
People vastly overestimate how large players like Blackrock are. There are something like 80 million single-family homes in the US. Of these, Blackrock owns 80 thousand. If they bought every one of those homes in 2020 (they didn't) - it would represent more like 1% of homes sold that year. And of course there are millions of condos not figured into my denominator. They're huge, but way under 1% of purchases.