ValueInsured's survey found that 65 % of prospective homebuyers
believe home prices in their area will be higher in a 5 - year horizon.
Among current renters who are highly interested in buying their first home, 55 %
believe home prices in their area are too high and not sustainable; this is a +9 percentage point increase since September 2016
Not exact matches
In the long run, however, Wei believes that rebuilt homes in burned areas will gradually increase supply and could raise home prices in these neighborhoods, since these homes will be newer and improved compared with previous home
In the long run, however, Wei
believes that rebuilt
homes in burned areas will gradually increase supply and could raise home prices in these neighborhoods, since these homes will be newer and improved compared with previous home
in burned
areas will gradually increase supply and could raise
home prices in these neighborhoods, since these homes will be newer and improved compared with previous home
in these neighborhoods, since these
homes will be newer and improved compared with previous
homes.
There is reason to
believe that some people claim intolerable noise
in order to justify compensation for a
home that they had previously been unable to sell for a
price sufficient to buy
in a more attractive
area.
Additionally, both sides
believe they can afford their
home for as long as they would like to live
in it (91 percent of Republicans and 89.6 percent of Democrats), even as
prices reach — and,
in some
areas, shatter — records.
The median existing -
home price, according to NAR, is expected to grow 4 percent
in 2017; of the homeowners surveyed, a wide 91 percent
believe prices will stay the same or rise
in their community over the next six months — a sentiment felt most among renters and residents
in suburban
areas or
in the West.
Fifty - seven percent of American owners
believe that
homes in their
area are overvalued and that current
prices are unsustainable.
Fifty - seven percent of American homeowners surveyed
believe that
homes in their
area are overvalued and that current
prices are unsustainable.
More than 7
in 10 California homebuyers and homeowners (73 %) say
homes in their
area are over-valued, and that current
prices are not sustainable; this contrasts sharply with 47 % of rest of Americans who
believe the same about
home prices in their local
area
In the latest ValueInsured Modern Homebuyer Survey, majority of Americans and Millennials believe more people will relocate to less expensive housing areas if home prices in their hometown continue to go u
In the latest ValueInsured Modern Homebuyer Survey, majority of Americans and Millennials
believe more people will relocate to less expensive housing
areas if
home prices in their hometown continue to go u
in their hometown continue to go up:
Nearly 60 percent of American homeowners surveyed
believe homes in their
area are overvalued and current
prices are unsustainable, a 7 percentage point increase since last quarter.