The persistent trend of
price appreciation exceeding income appreciation means homes on the market become less affordable every month.
Although house
price appreciation exceeds income growth, the gap between the two does not match the differences that prevailed during the housing boom.
Not exact matches
We know that Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway hasn't paid a dividend in more than 30 years because Buffett feels that the return on capital that he generates by retaining those earnings will create eventual share
price appreciation value for the shareholder that will
exceed the share
price / dividend capital
appreciation that his shareholders would receive.
The strong
price appreciation of the past few years was an aberration, vastly
exceeding the rise in personal income.
It would be natural to have some kind of
price appreciation as earnings accelerate, but since 2008 (or even the peak prior) the acceleration in
price far
exceeds the acceleration in earnings power.
We know that Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway hasn't paid a dividend in more than 30 years because Buffett feels that the return on capital that he generates by retaining those earnings will create eventual share
price appreciation value for the shareholder that will
exceed the share
price / dividend capital
appreciation that his shareholders would receive.
«This is why many of these areas — in particular several parts of the South and West — are seeing unhealthy
price appreciation that far
exceeds incomes.»
«Much faster
price and rent
appreciation — easily
exceeding wage growth — will occur next year unless new construction picks up measurably.»
He also noted that many metros have increased demands as employment levels rebound, but new home construction isn't up, particularly in the South and West, leading to «unhealthy
price appreciation that far
exceeds incomes.»
«Toronto's
appreciation in average home
prices since early 2015 has now
exceeded Vancouver's,» she writes.
«The growth in royalty revenue
exceeded our expectations, reflecting the ongoing expansion of the fund's underlying network of Realtors, the surprising strength in housing unit sales, and steady average
price appreciation across Canada,» says Philip Soper, president and chief executive.
Price appreciation is largely driven by the degree to which demand
exceeds supply.