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I dont see the feds destroying the US housing market since that would wipe out a lot of cash and derivatives in the process, completely disastrous to say the least. So really, I foresee a panic sale or panic buy as people scrounge up based off the fear of missing out, followed by a cash injection by the feds which will cause the prices to shoot back up. Essentially the opposite of a dead cat bounce

I dont see the feds destroying the US housing market since that would wipe out a lot of cash and derivatives in the process, completely disastrous to say the least. So really, I foresee a panic sale or panic buy as people scrounge up based off the fear of missing out, followed by a cash injection by the feds which will cause the prices to shoot back up. Essentially the opposite of a dead cat bounce

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[–] 0 pt (edited )

It always goes up long-term, and it always will unless there's a huge, unexpected population crash. Interest rates determine the speed with which it increases because people operate based on the payments, not the price.

The payments on a $450,000 loan two years ago are the same as a $280,000 loan today.