Although this question has been addressed numerous times in one form or another, here’s my $.02:
I think you need to check a variety of variables. Keep a pulse of the market. I am buying next summer in the Pac NW and see prices leveling off or even decreasing. Keep an eye on the following things:
- Mortgage rates - (
www.bankrate.com). They are not dependent upon the fed funds rate, but more so the 10-yr T-note and recently reintroduced 30-yr T-bond. Since the bulk of the economy is tied into the housing market (from jobs to home equity extraction), the fed will do everything in its power to keep rates low to continue the economy moving ahead (albeit somewhat questionably imo).
- Rental prices versus mortgage payments. If there is a huge disparity in these (west coast and east coast primarily), then you may have a bubble.
- Demographics – Baby boomers are beginning to retire, and they will be moving to drive up real estate prices, as many of them still have pensions (for how long is questionable), highly appreciated real estate they are selling, and consequently the ability to continue driving up prices.
- Owner occupied. What percentage are owned, vacant, or rented? Some areas in the SW have high vacancy rates due to flipping, but this seems to be ion the wane, except for the condo market.
I think a bubble burst, if it happens, will be in certain concentrated areas. Miami, Las Vegas, and Phoenix come to mind. DC, SF, LA all seem to have high prices, but this is more due to demand and subsequent housing shortages versus investors.