Rent While The Renting Is Good?

According to the New York Times, if you’re renting you’re smart.

Over the next five years, which is about the average amount of time recent buyers have remained in their homes, prices in the Los Angeles area would have to rise more than 5 percent a year for a typical buyer there to do better than a renter. The same is true in Phoenix, Las Vegas, the New York region, Northern California and South Florida. In the Boston and Washington areas, the break-even point is about 4 percent.

“House prices have to fall more before housing becomes a clear buy again,” says Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Economy.com, a research company that helped conduct the analysis. “These markets aren’t as overvalued as they were a year ago or two years ago, but they’re still unfriendly. And that’s one of the reasons the market is still soft — people realize it’s not a bargain.”

Unless you plan on living in your home long-term, you may want to hold off and see what happens to the market. —MEGHANN MARCO

A Word of Advice During a Housing Slump: Rent [NYT]
(Photo: Sugar Pond)

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