It’s high when home prices have grown substantially since the last time mortgages were 7%.
Also, it’s not really a “haha, you suck at planning” so much as a new generation is hit with much higher home prices when they are entering buying time of their life.
Mortgages have been 4% for the last 20 years or so, so an entire generation has had 4% mainly due to government subsidization. And now the government can’t or won’t do that any more. If the next generation can’t buy homes because prices and rates are too high, that’s not good for social stability.
I don’t think it’s the French Revolution, but I do think there will be “why are we not paying for social programs when we have mortgage interest rate deductions for people with $750k mortgages [0]. That was palatable when the middle class had mortgages. But people who are stuck perpetually renting will likely vote to stop that.
Also people in most other countries economically comparable to the U.S. have variable rate or 5 year fixed rate mortgages. The U.S. government backstops most 30 year fixed rate mortgages. The banks don't wouldn't offer 30 rates so low, given the interest rate risk.
Also, it’s not really a “haha, you suck at planning” so much as a new generation is hit with much higher home prices when they are entering buying time of their life.
Mortgages have been 4% for the last 20 years or so, so an entire generation has had 4% mainly due to government subsidization. And now the government can’t or won’t do that any more. If the next generation can’t buy homes because prices and rates are too high, that’s not good for social stability.
I don’t think it’s the French Revolution, but I do think there will be “why are we not paying for social programs when we have mortgage interest rate deductions for people with $750k mortgages [0]. That was palatable when the middle class had mortgages. But people who are stuck perpetually renting will likely vote to stop that.
[0] https://www.rocketmortgage.com/learn/mortgage-interest-deduc...