Lessons Learned From the Great Depression old stories of how are grandparents and great-parents passed down through the generations were difficult to assimilate until the housing market crashed. Compounded with soaring unemployment, many modern-day families are finding the correlation between the current market crisis and the tales we heard as children from generations that preceded us.
What the two eras have in common are families struggling to make ends meet. Epic home foreclosures, (Grandma losing the family farm) and historically high unemployment (Brother can you spare a dime?) But with all adversity and hardship: there comes the dawning of a new day and new opportunities.
Senior Citizens are our best resource when it comes to experience. Having lived through the Great Depression and Stock Market Crash, they became very resourceful. They saved money, and recycled materials to avoid waste. In time things did bounce back. Following any major crisis is the epicenter of opportunity. All one has to do is look for it.
Today’s home buyers are looking for solid long-term investments. We are seeing more senior citizens investing in Real Estate for their heirs, or assisting their children and grandchildren in the purchase of property perhaps to offset rising Estate Taxes. The terms of which are increasing annually.
Older people see the opportunity in the housing market which is parallel to what occurred following the Great Depression of 1929- even then housing appreciated 6% per year on average for the next 33 years until the Mortgage Meltdown which began in 2005.
So the window of opportunity which is attracting renewed interest in the housing market is the surplus of distressed properties the banks are holding as a result of epic foreclosure filings not seen since the Great Depression.
THE LACK OF REO/FORECLOSURE HOMES IS AN ECONOMIC BYPRODUCT
The lack of REO properties (Real Estate Owned by Lenders) is an economic byproduct of the glut which hit the market early on. Those first to fall, which were liquidated at substantial losses to the lenders who now held them. The learned through trial and error that releasing too many at one time, would result in a price devaluation and prolong the housing market recovery.
The Second Prong
The second prong is Short sale efficiency improvements and new guidelines: which have helped to streamline the decision-making process; and perhaps lenders have learned that rushing to judgement (foreclosure) and amassing vast inventories could take years to liquidate at or below fair market value.
Buyers are returning to the market. They are evaluating their needs more conservatively, obtaining Pre-Approvals on financing and examining their budgets more carefully.
Bigger is no longer better. Economic stability and long-term endurance has become the new norm. Which, is exactly what occurred following the Great Depression four score early.

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