字幕表 動画を再生する 英語字幕をプリント You know the rule of real estate: location, location, location. But in the US, after years of housing markets struggles, prices are ramping up, and there're fewer and fewer locations, where buyers can get bang for their buck. Experts say, "Don't call it a bubble, because there are still deals to be found, but overvaluation is becoming an issue." According to real estate analytics from CoreLogic, an overvalued home market is one in which home prices are 10% or more above what's considered affordable. And that's defined by per capita income in the area. And this overvaluation problem is really an issue of supply. Builders are not building enough homes for the lower and middle parts of the market. And they're really focusing on the upper-end of the market, where they're building a lot of homes, because there is good margins in that part. The most overvalued market in the country: Austin, Texas. Home prices have surged a staggering 42.3% over what is considered affordable. Want to live elsewhere deep in the heart of Texas? Well, prepare to dig deep in the heart of your wallet. Home prices in Houston and San Antonio also make the list. In Philadelphia, home prices have risen faster than almost any other city in the country since last year. And prices in the city of brotherly love, clock in at 14.3% over affordable levels. The nation's capital's population has risen by about 800 thousand over the past ten years, but Washington D.C.'s housing inventory hasn't caught up. And that has pushed housing prices to about 19% above the affordability level. And it's not just larger metropolitan areas that make the list, in Tennessee, Knoxville home prices have soared over the past several years. And in Nashville, potential home buyers are singing the blues, facing a housing market that's 12% over what qualifies as affordable.
B1 中級 米 米国で最も過大評価されている住宅市場 (在美國房價最被高估的地區(The Most Overvalued Housing Markets in the U.S.)) 267 18 Candy に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日 シェア シェア 保存 報告 動画の中の単語