se_na_23
2023-01-04 17:54:39
- #1
You stand pretty much alone on a broad front – except for the boss of a large real estate corporation who, of course, has to make endless write-downs during the downturn and therefore would like a price increase, especially for all the properties the corporations currently have to divest. But the nasty buyers are striking. Otherwise, the party is largely over. Those who can still "strike" have been significantly reduced in the last year. Money for grandma's junk property is no longer coming in, and from year to year the age cohorts in question are getting smaller. There have been many studies on this for years.
You see it wrong... "Grandma's junk property" is for more and more people the only option... over the years, something is always done, especially in the configuration of craftsman + housewife... energy costs... a new house with land costs 650k... an old house costs for example 200k... for 80k I make cosmetic improvements and I doubt anyone will live so long to burn through 370k...
Politically, the single-family house is becoming increasingly unwanted... but "grandma's junk property" stands on a plot where single-family house development is still possible... sooner or later someone will be found who says before I live in a new residential bunker with 20 neighbors, I buy this and tear it down...