- cross-posted to:
- canada@lemmy.ca
- cross-posted to:
- canada@lemmy.ca
My wife and I watched this last night. Our conclusion was that there a whole lot of really dumb-ass investors out there.
The main thesis is that small, basically useless units are built to satisfy the requirements of people hoping to either flip directly or to rent to cover the difference between finance cost and eventual market value. That is they are built to the demands of the investors, both institutional and private.
How bad of an investor do you have to be to be sinking money into a dwelling that nobody actually wants to live in? And how did we get so many of them that it’s impacting housing to this degree?
My opinion is that someone, somewhere has been running a con. A scheme where your market is not people who want a place to live, but people who are looking to make a profit by selling to others looking to make a profit.
Now the scheme has run its course and the most recent owners can’t get out because, surprise!, nobody actually wants to mortgage their very lives for a glorified closet.
That’s why for buildings, minimum construction requirements and foreign investor stops are so important.
deleted by creator
I wonder how many of these places are owned purely for their speculative value in the future, just to own as an asset. Like million dollar paintings or rare cars.
I wonder if real estate can be used for money laundering.
Methinks the COVID crisis upset the apple cart or had a factor in the crash. These closet units should be around $200k tops IMHO.
Yeah, this looks like a ponzi scheme using (useless) real estate. Can’t say I feel bad for whoever gets stuck with it. Sucks that everyone else has to deal with inflated housing prices because of it, though.
Its money laundering.
Hadn’t thought of that. How would they get their money out if the asset can’t be sold?
I don’t think it would matter. Put a loan against it. If the debt defaults, someone else inherits it…