HomeMy WebLinkAboutNYT- Stuck at the Start
Butler, Bric
From:Keeling, Adrienne M
Sent:Monday, June 3, 2024 9:11 AM
To:Butler, Bric
Cc:Hollibaugh, Mike P
Subject:FW: The Morning: Stuck in a starter home
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Bric,
Please send this article to the housing task force and place in Laserfiche.
Thanks,
Adrienne
From: Sue Finkam <sfinkam@firestarterllc.com>
Sent: Sunday, June 2, 2024 10:13 AM
To: Keeling, Adrienne M <AKeeling@carmel.in.gov>
Subject: Fwd: The Morning: Stuck in a starter home
Article for housing task force.
Begin forwarded message:
From: The New York Times <nytdirect@nytimes.com>
Date: June 2, 2024 at 7:45:53 AM EDT
To: Sue Finkam <sfinkam@firestarterllc.com>
Subject: The Morning: Stuck in a starter home
Reply-To: nytdirect@nytimes.com
Plus, Israel, the South African election and the online afterlife of Franz Kafka.
View in browser|nytimes.com
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June 2, 2024
Good morning. Today, my colleague Rukmini Callimachi has a story on
troubling economic trends for people trying to buy, or sell, starter
homes. We’re also covering Israel, the South African election and the
online afterlife of Franz Kafka. —David Leonhardt
In Chicago. Michelle Litvin for The New York Times
Stuck at the start
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By Rukmini Callimachi
I cover real estate, with a focus on the affordability crisis.
Buying your first home has long been a milestone of adulthood. So has selling
your first home and moving into something bigger. But in the last few years,
many Americans have gotten stuck in their starter house.
That’s because the U.S. housing economy is being hammered by three forces:
the highest interest rates in around two decades, record home prices and near
rock-bottom inventory. “Home affordability is the worst I’ve ever seen it,”
Daryl Fairweather, Redfin’s chief economist, told me.
Many of those who bought their homes in recent years are unable to trade up,
hampering the ability of the group behind them to purchase its own starter
homes. In today’s newsletter, we’ll look at how the housing market trapped
both groups.
Twice as expensive
In the past, the starter home served as a bridge: Families just starting out
would squeeze into a smaller home and build equity. With time, as their
careers grew and their incomes increased, they cashed in the equity and
moved to something bigger.
But now that process has hit a wall. “The trade-up buyer has just
disappeared,” Sam Khater, chief economist of Freddie Mac, said.
A majority of homeowners — six out of 10 — have mortgages with interest
rates that are locked at 4 percent or lower. With rates now hovering around 7
percent, most people who buy a home today will pay much more interest on
their new mortgage.
Economists put it to me like this: If you were to sell your house today and buy
an identical one across the street, your payment would double — and that’s
before you factor in how much the house across the street has gone up in
value. (Which is a lot: According to Redfin, home prices are at a record high.)
In Chicago, Chris and Alison Wentland told me about the predicament in
which they found themselves. Last year, they decided to sell their townhouse
in the Lincoln Park neighborhood. Their children, at 2 and 6, were sharing a
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room not much bigger than a walk-in closet, with their daughter’s bed
pressing up against their toddler’s crib. They began looking for a four-
bedroom.
They had purchased their townhouse in the low $500,000s, and would likely
be able to sell it for $700,000. But getting that one extra bedroom in the
popular Lincoln Park neighborhood would put their next home in the $1
million range. Despite having a sizable equity from their starter home, the
higher rates and higher cost meant that their monthly payments would go
from around $3,000 to at least $7,500, their real estate agent warned.
Now, the professional photographs that their broker had taken of the
townhouse — including a snazzy 3-D video — are languishing on a hard drive,
out of the public’s view. Their home is one of 50 properties that the brokerage
has photographed but has not been able to list.
Nothing to buy
It has also become harder to buy your first home. Starter homes — defined as
those that cost 75 percent or less of the median home price in a given market
— have gone up faster in value than any other category of home.
The problem is being exacerbated not just by rising prices and high interest
rates, which affect every tier of the housing market, but also by something
more fundamental: The number of new entry-level homes being built has
fallen off a cliff.
In the 1970s, more than 400,000 entry-level homes were built every year. By
2020, only 65,000 were built. One reason for the drop is the rising cost of
materials; smaller homes just don’t pencil out for builders.
So the supply of starter homes is not being replenished — by builders or by the
last generation moving out and selling. The first rung of the ladder of
homeownership, long a key part of the American dream, has become
especially hard to climb.
As just one example: I spoke to a pair of sisters in Oakland who decided to
pool their resources to buy a duplex, each sibling taking one unit. Before the
pandemic, they were approved for $850,000. But even in that price range,
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they couldn’t find anything in a city with famously high property values; one
house had a rat infestation, another had fungus, the sisters told me.
Their banker recently told them that they were now qualified for only a
$750,000 loan — $100,000 had evaporated because of rising interest rates. If
they couldn’t find anything at the higher amount, they wonder, how will they
find anything at this lower price point?
ADVERTISEMENT
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THE LATEST NEWS
Israel-Hamas War
Benjamin Netanyahu Ronen Zvulun/Reuters
A day after President Biden called for a truce in Gaza, Benjamin
Netanyahu reiterated that Israel would not agree to a permanent cease-
fire as long as Hamas retained power there.
Two far-right members of the Israeli government — Bezalel Smotrich
and Itamar Ben-Gvir — threatened to quit the coalition should
Netanyahu accept a cease-fire plan laid out by Biden.
Thousands of protesters rallied in Tel Aviv and other cities in Israel,
calling on Netanyahu to accept the cease-fire proposal.
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Officials from Israel, Egypt and the U.S. are expected to meet in Cairo
today to discuss reopening the Rafah crossing, an important route for
aid into Gaza.
More International News
In the Seshego township, South Africa. Paul Botes/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
In South Africa, the A.N.C. failed to win an outright majority in a
national election for the first time since the end of apartheid. Voters
explain why they turned away from the party.
Russian officials took children living in a Ukrainian foster home. A
Times investigation found that the authorities had later put many of
them up for adoption.
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Mexicans will vote today in an election that could put a woman in the
presidency for the first time.
Inequality in India is a hot topic during the nation’s elections. CNN
explored the different lives of two women living in Mumbai.
Starlink, the Space X satellite service, connected an isolated Brazilian
tribe to the internet. The Times traveled into the Amazon to see what
happened next.
North Korea has sent roughly 1,000 balloons filled with trash into
South Korea in the past few days.
Politics
A jury in Manhattan found Donald Trump guilty on 34 counts of
falsifying business records this past week. Here’s where his three other
criminal cases stand.
Some wonder how America’s system of checks and balances would
work if the next president is already a felon. Read Peter Baker’s
analysis.
Hunter Biden will stand trial this week on charges that he failed to
disclose his addiction when buying a gun in 2018. The president has
refused to treat him as a political liability.
Other Big Stories
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A hotel shelter run by Catholic Charities. Ariana Drehsler for The New York Times
American faith-based organizations have helped manage migrant
arrivals for decades. In recent years, they have become the targets of
extremists.
Burst water pipes caused widespread disruption in Atlanta.
In New York City, the coming introduction of congestion pricing has
inflamed an old argument: drivers versus those who embrace public
transit.
Dr Pepper now ties Pepsi as the second-most popular soda in the U.S.,
behind Coke. It has increased its market share through advertising and
novel flavors, The Wall Street Journal reports.
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THE SUNDAY DEBATE
Does Donald Trump’s guilty verdict matter for the 2024 election?
No. Trump’s supporters were unfazed by his impeachments and his role in
the Jan. 6, 2021, attacks, and they’re unlikely to be fazed now. “It’s all the
more reason for him — and for them — to press on,” Times Opinion’s Frank
Bruni writes.
Yes. A criminal conviction has the potential to sway crucial undecided voters.
“Trump’s felony conviction might end up more like a whimper than a bang …
but, sometimes, even a whimper can be decisive,” MSNBC’s Michael Cohen
writes.
FROM OPINION
Israel’s defense minister, Yoav Gallant, is a pragmatic alternative to
Netanyahu’s populist leadership, Dahlia Scheindlin argues.
The United States needs to combat fossil fuel interests’ disinformation if it
wants to expand renewable energy, Andrew Dessler writes.
Here are columns by Thomas Friedman and Maureen Dowd on the
Trump trial.
Readers of The Morning: For a limited time, enjoy 7 free days.
Discover all of The Times, from expert coverage to games to cooking, sports
and more, free for one week, then $1/week for your first six months. Try The
Times now.
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MORNING READS
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Photo illustration by Ricardo Tomás
An online afterlife: Franz Kafka, 100 years after his death, has become a
pop idol of digital alienation.
Brick by brick: A model of the Cathedral of Notre-Dame is all the hype
among adult Lego fans.
Pride month: In the 1980s, the photographer Nicholas Blair captured early
iterations of parades and political marches. See some of his photos on CNN.
Life coaching: They wanted to improve their circumstances and well-being.
Instead, they lost their savings.
Look closer: New York is constantly changing, but you can still spot old
public artworks between towers and in traffic triangles.
Vows: Finding love and acceptance, thanks to church and therapy.
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Lives Lived: U Tin Oo was a former Burmese armed forces chief and
minister of defense who turned against his country’s repressive government to
become a leader of the pro-democracy movement. He died at 97.
THE INTERVIEW
Richard Linklater Devin Oktar Yalkin for The New York Times
By David Marchese
This week’s subject for The Interview is the director Richard Linklater. His
latest film, “Hit Man,” is a stylish, sexy thriller that also sneaks in some
provocative ideas about the shifting nature of personal identity.
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I’m curious how you think about your identity at 63 years old. Do
you feel like it’s fixed?
It’s the kind of thing I’ve thought a lot about my entire life: What could
transform me? I was probably more in the camp of we’re fixed, give or take
whatever little percentage around the edges. So I was interested in this notion
lately that, oh, you can change, the personality isn’t fixed. That seems current:
this notion of self and identity, gender. I sort of like that it’s all on the table,
that everybody’s thinking you kind of are who you say you are.
One idea of the film, \[“Hit Man”\], is that we all have the power to
create our own identity. The film then suggests that this includes
the identity of someone capable of murder and living happily after
having committed murder. That’s pretty dark!
Yes, but I don’t mind. I mean, everybody wants someone dead, probably. I’ve
been in the film business over 30 years. Of course I could murder somebody.
Whom do you want dead?
No, I don’t want anyone dead. I’ll spread that out: I don’t want anything dead.
But I think there’s a surprising number of people in the world who, to
whatever degree voluntary or involuntary, have done something that has
ended a life and can compartmentalize it away. A lot of killers among us.
Read more of the interview here.
THE NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE
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Illustration by Gaia Alari
Click the cover image above to read this week’s magazine.
BOOKS
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Keila Shaheen Eli Durst for The New York Times
Online: TikTok has changed the way books are sold and marketed. Keila
Shaheen’s “The Shadow Work Journal” shows how.
There’s a spell for that: “Cunning Folk” explores a time when the use of
“service magic” was an everyday practice.
Summer reads: Lounge in the sun with this year’s crop of historical novels,
including “The Tower,” about Mary, Queen of Scots.
Our editors’ picks: “Finish What We Started,” about the MAGA grass roots,
and five other books.
Times best sellers: Stephen King’s latest short story collection, “You Like It
Darker,” is a No. 1 debut on the hardcover fiction list.
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THE MORNING RECOMMENDS …
Watch these movies before they leave Netflix.
Try this restaurant trick when making steak.
Escape with a romance novel.
THE WEEK AHEAD
What to Watch For
India’s general election results are set to be announced on Tuesday.
The Tribeca Film Festival begins on Wednesday.
European Parliament elections begin on Thursday.
London Fashion Week begins on Friday.
A deadline for Netanyahu to come up with a postwar plan for Gaza, set
by Benny Gantz, a centrist member of Israel’s war cabinet, is Saturday.
Meal Plan
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David Malosh for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews.
This week, Cooking unveiled the Summer 100 — recipes that the team thinks
you should have on repeat for the next three months. In the Five Weeknight
Dishes newsletter, Emily Weinstein includes one of the meals featured on the
list: summer shrimp scampi with tomatoes and corn. Emily also suggests
making pepper-crusted flank steak and spanakorizo with jammy eggs.
NOW TIME TO PLAY
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Here is today’s Spelling Bee. Yesterday’s pangrams were engulfed and
unfledged.
Can you put eight historical events — including the discoveries of Galileo, the
creation of “Back to the Future,” and the debut of Julia Child — in
chronological order? Take this week’s Flashback quiz.
And here are today’s Mini Crossword, Wordle, Sudoku, Connections and
Strands.
Thanks for spending part of your weekend with The Times.
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News Editor: Tom Wright-Piersanti
Associate Editor: Lauren Jackson
News Staff: Desiree Ibekwe, Sean Kawasaki-Culligan, Brent Lewis, German Lopez, Ian Prasad Philbrick, Ashley
Wu
News Assistant: Lyna Bentahar
Saturday Writer: Melissa Kirsch
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