Millennials are buying more homes — after moving back in with their parents

 
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When Jann Ton and Martin Wong began house-hunting in the Bay Area, it wasn’t size or location that was at the top of their worries.

“Can we afford this?” Wong asked himself. “I don’t even care what the house looks like.”

Even before getting engaged last year, the East Bay couple had been anxiously budgeting, unsure if buying a house in one of the priciest regions in the nation was feasible. In August, the median house price for a home in the Bay Area was $1.3 million, according to the California Association of Realtors — with mortgage payments that are more expensive than renting and a stretch for two young professionals. In the end, it was possible, but not without some number crunching and serious doubt.

Those concerns are particularly pronounced for Millennials like Ton and Wong, with claims by some economists that they’ve fallen behind other generations in financial standing. But while previous research indicated that Millennials may be too poor to own homes, more adults in their 20s and 30s are beginning to dip their toes in the housing market. And, for many, it’s coming after moving back in with their parents.

The National Association of Realtors also reported this year that 28% of younger Millennials lived with parents, other family members or friends right before purchasing a home.

This is higher than any other generation,” a briefing of the report said, attributing it to young adults trying to save for a down payment as they were looking for a home.

Ton and Wong are among them, having just closed on a property this summer.

“We were not planning on moving back home initially,” Ton said. But when COVID-19 hit, the couple’s housing plans with friends fell through. Moving back in with each of their parents in the East Bay seemed like a good, temporary plan — a rare opportunity for family time in the midst of pandemic uncertainty.

And while it meant being separated from each other, there were some financial perks to make up for it: No commuting costs, thanks to remote work. No work lunches. And no more Bay Area rental rates, which is annually ranked as one of the highest in the country.

“Being able to stay at home really helped us out,” Ton said, noting that they were able to buy a home three to four years earlier than they had budgeted. “I think it put us in a really strong purchasing position.”

The couple isn’t alone, joined by a generation of other young adults who were forced into the same situation over the course of the pandemic. In July 2020, Pew Research reported that 52% of young adults were living at home with their parents, a jump from the 46% reported in January earlier that year. It was the first time that census data recorded more adults ages 18-29 living with their parents instead of with roommates, partners or on their own, the study said.

And similar to Ton and Wong, the path back to childhood homes has allowed many Millennials to gain better financial footing. A 2020 study by Bank of America found that Millennials were saving more than ever before — 73% of respondents said they were able to add to their savings during the pandemic, up 10% from two years ago. Nearly 40% said that they were able to boost their credit score, and 27% said they were able to reduce their spending during the pandemic.

“I think it’s also because we couldn’t do anything (during the pandemic),” Ton said. She also attributes their increased savings to social distancing measures, which led to a dramatic drop in consumer spending. “Expenses that went away with lockdown really put us in a better financial position.”

It’s a stark turnaround from previously recorded data, which suggested Millennials had some of the poorest spending habits and credit scores compared to previous generations. Despite making up 22% of the population, the Federal Reserve reported that Millennials owned a little over 5% of all U.S. wealth last year. A 2016 report by TransUnion also found that 43% of Millennials said they had subprime credit, and a 2019 study by Bankrate found 58% of Millennials were turned down for a loan — although that number was cut nearly in half in 2020.

Those numbers are part of the reason Millennials have had the lowest homeownership rates relative to other generations, although they now make up the largest share of the housing market, representing 37% of homebuyers.

“I think it was the case that the Millennial generation was hit rather hard and for a long time by the financial crisis (in 2008) and the Great Recession that came afterwards,” said James Wilcox, a professor of economic analysis and policy at UC Berkeley. He points out that many Millennials graduated in one of the poorest job markets of the decade, peaking at 16.2% unemployment for young workers in 2010.

But despite the recession that slugged them in the prior decade, Wilcox thinks that COVID-19 — and the exodus that resulted from it — was a game changer for some, particularly Millennials who had a stable income. With scant opportunity to spend their paychecks in a remote world and some of the lowest mortgage rates in the past 50 years, it was a sign for many to head home and begin moving into the housing market themselves, as Wong and Ton did.

“I think many (Millennials) may have been putting home ownership off,” Wilcox said. “And when all of a sudden mortgage rates went under 3% and they still had jobs and were saving more, I think we saw … some catch-up from the past and some telescoping of future demand. Adults who said, ‘Well, we’re going to buy a house sometime in the next few years, but a 3% mortgage rate and a job that doesn’t require me to be close to downtown?’ Makes it time to move to the ’burbs.”

T he improved homeownership rates are a sign that Millennials are beginning to settle into adulthood, although Ton admits that the process of saving up at her parents’ home hasn’t come without its struggles.

“I respect that it is their home and I do follow their rules, but I have to answer the five Ws every time I go out,” Ton said, referring to who, what, when, where, why.

Despite some of its challenges, Ton and Wong have called the past year and half a valuable experience — more home-cooked meals, more time with the family, as well as the family dogs. And most important, it’s led to the couple settling into their own space in the East Bay. Under a fixed mortgage, they say it’s a relief to no longer have to worry about San Francisco’s rising rent prices.

“It feels surreal,” Ton said. “Overall, we have no regrets with how things turned out.”

Keep reading on Apple News.

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Ungardening: The Latest Trend in the Gardening World

 
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It’s fairly common to find invasive species and non-native plants in garden centers, and while they might look pretty—bittersweet gets festive red berries with orange shells in the fall—these plants aren’t great for our local ecosystems.

That’s where “ungardening” comes in. We spoke to an ecologist about how this new gardening movement can help reverse ecological decline and build habitats for local wildlife, and it turns out that it’s perfect for anyone with a laissez faire gardening style (like me!).

What Is Ungardening, Exactly?

The concept of ungardening, sometimes also called “rewilding,” encourages you to let go of your perfectly manicured flower beds and lawn, and instead, embrace native species and let things get a little wild.

“Ungardening is the concept of using the ideas and techniques of natural land management and restoration in our own yards, instead of the conventional landscape methods,” explains Aubree Keurajian, an ecologist and the owner of Ungardening Native Plants in Connecticut. “This includes planting native species, removing invasive species, and stopping the use of pesticides, but it goes further, bringing the focus to creating habitat not just for pollinators, but for lots of beneficial organisms.”

So instead of using a non-native grass for your lawn (we’re looking at you, Bermudagrass!), which will likely require weed killers and lots of water, ungardening would encourage you to let a native grass variety, clover, or another native ground cover take over. Or, instead of altering your soil to grow specific varieties of flowers, choose native blooms that will thrive without any amendments or pesticides.

The end result is a more eco-friendly habitat that’s every bit as beautiful: “When done properly, gardening can help to reverse ecological decline and create a welcoming enviornment for pollinators and wildlife,” says Keurajian. “If you find joy in any part of nature, be it plants, insects, mushrooms, birds, or anything else, ungardening an area will undoubtedly bring more of it into your life.”

Not sure you’re ready to hand your whole property over to Mother Nature? Start small! “It doesn't have to be an all or nothing process,” Keurajian says. “You can start ungardening just a small portion of your property while maintaining more conventional flower and veggie gardens and even lawn area.”

Wait, So What Are These Invasive Species?

One of the key steps of ungardening is kicking invasive species to the curb—but what does that term mean, exactly? An invasive species is any plant (or animal, or insect) that’s introduced to a non-native area—a.k.a. somewhere it wouldn’t be on its own. When left unchecked, invasive species often become overpopulated, and they can negatively alter the new environment, such as the way bittersweet, a plant native to China, causes strife in North America.

“Many plant species that are invasive now were introduced intentionally for the garden industry, many horticulturally, but some culinarily and agriculturally, as well,” says Keurajian. “Three of the most common ornamental species that are actually invasive are burning bush, privet, and barberry, but there are dozens of others.” She notes that what’s considered invasive will largely depend on where you live.

Here’s How To Get Started Ungardening

Personally, I have a laidback gardening style and tend to let my gardens do what they want, so ungardening sounds right up my alley. If you want to try it out yourself, Keurajian breaks down the key steps of ungardening as follows:

  • Remove any invasive species

  • Stop the use of synthetic pesticides, herbicides, and nutrient amendments

  • Allow native species that grow on their own to remain

  • Create insect habitat by leaving areas of open soil, dead wood, leaves, and stems

  • Allow for the natural pace and fluctuations of natural restoration processes.

It may seem a little overwhelming, but you don’t have to do it all at once. “The first place to start is with removing invasive species and stopping the use of broadcast pesticides and herbicides,” she recommends. “Use local resources to determine what species are invasive in your area. There are plenty of introduced species that play fairly well with others, and there's no need to bite off more than you can chew. ”

“Next, designate an area that you want to ungarden, and just let things grow! Manage invasive species and trim the edges to keep up appearances if you want, but otherwise let the plants and critters do what they want and just observe.” As new greenery springs up your ungarden, Keurajian recommends using the Seek by iNaturalist app to help with plant identification.

When you embrace this more natural way of landscaping, you’ll likely find that Mother Nature is a wonderful gardener, and local birds, insects, and other critters are sure to appreciate your efforts, too.

Read more about ungardening.

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Hanging Lake Trail will take a long time to rebuild, but there’s clear water on the horizon

 
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The Hanging Lake trail was buried in mud, rock and charred timber following intense rain. But the oasis was untouched by debris flows and the Forest Service hopes to rebuild a more sustainable path.

White River National Forest ecologist Liz Roberts picks up her pace as she climbs the final, steep steps to Hanging Lake. She’s seen pictures of the pristine oasis clouded by mud and silt after devastating debris flows last week.

“Wow the lake has cleared up,” she says at the edge of the lush travertine pool swirling with deep green and blue hues.

Roberts, who has spent most of the last year reseeding vegetation in the scorched highlands of Glenwood Canyon following last year’s Grizzly Creek fire, marvels that the unique flora on the cliffs below the iconic Hanging Lake waterfall seems untouched by the canyon’s recent storms and fire. 

“The vegetation recovery has been very impressive with this fire,” Roberts says.

Last week the White River National Forest closed the popular Hanging Lake Trail after torrential rains — including a once-in-500-years downpour — flushed countless tons of debris down Dead Horse Creek and over cliff walls, burying portions of the 1.2-mile trail in several feet of rocks, mud and charred timber.

The agency brought a gaggle of reporters up the trail Wednesday, revealing not just the damage of the debris flows, but the opportunities emerging from the devastation. 

The oasis remains untouched

White River hydrologist Justin Anderson hiked directly past the lake and beelined further up to Spouting Rock, where water from the East Fork of Dead Horse Creek gushes through rock and into Hanging Lake. 

It was clear as glass.

Another good sign. 

Anderson had toured the burn zone in a helicopter and did not see much charred debris in the East Fork of Dead Horse, so he had a feeling Spouting Rock would not get clogged. 

“This confirms what I suspected. Anywhere we’ve had debris flows come over waterfalls you can really see the damage … but right here I’m not seeing that,” he says amidst the mist of the Spouting Rock waterfall. “In other cliffs … we’ve seen a huge amount of water and debris and boulders and logs just free falling off a cliff. Not so here.” 

There is hope that as debris flushes down the canyon walls, eventually the storms that batter Glenwood Canyon and close Interstate 70 will be less damaging. There is only so much loose rock and dirt that can wash down the cliffs above the interstate. 

“The experts tell us we will continue to see debris flows but with each big flow we do move the sediment that has been stored and we get closer to more clear-water floods,” Anderson says. 

Yet another upside of the living laboratory that Glenwood Canyon has become after the Grizzly Creek fire: Before and after aerial lidar images of the canyon are helping the U.S. Geological Survey scientists better model where and when debris flows might strike burn zones. 

The U.S. Geological Survey models have been impressively on-point in Colorado this summer, with flows closely mirroring the survey’s maps showing canyons and gullies with increased likelihood of debris flow in burn zones. The research coming out of Glenwood Canyon is helping the survey’s scientists model even more accurately.

“And that sets us up in the future,” Anderson says, “for doing a better job of protecting the highway as well as safety, with better early-detection systems.”

Roberts spent the entire hike scanning for invasive weeds that were swept from the aspen groves atop Glenwood Canyon down into the Dead Horse Creek drainage, where there are very few noxious weeds. 

“Here’s an example of something I worry about,” says Roberts as she reaches the edge of Hanging Lake and finds a small field of weeds, including common mullein and thistle. “We need to come in and treat this. We want to give our native plants the opportunity to flourish.”

The thousands of tiny yellow seeds in each mullein plant, she says, can last in soil for 100 years.

“Once they get established in a place it’s a constant effort to get ahead of them,” Roberts says. “But overall, the species diversity in the recovery has been amazing. We are headed in the right direction.”

Forest Service folks are a glass-half-full lot. Especially when they are talking with reporters. It’s rare to hear doom-and-gloom from a federal land manager.

So it’s not that surprising that Roger Poirier, the recreation staff officer for the White River National Forest, shares the enthusiasm of Roberts and Anderson, even though the recreational impacts in Glenwood Canyon have been extraordinary. 

Rapids in the Colorado River have been forever changed by massive rockslides. Closures have pinched access to the river. The bike path along the river is buried in mountains of rock in some spots and completely submerged in other spots. And now Hanging Lake, a jewel in the Glenwood Canyon playground, is closed for the season and maybe longer.

Where Roberts likes the canyon’s plant recovery and Anderson is happy with how the debris flows have not impacted Hanging Lake, Poirier hopes to reimagine the trail that climbs up Dead Horse Creek. 

Poirier sees a chance to rebuild a better, most sustainable trail that can last another 100 years. 

Keep reading on the Colorado Sun.

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Just Listed: Furnished End Unit in Downtown Winter Park

 
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Your ultimate mountain escape awaits in this stunning, end-unit condo within the heart of Winter Park.

You’ll enjoy the space and privacy of this one-bedroom, one-bathroom abode with an attached garage while relishing easy access to everything Grand County has to offer. You can walk to the shops, restaurants and Hideaway Park for summertime concerts. The rec center is less than a half a mile away, and you are also only steps from the trail access, a gateway to hiking and biking throughout summer and cross-country skiing all winter long. Telemark is on the free shuttle route that will take you to Winter Park Resort. After a day of nature-inspired adventure, you can return to the comfort and style of this beautiful condo complete with a fireplace for those cool afternoons. The kitchen is well-equipped with a gas range, washer/dryer, great storage, and there is also a sunny patio where you can end your day with a drink in hand. This condo is being sold furnished, so all you need to do is unpack and enjoy!

Listed by Leah Bishop for West + Main Homes. Please contact Leah for current pricing + availability.

 
 
 

Have questions?
West + Main Homes
(303) 935-8787
hello@westandmainhomes.com

Presented by:
Leah Bishop
(970) 531-4723
leahbishop@westandmainhomes.com


 

Maximize passive income with 3 easy real estate investment strategies

 
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Real-estate investors have one thing in common: they want to generate income.

And for many, the more passively they can generate that income, the better.

Creating a stream of passive-income (which requires minimal effort for an investor to actively maintain) is a widely held goal by those who seek to keep money coming in after their initial investment.

Collecting rent is the classic example, but there are options besides landlording, like REIT and tax lien investing, which investors can use to start generating profits. The point is to generate streams of income that don't require extensive effort from the investor themself. 

In the US, real-estate ownership has long represented financial freedom and the opportunity to build generational wealth — in a Gallup survey published in 2019, 35% of 1,012 US adults polled said real estate was the best way to build wealth. 

Compared with other asset classes, real estate can have the strongest long-term growth potential. Expected annual total returns on apartment investments have fluctuated between 6 and 15% since 2012, according to the National Council of Real Estate Investment Fiduciaries, while over the same period, the S&P 500 had an annualized return of about 10%. In 2019, one-year returns on REITs were 20%, outperforming all other asset classes, per data from National Association of Real Estate Investment Trusts.

With that in mind, Insider outlined a handful of investment strategies that make it easy for beginners to get started investing in real estate, according to real-estate pros and "clever investor" Cody Sperber, who started investing in real estate with no money to his name and has now done hundreds of millions in deals.

Investors can generate passive income in a variety of ways, depending on just how involved they want to be in the process and how much time and capital they have to invest. 

Tax lien investing

When you purchase a home, you're required to pay property taxes. And if a property owner defaults on those taxes, Sperber said, the city government can make a legal claim — or "lien" — against the property for the amount owed.

That's where a tax lien investor can step in.

For the city to recover the money the property owner hasn't paid, the city sells tax lien certificates to investors. The delinquent homeowners then have a period of time — usually 120 days — to pay the investor the tax, penalties, and interest owed, Sperber said. If they fail to pay off the delinquent amount, the investor can foreclose on the lien and take possession of the property. 

That said, tax lien investing most often occurs on single family homes, Sperber said, and works best in smaller markets, often returning an interest rate between 4% and 6%.

It's a strategy Sperber said is a good way for beginner investors to start out if they don't have deep pockets, too. 

The 'subject to'

"Subject-to" investing is purchasing a property subject to the existing mortgage that is already in place.

Essentially, this is when an investor comes in and makes back payments for a homeowner who is behind on their payments, as opposed to the home falling into foreclosure. The original owner then deeds the property to the investor and moves out — often to downsize into a more affordable living space — while leaving the loan in place and the property under the investor's ownership.

It's an investing strategy ideal for investors low on capital, Sperber said, adding that buyers in this situation aren't formally assuming the loan. The terms of the original note stay the same, including the name in which the loan was purchased. And the buyer takes on the responsibility of making sure the mortgage is paid on time until it's renovate and resell the property.

An average return for a "subject-to" investment is hard to give, according to Sperber, who said profits could differ greatly depending on expenses at hand. 

REITs

Real Estate Investment Trusts, or REITs, are companies that own, operate, or finance income-producing real estate ventures. And investing in them can be a good way for rookie investors to create passive income from real estate.

Publicly traded REITs offer investors a liquid way to invest in real estate without having to buy or manage property themselves, Insider previously reported.

So instead of owning individual buildings, REITs allow investors to make investments in a mutual-fund-style model.

As of the first quarter of 2021, the average 25-year return for private commercial real estate properties held for investment purposes was 10.3%, outperforming the S&P 500 Index's 9.6%, according to the National Council of Real Estate Investment Fiduciaries (NCREIF). Residential real estate investments averaged a return of 10.3% as well, according to Investopedia.

Investors can find value if they know where to look for it. Jussi Askola, the president of the boutique investment-research firm Leonberg Capital, told Insider in November that the REITs with the most potential during the 2020 economic downturn included those within the apartment, mobile-home, and manufactured-home sectors. REITs with properties appropriate for industrial or e-commerce use could do well too, he said. 

Keep reading on Business Insider.

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