San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

Should Calif. house hunters wait to buy until next year?

- JONATHAN LANSNER Southern California Economy

Is 2024 the year to get back into a homebuying mood?

Or after a historical­ly slow year for home sales, should house hunters wait for the real estate clouds to clear?

Well, everyone’s situation is different, from stages of life to family needs to personal finances and job security. Plus, the emotional weight of house hunting — from juggling various opinions to risk tolerance to a desire for a perceived bargain — also is part of the equation.

But amid various personal, real estate, and economic uncertaint­ies, one might wonder if waiting until 2025 to buy is worthwhile. Could homebuying be any more unaffordab­le? Will prices swing up or down this year? Will mortgage rates soar — or tumble back to the 5 percent range?

Economic history serves as a useful tool to test if a wait-and-see approach might pay off for a California homeowner wannabe. Yes, it can diminish the value of current marketplac­e trends. But despite the all-toofrequen­tly-claimed “it’s different this time” logic, history has a curious habit of repeating itself.

So as a public service, the trusty spreadshee­t looked at a history of one-year moves in prices and rates to gauge how often waiting 12 months to buy paid off.

Think about California home value swings through a combinatio­n of three Caseshille­r price indexes for Los Angeles-orange County, San Francisco and San Diego.

This history dates to 1987, including the housing booms of the late 1980s and the early 2000s, real estate’s ugliness of the early 1990s and the Great Recession, plus the pandemic economic madness.

And this yardstick tells us that California prices

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