- back in April, moved 401k fund from S&P allocation to cash equivalent (2% yield). Note: this wasn't a cash out, just reallocation.
- Bought long-dated treasuries (10 yr and 30 yr). Allocated through July and August. This one is not doing well, but allocation was sized appropriately (< 2% of portfolio).
- pooling any excess capital in a savings account until volatility calms down.
- have a couple rentals and plan to continue holding. It will be interesting to see some buying opportunities in the upcoming year or two.
Why do you say that?
There seems to be this idea among younger individuals online that because prices jumped so quickly that a correction is inevitable, and it’s just not. There’s a ton of demand still out there, and the second any sort of meaningful dip is perceived all those buyers will be right there.
Prices went up because a shit ton of money was printed with sub-3% rates. Why would any sane person with a 3% mortgage ever sell, especially when inflation is 9%? It’s quite literally free money.
[1] https://calculatedrisk.substack.com/p/new-home-sales-decreas...
[2] https://www.freddiemac.com/pmms