Tag Archives: Solomon on decisions

What to Do When Nobody Knows What’s Next

In our last post we explained why we agree with Freddie Mac’s chief economist, Frank Northaft that “We just don’t know [when the market will hit bottom or how low prices will drop] because we’re in totally uncharted territory.”

As if to illustrate our point, since we wrote that we’ve seen huge swings in stocks as Federal Reserve leaders twice surprised the markets with supposedly clear indications they intend to further reduce rates.

Now, as promised, we tackle the logical next question of what buyers and sellers should do in such an uncertain situation.

The key is to base your decision making primarily on what you know, not on speculation about market trends. Market timing is nice, but it’s highly speculative and subject to surprises from the Feds, politicians, consumers, other nations, and even terrorist attacks. Instead of trying to precisely time the market, figure out what you really want or need and brainstorm options, work, & wait until you find an acceptable solution.

As my mortgage broker once told me when I was trying to time the interest rate market in locking a loan, “if the loan works at the current rate, go ahead & take it. ” In other words, don’t gamble on something that works. As my mother used to say, “A bird in the hand is worth 2 in the bush.”

This approach usually works with buying, if 3 conditions are met:

1. You’re planning to live in the home for a long time, 5 – 10 years.

2. You’re buying with a loan that’s fixed for at least 10 – 15 years.

3. You’ve got fairly stable income.

If it works, do it. The better it works, the more you should do it. Especially if you like the location and the floorplan. After all, location is the one thing you can’t change, condition is the easiest thing to change.

The same goes for selling. If you can sell & move up to your dream home at today’s prices, don’t roll the dice on prices going up. Especially any time soon. A year from now you may wish you’d sold today. What your neighbor got two years ago is irrelevent–the question is, will today’s price work for you?

For those of us who are people of faith, we’d add in prayer. God is the only one who does know what the future holds, but he’s also a lot more concerned about our character than our money. (Actually God’s the only one with a perfect perspective on money, too.)

King Solomon was the wisest and richest monarch of his day and he said it well: “Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and don’t rely on your own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge Him, and He will direct your paths.” (Proverbs 3:5,6) That worked almost 3,000 years ago, & it still works today.