In a strong market is when you really have to watch what is going on. Right now you're dealing with shortages of all the tradesman so a lot of them are hiring anyone who walks in the door. Builders with bad finances can usually keep rolling through a hot market, they fall apart at the end of it. Also everyone is stretched thin because they are building so much, that means attention to detail starts to slip, people start cutting corners, they substitute out materials, etc. A hot housing market in a lot of ways is the very worst time to build a house. You will pay top $ for lower quality and when the tide turns (which it always does) you're equity is going to take a hit and if you're builder turned out to be broke, they won't be there for issues with the home. Those are my 2 cents.
That's damn fine input actually - thank you DU-GATTA-TUU ...
(phonetically that's how I see your screen name in y mind.... when I try to say it....it sounds like some kind of lost Navaho chief or maybe a secret prison in Turkey)
I really like the point about their possibly having bad finances and "rolling through" a hot market ---
Let me ask this though --- I honestly don't know very much about this world and need to get smarter fast......
When we say "builders" --- we could mean totally different things, right?
It could be some old geezer in a pickup truck who hires strangers and his Schlitz-Drinkin-Buddies
OR
It could be a more organized business entity with business professionals up front, project managers and engineers and a very large work force that's more ..... "official"
However I would assume that both instances could present unique risks / rewards?
Also - I think there are different levels of "Building" a house, right?
((I know -- I'm using way too many words but bear with me -- I need to start with a
foundation and work through this
from the ground up..........
see what I dix there?))
Example A - you aren't building ANY thing -- you are picking a fine home in scenic Middlesboro, KY and buying what's already there....
Example B - you are working with a team that offers customization and modular options for 3 or 4 basic design layouts -- they provide an iterative design /build process so you are checking in periodically and ensuring that you get what you want --- lead time on materials and construction has been solidified into a very predictable and repeatable process (mature organization)
Example C - there's NOTHING there and you are handling all the coordination with multiple contractors etc .... you are the program manager AND the financial analyst (and probably the bartender)
-- I THINK the serious heartburn comes from "Example C" - right??
-- We're about to go through is "Example B"
I have questions I can think of from a contracts/project manager POV -- but my industry is Aerospace/Defense --- and I'm not handy at anything (expect guitars and the Sex)....so I"m struggling to come up wth good intervention questions
Thank you again for helping with this -- I think I already have some ideas on how to approach this
Good thread
PS: Your University of Kentucky football team is going to see 8 wins this year .... I feel it in my bones, loins and deep within my 4th eye ......the world will NOT see it coming......
AHHHHHHH BUT WE DO!!!!! I HAVENT BRRN THIS EXCITED ABOUT A FOOTBALL SEASON SINCE I ACCIDENTUIALLYS ET MY YARD ON FIRE WHEN STEVIE GOT LOOSE~!@@!!!!!