When you move, there are always a large number of variables that you have to take into consideration. Location of the new home, mortgage rates, schools, shopping, commute, etc., etc. When the housing market is in flux or down, the number of variables increases. A home doesn't stand by itself in the middle of nowhere. If you buy a great house in a crappy neighborhood, that's going to hurt you.Thanks for your input. I have a very small mortgage on the house, so that is basically a non-issue. To address your first point....yes I am going to be moving in the next year or so. The way I look at it is like this....if the housing bubble bursts, the burst will be felt by everyone....thus if my house I sell is worth less, the house I buy will be worth less as well. One kinda negates the other...Short sighted? nah....realistic.
Curious, real estate is what I do for a living. I buy properties, rent them out, fix them up, sell them, etc. I'm telling you that if you have a blase attitude about the most expensive thing you will probably ever buy, you stand a decent chance of getting screwed on it. The equity you have in your home isn't just for changing homes: it affects your overall financial health. What your neighbors do directly affects the value of your home. The bubble bursting isn't going to be a 2 day event: it's a rolling event that will be felt for months and years. If it happens.
I'm not betting that it's going to happen, but I'm putting myself in a good financial position to take advantage of it. I'm keeping a cash-heavy position if things break the right/wrong way in Canada. I'm not sitting here, hoping people will be hurt, but if it happens I'd be a fool not to take advantage.