Anonymous wrote:Home prices will not just keep going up, indefinitely uninterrupted. All asset classes go up and down. There’s no such thing as always going up.
For the record, I’ve made over 1M in capital gains on multiple properties in the last 4 years and own my own house, which I’m sitting on 30% appreciation on over purchase price and own a rental with about 20% appreciation and cash flow covering expenses. I fundamentally don’t want prices to decrease, but a dispassionate objective analysis dissuades me from buying more real estate, or even investing significantly in my current properties.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not always about the quality of the investment. If you'd like to own a home, you have to make a decision about whether it makes sense to buy now lest you get priced out later on.
Yes, you can always rent, but rents go up, landlords decide to sell, etc. -- you are not in charge of your fate, which matters if, say, you've got kids in the local schools.
Even aside from being priced out, life is short. You, your spouse and kids are not getting back those 12 24 36 48 60 plus months you’ve flushed down the drain in a crummy living situation.
Anonymous wrote:It's not always about the quality of the investment. If you'd like to own a home, you have to make a decision about whether it makes sense to buy now lest you get priced out later on.
Yes, you can always rent, but rents go up, landlords decide to sell, etc. -- you are not in charge of your fate, which matters if, say, you've got kids in the local schools.
Anonymous wrote:It's not always about the quality of the investment. If you'd like to own a home, you have to make a decision about whether it makes sense to buy now lest you get priced out later on.
Yes, you can always rent, but rents go up, landlords decide to sell, etc. -- you are not in charge of your fate, which matters if, say, you've got kids in the local schools.
Anonymous wrote:In retrospect of course it now seems that it was a good decision to buy. However, when you see a house increase from $1.2 to $1.8 in a matter of just a few years, it is hard not to wonder if the buyer could be overpaying. This does not seem to be a normal rate of increase for housing - especially when mortgage rates went up at the same time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Except rent keeps going up year after year, to keep up with the market.
Still better than buying at the current interest rates and having 80% of your mortgage payment go to interest. Plus the transaction costs of buying and maintenance costs. Rents don't increase at this rate. It is much smarter financial decision to rent and invest any potential downpayment right now for those who do not own. Owning is way overrated in general and massively more so in the current scenario.
No, sharing walls and owning nothing is not better at all. It's demoralizing. And life is short.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Except rent keeps going up year after year, to keep up with the market.
Still better than buying at the current interest rates and having 80% of your mortgage payment go to interest. Plus the transaction costs of buying and maintenance costs. Rents don't increase at this rate. It is much smarter financial decision to rent and invest any potential downpayment right now for those who do not own. Owning is way overrated in general and massively more so in the current scenario.
No, sharing walls and owning nothing is not better at all. It's demoralizing. And life is short.
We share a wall and barely hear anything even when our neighbors have contractors working in their house.