Anonymous wrote:Screw all you finance people who are getting rich by leeching off the rest of the economy that is full of people who actually do valuable work
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's all about timing Very few 22-25 year olds have any clue about what kind of market they are getting into
for all the stories about people buying a condo in 2009 you have people that bought in 2005 that got screwed and are just breaking even now
It does crack me up all these people in these $2000, 2500+ per month apartments renting. It's like roommates and living within your means are foreign to folks
Roommates are awful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm amazed at how many 28-40 yo's we know that are purchasing brand new homes in Bethesda, Chevy Chase, DC, Vienna and McLean. What took my spouse and I years to afford, they are buying at a relatively young age. How do they do it here? My spouse is a partner in a law firm and our house is barely worth a million. Granted, we'll have it paid for next year. But really, Millennials what's your secret?
Millennials here. We bought our starter home for $1.2M 10 years ago at age 28. It was an apartment in Manhattan. We had no help from family.
We now live in a $2M home in Arlington.
The secret is hard work.
Anonymous wrote:It's all about timing Very few 22-25 year olds have any clue about what kind of market they are getting into
for all the stories about people buying a condo in 2009 you have people that bought in 2005 that got screwed and are just breaking even now
It does crack me up all these people in these $2000, 2500+ per month apartments renting. It's like roommates and living within your means are foreign to folks
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Help from parents is one scenario. Other possibilities might include: higher risk / lower down payment; high dual-income HHI, since older Millenials are mid-30s and well into their careers; secondary income from side gig, Air B&B, etc.; and/or bringing equity from somewhere else, such as a condo they bought in a sketchy part of DC that has gentrified.
I guess I don't think 40 is that all that young to be buying a million dollar house. They aren't kids fresh out of college. DH and I were born in '77 and '79, respectively -- we're among the youngest GenX -- and we could afford a $1M house on our unimpressive government salaries plus the equity from a TH we bought 10 years ago.
You are your "unimpressive government salaries"? Curious minds want to know.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Help from parents is one scenario. Other possibilities might include: higher risk / lower down payment; high dual-income HHI, since older Millenials are mid-30s and well into their careers; secondary income from side gig, Air B&B, etc.; and/or bringing equity from somewhere else, such as a condo they bought in a sketchy part of DC that has gentrified.
I guess I don't think 40 is that all that young to be buying a million dollar house. They aren't kids fresh out of college. DH and I were born in '77 and '79, respectively -- we're among the youngest GenX -- and we could afford a $1M house on our unimpressive government salaries plus the equity from a TH we bought 10 years ago.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My neighborhood has 2 former SCOTUS clerks who rolled their $500k signing bonus to big law right into their new house purchase.
It was the first question the older one asked the younger one- what’d you do with your special bonus?
This kind of makes me sick
Anonymous wrote:My neighborhood has 2 former SCOTUS clerks who rolled their $500k signing bonus to big law right into their new house purchase.
It was the first question the older one asked the younger one- what’d you do with your special bonus?
Anonymous wrote:Jesus. No one even works in finance here. Some people just make a lot of money. You really need to get over your bitterness. And improve your grammar.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:what does that have to do with 2008 TARP?
and no I don't want to waste time talking with you.
2008 TARP was paid back b/c Fed propped up and purchased garbage MBS, which gave banks the capital to pay back the govt. I guess you are a young millennial?
Which kept PPs NYC Manhattan lifestyle in the black.
what does 2019 Fed doing QE in the current global macro environment have to do with 2008 TARP?
you have no clue who I am, but I can guarantee you i know what I'm talking about and I can guarantee everyone here that you do not. but you sure are consumed with hate from 2008. take a pill or something.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Jesus. No one even works in finance here. Some people just make a lot of money. You really need to get over your bitterness. And improve your grammar.
Sure they do. They are just regular people living in $1m-$2m homes in your neighborhood. I work in accounting and see the bonuses. They have millions in the bank, but they aren't pretentious and showy about it.
Omg.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Jesus. No one even works in finance here. Some people just make a lot of money. You really need to get over your bitterness. And improve your grammar.
Sure they do. They are just regular people living in $1m-$2m homes in your neighborhood. I work in accounting and see the bonuses. They have millions in the bank, but they aren't pretentious and showy about it.
Anonymous wrote:Jesus. No one even works in finance here. Some people just make a lot of money. You really need to get over your bitterness. And improve your grammar.
Anonymous wrote:Jesus. No one even works in finance here. Some people just make a lot of money. You really need to get over your bitterness. And improve your grammar.