Quote: (02-25-2018 11:08 PM)911 Wrote:
Quote: (02-25-2018 06:55 PM)Suits Wrote:
Quote: (02-25-2018 12:24 PM)treypound Wrote:
No matter what generation you are from, homeownership is part of the path to wealth. Much like any investment, you don't want your entire investment portfolio just in single family homes, but renting your entire life is like leasing a car your entire life. You spend thousands, and in the end own nothing.
I'll give you a partial pass, as your day job guarantees that you work in an echo chamber where homeownership is the greatest thing ever, but this is one of the most ridiculous set of statements I've ever read.
Home ownership is not the path to wealth. The path to wealth is achieving an income the significantly exceeds your expenses.
You can achieve that with or without home ownership.
Depending on the local market, home ownership might leave you with a worse balance sheet after 30 years than renting (even if you end up having full ownership of the property in the end). There are a number of different reasons for this.
(1) (a) Just about no one pays cash. If you're paying cash for a house, you're already wealthy and this conversation is irrelevant.
(1) (b) If you're not paying cash, you're taking on debt, upon which you're paying interest. Over 10-30 years of interest payments will be a significant sum, so even with including the value of the home in the balance sheet after 30 years, renting may have produced more wealth because you weren't paying the interest payments.
Here's what a 30 year mortgage looks like:
![[Image: mortgage-interest-principal-payments-o.png]](http://www.growingfamilybenefits.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/mortgage-interest-principal-payments-o.png)
For the first 19 years, you're actually spending more money into interest payments than against the principle.
In fact for the first 8 years, the interest payment is 3/4 or more of the total payment.
In some housing markets, when you account for the interest payments (and perhaps even some markets where you don't), if you'd simply rented instead of having the bank buy you a home and charging you a massive amount of interest on in over a 30 year period, you could have simply rented, spent far less money on housing each month, pocketed the difference and ended up with a bank account after 30 years with more money than the value of the house that you would have ended up owning if you'd taken on debt to "own" a house.
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Your model has two major flaws, it doesn't take into account rent inflation. In SF for example, an apartment that rented out for $1,000 in 1993 now goes for $5,500.
![[Image: 1*MdPAr5dt5AH73H1mO_NahQ.jpeg]](https://cdn-images-1.medium.com/max/1200/1*MdPAr5dt5AH73H1mO_NahQ.jpeg)
If you're in an active urban market, you will find yourself already breaking even 5 to 10 years into your mortgage, as your mortgage is locked in and rents keep rising. So whatever money you're spending in interest paying up your mortgage, you would have spent even more in rising rental prices.
The other missing factor in your model is that it doesn't take into consideration the fact that you're also gaining equity with the increase of your house price. A friend in the Bay Area is nearly covering the mortgage on his 5-BDR house he bought 10-15 years ago just by renting out a guest suite, and the house price has already doubled.
One way to look at buying is as a hedge against housing inflation. If you're in a market like coastal CA or say NYC, Boston, housing will outstrip inflation. Less so in markets like Atlanta or Houston, where there is more space and less anti-growth regulation, and the Case-Shiller model will apply.
In an environment of relatively high housing inflation and historically low interest rates, it makes sense to buy.
You can't possibly use the most distorted housing market in North America as the base to back up your argument. SF is the most fucked up market around with granola hippies and rich assholes holding as fiefdom to block development that has skyrocketed prices.
Interesting fact
San Francisco and Paris are the same size but SF holds 864,816 versus Paris at 2.5 million, the city is under built deliberately and has exploded living costs into space.
The city of SF is laughably under-built and remember Paris proper has no skyscrapers so the whiny picket fences people who complain about buildings making shadows can't complain. SF prices is what happens when the supply is literally blocked from growing and prices shoot up to the moon.
Please, use a more middle of the road market like a Charlotte, NC or Kansas City and you see your assertion start to turn into dust.
On average housing does not appreciate more than 1% per year. Once you take into account taxes, maintenance, closing costs, etc that all will eat away at your equity when you do the magic math many barley get above inflation when it is all said and done.
Plus, the reality is that most don't cash out and run from housing they spin it into new more expensive housing the next round.
I'll never for the life of me understand people who pimp out the faulty logic that rent is "throwing your money away"
Hey, is buying food a waste of money? ... You literally shit out your groceries after you buy them. What a waste.
There are basics that every humans needs to maintain a basic level of sustenance
Shelter
Food
Clothing
Water
Heat
Putting money and resources towards those things is non-negotiable and it is silly to attempt to extrapolate all those into speculative instruments where you gamble your future and place your self into debt simply to attain items you need to survive.
Who says its smart to go into debt to buy a chipboard house in suburban Salt Late City? Who says that shack will always go up in value? The Bank? Talking heads whom all profit from it on CNBC? Real Estate agents? (all have an agenda to let you think this is the case. RE agents only know how to hustle sales, few even understand the complexities of why and what does into the valuation of house and plot of land) The land might but the structure that is intrinsically tied to that land is not a true appreciating asset as some may have you think.
If you need any more proof that housing is a scam when you buy, go look at what wealthy people do. Unless they can spin a property for tax savings into any of their various corporations they will all largely rent their primary residences. Housing purchase was created as a scam by the baking industry to ensure every american was saddled with multi-decade debt. In the years prior to widespread mortgages housing could be paid off with a few years of your income. Or, you simply attained a plot of land and built a shelter on it.
Now, because of speculative mortgages the Western model has cooked the debt into the land value and now it is nearly impossible to attain land with the simple goal of building a home. The land should be a large portion of the value but the structure that sits on it is a rotting depreciating asset.
You will always be ahead taking money and putting into the best performing assets you can that can pay you income. In some cases, this may be a house, but if it isn't then you are wise not to push it. A house should only be used a way to build history with debt products so you can leverage the debt to attain higher quality income producing assets. That is leveraging the game for what it is to your advantage but to hustle just to plop down money on a flop house or some concrete condo cube is not wise and is a outdated model that has no long term viability. Most houses only average 1% appreciating per year when it is all said and done, you get more money investing in stocks (remember,
real inflation is around 5.5% as real GOVT index is cooked to under report. This is why wealthy men in this environment won't get out of bet for less than 6-7% return ROI as they know the real deal on the numbers).
With the growth of technology and blockchian why the hell would I dump money into a jail sentence of debt called a mortgage when I can invest in companies, get income, invest in other assets, or leverage and get multi-units that pay for my own shelter costs. OR with blockchain I can simply buy a portion of an income producing rental and get the income it produces plus a cut of the equity. The real estate hustle is going to get royally fucked once blockchain rolls around.
I can;t get preferred investor products but I can, today, use my phone to invest in block chain instruments that put money in various funds that will pay me income, all I need is a $150 min. and a smartphone and I can get 6% returns. Also, these investments pay income each money on the debt.
Why not just do what the banks do on a smaller scale? Fuck a bank.
People think I am crazy when I tell them I don't want to buy a house. I want to buy a small multi-unit so I can get income from it. I don't care if it is a duplex in the ghetto, if I can get the debt to purchase it and get income form it then I can use that as leverage to scale up.
@911, we can agree on this. I do agree with you that in a low interest environment it is wise to take on debt. But, why not go into it with the long term goal of gathering assets that will provide for you income. I ain't getting into the housing game unless I can take on multiples that can pay me and essentially pay for my living costs.
Housing does not go up forever but people always need a place to live. Old school wealth is built in multi-family or multi-units. Your house does not pay you income, you put money into it with a price on that money that the bank gets. If you have to put in money towards providing you a basic need, of shelter, then why give the bank a cut? Fuck the bank. Rent and invest your money into better assets that give income.