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5yearwaiter
Participant[quote=patientrenter][quote=peterb]Just remember, the term “buying” a house has been twisted. Almost no one buys a house, they take out a huge debt to get the title. That aint buying. You pay cash and own it outright, that’s buying. The rest is a strange fantasy people have. So if the payment’s lower, great, but that’s about sustaining debt. Not owning.[/quote]
I dunno, peter. If you go with the standard 3% down, and maybe throw in first-time buyer credits and a little kickback from the agent or broker or one of the other parties getting paid in the deal, you effectively get a very cheap option to (really) buy) at a fixed price. And you can do what you want with the property while you’re considering whether to actually buy. If the prices come down, you go get a modification. If they go up, you can cash in. You pay for the option in small installments. It’s pretty attractive. Hey, if I didn’t know better, I’d say it’s the greatest scam we’ve ever had! Better than mere owning, where you can gain or lose.[/quote]
Patientrenter take this scenario: You buy a house worth of 600K in this time with around 4.5% of mortgage. Eventually you pay 20% down (120K) and you start paying mortgage for 417K (assume now you down more than 20% in this case(183K) – you gave back to the system 183K and hold the house worth of 600K. What do you expect to get a good return on this house after 5 years at the most? – If you get sold your house at the worth of 750K after 5 years then I can say you got your money whatever you paid on this house. If you don’t get sell this house with the worth of 750K after 5 years. But if your situation is still to sell your house after 5 years then prepare you got lose on this house investment as a total. To avoid this much risk and keep you in benifitable a decent rental would give this. Now I will leave the rest of solution to you all by asking this:
How much you expect your home will be sold after 5 years? Keep in mind all the factors like our economy was really spoiled, in future interest rates demand to jump but fed is sacrificing still, any minimal outbrakes of flu,or a small stone throwing in those glass doors of wall st would also keep our paper economy sure to down. A major shift of golbal economy trend would likeley to be occur as per China and Russia slogans on Gold and find of other uninversal level of currency instead of Dollar. Where you keep this big 417K liability on your back with that turmoil situations. Future is bit blink with the ongoing trend- they (Fed) says recovery is the term as math changes every quarter. But here you are the one to do your own math but not look at the Fed math.
5yearwaiter
Participant[quote=patientrenter][quote=peterb]Just remember, the term “buying” a house has been twisted. Almost no one buys a house, they take out a huge debt to get the title. That aint buying. You pay cash and own it outright, that’s buying. The rest is a strange fantasy people have. So if the payment’s lower, great, but that’s about sustaining debt. Not owning.[/quote]
I dunno, peter. If you go with the standard 3% down, and maybe throw in first-time buyer credits and a little kickback from the agent or broker or one of the other parties getting paid in the deal, you effectively get a very cheap option to (really) buy) at a fixed price. And you can do what you want with the property while you’re considering whether to actually buy. If the prices come down, you go get a modification. If they go up, you can cash in. You pay for the option in small installments. It’s pretty attractive. Hey, if I didn’t know better, I’d say it’s the greatest scam we’ve ever had! Better than mere owning, where you can gain or lose.[/quote]
Patientrenter take this scenario: You buy a house worth of 600K in this time with around 4.5% of mortgage. Eventually you pay 20% down (120K) and you start paying mortgage for 417K (assume now you down more than 20% in this case(183K) – you gave back to the system 183K and hold the house worth of 600K. What do you expect to get a good return on this house after 5 years at the most? – If you get sold your house at the worth of 750K after 5 years then I can say you got your money whatever you paid on this house. If you don’t get sell this house with the worth of 750K after 5 years. But if your situation is still to sell your house after 5 years then prepare you got lose on this house investment as a total. To avoid this much risk and keep you in benifitable a decent rental would give this. Now I will leave the rest of solution to you all by asking this:
How much you expect your home will be sold after 5 years? Keep in mind all the factors like our economy was really spoiled, in future interest rates demand to jump but fed is sacrificing still, any minimal outbrakes of flu,or a small stone throwing in those glass doors of wall st would also keep our paper economy sure to down. A major shift of golbal economy trend would likeley to be occur as per China and Russia slogans on Gold and find of other uninversal level of currency instead of Dollar. Where you keep this big 417K liability on your back with that turmoil situations. Future is bit blink with the ongoing trend- they (Fed) says recovery is the term as math changes every quarter. But here you are the one to do your own math but not look at the Fed math.
5yearwaiter
Participant[quote=patientrenter][quote=peterb]Just remember, the term “buying” a house has been twisted. Almost no one buys a house, they take out a huge debt to get the title. That aint buying. You pay cash and own it outright, that’s buying. The rest is a strange fantasy people have. So if the payment’s lower, great, but that’s about sustaining debt. Not owning.[/quote]
I dunno, peter. If you go with the standard 3% down, and maybe throw in first-time buyer credits and a little kickback from the agent or broker or one of the other parties getting paid in the deal, you effectively get a very cheap option to (really) buy) at a fixed price. And you can do what you want with the property while you’re considering whether to actually buy. If the prices come down, you go get a modification. If they go up, you can cash in. You pay for the option in small installments. It’s pretty attractive. Hey, if I didn’t know better, I’d say it’s the greatest scam we’ve ever had! Better than mere owning, where you can gain or lose.[/quote]
Patientrenter take this scenario: You buy a house worth of 600K in this time with around 4.5% of mortgage. Eventually you pay 20% down (120K) and you start paying mortgage for 417K (assume now you down more than 20% in this case(183K) – you gave back to the system 183K and hold the house worth of 600K. What do you expect to get a good return on this house after 5 years at the most? – If you get sold your house at the worth of 750K after 5 years then I can say you got your money whatever you paid on this house. If you don’t get sell this house with the worth of 750K after 5 years. But if your situation is still to sell your house after 5 years then prepare you got lose on this house investment as a total. To avoid this much risk and keep you in benifitable a decent rental would give this. Now I will leave the rest of solution to you all by asking this:
How much you expect your home will be sold after 5 years? Keep in mind all the factors like our economy was really spoiled, in future interest rates demand to jump but fed is sacrificing still, any minimal outbrakes of flu,or a small stone throwing in those glass doors of wall st would also keep our paper economy sure to down. A major shift of golbal economy trend would likeley to be occur as per China and Russia slogans on Gold and find of other uninversal level of currency instead of Dollar. Where you keep this big 417K liability on your back with that turmoil situations. Future is bit blink with the ongoing trend- they (Fed) says recovery is the term as math changes every quarter. But here you are the one to do your own math but not look at the Fed math.
5yearwaiter
Participant[quote=patientrenter][quote=peterb]Just remember, the term “buying” a house has been twisted. Almost no one buys a house, they take out a huge debt to get the title. That aint buying. You pay cash and own it outright, that’s buying. The rest is a strange fantasy people have. So if the payment’s lower, great, but that’s about sustaining debt. Not owning.[/quote]
I dunno, peter. If you go with the standard 3% down, and maybe throw in first-time buyer credits and a little kickback from the agent or broker or one of the other parties getting paid in the deal, you effectively get a very cheap option to (really) buy) at a fixed price. And you can do what you want with the property while you’re considering whether to actually buy. If the prices come down, you go get a modification. If they go up, you can cash in. You pay for the option in small installments. It’s pretty attractive. Hey, if I didn’t know better, I’d say it’s the greatest scam we’ve ever had! Better than mere owning, where you can gain or lose.[/quote]
Patientrenter take this scenario: You buy a house worth of 600K in this time with around 4.5% of mortgage. Eventually you pay 20% down (120K) and you start paying mortgage for 417K (assume now you down more than 20% in this case(183K) – you gave back to the system 183K and hold the house worth of 600K. What do you expect to get a good return on this house after 5 years at the most? – If you get sold your house at the worth of 750K after 5 years then I can say you got your money whatever you paid on this house. If you don’t get sell this house with the worth of 750K after 5 years. But if your situation is still to sell your house after 5 years then prepare you got lose on this house investment as a total. To avoid this much risk and keep you in benifitable a decent rental would give this. Now I will leave the rest of solution to you all by asking this:
How much you expect your home will be sold after 5 years? Keep in mind all the factors like our economy was really spoiled, in future interest rates demand to jump but fed is sacrificing still, any minimal outbrakes of flu,or a small stone throwing in those glass doors of wall st would also keep our paper economy sure to down. A major shift of golbal economy trend would likeley to be occur as per China and Russia slogans on Gold and find of other uninversal level of currency instead of Dollar. Where you keep this big 417K liability on your back with that turmoil situations. Future is bit blink with the ongoing trend- they (Fed) says recovery is the term as math changes every quarter. But here you are the one to do your own math but not look at the Fed math.
5yearwaiter
Participant[quote=patientrenter][quote=peterb]Just remember, the term “buying” a house has been twisted. Almost no one buys a house, they take out a huge debt to get the title. That aint buying. You pay cash and own it outright, that’s buying. The rest is a strange fantasy people have. So if the payment’s lower, great, but that’s about sustaining debt. Not owning.[/quote]
I dunno, peter. If you go with the standard 3% down, and maybe throw in first-time buyer credits and a little kickback from the agent or broker or one of the other parties getting paid in the deal, you effectively get a very cheap option to (really) buy) at a fixed price. And you can do what you want with the property while you’re considering whether to actually buy. If the prices come down, you go get a modification. If they go up, you can cash in. You pay for the option in small installments. It’s pretty attractive. Hey, if I didn’t know better, I’d say it’s the greatest scam we’ve ever had! Better than mere owning, where you can gain or lose.[/quote]
Patientrenter take this scenario: You buy a house worth of 600K in this time with around 4.5% of mortgage. Eventually you pay 20% down (120K) and you start paying mortgage for 417K (assume now you down more than 20% in this case(183K) – you gave back to the system 183K and hold the house worth of 600K. What do you expect to get a good return on this house after 5 years at the most? – If you get sold your house at the worth of 750K after 5 years then I can say you got your money whatever you paid on this house. If you don’t get sell this house with the worth of 750K after 5 years. But if your situation is still to sell your house after 5 years then prepare you got lose on this house investment as a total. To avoid this much risk and keep you in benifitable a decent rental would give this. Now I will leave the rest of solution to you all by asking this:
How much you expect your home will be sold after 5 years? Keep in mind all the factors like our economy was really spoiled, in future interest rates demand to jump but fed is sacrificing still, any minimal outbrakes of flu,or a small stone throwing in those glass doors of wall st would also keep our paper economy sure to down. A major shift of golbal economy trend would likeley to be occur as per China and Russia slogans on Gold and find of other uninversal level of currency instead of Dollar. Where you keep this big 417K liability on your back with that turmoil situations. Future is bit blink with the ongoing trend- they (Fed) says recovery is the term as math changes every quarter. But here you are the one to do your own math but not look at the Fed math.
5yearwaiter
Participant[quote=jpinpb]”Owner is licensed Real Estate agent.”[/quote]
And you know every time Real Estate agent song is ‘This is the best time to buy house – interest rates are going to be higher’. May be this time they want to show practical by putting this kind of rates what they sing a song
5yearwaiter
Participant[quote=jpinpb]”Owner is licensed Real Estate agent.”[/quote]
And you know every time Real Estate agent song is ‘This is the best time to buy house – interest rates are going to be higher’. May be this time they want to show practical by putting this kind of rates what they sing a song
5yearwaiter
Participant[quote=jpinpb]”Owner is licensed Real Estate agent.”[/quote]
And you know every time Real Estate agent song is ‘This is the best time to buy house – interest rates are going to be higher’. May be this time they want to show practical by putting this kind of rates what they sing a song
5yearwaiter
Participant[quote=jpinpb]”Owner is licensed Real Estate agent.”[/quote]
And you know every time Real Estate agent song is ‘This is the best time to buy house – interest rates are going to be higher’. May be this time they want to show practical by putting this kind of rates what they sing a song
5yearwaiter
Participant[quote=jpinpb]”Owner is licensed Real Estate agent.”[/quote]
And you know every time Real Estate agent song is ‘This is the best time to buy house – interest rates are going to be higher’. May be this time they want to show practical by putting this kind of rates what they sing a song
5yearwaiter
Participant[quote=SD Realtor]Because the builders are seeing strong demand. Two years ago they started a substantial slowdown. Now they have a much slower rollout of phases and the number of homes per phase is smaller now as well.
The resale inventory has also gone down further reducing the homes for people to choose from. The foreclosure moratorium is also reducing the foreclosure stock of homes.
Also as you can see the incentives are very poor as well. [/quote]
Where the money coming from to invest this much in housing? I believe now fewer folks trying to use the chance that is Fed giving (8k and 10K incentives) but still the situation would remain same – that keep knocking down economy further. Having this much house mortgage payments and having escalated commodities – we are not going to any way further. If I interpret correctly our Fed is indirectly trying to make everyone take some borrowing and keep paying a bit high back to them, so that they can show to everyone this is “our Economy”. But finally everyone knows how this end up.
5yearwaiter
Participant[quote=SD Realtor]Because the builders are seeing strong demand. Two years ago they started a substantial slowdown. Now they have a much slower rollout of phases and the number of homes per phase is smaller now as well.
The resale inventory has also gone down further reducing the homes for people to choose from. The foreclosure moratorium is also reducing the foreclosure stock of homes.
Also as you can see the incentives are very poor as well. [/quote]
Where the money coming from to invest this much in housing? I believe now fewer folks trying to use the chance that is Fed giving (8k and 10K incentives) but still the situation would remain same – that keep knocking down economy further. Having this much house mortgage payments and having escalated commodities – we are not going to any way further. If I interpret correctly our Fed is indirectly trying to make everyone take some borrowing and keep paying a bit high back to them, so that they can show to everyone this is “our Economy”. But finally everyone knows how this end up.
5yearwaiter
Participant[quote=SD Realtor]Because the builders are seeing strong demand. Two years ago they started a substantial slowdown. Now they have a much slower rollout of phases and the number of homes per phase is smaller now as well.
The resale inventory has also gone down further reducing the homes for people to choose from. The foreclosure moratorium is also reducing the foreclosure stock of homes.
Also as you can see the incentives are very poor as well. [/quote]
Where the money coming from to invest this much in housing? I believe now fewer folks trying to use the chance that is Fed giving (8k and 10K incentives) but still the situation would remain same – that keep knocking down economy further. Having this much house mortgage payments and having escalated commodities – we are not going to any way further. If I interpret correctly our Fed is indirectly trying to make everyone take some borrowing and keep paying a bit high back to them, so that they can show to everyone this is “our Economy”. But finally everyone knows how this end up.
5yearwaiter
Participant[quote=SD Realtor]Because the builders are seeing strong demand. Two years ago they started a substantial slowdown. Now they have a much slower rollout of phases and the number of homes per phase is smaller now as well.
The resale inventory has also gone down further reducing the homes for people to choose from. The foreclosure moratorium is also reducing the foreclosure stock of homes.
Also as you can see the incentives are very poor as well. [/quote]
Where the money coming from to invest this much in housing? I believe now fewer folks trying to use the chance that is Fed giving (8k and 10K incentives) but still the situation would remain same – that keep knocking down economy further. Having this much house mortgage payments and having escalated commodities – we are not going to any way further. If I interpret correctly our Fed is indirectly trying to make everyone take some borrowing and keep paying a bit high back to them, so that they can show to everyone this is “our Economy”. But finally everyone knows how this end up.
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