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Diego Mamani
ParticipantI thought it made sense for you to buy until I read that you may not stay put long enough. Then this finally put the nail on the coffin:
“We want to keep our options open so when higher-end homes in the Bay area become reasonable we can make the jump.”
Obviously you don’t like Vacaville for the long term! You really want to live in the Bay Area. My advice to you: don’t buy! Even if for some miraculous reason your house does not drop in price, you’ll still have transaction costs to pay when you sell to move to the Bay Area. (But we do know that prices still have a lot to drop, especially in Vacaville.)
Even with a newer house, “ownership” translates to countless trips to Home Depot and hours spent on the yard and other related activities that your landlord should be taking care of. Did you account for this in your rent-vs-buy calculation? House “ownership” really robs you of your leisure time and time with your family, unless you really enjoy gardening, hanging curtains, adding shelves, replacing tiles, etc., etc., etc.
If this house and area are not your first choice for the long term, don’t buy! Keep enjoying the renter’s good life until house prices in your preferred location come down to affordable levels.
Diego Mamani
ParticipantI thought it made sense for you to buy until I read that you may not stay put long enough. Then this finally put the nail on the coffin:
“We want to keep our options open so when higher-end homes in the Bay area become reasonable we can make the jump.”
Obviously you don’t like Vacaville for the long term! You really want to live in the Bay Area. My advice to you: don’t buy! Even if for some miraculous reason your house does not drop in price, you’ll still have transaction costs to pay when you sell to move to the Bay Area. (But we do know that prices still have a lot to drop, especially in Vacaville.)
Even with a newer house, “ownership” translates to countless trips to Home Depot and hours spent on the yard and other related activities that your landlord should be taking care of. Did you account for this in your rent-vs-buy calculation? House “ownership” really robs you of your leisure time and time with your family, unless you really enjoy gardening, hanging curtains, adding shelves, replacing tiles, etc., etc., etc.
If this house and area are not your first choice for the long term, don’t buy! Keep enjoying the renter’s good life until house prices in your preferred location come down to affordable levels.
Diego Mamani
ParticipantI thought it made sense for you to buy until I read that you may not stay put long enough. Then this finally put the nail on the coffin:
“We want to keep our options open so when higher-end homes in the Bay area become reasonable we can make the jump.”
Obviously you don’t like Vacaville for the long term! You really want to live in the Bay Area. My advice to you: don’t buy! Even if for some miraculous reason your house does not drop in price, you’ll still have transaction costs to pay when you sell to move to the Bay Area. (But we do know that prices still have a lot to drop, especially in Vacaville.)
Even with a newer house, “ownership” translates to countless trips to Home Depot and hours spent on the yard and other related activities that your landlord should be taking care of. Did you account for this in your rent-vs-buy calculation? House “ownership” really robs you of your leisure time and time with your family, unless you really enjoy gardening, hanging curtains, adding shelves, replacing tiles, etc., etc., etc.
If this house and area are not your first choice for the long term, don’t buy! Keep enjoying the renter’s good life until house prices in your preferred location come down to affordable levels.
Diego Mamani
ParticipantI thought it made sense for you to buy until I read that you may not stay put long enough. Then this finally put the nail on the coffin:
“We want to keep our options open so when higher-end homes in the Bay area become reasonable we can make the jump.”
Obviously you don’t like Vacaville for the long term! You really want to live in the Bay Area. My advice to you: don’t buy! Even if for some miraculous reason your house does not drop in price, you’ll still have transaction costs to pay when you sell to move to the Bay Area. (But we do know that prices still have a lot to drop, especially in Vacaville.)
Even with a newer house, “ownership” translates to countless trips to Home Depot and hours spent on the yard and other related activities that your landlord should be taking care of. Did you account for this in your rent-vs-buy calculation? House “ownership” really robs you of your leisure time and time with your family, unless you really enjoy gardening, hanging curtains, adding shelves, replacing tiles, etc., etc., etc.
If this house and area are not your first choice for the long term, don’t buy! Keep enjoying the renter’s good life until house prices in your preferred location come down to affordable levels.
Diego Mamani
ParticipantHow much was her down payment?
I’m speculating, but Countrywide may be the loan servicer in this case, not the lender. They are unable, or unmotivated, to modify the terms of the loan. It’s someone else’s loss, after all.
Diego Mamani
ParticipantHow much was her down payment?
I’m speculating, but Countrywide may be the loan servicer in this case, not the lender. They are unable, or unmotivated, to modify the terms of the loan. It’s someone else’s loss, after all.
Diego Mamani
ParticipantHow much was her down payment?
I’m speculating, but Countrywide may be the loan servicer in this case, not the lender. They are unable, or unmotivated, to modify the terms of the loan. It’s someone else’s loss, after all.
Diego Mamani
ParticipantHow much was her down payment?
I’m speculating, but Countrywide may be the loan servicer in this case, not the lender. They are unable, or unmotivated, to modify the terms of the loan. It’s someone else’s loss, after all.
Diego Mamani
ParticipantHow much was her down payment?
I’m speculating, but Countrywide may be the loan servicer in this case, not the lender. They are unable, or unmotivated, to modify the terms of the loan. It’s someone else’s loss, after all.
May 11, 2008 at 3:50 PM in reply to: In mortgage market, ‘walkaway’ homeowners may be urban myth #202433Diego Mamani
ParticipantFurthermore, youwalkaway.com is doing pretty well charging $999 per trick. A myth? I don’t think so.
May 11, 2008 at 3:50 PM in reply to: In mortgage market, ‘walkaway’ homeowners may be urban myth #202480Diego Mamani
ParticipantFurthermore, youwalkaway.com is doing pretty well charging $999 per trick. A myth? I don’t think so.
May 11, 2008 at 3:50 PM in reply to: In mortgage market, ‘walkaway’ homeowners may be urban myth #202504Diego Mamani
ParticipantFurthermore, youwalkaway.com is doing pretty well charging $999 per trick. A myth? I don’t think so.
May 11, 2008 at 3:50 PM in reply to: In mortgage market, ‘walkaway’ homeowners may be urban myth #202529Diego Mamani
ParticipantFurthermore, youwalkaway.com is doing pretty well charging $999 per trick. A myth? I don’t think so.
May 11, 2008 at 3:50 PM in reply to: In mortgage market, ‘walkaway’ homeowners may be urban myth #202567Diego Mamani
ParticipantFurthermore, youwalkaway.com is doing pretty well charging $999 per trick. A myth? I don’t think so.
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