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9th home under contract.


By robertoaribas   Follow   Mon, 6 Feb 2012, 7:51pm   8,849 views   77 comments
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A year ago, I posted 3 condo rentals I was buying. The market has changed, and such cheap condos are now impossible to find in Phoenix, ( I know this is antithesis to the bears on here, but I could see each one easily for $15K to $20K more now), and while I did stumble into one more by luck, the deals are few and far between. One tenant moved from one of my condos to another, and I evicted one tenant out of the 4 ( I had one I've owned for 15 years) but all in all, I've had less vacancy and repairs than I estimated when purchasing them.

So, I'm buying single family homes with mortgages. The latest one is $76K for a 4 bedroom 2.5 bath 2 car garage home near downtown. The area is shitty, but my other inferior 4 bedroom half a mile away is rented for $1095 a month. Factor in $1000 a year for taxes, $600 for insurance, $50 a month for HOA, and 4.5% loan with 25% down, and my monthly expenses will be around $500.

Note, I do not recommend doing this from out of state. I do a lot of my own maintenance work, and have local contacts to help inexpensively when I need it. I have a partner who helps with the management, as I am often too busy to get over there when necessary. See the Las Vegas thread to see how the inexperienced can get hurt in a market they don't know, and don't live in.

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  1. edvard2


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    1   8:17pm Mon 6 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (1)  

    I just invested more money into my mutual funds and my 401k. I will add more this year.

  2. Austinhousingbubble


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    2   10:28pm Mon 6 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like (2)   Dislike  

    Knew too many people (boomers) who lost their ass in both real estate and equities either because they timed their exits wrong or through blind faith/insouciance. I never really understood the American obsession with either, and for the most part, invest in what interests me. I have a 401K and some other crap, but I never look at it.

    Investments to date: my wife's career; artwork; rare auto parts; rare hi-fi/recording components/parts; running shoes.

  3. Austinhousingbubble


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    3   10:35pm Mon 6 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like (1)   Dislike  

    Oh! and I just paid my taxes for the year, so tack that on as an investment in the country. Huzzah!

  4. APOCALYPSEFUCK is Shostakovich


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    4   10:39pm Mon 6 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like (6)   Dislike (1)   Protected  

    Just freeze-dried my third ton of potatoes.

    Restored a Vietnam-era flame thrower.

    When cannibal anarchy hits, I'm going to be rich in what matters: durable foodstuffs and ordnance.

  5. EightBall


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    5   5:48am Tue 7 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like (1)   Dislike (2)  

    Austinhousingbubble says

    Investments to date: my wife's career; artwork; rare auto parts; rare hi-fi/recording components/parts; running shoes.

    You should try the bacon of the month club for your parents.

    http://www.thepignextdoor.com/bacon/traditional.html

    Excellent investment as well for that old maid aunt.

  6. GUAB


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    6   6:24am Tue 7 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (1)  

    I hear you Roberto. Most of the good stuff has dried up. Lots of SFH still available in central phoenix/south mountain though. But I'm still skeptical about buying rental properties now that the government is on their way to that foreclosure-to-rental conversion plan. That's going to dump a ton of properties onto the market when it hits and (most likely) drive down rents.

  7. Austinhousingbubble


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    7   6:41am Tue 7 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (1)  

    EightBall says

    You should try the bacon of the month club for your parents.

    http://www.thepignextdoor.com/bacon/traditional.html

    Excellent investment as well for that old maid aunt.

    never touch the stuff.

  8. bubblesitter


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    8   7:49am Tue 7 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like (1)   Dislike (1)  

    I just realized that the stocks I bought last year doubled in value this year. LOL.

  9. bubblesitter


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    9   7:50am Tue 7 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (1)  

    APOCALYPSEFUCK is Tony Manero says

    Just freeze-dried my third ton of potatoes.

    Restored a Vietnam-era flame thrower.

    When cannibal anarchy hits, I'm going to be rich in what matters: durable foodstuffs and ordnance.

    Hahahahahahaha..

  10. swilliamscc


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    10   7:56am Tue 7 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like (3)   Dislike (1)  

    Homes and condos will drop another 30-50% in the west. One year of slight increases in prices when the Fed is spending trillions to temporarily keep mortgage rates way too low and unsustainable is not a trend. When rates return to fair and are market driven, home prices will collapse again. It's coming.

  11. swilliamscc


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    11   8:00am Tue 7 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like (1)   Dislike (1)  

    Just checked trulia. 18,617 foreclosures on the market (auctions and bank owned only) better buy quick. LOL Total boom coming.

  12. robertoaribas


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    12   10:09am Tue 7 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (2)  

    "18,000 foreclosures coming..." save your lol, 1.5 years ago, Phoenix had over 50,000 foreclosures in the pipeline! Thus, you actually just quoted one of the factors encouraging me to buy now, rather than wait.

    As to the government to rent rather than sell foreclosures objection:
    who cares? Most of the foreclosures are going to investors anyways... And I view the government as probably the least capable competitor for me. Will their hired managers advertise on craigslist? Show properties on a moments notice? Upgrade them the way I do? Sure!

  13. tiny tina


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    13   11:29am Tue 7 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (1)  

    roberto,
    You really think it's a bad idea for an outsider to try to invest there? I was just briefly looking at 4-plexes and more on redfin in Phoenix, and it seems like the numbers are great, but it worries me that they almost seem too good to be true. Wouldn't it be possible to find someone out there to help guide me to areas that are ok, or is that unrealistic?

  14. LAO


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    14   4:36pm Tue 7 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (2)  

    bubblesitter says

    I just realized that the stocks I bought last year doubled in value this year. LOL.

    bubblesitter says

    I just realized that the stocks I bought last year doubled in value this year. LOL.

    The problem is the stock market can fall harder and faster than the real estate market.. look at 2008. On the other side of the coin it can rise just as fast also...

    The thing is..if your predictions of another 40% drop in the housing market come true... The stock market is going back to 6000 or below... People predicting higher interest rates should know people will flee the stock market in mass numbers in the coming years... if interest rates rise.

    Boomers won't have any equity left to tap from their homes, so they will quickly start withdrawing in large quantities from their 401Ks for basic necessities... Right now they are still funneling into the market because there's no where else safe to put their money.

    This will change if housing crashes again... and interest rates rise... It's like a see saw.. .right now we are back close to 2007 stock market highs... as if everything is magically better.

  15. LAO


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    15   4:37pm Tue 7 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (1)  

    swilliamscc says

    When rates return to fair and are market driven, home prices will collapse again. It's coming.

    And the stock market will crash around that time too... People think low rates are just helping the housing market... Low rates are the only reason the stock market is back close to peak levels too!

  16. robertoaribas


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    16   4:52pm Tue 7 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like (1)   Dislike (1)  

    In the areas i'm buying, I think the 75% price drops might be helping the market...

    I bought 3/2 condos for 40K, that rent for $800 a month each. Really, how far are they supposed to crash? one had sold for $165k in 2006, this isn't 2002 pricing, this is below 1990 pricing...

    the home I'm buying now is a 2005 built 1700 ft home with a 2 car garage and a yard. my $76K price to purchase is $45 a square foot, far below build cost, with the land thrown in for free. new builds a few miles away are in the 140K range for the same size home...

    with a sub $500 mortgage on a home that will currently rent for around $1100, even if rents fall, I'll still make money, just less money. And that is far less certain than the tongue waggers on here think. Vacancy in the entire Phoenix metro is under 10% now, at the worst it was over 13%. Still not a good number, but moving in the right direction. The house is literally within sight of downtown, so if gas goes sky high, renters will trend inwards as they are already.

    There is other good economic news here: employment is increasing, tax revenues have increased so state and local layoffs may be nearing the end for this cycle...

    The future is impossible to predict for certain, but you have to invest on the data you can see, not on pure speculations that may or may come to pass.

  17. PockyClipsNow


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    17   5:26pm Tue 7 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (1)  

    Ok people the 'when rates rise' question is a joke. They wont and cant raise rates. Interest on national debt would destroy the empire.

    I predict rates will be super low like this the rest of our lives. Like Japan.

    The FED will raise THEN lower the rates just enough to churn the loanowners into one refi after another to extract the maximum in banking fees from the debt sheep (see last 30 years of rates see sawing up and down but always down even more).

    Roberto is gonna do very, very well because he knows his farm and manages them himself.

  18. bubblesitter


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    18   7:29pm Tue 7 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like (1)   Dislike (2)  

    Los Angeles Owner says

    The problem is the stock market can fall harder and faster than the real estate market..

    I sold my stocks,now try selling your house. :)

  19. everything


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    19   8:04pm Tue 7 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (1)  

    Wow, cheap taxes, and lots of home for the money, hard to find in my area, having some larger rentals is not bad at all, if you price em just right your always going to have tenants.

  20. pinchedc


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    20   1:54am Wed 8 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like (1)   Dislike (1)  

    I have 3 houses rented out in Gilbert that I bought between 2002 to 2004. Each one started out as my primary residence and when I bought the next one I rented out the old one. The market in AZ started going crazy in 2004 so I stayed put in the 3rd house until two months ago when I moved into my 4th and started renting out the 3rd. The rentals are all about 10% underwater now, but for each one the rent covers the total mortgage,insurance,tax,HOA & prop manager so I'm not worried about them being underwater. Each rental is 3bed/2bath ~1700sf in nice residential areas and I get between $1200-$1400 rent. Each time a tenant has moved out I've found another within a week or two.

    In hindsight I should have sold them near the peak, but hindsight is 20/20. I agree with Roberto that at today's prices, you can't go too wrong when the mortgage is $600 and the house rents for twice that.

  21. ArtimusMaxtor


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    21   2:06am Wed 8 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like (1)   Dislike (1)  

    What a coincidence. When I was new to the game. I liked to exaggerate. Saying I bought so many houses. When in fact it was not true. Trying to inflate the market. I thought it was a good idea of course. However buying 10 over the course of time (the good times). Might have Ment at the present time. I really bought one and had one under contract. Hard cash dosen't always mean its a good deal of course they loose out to. Yet to be bent over the closing table. (its the HARD part in HARD cash.). Inflated markets just not going to happen of course. Keeps going south day after day.

    I watch as Zillow and Trulia try to inflate the market every once and a while. Investors are fast fish sometimes learning by osmosis. I know some really smart ones. Then again I've seen some really transparent ones.

    One more time rates are bullshit. Its the amortization.

  22. ArtimusMaxtor


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    22   4:53am Wed 8 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (2)  

    Real Esate is an interesting game. All the boys I know. Some well known big boys. They aren't doing as much as one would think. Anything a investor hates is equity loss. Especially on a turn, making payments. They payments cause jitters. Mostly the experinced don't care and wait for the landing.

    ArtimusMaxtor - MasterPP your hometown investor rapper.

  23. swilliamscc


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    23   5:29am Wed 8 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like (1)   Dislike (2)  

    One more point. If you aren't paying cash, you are renting from the bank. Stop saying I own. You don't own a thing until the bank can't take it from you for missing one payment.

  24. swilliamscc


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    24   5:38am Wed 8 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (3)  

    $500 a month in expenses and nothing put aside for repairs. Only makes money because you are doing the work yourself. Sounds like a bad investment to me.

  25. robertoaribas


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    25   6:19am Wed 8 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (2)  

    swilliamscc says

    $500 a month in expenses and nothing put aside for repairs. Only makes money because you are doing the work yourself. Sounds like a bad investment to me.

    1. maybe it sounds bad, because you are really bad at math? I use $1000 a year for expenses, 11 months rent for income, and i come up with a 25% ROI not even counting loan payoff...

    "another liar...claiming to own homes..." jacktard, my name is in my profile, the county website is www.maricopa.gov you can look up all my purchases.

    Some other factors: TODAY there are less than 19,000 homes for sale on the mls here. We are selling 7000+ a month... 2.5 months inventory? that is tighter than 2005. Those 18,000 foreclosures in the pipeline are not enough to have more than a small effect at Phoenix sales rates.
    asking prices have been climbing for over half a year, you can verify this on housingtracker.net

    If you care to look back to 2005 and 2006 on zillow, I called the bubble. I got 100 to 1 negative comments on there, and I sold 4 of my investment properties then. Now, the same data that drove that decision, is telling me to buy everything I can get, right now... What is your track record again? swilliamscc says

    One more point. If you aren't paying cash, you are renting from the bank. Stop saying I own. You don't own a thing until the bank can't take it from you for missing one payment.

    how stupid is that? I guess you don't own your car either, if you drive it without paying the registration it could get impounded... and you don't own your tv, because if you don't pay your income tax the IRS could liquidate it.

  26. investor90


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    26   6:59am Wed 8 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (1)  

    EightBall says

    Austinhousingbubble says

    Investments to date: my wife's career; artwork; rare auto parts; rare hi-fi/recording components/parts; running shoes.

    But why buy bacon by the month when you can buy the whole hog cheaper?

    You should try the bacon of the month club for your parents.

    http://www.thepignextdoor.com/bacon/traditional.html

    Excellent investment as well for that old maid aunt.

  27. investor90


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    27   7:12am Wed 8 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like (1)   Dislike (1)  

    Around here, most landlords keep the rent and neglect to pay property taxes, insurance and mortgage payments, but yet they will try to evict any tenant who is late with the rent! Many of these landlord-investor types are also Real-tards. It should be a federal offense to collect rents from people who actually work and not pay the mortgage payments, so you can keep the rent and buy more insider deals for 10 cents on the dollar, refi and not pay that mortgage. SLIMEBALLS ! I guess we all must take a weekend RE course so that we can be Real tards too?

  28. swilliamscc


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    28   7:32am Wed 8 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (1)  

    MARICOPA AZMA Median Price Sales Volume
    Community Zip Code 3Q2011 % Chg* $/SqFt 3Q2011 % Chg*
    All homes $125,000 -7.4% $69 24,171 22.1%

    according to dataquick real estate news home prices were down 7.4% in the 3rd qrt. in Phoenix yoy and still dropping.

  29. bgamall4


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    29   7:33am Wed 8 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like (1)   Dislike   Protected  

    ContStinks DeGroot says

    You're a financial time bomb.

    It is very risky. However, it is probably far less risky than doing the same in Las Vegas.

  30. bgamall4


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    30   7:34am Wed 8 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (1)   Protected  

    swilliamscc says

    ccording to dataquick real estate news home prices were down 7.4% in the 3rd qrt. in Phoenix yoy and still dropping.

    But bottom feeders are scooping up the lower valued homes. Some say it is an Asian invasion but I don't know for sure. Homes valued over 200k are probably getting killed.

  31. bgamall4


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    31   7:48am Wed 8 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (1)   Protected  

    ContStinks DeGroot says

    Really? REALLY?

    Sales volume is at 1997 levels.... 15 year lows.

    Why would you misrepresent this? You're a corrupt liar.

    My daughter has done a search of low end housing in Las Vegas. The inexpensive deals are being scooped up. From what the guy says in Phoenix, that is happening there too.

    Don't call me a liar. We have looked carefully at houses in Las Vegas. What you need to know is that some areas are hot and many are not. We would not want to live in the "not" areas.

    So statistically you are likely right. But you aren't understanding the dynamic. Banks crash the areas they want to crash and keep other areas afloat. So do the cash buyers.

  32. zzyzzx


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    32   7:55am Wed 8 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (1)  

    $600/year for insurance and $1000 /ear property taxes on a rental sounds very low to me.

  33. GlobalRoamer


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    33   9:04am Wed 8 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like (1)   Dislike (1)  

    Robert - Well done. The nay-sayers are just jealous. I don't understand why people get pissed when they discover I made a few hundred thousand flipping houses but think it is OK I made the same on Apple stock? At least I took some vacant property and made it into a home for someone.

    I fully agree with Robert as I also have properties in the Phoenix area. Auction inventory has been low for at least six months - a good indicator. People are bidding auction properties up to retail value - another indicator.

    There are a LOT of buy and hold investors in Phoenix now. Rental returns are still fantastic. Sure, rents will go down over the long run - but returns will still be good if you paid next to nothing for the property.

    I actually am leaving the Phoenix market as there are few flipping opportunities left (it was great for a few years though). I do have some rentals but don't want my cash tied up as flipping requires a lot of cash (financing is too costly for flips).

    I'm searching for new markets that have flipping opportunities. Wahoooooo!

  34. GlobalRoamer


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    34   9:19am Wed 8 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (1)  

    Yes, prices are falling in many (probably most) markets. I do know Phoenix is on the rise - especially in the low end. And the part about lying and realtors need not be repeated - it is a given. That is part of the game and you need to always keep it in mind but don't let it get in the way of making deals.

    Imagine if we avoided all liars? Forget lawyers. Don't sign up for any services in the USA as all are scams - cable TV, Internet, cell phones. And banks, too. Health insurance would have to go. Heck, the whole medical system is a big fat lie.

    The way I look at it Realtors kind of are normal.

  35. GlobalRoamer


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    35   9:51am Wed 8 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (1)  

    Hold on there Horse Face. OK, you can still call realtors liars - fair enough.

    But you have an issue with attacking people who probably know a lot more about the subject than you do.

    I know you are pissed as you lost a lot on your home and you blame realtors for it. But don't vent your anger at others.

    These discussions are not Binary. There is no right or wrong answer. Some of us are actually on the ground and know what is really happening.

    I actually wish prices were still falling - I made MUCH more money when prices were falling. Why? Fewer buyers meant great prices at auction - with enough margin to flip. I have cash so I can buy. My only regret was not entering the market back in 2009 when investors were making 40K a flip.

    Now San Jose - that is another story. Definitely still on the downslope.

  36. bgamall4


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    36   9:52am Wed 8 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (1)   Protected  

    GlobalRoamer says

    The way I look at it Realtors kind of are normal

    It is always a good time to buy if you are a realtor. But we know that isn't true. Again, location and how banks are handling comps have a lot to do with what crashes and what doesn't crash as fast.

  37. ArtimusMaxtor


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    37   9:55am Wed 8 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (1)  

    I'd respond. But I don't feel like laughing.

  38. iwog


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    38   11:22am Wed 8 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like (1)   Dislike (1)   Protected  

    It's best to put the childish twit who calls everyone a realtor on ignore. He's only here to troll.

  39. Walter


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    39   12:24pm Wed 8 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (2)  

    zzyzzx says

    $600/year for insurance and $1000 /ear property taxes on a rental sounds very low to me.

    If the homeowner isn't insulted by your offer...you didn't bid low enough!!!

    In escrow on a rental in Vegas (Henderson). Those numbers are right on.

  40. GUAB


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    40   1:39pm Wed 8 Feb 2012   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (2)  

    robertoaribas says

    "18,000 foreclosures coming..." save your lol, 1.5 years ago, Phoenix had over 50,000 foreclosures in the pipeline! Thus, you actually just quoted one of the factors encouraging me to buy now, rather than wait.

    As to the government to rent rather than sell foreclosures objection:

    who cares? Most of the foreclosures are going to investors anyways... And I view the government as probably the least capable competitor for me. Will their hired managers advertise on craigslist? Show properties on a moments notice? Upgrade them the way I do? Sure!

    I wasn't trying to discourage you.

    Also, you are not competing with the government. You are competing with firms that bought homes from the government at a value that was probably one third to one half of what you paid. I hope I'm wrong on that value.

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