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What would YOU do?


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2010 Apr 17, 9:32am   7,120 views  38 comments

by CBETA   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

A few words about self: Single gal, looking to purchase for the first time, top rated excellent credit, solid salary and employment, savings for down payment, foreign born but brought here as a child in high school. Another words solid buyer with pre-approval and all.

If I purchased: I want a 3B/2B with 1200sqf at minimum.

a. Buy now in a area which is not the very best (schools ok, train tracks which will host BART in the future are 2-3 streets away)I can afford but at 3x my salary. Allow renters or live there myself.

b. Continue renting and saving to buy with a shorter term, thus saving on interest and accumulating principal fast.

My situation is that TODAY I am single, 1B1B is enough for me. I don't want to think I will marry a guy with a house. Suppose I want to be a single parent. Shall I rent till then? I've played with the compare calculators: When I compare $$ for 1B1B vs a house, then the answer is Rent, if I compare the cost for 3B2B vs a house with same rooms, then it is about the same.

After reading a bit: I feel like I shall wait till I need to pay for 3B2B and then make decisions, now I am better off saving. (the only scary thought that I may not afford anything except renting a 2B2B then, if prices go up)

What do you think?  I am interested in your opinions.....

Comments 1 - 38 of 38        Search these comments

1   azrob00   2010 Apr 17, 10:14am  

with owners not paying their mortgages doubling over the last 18 months, the new buyers credit ending, I would think you have plenty of time before prices begin moving up in any serious manner. Much more likely that prices begin coming down again this year.

2   Ptipking222   2010 Apr 17, 10:19am  

Seems like renting is the best optio for nown. You seem to want to start a family someday, but probably better to wait until you found the right guy or are planning to get pregnant before getting more space. House comes after the life changes, not before imo :)

3   elliemae   2010 Apr 17, 10:21am  

only buy if you find a place that you really want, can afford it and it meets your needs. If an area isn't the best now, it might continue to get worse as time goes on. IMHO you're better off waiting.

4   Eliza   2010 Apr 17, 4:06pm  

Of the choices you listed, I would go with waiting and saving. You mention starting a family at some point. That could mean meeting someone great who has a great job somewhere else, and if that were to happen, you might end up needing a home between his work and yours. Or if you wanted to stay home with the kid(s) for a time, it might make sense to live closer to his work, since you would not be working. You just don't know how that kind of life change is going to look. So unless having a cool little house is part of your plan to attract a partner, I don't see the point. And I especially would not buy a house in a weak school district for the purpose of raising a family. It would be better to rent in a better school district.

I also wonder why you are not interested in buying a smaller place, conveniently located for your life as it is right now. A little place in a great location will usually rent, and rent at a pretty good price, too. It might be a good fit for you now, then a source of income later.

5   B.A.C.A.H.   2010 Apr 17, 4:28pm  

CBETA,

I spent nearly a decade in my kids' PTA, off and on in various officer positions, always active. They are long gone from that elementary school but I still volunteer occasionally. My kids went to an elementary school with demographics that included many single parents, at least one of them was a teacher at the school. So many single parents are my heroes, the sacrifices they make day in and day out to make it work. It is a grind, it is not glamorous, they show how human will can make things happen.

But none of them "wanted" to be a single parent. Divorce, widowed, poor choices while unwed, I know them all. Nobody "wanted to be" a single parent, at least not among my peers of dedicated parents at the school. Even gays who adopt typically have partner.

So, "supposing you 'want' to be a single parent" ?, well I suppose in that case you would not have your act together, and the discussion would be more about core values and what's right for kids then about how to be Hip and Cool and Time the Real Estate Purchase.

6   cdw7503   2010 Apr 17, 4:36pm  

If you read the news stories here on this site it should be obvious that waiting is the best play. All the major banks are insolvent right now because they are hidding billions of dollars in mortgage loan loses on their books. Eventually these future foreclosures on the banks balance sheets must come on to the housing market. This will futher depress the housing market especially in California for years to come.

But you can find a bargain...take the yearly rental value of the house you'd like to buy and multiply that by 10. If house price is at or lower than that amount buy it. But don't buy it if it is a fixer upper; you have time to wait for one that is not a fixer upper.

7   Michinaga   2010 Apr 17, 10:01pm  

CBETA, you're in the same situation I was in about two or three years ago.

I'm also foreign-born (from the perspective of where I live now), also single, and had at long last saved enough money for a small apartment. (Not eligible for a conventional mortgage, so I was deciding between buying a small apartment outright or taking out an unconventional loan from an international bank if I wanted something more expensive.)

If you're single, you don't need 3BR/2BA or anything close to that. What are you going to do with all that space as a single person? Consider the property taxes on it (it sounds like you live in California); you'll come to resent those!

My advice would be to buy a small 1BR/1BA starter home/apartment and live in it until your life changes. All the money you're saving on rent goes towards paying off this apartment; then you own it free and clear.

You're at least five years from having to worry about schools. As Eliza has said, you could rent out the small place in the future and use the income to fund whatever you do next. That puts you in a great position.

(Digression: the one statement that just jumps out at me is "suppose I want to be a single parent". Are you looking to adopt a child on your own if you don't get married? Forgive the tone I'm taking here, but what right do you have to deprive a child of the right to be in a two-parent family?)

My fiance lives with me in the 400-sf apartment I purchased a year ago; if we get married and have kids, this place gets rented out to pay for the bigger home that we'll need then. You're a long way from needing three bedrooms! Put yourself in a position *now* to be able to afford that five or ten years down the road when you really do need it. Throwing money away to pay for too much space today will make that more difficult.

I live in an Asian city where "used" real estate depreciates rapidly between year 1 and year 20 and then flattens out. My place is expected to drop in value by about two months' rent per year over the next five years, meaning that it's much better to buy than to rent. What do RE values in your neighborhood look to do? Even if they're projected to go down, it can still be a net gain for you of this decrease is outweighed by what you'll save in rent. Property taxes are the wild card, which is one reason why I recommend against buying more house than you need.

8   azrob00   2010 Apr 17, 11:57pm  

"all the money you are saving on rent" This is actually very poor logic. In many cases, especially many parts of california, you won't be saving a penny on rent, you will actually be paying a good deal more than rent.

Also, it is quite unfair to judge someone's life choices, ie possibly having a child without a partner, without knowing the first thing about her. Show a single scientific piece of research that demonstrates a couple raises a child better than one dedicated parent, or admit you are simply espousing your own biases.

9   gable   2010 Apr 18, 12:11am  

CBETA,

If the homes you are looking at are located a few streets away from where BART will be in a few years, I would take that into consideration as well as that might be able to help a home weather any potential second dip as the value will be increased by the proximity of public transportation (decline in value of home, but boost from BART location).

10   elliemae   2010 Apr 18, 1:07am  

azrob00 says

Also, it is quite unfair to judge someone’s life choices, ie possibly having a child without a partner, without knowing the first thing about her. Show a single scientific piece of research that demonstrates a couple raises a child better than one dedicated parent, or admit you are simply espousing your own biases.

IMHO no one wants to be a single parent or married parent, or in a relationship parent. They want to be parents. Personal choice. She asked if she should buy a house, not whether we think she should start a family.

11   MAGA   2010 Apr 18, 4:54am  

I would wait until you got married. What happens if your husband to be already has a house? Nothing wrong with renting for now.

12   danville woman   2010 Apr 18, 5:08am  

Listen to Mark Hanson's interview on Eric King News. It is information not available in the mainstream news. Lots of foreclosure shadow inventory coming onto the market. Renting will give you time to buy a cheaper place, and give you more flexibility to move wherever life events lead. Love is a drug and has an uncanny ability to make one do things such as leave your job and move to a godforsaken place - things which you would not normally do in your right mind !

Take your time.

13   CBETA   2010 Apr 18, 5:45am  

Lets not fight...I hope to give my children as much as I possibly can, but sometime things do not work the way we expect, or plan. I am not saying I will be a single parent for sure, but that's one possibility and I want to be prepared for it, instead of being surprised by it.

I agree about inventory and insolvency, and in hopes the prices do come down. But it is Bay Area and things often do not work like they do in rest of the normal market. I am not sure whether the banks will ever let the flood of inventory into market, they are not doing it now, and most likely will avoid doing so in the future....

As far as current apartment, that is exactly what I do. I live 15min away from work, because it is convenient.

14   elliemae   2010 Apr 18, 6:20am  

Zlxr says

I don’t have stats but it looks to me like people (families) are moving in together so that the larger homes are more in demand.

Yea - because several household members are out of work and can't afford to live on their own. It's tough out there.

15   weaverdo   2010 Apr 19, 1:40pm  

for us buyers, the best is yet to come. For the entire Nation, including us wanna be buyers - hang on for dear life

16   pkennedy   2010 Apr 19, 3:07pm  

Just some basic numbers, from the day you meet mr right, you'll likely need 1 year before you get married. Say after you get married, you decide to get pregnant right away, then you have ~1 year of that status. Then you have a child, which doesn't require that much space for roughly 1 year. You're looking at roughly 3 years in a 1b1b from today. Assuming things move along pretty quickly.

Housing might take off in the next couple of years, the major push for this *might* be pent up demand. Currently there are a lot of people sitting on the side lines waiting to sell, and people sitting on the side lines waiting to buy. When people feel more confident in the economy they might start coming out of the wood work to buy again. If realtors play the multiple bids game, we might see some bidding going on. Ugh. I'm betting that you will have a couple of calm years to save up though. This will give you time, and your husband to really save up. If you can save up while renting a 1b1b for 3 extra years, you'll be in a great place to put some serious money down on the house you want. If housing does start to take off, you'll likely just end up saving at the same rate housing goes up. You probably won't be priced out of the market, you'll just not get any further ahead by renting at that point.

I think the other points made here are important. Where will your husband work? Will he want to live in the area you've chosen? Will you make it a miserable commute for him? If you need to move after getting married, you'll be in for a world of hurt, losing out on all those commissions by having to sell/buy again. Not to mention, it will be your house, vs you+husbands house. It's best to both be involved in picking a long term home.

17   CBETA   2010 Apr 19, 3:26pm  

pkennedy, agree.
However let me ask a question, that is not part of your key messages.
You said "I’m betting that you will have a couple of calm years to save up though. This will give you time, and your husband to really save up. If you can save up while renting a 1b1b for 3 extra years, you’ll be in a great place to put some serious money down on the house you want."

So what do you call "serious money" in
- % of purchase price,
- factor of annual salary
- % of annual gross income
- or perhaps an absolute amount?

Example Answer
- 50% of purchase price where price is 1Million or below
- 5x the annual salary before taxes
- 60% of annual gross income over 5 years
- minimum of 500K

18   CBETA   2010 Apr 19, 3:28pm  

p.s. I really do agree that it is easier and better to purchase a large investment such as a house together. Sadly my current BF is not in a position to do, due to personal problems. I am not the only bread-winner, but he can only contribute in terms of helping around and some rent, hence would not be on the DEED (as he decided)

19   edub10304   2010 Apr 21, 1:52am  

Wait til marriage

20   pkennedy   2010 Apr 21, 2:52am  

In terms of serious savings. I guess it's slightly subjective. I'm going to assume when you buy, you'll still be saving to some degree, for retirement, for savings, etc. So you're saving that + the difference in mortgage at the very least. Hopefully saving the tax money you would spend on a home.

If you take the difference between rent and mortgage and other housing costs, you should probably be saving 1000-1500 at the very least per month? Hopefully more, if you're looking to buy alone, since the boyfriend could "hopefully" contribute large amounts later on, most likely nearly his entire salary as well.

Say you're saving $1500/month now and paying rent, if you bring in a guys salary and he isn't paying rent, and you're living together and now saving say his $1500 + $1000 he would normally spend on rent, then you're looking at 4000/month? 3 years at that rate could add some pretty good money. Assuming you invest it a bit, you're looking at close to 150K in three years. That is fairly large chunk to take off a mortgage. If you go 4 years, that could be an additional 200K. Those could be fairly aggressive numbers.

There are some caveats here, which require diligence. This could be like trying to diet in a candy store. While in theory, your diet plans might be fool proof, there might be a small drag here, that others aren't feeling.

You're going to be putting away large sums of money. At some point, you might say it wouldn't hurt to indulge a little bit, save like $300-500 less per month. You could get used to that, and when the mortgage payment comes along, not be able to drop those small indulgences until they've done some fair damage to your overall financial situation.

In the future you might use your boyfriends income to buy a house as well (doubling up what you could buy), which might create an over extending situation? Having a whole income on the side for living might be nice.

If you buy now, and your break it off with your boyfriend, you could put yourself into a potentially bad situation if you buy now? His small contributions around the house could be more important that you expect. If you're going to start all over in the 3 year cycle.

If you're serious about this guy and planning on getting married, you're at least buying "with him" which is a positive. If you setup a solid savings plan and can't keep to it, it would be nice to learn that now, or learn now how to set more realistic expectations.

Overall, I would wait and save.

21   Tude   2010 Apr 21, 2:55am  

It's hard to say because I have no idea where you are talking about. If I were single here in the East Bay, on my salary (above average but not 6 figures...), in a very secure job, with a down payment... I would probably be looking for a really small 2 bedroom condo, flat or apartment where my payments were the same or less than rent, and I was walking distance to a BART station, somewhere between MacArthur and Pleasant Hill BART stations.

I would continue to rent until then (maybe forever?). IMO buying a house with the goal of children in your situation is a bit strange. I would be looking for the perfect single-persons starter place that would be easy to sell.

22   pkennedy   2010 Apr 21, 3:21am  

@tude
Remember you need to pay upto 12% when you buy and sell, plus mortgage costs. With this market, we're unlikely to see large gains, which means you could need to sit in it for a long time to just recover those costs.

Doing so for 3-4 years isn't going to work. If you want to keep it as a rental forever, it might be a decent idea. Of course then you need to buy as if it was a rental. Buying a nice place doesn't make great sense. It seems that most landlords buy the worst properties on a block and rent them. If you're in a condo, they might not allow renting either.

23   Tude   2010 Apr 21, 4:10am  

@pkennedy
I would never buy anything that I could not rent out to someone else if I wanted or needed to. Where do you get 12% Sellers pay commissions on real estate transactions, buyers do not. If anyone wanted me to pay commissions as a buyer I would also walk.

I am just saying what I would do as a single woman in the Bay Area making enough to pay a crapload in taxes, but not a lot of money. As you can see from my post, I would buy a smaller place in the best area for what I was paying for rent, or not buy at all. A 2 bedroom would be plenty of space to have a first child (if I wanted a child, and thought husband/child would be down the road) or would allow a roommate (easy to get being in a nice area walking distance to BART).

I would NOT, under any circumstances, buy a 3/2 house in a less desirable area..

24   alexn74   2010 Apr 21, 4:11am  

It's hilarious to see asians giving advice to a jewish born in Russia gal whose actions are solely dictated by her parents born in Soviet times, i.e. the only goal in life is to own a RE. :)

25   pkennedy   2010 Apr 21, 5:02am  

@tude

You might not pay 12% but many others might end up paying it. You'll need to pay it to buy and then to sell. So probably 6% ish. Either way you're "paying" it, whether you pay it or the other person pays it, it's coming out of your bottom line. You might get a good discount, but in then end you're likely going to lose/pay 6% minimum.

The best rental returns are having the worst place in the neighborhood. So if you're buying a great place in a great neighborhood, you're less likely to see a good return on it when you rent it out. If you're not seeing a good return, you're just one of those LL's that is over paying, so us renters can get a nice place at your expense.

26   pkennedy   2010 Apr 21, 6:31am  

True enough, the difference is whether you want to "pay" for the better housing and live in a better home overall. Probably on an investment, you don't want to do that. If it effects you personally, you might though.

27   EBGuy   2010 Apr 21, 6:55am  

How about a conforming (4 or fewer units) multiplex. It gets you into the game (which you seem eager to do), and you come out ahead on all fronts. You can always move out (into a SFH) if and when the time is right.

28   CBETA   2010 Apr 22, 6:12pm  

alexn74 says

It’s hilarious to see asians giving advice to a jewish born in Russia gal whose actions are solely dictated by her parents born in Soviet times, i.e. the only goal in life is to own a RE. )

On one hand you are right "parents are overbearing", but I must say, when it comes to money decisions they are really smart themselves, so far agree that buying now may not be the best approach.
Needless to say - mother is an mortgage underwriter.... just not in CA.

29   CBETA   2010 Apr 22, 6:27pm  

pkennedy,
thank you for putting the time to give an answer. I truly do appreciate it.
So as far as savings - you are right on the ball. My projects are exactly that 100K in 3.5years myself. Actually this has been what I've done over past few years. And that not including 401.K at maximum, ESPP, IRA yearly, BONDS, and interest income, and purchasing a luxury brand new car (may not be the best idea, but that was my present for the hard efforts, and payback for someone totalling my 1st corolla, which was also paid off in full in 2 years)...
Not to brag, I don't believe I am stingy, but I do pretty well with savings and such.
As far as his income that is exactly it! He is not able to pull together savings, due to a large debt which he encountered through the market crush. For the next 10 years, his paycheck is all 'spent'. Hence we both felt that he would not be participating more than paying a rent. Do I care for the guy? Yes I do. Do I care he is in such situation? yes I do. Will I put myself at risk due to his debt - NO. Hence no marriage until debt is settled. Kids that's a different story, though I hate the idea of doing it that way, I may have to, as I am not getting any younger.

So back to original discussion.
On one hand it is great to take a chunk off the mortgage. Why waste money on interest (and it is significant sum). Yet, in market like today, I am not sure that' would be my best benefit.
Morally, I would still owe per contact, hence if I put lets say 60% in. I can afford the monthly payment, but if prices decline, bank got the pay, and I missed out. Morally that's the way to go, in my opinion!
Now if I put 20% down (which I am able to do already, leaving just as much in the bank), if prices fall, bank would work (may be, hardly doubt but at least a chance) to help me. But I keep the hundreds of thousands that I made, allowing me to start a new.

But all in all I see a picture. I shall wait and see, but be in touch with the market. Consider a townhome in an area with good elementary/middle (for resale), where my payment would be similar or only slightly above of what I am paying in rent today.( BTW 3/2 is easier to resell than a 2/2 or 2/1. But if prices rise again, it won't matter as much in CALI.)

30   CBETA   2010 Apr 22, 6:42pm  

CBETA says

Now if I put 20% down (which I am able to do already, leaving just as much in the bank), if prices fall, bank would work (may be, hardly doubt but at least a chance) to help me. But I keep the hundreds of thousands that I made, allowing me to start a new.

Quoting myself. Do we really think ALL people foreclosing due to lack of money to pay. They are about 30% of them who could pay, but chooses to save now, rather than waste. They tell themselves "forget about credit", now I need to get ready to live w/o it.
I will say this I like credit, but too many here have forgotten that it is not a free money. It is something that must be repaid! Somewhere deep down, I am glad, even for these people, perhaps dealing with hard cash will teach them back that credit is NOT money. That when spending you need to have a very secure resource for repaying (moral part)
When I purchase something with credit (RE would have to be an exception), I always have this same amount in cash, plus enough to last me 1 year (though they recommend at least 6mo)
Per my mother who is underwriter, she says when giving loans she always looked for people to have steady income prior to, and proof that they will most likely continue to receive it, made sure that new debt plus all debts were only at 33% income (we are dealing with smaller states, where salaries are usually under 50K), 6mo minimum to cover this expense plus all other monthly expenses based on past 12 mo of statements, and good credit standing. She held and still has the lowest 'defaulted loans' rating, which shows how many loans out of all she underwrote went to default.
That tells me she did something right.
Particularly she is shocked by California's market. BTW I tried getting approved through her bank, they said "No way, too Risky in Cali"

31   thomas.wong1986   2010 Apr 23, 10:44pm  

CBETA, first of all, understand we are in a bubble.

It took 15 years under a far better economic climate for prices to double in prior decades, 1980 to 1995. Since 1997 to 2006 prices tripled. Incomes nor inflation have kept up with prices.

http://www.housingbubblebust.com/OFHEO/Major/NorCal.html

You have plenty of time to focus on your career goals and watch the markets here. Prices are not going back to peak years. As you indicated prices are still well above 3x normal salaries for you and many others. So kick back have a brewski and watch the surfers at Steamers lane in santa cruz Saturday morning.. who knows you might get lucky!

32   thomas.wong1986   2010 Apr 23, 10:58pm  

CBETA says

Per my mother who is underwriter, she says when giving loans she always looked for people to have steady income prior to, and proof that they will most likely continue to receive it, made sure that new debt plus all debts were only at 33% income (we are dealing with smaller states, where salaries are usually under 50K), 6mo minimum to cover this expense plus all other monthly expenses based on past 12 mo of statements, and good credit standing. She held and still has the lowest ‘defaulted loans’ rating, which shows how many loans out of all she underwrote went to default.
That tells me she did something right.

Ditto! we seemed to have lost that Good Credit Standards (ie Common Sense) over the past few years.. but it is slowly being put back into practice. Not yet there, but it will take some time. Look for further tighting of credit standards to continue.

33   toothfairy   2010 Apr 24, 12:59am  

I think it's a good decision to buy. I have a friend who's wife did the same as you. She bought a house in Santa Clara while she was single and when they got married they moved to a bigger place and kept her house as a rental. This was back in the 90's during the last real estate bust now they've got about 4 houses and are pretty much set.

yes you are saving money renting but that money you saved gets wiped out if prices go up. Real estate market is cyclical so prices will go down but they will also go up. Better to have an asset so that you're at least in the game even if it's in a so so area.

34   pkennedy   2010 Apr 24, 3:40am  

Prices won't outswing her savings right now. Probably not for a little while. I was told once by a financial banker, when we were discussing personal stock choices, that buying a company coming out of bankruptcy is a pretty good investment, BUT wait until it's come out fully. There could be huge gains to be made, but it could also all go away. You'll still see great gains once it gets out. Essentially don't try and time the bottom, don't catch a falling knife, etc.

This market might be at bottom, many of us think it's pretty close already, if not recovering already. However, it can't hurt to wait another year to see what shakes out, at the very least. If it is going up, you miss the very bottom, if it's not there, you can wait another year or two. Better to catch it on the way up, and solidly up.

As for "10 years of paying off debt" Um. Bankruptcy an option here? Don't most people suggest it if you're over 5 years of paying back a debt at a large portion of take home? If you're not going to use his credit, trash it. 10 years is a VERY long time.

35   seaside   2010 Apr 24, 4:31am  

This thing is confusing.

CBETA, some questions for you.

Is this home a primary resident you want to stay in for long years, or is it possible investment you may sell in few years?

Did you talk about buying home with your guy, and what was his opinion?

36   toothfairy   2010 Apr 24, 5:00am  

pkennedy I'm not sure if that's the way I would play the housing market. It's a bit different from stocks in that solidly on the way up could mean it's harder to get the house you want.

Although waiting is certainly least risky since you're guaranteed not to win or lose by not playing.

I have no hesitation saying that now is the time to buy. Of course it depends on what you're buying but at the entry level you are mostly in the clear from any major price declines.
The issue in CBETA's case is the boyfriend situation. I say dump the boyfriend. I'm sure he's a nice person but marrying someone with 10 years bad credit is just a recipe for disaster.

37   CBETA   2010 May 9, 3:08pm  

pkennedy says

As for “10 years of paying off debt” Um. Bankruptcy an option here? Don’t most people suggest it if you’re over 5 years of paying back a debt at a large portion of take home? If you’re not going to use his credit, trash it. 10 years is a VERY long time.

well yeah, an option, but there is something to be said about honor. Acquired debt happened because he made a dumb move, but thankfully he was saved. He feels gracious and wants to repay for the effort.

38   CBETA   2010 May 9, 3:10pm  

seaside,
I would not plan to sell the house I purchase, for no good reason.
Yes, if I can no longer afford it, I will sell. Otherwise, I'd like to live there. Unless of course I am able to upgrade and/or keep it as investment and live in a better one.

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