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French would be a welcome change ..... RE has been all Greek ... if you know what I mean .... "not that there's anything wrong with that". lol
I would like to see the details on how you compute that $866/MTH number. It is a fanatasy number.
Take out a 15 year 3.875% loan for $752,000 (80% of $940,000).
Pay it down $5515.47/mo = $992,784.60 total payments on the mortgage.
$992,784.60 - $752,000 = $240,784.60, so $240,784.60 is the total interest paid on the mortgage.
Interest is tax deductible so you get back your top marginal rate, 35.2% in my calculation. 35.2% of $240,784.60 is $84,756.18, leaving the after-tax interest expense at $156,028.42.
Averaged over the 180 months of the loan that's $866.82/mo in interest costs on a $940,000 house with 20% down.
I believe looking at this average is a better feel for the true cost of ownership, but actually one should in fact look at the total benefits of owning a home vs. renting over one's lifetime, and the lifetimes of the beneficiaries of your estate.
If wage inflation returns in the next 15 years, buying now will be better than buying in the 1960s.
But I don't know if wage inflation is going to come for us. We could get stagflation, where wages remain under pressure & rising life expenses -- taxes, health costs, energy costs, food costs -- are taken OUT of the housing expense.
Or we could get stagflation and the PTB throws the kitchen sink at preserving home values -- turning the mortgage interest deduction into a credit, offering 2% 60 year loans via the Fed (this is what Japan is doing). Who knows.
I do know that tax policies that cause tax revenues to double are definitely paying for themselves. Whether or not spending was never brought under control does not disprove that (but your articles seem to think so).
You need to know more about Reagan's tax policy. First off revenues only went from 1.077 in 1981 to 1.25 in 1988 in year 2000 dollars as per the OMB. Not double in the system of math that I use. Doesn't even beat the increase in GDP adjusted for inflation. Secondly the top rate was lowered but the the bracket was lowered a lot more. To be in the top bracket when Reagan entered office you had to make 215,000 but to be in the top bracket when he left office you only had to make 29,750. I certainly see who was doing the paying part of the tax cut paying for itself.
That's the problem with calculating this on such tight margins: Untouched property values always do decline over time, unless you catch a bubble. The constant backsliding in your value as the house ages is counteracted by the maintenance and updating. If one assumes that rents and prices should not be at least somewhat close, this factor is often being left out.
Ultimately, the homeowner in Troy's best-case scenario is sitting on an asset that without major capital input can and will decline significantly in value, and which is also highly illiquid. The renter, on the other hand, has liquid cash in the bank account which can either be placed in an absolutely safe position subject only to inflation, or be placed into higher risk and return investments. In this example, the homeowner loses.
As a general rule, rents and prices are tied together in the long term view. Ultimately, it makes no sense to pay more than you can rent something for unless it is something that you simply cannot rent. In other words, it makes no sense to pay more than rents unless there is something else about the property that you enjoy but which does not necessarily add to economic rental value. The idea that houses will never go for rent in a particular area is ill-founded, at best. Even a house in the over-priced range will go up for rent. It will simply do so at a loss. Ultimately, that person losing money on the rents will sell, and will probably gladly do so at a price which matched the value of the house based on current future-anticipated rental value. That, in turn, will bring surrounding values down.
SFRs typically cost more than rentals not because they are not rentals, but because there is stuff in them that is not present in rental houses. I can think of, in particular, an area near me which has many $400,000.00+ houses. There is currently a parcel with a 2000sqft rental on it that was slated for demo and replacement by a new 2400sqft SFR at $400k. Having no bites, the rental went back up for sale. It's priced around $120k, and has been for months. No takers. Externally similar houses in size and finish in the neighborhood (former tear down area) can and do sell at $250k. Why? Those houses have stuff that most renters do not want. Finding someone to rent your high end cabinets, built in flat panel, home theater, etc. is a little more complicated. People with that much money typically don't want to make payments on goodies unless the owner of the goodies is taking a bath on them.
If California thinks it can escape this reality is any of its communities, it probably has a wake up call coming. Properties ultimately can and will sell for close to their rental value, all factors considered, even if there are not many renters in an area. Unless you plan to live in a house for an extended term, buying a house is normally a bad deal. Try on the handy-dandy NY Times calculator for size: http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/business/buy-rent-calculator.html This basically will give you a nice graph and calculable figures for what Troy is doing.
Note that “paying down a mortgage†is the opposite of losing money, assuming property values don’t decline further.
*Other costs are insurance ($200/mo), Utilities ($200/mo), Maintenance ($200/mo), Opportunity Cost ($450/mo).
I would like to see the details on how you compute that $866/MTH number. It is a fanatasy number.
Take out a 15 year 3.875% loan for $752,000 (80% of $940,000).
Pay it down $5515.47/mo = $992,784.60 total payments on the mortgage.
$992,784.60 - $752,000 = $240,784.60, so $240,784.60 is the total interest paid on the mortgage.
Interest is tax deductible so you get back your top marginal rate, 35.2% in my calculation. 35.2% of $240,784.60 is $84,756.18, leaving the after-tax interest expense at $156,028.42.
Averaged over the 180 months of the loan that’s $866.82/mo in interest costs on a $940,000 house with 20% down.
I believe looking at this average is a better feel for the true cost of ownership, but actually one should in fact look at the total benefits of owning a home vs. renting over one’s lifetime, and the lifetimes of the beneficiaries of your estate.
If wage inflation returns in the next 15 years, buying now will be better than buying in the 1960s.
But I don’t know if wage inflation is going to come for us. We could get stagflation, where wages remain under pressure & rising life expenses — taxes, health costs, energy costs, food costs — are taken OUT of the housing expense.
Or we could get stagflation and the PTB throws the kitchen sink at preserving home values — turning the mortgage interest deduction into a credit, offering 2% 60 year loans via the Fed (this is what Japan is doing). Who knows.
I still doubt your figures.
But how can life be any good if you have this massive noose around your neck if you lose your job?
Our mortgage interest deduction is truly a bad law.
shrekgrinch,
You bring up a good and interesting point about the declaration of Independence.
http://www.answers.com/topic/united-states-declaration-of-independence
"The constitutional and legal status of the Declaration of Independence is curiously ambiguous. John Hancock (in his capacity as president of the Second Continental Congress) and James Madison both considered it to be, in Madison's words, “the fundamental Act of Union of these States.†Reflecting that view, Congress has placed it at the head of the United States Code, under the caption, “The Organic Laws of the United States of America.†The Supreme Court has infrequently accorded it binding legal force"
As far as the Latino vote (2008):
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C06E0DC1638F934A35752C1A96E9C8B63
"In a year when turnout among many groups surged nationwide, the number of Latinos who went to the polls increased by nearly 25 percent over 2004, with sharp rises among naturalized immigrants and young, first-time voters, according to a study by the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials. Hispanic support for the Democratic nominee increased by 14 points over all compared with 2004, the biggest shift toward the Democrats by any voter group.
For the first time, Latino voters emerged as a mobilized Democratic voting bloc in states across the country, Latino officials said.
''They really delivered,'' said Efrain Escobedo, director of civic engagement at the Latino officials' association, a bipartisan group that ran voter registration drives across the country. ''This is an electorate that now understands the importance of voting, and they made a significant shift in the political landscape.''
Nationwide, Hispanics voted 67 percent for Mr. Obama and 31 percent for Senator John McCain, according to Edison/Mitofsky exit polls. In 2004, Senator John Kerry won 53 percent, while 44 percent of Hispanics voted for President Bush, a record for Latino support for a Republican presidential nominee.
The approximately 10 million Latinos who went to the polls this year were 9 percent of the total of voters, up one percentage point from 2004. Their share of the electorate did not increase more substantially because turnout was high across most voting groups.
A striking increase was in Colorado, where Hispanics went from 8 percent of those who voted in 2004 to 13 percent this year, according to Edison/Mitofsky. Mr. Obama carried the Latino vote in Colorado by 61 percent to 38 percent, Edison/Mitofsky found."
also, I come here to learn, all geniuses were once fools.
But how can life be any good if you have this massive noose around your neck if you lose your job?
LOL, this is why I'm a renter in my 40s. The only problem is over my lifetime rents have been on an escalator. In the mid-70s my parents were paying $300/mo for a 3B in El Cerrito that rents for $1500 today, in the late 70s $400/mo for a house that just sold for $315,000:
http://www.redfin.com/CA/Salinas/222-San-Miguel-Ave-93901/home/14955586
The numbers on this house are a starting monthly cost of ~$1700/mo ($2100/mo including principal repayment). This declines as the loan is paid down, for an average monthly cost of $1130 over the 30 year life of the loan.
What will rents be in Salinas in 2025? More or less than $1100?
Buying gets you off this escalator. Since this is economics, and economics sucks, this buy decision is generally never favorable to renting in the short term, it only pays off in the long term.
But for anyone who's bought in California 1850 ~ 1999, it has paid off big. My mom's housing expense is dominated by three things: Cable bill, gardener, and property taxes, in that order.
Our mortgage interest deduction is truly a bad law.
On that, we certainly agree.
good point ... but, not being afraid of something because it is very unlikely doesn't make it less dangerous. I could see Barry, and those who think like Pelosi and B.Frank, having the balls (sic) to try to remove term limits for Prez. All it takes is "a good crisis". Right? Then we be having some of those unelected dic-taters too. lol
it could happen
This example matches my Mom's house perfectly, almost to the dollar, though of course she didn't sell in 2009.
From the original:
So there you have it. 74% of the Twelvepack’s gain can be attributed to the 9% drop in interest rate. When you strip out the interest rate effect, the house underperformed inflation by more than 60% over 30 years
This may be true but it is missing the fact that this interest rate lowering 1983-2003 was what got us inflation in the first place! This same inflation bailed out homedebtors and totally screwed renters (I have been renting since the mid-80s, grrr).
Just for fun I've modeled this ownership.
$76,400 starting loan balance, 14% 30 year in Jan 1980, serially refi'd into new 30 year mortgages in 1983 (12.5%), 1986 (10%), 1994 (7.5%), 2003 (5%).
Total interest paid is $120,000, total property taxes $27,000 (assuming Prop 13 protection). Both are net 30% tax credit.
So for $147,000 in interest and taxes we get an average cost of ownership of $412/mo over the 30 years.
$30,000 was still owed on the home in Dec 2009, so there was a $220,000 profit on $46,000 in total investment (principal paydown).
I have no idea what kind of point this author is trying to make. ~$200,000 profit on a $1500/yr investment, a cost of ownership half or less of renting. Sign me up!
We can’t drop mortgage interest rates 9% again (currently 4.4%), but we should expect houses to continue to underperform inflation.
Oops! I found his point. Can you spot the mathematical error?
Rates fell from 14% to 5%, a 64% drop. Gee, how can rates fall 64% from 5%?
Bueller?
Here's a hint:
The funny thing is 2.35% rates would in fact send the $270,000 pricepoint to $430,000.
According to my stupid spreadsheet, $76,400 @ 14% has an average monthly TCO of $900/mo, and $270,000 @ 5% and $430,000 @ 2.35% come in at ~$1100/mo.
I don't know this area. But a quick look on Redfin shows that there may be better deals now.
http://www.redfin.com/CA/Antioch/1936-Evergreen-Ave-94509/home/748261
Home prices here seem so low.
good point … but, not being afraid of something because it is very unlikely doesn’t make it less dangerous. I could see Barry, and those who think like Pelosi and B.Frank, having the balls (sic) to try to remove term limits for Prez. All it takes is “a good crisisâ€. Right? Then we be having some of those unelected dic-taters too. lol
it could happen
While were at it, everyone be very afraid of a meteor crashing into earth and destroying everthing.
There's actually a real chance of that happening in 2015, unlike the bizarre socialist hysteria.
good point
I'm kinda seeing the Mayan 12/21/12 thing looking like a good time to end this poop.
@Nomo,
Could be you trust me to be respectful, and vice versa (?). lol
Could be some of the newer conservos are better adversaries for you? lol
Dude ... we could sit and sip coffee and talk about houses any time. Or other stuff.
Buying averaged $400/mo in interest and taxes over the 30 years.
Rent would have been $1000/mo on average let's say ($500 in 1980 and $1500 now), so that $600/mo diff over 30 years works out to around $200,000 money saved buying.
From that deduct $20,000 in incidentals: new roof, $10,000 in other maintenance. Altogether buying put you ahead ~$400,000 over renting. Compared to the $1500/yr in actual property investment, that's pretty awesome!
The dude's question whether buyers today will see that sort of appreciation is an open one. The 1980 ~ 2009 example follows the Early Boomer moving from age 30 to age 59. That was the run-up, what may follow is the run-down.
>>$76,400 starting loan balance, 14% 30 year in Jan 1980, serially refi’d into new 30 year mortgages in 1983 (12.5%), 1986 (10%), 1994 (7.5%), 2003 (5%).
>>~$200,000 profit on a $1500/yr investment, a cost of ownership half or less of renting. Sign me up!
Lets assume that you used an IO loan.
You pay interest of about 257% over the loan. (14x3 + 12.5x3 + 10 x 8 + 7.5 x 9 + 5 x 6) after the serial refinance.
You sell the house for 270,900 and pay 76,400 and pocket the difference of $194,500
You paid 76,400 x 2.57 over this time = 196348
So you lived free in the house (assuming prop taxes + maintenance vs. the tax deduction is a wash).
Amortization does not matter - for eg if you paid $1000 principal in the first(1980) , year you lost the returns on that $1000 if you had invested it all this time.(1981 to 2009). That returns would hold close to your rates you refinanced if invested in bonds but much more if you invested in S&P (700% gain). So doing this I/O calculation has a bias, if any, towards the buy side.
If you take realistic maintenance costs, and the investment gains forgone, the benefits would even less.
Calculations like these should be in real terms. $1 in 1980 is not equal to $1 in 19994 is not equal to $1 in 2009.
I just noticed that the house was sold at 410K back in 2005, then it sold at 115K in 2009 to, you rentalinvestor, I guess.
I've never been there, so bare with me. But WTF happened to that area?
^ yes, I can confirm that the tax value of IO financing does wash out with the after-tax property tax, insurance, and $20,000 of maintenance.
But free rent is nothing to sniff at!
You say the S&P returned 700% since 1980, but due to the 10% refi in 1986 and the general inflation of the 80s, in the late 80s IO had a cheaper per month cost than renting ($636 vs. ~$800) So the rent strategy can only put money into the market 1980-1985, after that it is taking money out of the market.
From 1980-85 the renter saves $18800 vs buying. This will expand to $331,000 by 2009 going with the S&P's CAGR.
However, from 1986 through 2009 the renter has to cough up an extra $172,000 to live.
The pure rent strategy thus nets $160,000.
But because IO was cheaper than renting 1986 ~ 2009, the IO buyer could have put THOSE savings into the market, yielding an extra $284,000 from the S&P over that time, over and above the $200,000 he also netted on the house.
Edit: oops, forgot the $200,000 IO interest payments.
Rent: +$160,000.
Buy: +$284,000.
Spreadsheet here :)
^ that's probably not entirely right. The renter has to pay $354,000 in rent 1980-2009 while the IO strategy has a net housing cost of $0 thanks to the home appreciation covering the IO cost.
The only way to really model this is to include the person's entire investment strategy, not just this differential.
So let's say the dude has $12,000 less the housing expense to throw into the market in 1980, and this $12,000 rises 5% per year until it hits ~$49,400 in 2009.
In 2009 he will have $1.462M in the rent case and $1.416M in the IO case, for a rent strategy advantage of $46,000 in investment gain.
But the IO strategy does have $200,000 in home equity, for a $150,000 advantage.
I think I learned something with this, what, I'm not sure.
Oh, I know. Instead of playing Pac Man I should have been investing in the S&P. $1000 invested in 1980 would have been worth $31,000 in 2007.
Important announcement: Bap & Nomo have won the 1st. Annual Rodney King "Why can't we ... why can't we ... all ... just .... get along?" Award. I'm going to have to sign off for now. I'm afraid tears are going to short circuit my keyboard.
Oh Come on, Look at the WSJ top ten reasons, I am still laughing so hard, I had to re read it to make sure they actually put that in print.... LOLOLOLOLOLOL Ya, Lots To Choose From, Low Rates, Save on Taxes, LOL, It will be YOURS! (I guess you will ignore the bank) Inflation protection (that is like rain coat in AZ) Oh and lets us not forget the killer, Sooner or later, the market will clear. LOLOLOLOL Yea, sooner or later... alright sounds like some solid reasons.... NOT Did they really run this in the paper version? Wow
Is Mr. Arends sponsored by the NAR? We're in one of the "far-flung" areas of CA, and unless we get another industry or prison soon, nobody's going to have the income to buy our pretty country club mansions and subdivision "estates."
Many desirable areas near employment opportunities have already seen major drops and are unlikely to go much further.
Really? I think you may be right if you are assuming rates will remain super low. What do you think may happen if there is a 2% hike in 2 years(I see that happening if and only if economy gathers some steam)? What if rate remains same but employment picture never improves(I see this more of a possibility than the previous scenario)?
Bap33 says
Dude … we could sit and sip coffee and talk about houses any time. Or other stuff.
You and I have had some pretty fierce knock-down drag-outs over the years, but the truth is I think you are one of the most clever and insightful people on this forum. I enjoy reading your posts, and I respect your opinion a great deal. I’m usually only a ass to people I think are worthy intellectual adversaries.
I love you, man.
How sweet, you two. But, having read rayray's post, you coulda done it a lot sooner. :)
I’m usually only a ass to people I think are worthy intellectual adversaries.
Ouch.
Logic: A ---> B does not imply ~A--->~B, but it does imply contrapositive ~B--->~A
That is you can only conclude that if you are not intellectually worthy, he would not be an ass. But Nomo, you know how Ellie feels about you. Maybe you need to be get a little rude with her.
Or he could just talk dirty. :)
He said he's an ass to worthy intellectual adversaries... It appears to me that I meet 2/3 of his criteria. Since I'm not an adversary for the most part, I know in my heart that he likes me (blush). But I've sneezed a lot of liquids from his snarky comments that came out of left field.
I’m actually just trying to get down Bap’s pants. Jealous much?
No, I'm over it. But it was touch & go for a second there.
This entire excercise is predicated on the concept that one would never have to change jobs or move. Not very likely in today's world.
Or he could just talk dirty.
That’s my specialty. Hit it and quit it, don’t babysit it.
Thanks. I'm gonna need a shower, tho. :)
get down my pants ..... an interesting undertaking. Caution: I'm commando at all times. Except for when I'm wearing my wedding/funeral/Christmas dockers - my wife demands that I wear chones under those.
I respect anyone who can defend their position sans personal attacks. That's why Clarence13 is such a dueche bag.
Yes, it WAS a great time to buy a house. Back then. That does not mean it is equally good now because circumstances are very different.
If you have done the right thing and actually saved up some money, the best thing you can hope for is HIGH interest rates. It brings competition among buyers down because the "how-much-a-month" idiots disappear from the equation. House prices drift lower, and while you pay more interest, it is on a much smaller principal amount.
It isn't 1979 anymore, so IMHO using that as an example to prove anything - either way - is ridiculous.
If you read the original post, you would realize the author was attempting to make against the case of "A home as an investment".
A home and the payments you pay on a home are at best a forced savings tool. Don't forget you also have to pay interest on a mortgage, substantial interest over the life of the loan.
4. It'll be yours.
Wow, that guy is really stretching just to reach the magic number 10. And like Rob said, this list would have been no different a few years ago.
It's all about the J-O-B-S.
If Japan is any guide we're heading back to 1997, nominal.
The mid 90s saw the invention of the internet, mass deployment of WIndows 95 PCs, cheap gas, growing trade with China, NAFTA, etc. save the economy.
But post 1997 it was all bubble, all the way down.
I like you both, especially when you talk dirty this way.
Caution: I’m commando at all times.
I once worked with a woman who refuses to go naked at all. Not to bed (she lives alone) and certainly not after she gets out of the shower, she grabs a towel. Ugh.
Just another sprout journalist with nonsense articles.
Brett Arends is an American financial journalist. He writes a column for the Wall Street Journal[1]. He has written a book about personal finance, Storm Proof Your Money.[2], and a book about sports gambling, Spread Betting: A Football Fan's Guide.
Arends writes a column of personal financial advice that appears twice a week online at the Wall Street Journal and a column for MarketWatch. He also writes a financial news column once a week for MarketWatch.
Before joining the Wall Street Journal, Arends wrote a financial news column for the Boston Herald and TheStreet.com, the financial website chaired by Jim Cramer. Arends received a Best in Business award from The Society of American Business Editors and Writers in 2007 for his columns at TheStreet.com.
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