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A year has passed since I bought...


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2011 Nov 23, 12:27pm   115,111 views  321 comments

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Well, so its about a year now that I bought and here is my current status:

Unlike the patrick.net predictions, I am not underwater, my house is not worthless or worth less and I am not hating life but loving it. Best decision ever. It feels good not to pay rent to somebody and making their retirement plan come true. This summer we did so many updates and improvements, would have never done that in a rental. And the best part - we refinanced our house at 4% and now our payment is actually not what our rent used to be but $280/m less. (and thats for a much bigger house) - Who could have know that interest rates would go even further from where we locked in and that my payment is now way less than rent used to be is definitely an xmas gift.

When I was talking about it last time, everybody jumped the gun on me and told me how I will regret my decision come xmas 2011. How I will be in total financial distress and will regret that I bought and eating ramin noodles. - Quite the contrary.

Well, folks?

The doom and gloom as predicted just didn't kick in, did it now?

I'll be back next year and repost - till then, keep up the good gloom and doom work, post the graphs that prove it and happy thanksgiving and merry xmas!!

:)

(Rumbling sound of an earthquake...)

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127   Hysteresis   2011 Nov 28, 6:52am  

toothfairy says

if someone decided to rent at the same time at the same time I bought they'd be about about $20k in rent money and still hoping for house prices to fall.

what do you mean hope?

they are falling, and they've fallen well over $20k, where i'm looking.

128   thomas.wong1986   2011 Nov 28, 7:02am  

toothfairy says

if someone decided to rent at the same time at the same time I bought they'd be about about $20k in rent money and still hoping for house prices to fall.

East Bay got hit the first, and the slide continues for others. If you paid 1997 prices plus inflation say 35-40%, then you did well.

East Bay, Riverside (SoCal), and Miami are at or near their long term trend. Others continue to decline. Not all regions move in tandem at the same rate.. but they do move over time.
Home prices are not going anywere and there is plenty of time to drive prices lower.

http://www.dqnews.com/Charts/Monthly-Charts/SF-Chronicle-Charts/ZIPSFC.aspx

"The median price paid for all new and resale houses and condos sold in the Bay Area last month was $350,000. That was down 4.1 percent from $365,000 in September, and down 8.6 percent from $383,000 in October 2010. Last month’s median was the lowest since last February when it was $337,250."

129   toothfairy   2011 Nov 28, 7:42am  

I paid around 1997 prices. But my house needs a ton of work. It's not like I got a brand new house for what someone would've paid in 1997.
and prices may have fallen some from when I bought but it's a different market now. It's hard to do an apple to apples comparison where I say that if I's only waited I coulve bought a house for 20k less because that's just not the case. (Even though the charts may seem that way).
The only 100% certain calculation is every year I'm not renting it saves me about 20k.

so not regretting my decision at all even if I'm underwater technically speaking.

130   edvard2   2011 Nov 28, 7:54am  

There's a ton of houses near where I live that are also probably at 1997 prices. Then again most I've looked at need major repairs. As in we're talking like at least 100k in work. So if I see a seemingly cheapish house- say in the 350k range- if the thing needs work- as in 120k for new foundation work- then the 'real' price is more like 450-500k. That's the hitch. Anything that's move-in ready in my area is still sitting at 500k and they aren't selling. There are cheaper houses. But for the most part to me it seems that the only affordable houses are still weird, in bad shape, or less than ideal. That's my take anyway.

131   toothfairy   2011 Nov 28, 8:18am  

Here's a good apples to apples comparison I looked at a few condos in this building when I was looking to buy, it was full of foreclosures. The one I looked at was identical to this one and the bank wanted something like $120k now I dont see anything under $140k

http://www.redfin.com/CA/San-Jose/1060-S-3rd-St-95112/unit-313/home/2125990

132   chip_designer   2011 Nov 28, 9:13am  

bob2356 says

The only gloom and doom is if you plan to flip or get in over your head.

touche'!

133   chip_designer   2011 Nov 28, 9:14am  

Clara says

Same here. Extremely happy with my home. It's amazing to have my own place and cheaper than rent. Ha ha. Love it.

do you have a boyfriend?

134   JodyChunder   2011 Nov 28, 9:36am  

edvard2 says

here's a ton of houses near where I live that are also probably at 1997 prices. Then again most I've looked at need major repairs

them repairs wont cost you what they would of in 1997. Gas was cheaper ER visit was cheaper food was a hell of a lot cheap. a THREE pak of cotton shirts was half what it was today. think on it

135   thomas.wong1986   2011 Nov 28, 2:16pm  

toothfairy says

I paid around 1997 prices. But my house needs a ton of work. It's not like I got a brand new house for what someone would've paid in 1997.

Then you have no issue with others who are waiting for their location to reach the bottom.

136   B.A.C.A.H.   2011 Nov 28, 2:51pm  

The only way they will ever know its the bottom is after the prices are increasing again. By waiting, they will miss it. Instead they should base the decision on their own situation instead of trying "time the market"

137   Hysteresis   2011 Nov 28, 4:15pm  

B.A.C.A.H. says

The only way they will ever know its the bottom is after the prices are increasing again. By waiting, they will miss it. Instead they should base the decision on their own situation instead of trying "time the market"

missing the bottom is my strategy.

i'm fine with paying a premium to know prices have bottomed (by waiting many years after the bottom has occurred)

138   toothfairy   2011 Nov 28, 10:55pm  

thomas.wong1986 says

toothfairy says

I paid around 1997 prices. But my house needs a ton of work. It's not like I got a brand new house for what someone would've paid in 1997.

Then you have no issue with others who are waiting for their location to reach the bottom.

No I dont have an issue with you waiting for 1997 prices. It's just painful to watch.

The reason prices fell here is because half the properties were owned by investors who all walked away as soon as prices stopped going up. The other half were owned by people who lost their job and could no longer afford to pay the mortgage.

unless you truly believe something similar is taking shape in your market. Then it might happen.

139   Hysteresis   2011 Nov 29, 2:26am  

you're a lying parasite. everyone can judge for themselves.

141   toothfairy   2011 Nov 29, 3:34am  

you have about 1 more year for the California housing apocalypse to play out. After that a little rule goes away and people will no longer be able to walk away or short sell their house without penalty.

once the change goes into effect expect a huge drop off in the number of distressed sales.

142   EBGuy   2011 Nov 29, 3:41am  

I remember reading a comment several months ago on CR. They guy had two choices: rent in Antioch or buy in Concord (duckyland). Can anyone guess which he did?

143   kunal   2011 Nov 29, 4:45am  

toothfairy says

you have about 1 more year for the California housing apocalypse to play out. After that a little rule goes away and people will no longer be able to walk away or short sell their house without penalty.

once the change goes into effect expect a huge drop off in the number of distressed sales.

Is that just your personal opinion? Gut feeling? Or do you have any data/analysis to share that will back it up?

144   Â¥   2011 Nov 29, 5:07am  

kunal says

Why will home prices not go below rent?

rents keep going up, but home prices stay same or down slightly.

Prices depend on interest rates, and interest rates can do down from here.

~50% down from here in fact.

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?id=MORTG

That graph is telling you something.

145   EBGuy   2011 Nov 29, 5:13am  

The San Francisco Bay Area C/S Index fell 1.5% month-to-month. To be frank, that number is pretty brutal. It beats every other Aug. to Sept. drop except the free fall in 2008. I'm fairly confident of new relative lows come this January (year over year).

146   edvard2   2011 Nov 29, 5:52am  

Here's the thing. Even if the market is flat ( which as seeing by the price drops lately I don't really buy) the rise in inflation will in turn eat away at overall values to the tune of about 3-4% annually. Look it up. Fairly common economic basics. So if your house just sits there not appreciating then its still losing value.

I find the pro-bullish sentiments in regards to housing a tad comical. I mean- cmon'. Housing in the Bay Area peaked around late 2005 and we're almost into 2012- representing a 7 year period of decline. Even if the absolute best scenario plays out and somehow everyone discovers they have an extra 100-150k in cash sitting around to pay more for Bay Area housing in the next year or so then when all is said and done we're looking at a total of an entire decade of a housing slump. Yet here we are, having these same arguments: Housing is grreeeat! Invest in em'. Buy a whole city block of em'. Because housing has shown itself to be such an absolute stellar use of investment capital.

147   kunal   2011 Nov 29, 5:57am  

Bellingham Bill says

rents keep going up, but home prices stay same or down slightly.

Huh? Rent go down too, its all demand and supply.
Huh? Home prices go down too, its all demand and supply.

Bellingham Bill says

Prices depend on interest rates, and interest rates can do down from here.

~50% down from here in fact.

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?id=MORTG

That graph is telling you something.

Yes, its telling me that the interest rates are trending downwards. Whats your point? That prices ONLY depend on interest rates?
Not in income?
Availability of loans?
Jobs?
Economic trends?
Govt Intervention?
Supply?
Demand?

I'll just re-state -> Home Prices (or cost to own) has to drop below cost to rent for people to want to shift. At that point not everyone can shift, they'll have to qualify for loans or have a bunch of cash.

148   edvard2   2011 Nov 29, 10:29am  

This is another circular argument. Sort of like what came first- the chicken or the egg. The reality is that neither decision- whether to buy or rent- is better than the other. As I previously mentioned everyone these days will need AT LEAST one million dollars in retirement per person for a fairly meager yearly income. Buying or renting isn't going to create that wealth. Your investments in retirement funds will. People need to become better educated about finance.

149   tatupu70   2011 Nov 29, 10:38am  

edvard2 says

Buying or renting isn't going to create that wealth. Your investments in retirement funds will. People need to become better educated about finance.

Yes and no. If you own your home, you eliminate a major retirement expense. That definitely creates wealth.

150   JodyChunder   2011 Nov 29, 10:57am  

tatupu70 says

Yes and no. If you own your home, you eliminate a major retirement expense. That definitely creates wealth.

retirement!! would not worry. chances are good you are gonna croak long before then buddy

151   edvard2   2011 Nov 29, 11:03am  

tatupu70 says

Yes and no. If you own your home, you eliminate a major retirement expense. That definitely creates wealth.

Maybe. If you had taken the same money spent on a house and instead stuck it in stocks you would actually be better off... to pay for your future old folks home- where we'll all wind up anyway.

152   toothfairy   2011 Nov 29, 11:07am  

edvard2 says

Your investments in retirement funds will. People need to become better educated about finance.

That's good no brainer advice for people who dont have the time to understand finance. Actually buying a house and investing in your 401k should be part of the no brainer path to retirement which is why most people are on that track.
Renting is not a no brainer.. For that path you need to get clever enough to have investment returns to outpace your rent that's increasing with inflation.

153   JodyChunder   2011 Nov 29, 11:14am  

edvard2 says

Maybe. If you had taken the same money spent on a house and instead stuck it in stocks you would actually be better off...

best hope you time things right. some folk I knew lost there butts who retired in 2000 or 2008

154   JodyChunder   2011 Nov 29, 11:15am  

toothfairy says

Renting is not a no brainer.. For that path you need to get clever enough to have investment returns to outpace your rent that's increasing with inflation.

you paint it a little rosey bub. rent also can go down. i have had to lower rent before.

155   toothfairy   2011 Nov 29, 11:30am  

JodyChunder says

you paint it a little rosey bub. rent also can go down. i have had to lower rent before.

or I guess you could say it's the ultimate no brainer. If you're not even thinking about retirement and dont know the first thing about buying a house then renting it is.

156   JodyChunder   2011 Nov 29, 12:34pm  

toothfairy says

If you're not even thinking about retirement and dont know the first thing about buying a house then renting it is.

it aint brain surgery man. every on I know thinks they got it figured.

157   JodyChunder   2011 Nov 29, 12:37pm  

everyone is a big time dude til they loose there butts. investment property is they way to go right now. i am doing well. it is a NO BRAINER

if that is your kitchen tere its a nice one... very elegant feminine.

158   anonymous   2011 Nov 29, 2:16pm  

Listen to the man from Victorville - he's living the dream. Victorville is known for ballers and shot callers.

159   B.A.C.A.H.   2011 Nov 29, 3:00pm  

Hysteresis says

B.A.C.A.H. says

The only way they will ever know its the bottom is after the prices are increasing again. By waiting, they will miss it. Instead they should base the decision on their own situation instead of trying "time the market"

missing the bottom is my strategy.

i'm fine with paying a premium to know prices have bottomed (by waiting many years after the bottom has occurred)

Hysteresis,

watching for a bottom is being in reactive mode, reactive to what others are doing.

Another way to act, is, to be more in control. If the total ownership cost is right for you, based on your own personal analysis, then go for it. Who cares what other people think in setting "the bottom"? Just do the right thing instead of reacting to what others do.

For me, buying now is not the right thing. All things considered, I am satisfied with the returns on my dividend stocks.

160   JodyChunder   2011 Nov 29, 3:23pm  

SubOink says

Listen to the man from Victorville - he's living the dream. Victorville is known for ballers and shot callers.

you been to this part of the high desert? you razzing??

161   tatupu70   2011 Nov 29, 8:23pm  

edvard2 says

If you had taken the same money spent on a house and instead stuck it in stocks you would actually be better off

We can argue that all day, but I'll just say that someone who buys a house and holds it through retirement willl almost never be worse off than someone who rents their whole life.

162   mike2   2011 Nov 29, 9:21pm  

ptiemann says

I'm sure someone will comment how that remodel money will never be recouped and that renters get free landscaping in their apartment complex's common areas.

Otherwise.. congratulations.

Don't forget also how much money you are savin gin taxes by writing off your interest abd preoperty taxes! I myself bought 5 rentals in the last 4 years for cash...Cheap in Richmond and Oakland but guess what? I have a cash flow of $7000 per month coming in and all of them are worth more than I paid for them at the time. I bought them all under $100k and they are worh about $110k-$125k each.I just bought another on ein October for $86k in Richmond and the person who Short sold it wanted to stay as a renter at $1200 per month so I said sure you can stay. That gave me a 15% return on the $86k cash I invested.

You can work this recession if you know how and have guts. ll these properties are returning 12-18% return on the money invested plus future growth.No gloom and doom here!

163   JodyChunder   2011 Nov 29, 10:12pm  

mike2 has the right ideas. KTF

164   Hysteresis   2011 Nov 29, 10:26pm  

B.A.C.A.H. says

Hysteresis,

watching for a bottom is being in reactive mode, reactive to what others are doing.

Another way to act, is, to be more in control. If the total ownership cost is right for you, based on your own personal analysis, then go for it. Who cares what other people think in setting "the bottom"? Just do the right thing instead of reacting to what others do.

For me, buying now is not the right thing. All things considered, I am satisfied with the returns on my dividend stocks.

waiting for the bottom -is- reactive but more importantly, it is a wealth preservation strategy.
i don't want to "lose" money, even if it is only on paper.

if price/income and price/rent ratios make sense, but prices continue to fall, it is very costly to buy in a down trending market. why?

1) because a financed house purchase is leveraged 5 to 1 (if you put 20% down). a 1% drop in house price is equivalent to a 5% (unrealized) loss of the down payment. a 20% drop wipes out your equity completely like the millions of people today that are underwater.
once your equity is gone, the odds of losing your house increases sharply.

2) consider a 20% down payment.
at a price of $250k that's $50k down, at $500k, that's $100k, at $1M that's $200k.
if prices drop 20%, the unrealized losses are $50k, $100k, $200k.
if prices drop 10%, the unrealized losses are $25k, $50k, $100k.
if prices drop 5%, the unrealized losses are $12.5k, $25k, $50k.

most mortgage owners are highly leveraged at 5 to 1, meaning they start with a 20% down payment; some with a 3.5% down payment are 29 to 1 which is insane.

most people i talk to don't realize how likely it is that prices will drop and how much they can lose. you can argue paper losses don't matter, but if you could time it even roughly, wouldn't you?

i too have dividend paying stocks. they are outperforming the market by a very large margin, probably because people are looking for safer investments when every asset class today has so much uncertainty/volatility.

in this environment (homes trending down, stocks extremely volatile), i'd rather have my money in stocks/bonds. it's a tough environment for any investor, but with a lot of hard work and strong analysis, good decisions can be made. we're no longer in a secular bull market, we're massively deleveraging trillions of dollars of debt (not just mortgage debt, but consumer debt like credit cards, student loans and auto loans). this means strategies need to emphasize the risk part of the risk/reward equation.

165   toothfairy   2011 Nov 29, 10:45pm  

i dont know how you could possibly be in the stock market if you dont like losing money on paper.

At least with a house you dont sit there and watch the number plummet each day not knowing whether it's going to zero.

166   Hysteresis   2011 Nov 29, 11:48pm  

toothfairy says

i dont know how you could possibly be in the stock market if you dont like losing money on paper.

At least with a house you dont sit there and watch the number plummet each day not knowing whether it's going to zero.

i have a high tolerance for stock price fluctuations - they move around a lot and move (relatively) quickly. so if the share price is down, it will go back up soon enough or if it stays down i can cut my losses.

house prices don't exhibit this behavior. they go down and stay down for years.
many of these peak buyers will be sitting on a paper loss for more than a decade.

i can cut my losses with stocks easily; even though it may be painful:).
underwater houses are much worse in my opinion; far less liquid. selling has heavy transaction costs and being underwater requires a short sale or foreclosure which has many undesirable consequences. or the owner can suck it up and keep paying into the loser month after month for years; i imagine this can wear on a person.

with stocks i expect to have losers so have strategies to deal with them. it's a numbers game. if played right, risk is reduced.
with a house you are concentrating a very large sum of money and income into this single asset over many years which in my opinion is risky. it's sort of like investing $250k-$1M, and in many cases people are spending half their income, on a single stock(ie their house) over 30 years.

i'm not expecting anyone to agree with me. investment strategies are very personal and have to be suited to the person's style and tolerances. what works for me, may not work for you and vice versa.

also all of my stocks have appreciated in price this year; most of them quite significantly (not crazy amounts but a very nice return).

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