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Anyone here feel cheated?


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2012 Apr 30, 6:35am   66,166 views  192 comments

by Goran_K   ➕follow (4)   💰tip   ignore  

If you don't want to live in an apartment for 20 years, you're forced to participate in a ponzi scheme and overpay for a home. You want to live in an area without gang fights in a dirty alley behind your house every night, and have your children go to schools without metal detectors at every entrance, better be a dual income earning couple who is willing to teeter on the edge of foreclosure every month while eating ramen noodles, and going out to Jack in the Box for fine dining.

Be a saver? The FED makes your money worth less and less. The market starts to correct? Home inventory "magically" disappears just in time to create a false bottom.

How do you win? Any tips appreciated.

#housing

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1   Patrick   2012 Apr 30, 6:51am  

That feeling of being cheated is exactly what drove me to create this site and what keeps me working on it.

How to win? I think there are still some ways in spite of the best efforts of the Fed and the banks to enslave us to mortgages and bosses:

* Work in a high income area for 10 years, while renting and saving enough to buy for cash in a nice but low income area, maybe something like far northern CA or coastal Oregon. Kind of a race against inflation eating your savings.

* Start your own business and tell your boss goodbye. Might work, might not, but at least it's an adventure.

* Live on a boat or in a mobile home. I knew a guy who had a house in Davis, but worked in San Francisco. During the workweek he lived on his sailboat docked in SF and it was only maybe $300 per month for the dock fees.

* Own a bank, and own a few senators too, to protect your bank from any possibility of losing money due to free market forces. If you own the government, the free market doesn't apply to you.

2   Finnian   2012 Apr 30, 7:01am  

I'm stuck in the same way. Had a bunch of money in the bank for 4 years now, theoretically I've been 3-6 months away from buying a house for those past 4 years, I was even under contract for one 2 years ago that I'm now happy I did buy.

I'd really emotionally like to buy a house, I thought fiscally that waiting would be a good thing but prices have not come down as much as I thought they would. There was a house for 215K two months ago that I now wish I had jumped on but it was under contract in a couple days. I feel like I've got a lot of my life on hold until I pick a house and settle down permanently.

All I know is I'm not losing. Sitting in a comfy apartment, bunch of money in the bank, decently secure job. I can recognize that I've got a better life than 99% of people in this world and I try to take stock of that. With so much turmoil out there in jobs, international markets, politics, it's kind of nice to know you can weather anything that happens and take advantage if any opportunities do pop up.

3   bmwman91   2012 Apr 30, 7:07am  

Goran, I am sort of with you. I used to be more so. Alas, I see it as a hopeless situation and one that is likely permanently rigged against people that think in "reasonable" terms. Knowing that, it is senseless to allow yourself to be bothered by it. Love it or hate it, it is what it is, and nothing good or productive can come out of thinking about it. The best course of action is to focus on all of the good things you already have in life and work on letting go of the house idea. We all sort of idealize many aspects of it and focus on the ways that a house is better than an apartment, while generally ignoring the aspects that aren't as great. As I like to say, it isn't necessarily BETTER, just different. You trade some headaches for others. The easiest way to deal with the unhappiness brought about from wanting something is to just stop wanting it. Easier said than done though!

As one poster says in his signature line..."No solution? NO PROBLEM!"

4   bmwman91   2012 Apr 30, 7:12am  

Finnian says

I can recognize that I've got a better life than 99% of people in this world and I try to take stock of that.

Amen!

It is so easy in this country to totally lose perspective on life. So we don't want to make large monthly payments for a single family house, boo hoo! How about wondering every day where you will find food or clean water for you and your family, or if your sons will be stolen from you to fight in some regional conflict? As I discovered after my first trip to industrial China...we have it so damn good here in the US, and all we can manage to do is complain about it!

Just keep in mind how marketing works. It operates by making you UNhappy with your life as it is now by promising greater happiness via whatever they are trying to sell. Think about all the fantasies that most of us have in our heads about how great a house will be. When emotions get put down and we actually THINK about it, it only looks like a pile of trade-offs. In some cases it is worth it, and in others it isn't. Just remember, the way things get sold is by spurring discontent in the consumers so that they come seek happiness in your product, with open wallets. Most stuff is shrouded in a disguise of why you "need" it, but a moment of rational thought will quickly show that there is in fact zero NEED involved, just want, usually driven by emotions. Keep those particular emotions under control!

5   PockyClipsNow   2012 Apr 30, 7:14am  

There is more government intervention now in RE than EVER BEFORE in history of US. Even more than the actions that created the bubble.

Low rates have caused large REITs/small investors(even CALPERS) to buy SFR to rent out. This is new! Added with all the other bailouts/squatter stimulous/loan mods for losers/robo signing 'scandal' delaying foreclosures/principal reductions/HARP/HAMP/REO to Rental cronyism its hard to say what will happen.

Banks dragging feet on foreclosures (wating 2 years to file NOD - used to be done in 90 or 120 days no matta what) is still going on of course and wont change. Also accounting rules for banks were suspended in 2009 probably permanently.

Romney or Obama will be exactly the same on these issues. They will leave Bernanke in place and the money printing ponzi will continue. Plan accordingly.

6   Hysteresis   2012 Apr 30, 7:26am  

i don't feel cheated.
mainly because i'm super patient and fairly analytical.

as long as prices keep falling or stay relatively flat i don't have a problem.
every year prices have been better - meaning lower.
i see the advantages of letting the impatient rush in first while i sit back(there's the old joke - "why run down the hill and fuck just one, when you can walk down and fuck them all?").

when i see prices start to inch up, then i'll decide if i want to commit to a house at that price.
right now, i'm satisfied with waiting, accumulating cash and growing my investments.
i could pay cash today for a house, so waiting is purely a strategic decision.

7   rooemoore   2012 Apr 30, 8:03am  

here they come:

http://www.mortgagenewsdaily.com/04262012_home_prices.asp

There is good news near the end of the article.

8   bubblesitter   2012 Apr 30, 8:05am  

A= renting a home.
B= buying the same home as in A.

How can you feel cheated when B != A or vice versa? Two different things. Pick yours and pick your own time when you want to do A or B in your life time. Why do you think only B will make you happy? and why does A makes you feel you are cheated?

9   drew_eckhardt   2012 Apr 30, 8:18am  

Goran_K says

If you don't want to live in an apartment for 20 years, you're forced to participate in a ponzi scheme and overpay for a home.

Unless you rent a single family home, buy a mobile home and rent the land, move someplace where it costs less to buy than rent, etc.

You want to live in an area without gang fights in a dirty alley behind your house every night, and have your children go to schools without metal detectors at every entrance, better be a dual income earning couple who is willing to teeter on the edge of foreclosure every month while eating ramen noodles, and going out to Jack in the Box for fine dining.

Or decide that things like avoiding gang fights and sending your children to good schools are more important than the American dream of owning a house with a white picket fence and settle for something less.

The last place I rented for $1250/month was in a neighborhood with $1.2M - $1.5M houses and if my children were young they'd have gone to the same high school as Meg Whitman's kids (assuming she found some one to breed with her and didn't send them to private schools).

I know people who bought condos and town houses with good schools instead of less expensive houses where there weren't.

Be a saver? The FED makes your money worth less and less.

That is a real problem.

10   BoomAndBustCycle   2012 Apr 30, 8:20am  

bubblesitter says

A= renting a home.
B= buying the same home as in A.

How can you feel cheated when B != A or vice versa? Two different things. Pick yours and pick your own time when you want to do A or B in your life time. Why do you think only B will make you happy? and why does A makes you feel you are cheated?

I don't know a single person.. (except those on this blog). That actually rents a SFH. Most of my friends and co-workers are renters.. but they rent 1-2 bedroom apts and condos.

When I look for SFH's on craiglist.. The majority are spammers or ads trying to get you to RENT TO OWN.. which i really don't understand.

Also SFH's usually have much larger deposits required. I've seen a lot of homes asking for $3000-$5000 deposits. I'm not to fond of handing that money over to a stranger.... Atleast with a property management company you feel like you have an entity you can track down and sue easier than an individual, that may or may not be making payments on their home.

So, your A = B scenario is much rarer in the real world. Maybe that will change once more investors start buying up SFH's.

11   David9   2012 Apr 30, 8:22am  

bubblesitter says

A= renting a home.
B= buying the same home as in A.
How can you feel cheated when B != A or vice versa? Two different things. Pick yours and pick your own time when you want to do A or B in your life time. Why do you think only B will make you happy? and why does A makes you feel you are cheated?DO YOUR MATH

Perfect.

There are properties for sale in my area that at these interest rates where buying = my rent. (Which is low)

Worse case: An earthquake or financial collapse where the value is half.

Best case: The value at least stays the same. I have a base in California.

12   Goran_K   2012 Apr 30, 8:38am  

Thanks for all the input (Patrick, bmwman, porky, etc).

I agree that I should be thankful for what I already have, and to tell the truth I am, I'm happy everyday. I have a beautiful wife, big growing 1 year old son, and lots of cash in the bank. I don't feel cheated in that I'm not able to buy a house, because I can, I feel cheated in that my world has been changed in a little more than 10 years into something that is unrecognizable to me.

In the 1990s when I was a college undergrad, I bought a condo on an entry analyst salary at Goldman Sachs (yes I know, I worked for the devil, irony is rich). Not a shoebox either, a real 3/2 with 1800 square feet in a nice area of Greater Los Angeles. When I left that job, I was able to get a fair price for my condo, no price gouging or low balling, just fair. It was so simple, sold in about 2 months.

Unemployment was around 5%, people could get jobs if they wanted and were motivated.

These days, things are just different. I have friends with MBA's who have been on $1,800 a month unemployment since 2010. What did these criminals do to our country?

I guess I could be happy I don't live in sub-saharan Africa, and have to carry an AK-47, but I think that it's all about perspective of where you were, and were you have come. I think things are a lot less better than before and it scares me how fast it changed.

13   Goran_K   2012 Apr 30, 8:44am  

The worst part of it is there are people who are young enough to consider this normal.

If you post on Zillow or Trulia forums, there are tons of agents/realtors. I brought up how Los Angeles prices in non-hoody neighborhoods have appreciated more than 200% in less than 10 years.

Then I'll get a REMAX agent, who will be maybe 22 at most, ask me to stop "being a cheap ass" and just accept that those neighborhoods will always be expensive because "rich people don't care about price just location."

Insanity.

14   David9   2012 Apr 30, 8:50am  

Goran_K says

Insanity.

Insanity, yes.

But this scenario is correct and the systemic way of lending has not gone back to the old lender/borrower business model. Thus, mortgages are still being sliced and diced and sold off to investors.

So, I'm not quite confident prices will drop to 1999 levels, in my neck of the woods anyway.

15   FuckTheMainstreamMedia   2012 Apr 30, 10:40am  

Eff it. I used to feel that way. But walking home instead of fighting traffic is great. Being able to stop off at whatever bar has the best happy hour and cutest worm also has its charm.

If houses drop enough where I'm ok buying, so be it. If not, I'll retire in 17 years, pay cash for a home, and still be happy

16   FormerBear   2012 Apr 30, 12:07pm  

Oh, of course you feel cheated. The system is punishing those economically responsible and rewarding irrational exuberance. And yes, we should feel greatful for what we have, but it used to be much better. The problem is the direction we are taking, and one can turn a blind eye to it at it's own risk.

17   PockyClipsNow   2012 Apr 30, 12:24pm  

I feel cheated because CD's used to pay 6% back in 06 now they pay 1%.

Of course the whole fraudponzconomy is managed soviet era CCCP style and 'they' want people with bags of cash to plunk it into RE or Stocks right now. Its all fake zeros and ones to them in a game.

18   rufita11   2012 Apr 30, 12:51pm  

rowemoore says

here they come:

http://www.mortgagenewsdaily.com/04262012_home_prices.asp

There is good news near the end of the article.

Reading these articles is maddening. I cannot stand how housing price recovery = a return to housing prices which can only be supported by toxic debt. To me, a housing price recovery is a return to pre-1998 prices. In some places that is happening, but not in the right places.

19   Rickshaw   2012 Apr 30, 1:16pm  

Why not rent in Oakland? There are many fantastic neighborhoods and it offers an easier commute to downtown SF than many of the neighborhoods in SF. But you haven't experienced it yet, so why lock in when you can test it out with renting? Let housing be consumption, not an investment. Then, buy after you are certain that you like the area and want to stick around.

20   everything   2012 Apr 30, 1:20pm  

Yeah, I refuse to buy just because of property taxes, being single I don't need much space and again for a single person, the money pit aspect of it is quite a drag. So, I'm putting retirement before real estate these days. I may consider buying a really cheap and small 771 sq. ft. condo for 45k very near to where I work, depending on the HOA dues it might come in cheaper than renting, and the taxes are only $1700.

21   TMAC54   2012 Apr 30, 4:32pm  


That feeling of being cheated is exactly what drove me to create this site and what keeps me working on it.

Yippee Kiyah ! All Hail to the chief. Thank You, again Patrick for providing this vocal community.
In the early eighties, I thought I.T. might provide some kind of unity for individuals who had been damaged in some way. But I was thinking along the lines of people who were unhappy with their auto repair, maybe an auto purchase. Maybe appliances. I had no Idea back then that the appointed leader to the financial crisis would advise the president "We can save the banks, or we can save the people, we can't save both". Who doesn't feel cheated ? Have ya ever left a waitress a nickel tip ? There is some malice involved. Hasn't every society eventually become an US vs THEM kinda gubmint ?
An Author on NPR this morning. "Leo Litwak: wrote 'Home for Sale". Mentions we grow up in this country starting off in a little cracker box condo or something, just expecting it to grow into a palatial estate. Growth is a system that CAN NOT be sustained forever. Nor can the opposition, stagnation. "INTELLIGENT GROWTH" is maybe what we should all seek in the future. But in the meantime, we should be focusing on repairing our failing political system. And not just bitchin about it. Lest we all remain in the cracker box.

22   citizen jpp   2012 Apr 30, 8:39pm  

Maybe the cheating has been going on all along.
Are we as a group of Patrick readers participants in a cohort effect: becoming increasingly self-aware of our environment?
Sometimes, I think I am trying to gain knowledge to make informed decisions, but it seems the cheaters are always a few steps ahead.
I can't do anything about the cheating, and I haven't found a way to move on -- that's why we are all here.
This is a very important topic that makes me think of the red/blue pill moment in "The Matrix."
http://www.youtube.com/embed/te6qG4yn-Ps

23   hanera   2012 Apr 30, 11:02pm  

citizen jpp says

Maybe the cheating has been going on all along.

Now that we know we're been cheated all along, what can we do? Demand more transparent info on real estate transactions? Are there any websites that talk about building costs?

24   Patrick   2012 May 1, 1:31am  

I think bitching about it in public is actually productive. It helps other people wake up to the Matrix-like reality of mass enslavement through debt.

Most people think massive lifelong mortgage debt is normal at this point, and it definitely is not normal and doesn't need to be that way.

We need a much more transparent housing market, with openly published and verified bids, but even more than that, we need the government to stop sponsoring mortgage debt. Mortgage debt is just not at all productive. All it does is suck money out of working people and hand it to bankers.

It was basically an arms race, where the everyone thought they could bid more than their neighbor/competitor for a house by borrowing more. But they forgot their neighbor could and would do the same thing. And the banks and the NAR encouraged the government to guarantee ever-bigger loans.

Reducing the amount of mortgage lending would be hard to pull off though, since that means all house prices would fall a lot, and there are huge political and powerful consituencies that DO NOT want falling prices:

* everyone who indebted himself at current prices
* old people who want to sell and downsize
* banks, because high prices are the main assets on their balance sheets

25   bmwman91   2012 May 1, 2:50am  

While it seems like massive inflation would make sense, given the QE measures we have seen, people have been saying it would happen for years now. Surely the government would like to allow it to deal with their debt issues, but they also have to know how wildly unpopular that would be. I'd agree that it is a "when" issue more than an "if" issue, but all indicators point until at least the end of 2014 before any big inflation can occur given the Fed's declared strategy.

Will this massive inflation be the panacea all mortgage holders have been dreaming of? I don't know, but chances are that the cost of goods & services will greatly outrun wages, and people won't exactly be throwing piles of disposable income at their mortgages. Folks might be spending so much more on the basics that even less is left for the mortgage. Then again, maybe not. We'll find out at some point.

Are rising house prices coming? Yes and no. It depends on location. Where you are in AZ, I would believe it. Prices really got smacked down there, and the frenzy of investor activity there did an excellent job of soaking up distressed properties. If there people are battling over decent properties now, then that must mean that the only houses left are a few good ones and a bunch that are in too bad of shape to fix and make a profit. So, it is conceivable that prices will go up a bit now that the market isn't flooded with low-hanging investor fruit. I am still a little fuzzy on HOW people are going to make rental income there since it sounds like overbuilding was an issue, and there are more houses than renters, but I may be mistaken since I don't live there.

There is a lot of anecdotal evidence that a similar situation in the BA is playing out. Certainly, anything in an OK area with a fair-looking asking price gets sold FAST, and at or above the asking price. I think that sellers are purposely listing low to attract attention since a listing price is not any sort of binding contract. Being that there aren't that many nice properties available at the moment, I don't blame them for using that tactic. It works well when competition between sellers is so low. Will prices rise all over the BA? I sort of doubt it since this place had an incredible amount of meddling during the crash. SF & the SV hit a plateau on the way down and didn't follow the same trend as most of the rest of CA. Banks have been systematically foreclosing on houses, starting with the lowest priced ones and working up as they go. The BA happens to have some of the most expensive RE in the BA, and there is a very large number of delinquencies and properties in foreclosure here, that aren't listed. If there is going to be a lot of foreclosure activity here, it will be one of the last places to show it. I believe that 1 in 4 people here are underwater to some degree or another, and it is unknown how many would just walk away if their property value took another hit.

We all know that we are going to see a push for loan mods & principal reductions this year as the presidential would-be's try to buy votes. What happens to RE around here will be largely dependent on what promises are kept from the campaign season. Inventories will likely grow a bit after the election once people know what will or will not happen. Our unusually warm winter (or lack thereof) also pushed a lot of sales activity earlier into the season, so it may end up being a weak summer for RE here.

And of course, RE in the BA could defy reason yet again and rise further. I am already making some preliminary plans to move to Seattle with my fiancee since I can't really justify current prices, and certainly not higher ones. I fly between here & there weekly for work, and I have encountered a number of young professionals on the airplanes that are in the process of leaving the BA, mostly due to housing prices (some really don't like the rat-race/money-money-money atmosphere, and some can't deal with the far-left politics of the peninsula). The next few decades will be very interesting for the SFBA. Almost all of the people leaving are white, so the BA may undergo a very large cultural transformation if this keeps up. The peninsula will probably also grow even further to the extreme left, politically, as more politically moderate people leave.

26   Goran_K   2012 May 1, 3:02am  

Homes selling depend on incomes being able to support current price points. Unemployment is too high, and under employment is just as high. Wages are stagnant right now.

I just don't see RE taking off until jobs and employment start to rise.

Homes are only in bidding wars now because of super low inventory, and I don't think it's because we've suddenly run out of houses, especially when I can walk down the street and see 3 homes that are vacant with "Chase Banks owns these properties" signs on the garages, but are not listed on the MLS.

Sorry Robert, maybe things are rosier in Arizona, but California has a lot of correction left to go. But I wish you well in retirement!

27   tiny tina   2012 May 1, 3:32am  

Goran_K says

Unemployment is too high

I'm not sure what kind of house you are looking for, but unemployment for the well-educated in the BA (ie the ones who would be buying houses) is actually around 4%. The landscapers and construction workers who are driving up the overall unemployment rate aren't the ones who would be buying nowadays.

28   PockyClipsNow   2012 May 1, 3:37am  

This idea to 'end mortage and all other debt' is an impossible dream.

Its like the Ron Paul dream - he got 3% of the vote and I'm pretty sure if Patrick was organized enought to get a 'mortgage debt is illegall' initiatitive on a ballot box it would get about 3% support.

Remember this is a democracy you just gotta add up the numbers - the debt slaves and debt slave masters far outnumber the 'debt is wrong' crowd.

FHA loan cieling was 220k in 2001 in high cost areas - now its 729k and the NAR wants it to be 1m or unlimited (currently they are lobbying for this.....no one is lobbying to outlaw debt so which one is more likely?)

Very soon the 729k limit will be raised just as soon as Obama or Romney get in the chair again and there is a slight slow down in sales. Prepare accordingly.

29   Goran_K   2012 May 1, 3:44am  

tiny tina says

Goran_K says

Unemployment is too high

I'm not sure what kind of house you are looking for, but unemployment for the well-educated in the BA (ie the ones who would be buying houses) is actually around 4%. The landscapers and construction workers who are driving up the overall unemployment rate aren't the ones who would be buying nowadays.

Do you have any sources for that, or is it anecdotal?

30   MisdemeanorRebel   2012 May 1, 3:57am  

How desirable is homeownership, given the mobility of the typical worker?

Does it really make sense to buy, knowing you will likely move a few years later?

31   clambo   2012 May 1, 4:01am  

You have been screwed. Everyone else has too.
The tens of thousands of illegals and HB1 visas create more housing demand while driving wages down. Who benefits? Surely not you.
Who loved the housing bubble? Among them, those guys who build/fix up and flip houses, who interestingly employ illegal aliens.
Semi-educated people selling houses/mortgages also liked the situation.
The trend is not going to end while the liberal simps encourage everyone to take what others have.
Would you believe that Pebble Beach Corporation is now going to build "affordable housing" down there in order get a permit to build a couple mansions?
I don't know the answer besides not voting for the traitors and of course, buy AAPL because money gives you the flexibility that complaining doesn't.

32   rooemoore   2012 May 1, 4:09am  

tiny tina says

Goran_K says

Unemployment is too high

I'm not sure what kind of house you are looking for, but unemployment for the well-educated in the BA (ie the ones who would be buying houses) is actually around 4%. The landscapers and construction workers who are driving up the overall unemployment rate aren't the ones who would be buying nowadays.

I'm guessing that the unemployment rate of "the ones who would be buying houses" is probably 0% + the small fraction of trust fund babies.

But your 4% number is correct and yet I'm betting if you looked closer you'd find of the well-educated pool there are home owners and renters. The unemployment rate of home owners is going to be less than the renters (or those who have moved back in with the folks).

Continuing to look at demographics we would find that the relative number of buyers who can afford nicer bay area homes is down as a percentage of the overall home buying population -- as compared to 5 or even 10 years ago. This is due not only to the recession and tighter restraints on borrowing, (both very significant obviously) but also the fact that we are in a population lull. In the nicer bay area markets I've been told the average buyer is mid-thirties. The demographic relative to the rest of the population is low.

The next "boom" of buyers is in college or just out: 18 - 23. Forget the fact that the unemployment rate for this demographic is much higher than 4% - the reality is even in a rosy future scenario they are at least a decade from buying a home.

In the end, it really does come down to supply and demand. Currently, in some bay area neighborhoods the demand is greater. This will change, but I don't think the best of those neighborhoods will ever suffer lower home prices. This is good for those who own or buy there. The sad thing is those homes will go up further once they become "gated communities", which they inevitably will.

33   tatupu70   2012 May 1, 4:12am  

PockyClipsNow says

Remember this is a democracy you just gotta add up the numbers - the debt slaves and debt slave masters far outnumber the 'debt is wrong' crowd.

Because the debt is wrong crowd is completely wrong. Debt is a tool that, when used correctly, is extremely beneficial to society.

To think otherwise is just silly.

34   rooemoore   2012 May 1, 4:15am  

Goran_K says

tiny tina says

Goran_K says

Unemployment is too high

I'm not sure what kind of house you are looking for, but unemployment for the well-educated in the BA (ie the ones who would be buying houses) is actually around 4%. The landscapers and construction workers who are driving up the overall unemployment rate aren't the ones who would be buying nowadays.

Do you have any sources for that, or is it anecdotal?

She may have low-balled. The bay area numbers are better than the national. Here are the national.

http://www.deptofnumbers.com/unemployment/demographics/

35   tiny tina   2012 May 1, 4:24am  

Goran_K says

Do you have any sources for that, or is it anecdotal?

It was from an article I read a few months ago. In a brief search, I found a national number which is 4.2%. I would think BA would be similar if not lower than the national average.

http://www.bls.gov/news.release/empsit.t04.htm

36   FortWayne   2012 May 1, 4:28am  

Every time I pay taxes to support the welfare socialist state for the public sector unions which constantly vote themselves more benefits from my paycheck.

37   DukeLaw   2012 May 1, 4:31am  

bmwman91 says

And of course, RE in the BA could defy reason yet again and rise further.

Why do you keep on harping on this? Have you traveled much? Do you know how much real estate costs in NYC, Tokyo, London, HK, Buenos Aires, Syndney, Melbourne, Paris, Vancouver, Taipei, Singapore? Do you realize that no US city ranks in the top 10 of most expensive cities in the world?

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/02/16/most-expensive-city_n_1281845.html#s701687&title=Tied_for_3rd

Do you think SF compares more to a Frankfurt or to Oklahoma City? "Reason" would dictate that a more attractive city is more expensive than an unattractive city. Just because you don't find the Bay Area worth the cost doesn't mean the rest of us moving here don't. Perhaps you're the kind of person that's more comforable in Raleigh, NC than San Francisco. Good for you. Just stop with the bitching about other equally smart people wanting to pay a premium for the leaning left politics (try moving your fiancee out to NC and see how some of the locals treat her), the great weather/outdoors, and the high tech opportunities here.

38   RentingForHalfTheCost   2012 May 1, 4:36am  

Goran_K says

If you don't want to live in an apartment for 20 years, you're forced to participate in a ponzi scheme and overpay for a home.

Then don't live in an apartment. Search hard and find a home of some good landlord that isn't trying to squeak out every last cent from his rental to pay down his massive mortgage. Many people have no mortgage on their homes and for various reasons have to rent them. They want, more than anything, someone that can take care of the place. If people are really serious about comparing renting to buying then you would put the same energy into finding such a rental as you do to buy. Spending a single Sunday out looking at apartments is not the same time commitment most people put into buying so it is not a fair comparison. Rent a home just as good as you could buy for less and enjoy. I don't feel cheated at all, in fact I feel like I am cheating the system.

39   Goran_K   2012 May 1, 4:41am  

I actually am renting a "home" of the SFR variety. I was just trying to make my post more dire. :)

40   1sfrenter   2012 May 1, 4:41am  

FortWayne says

Every time I pay taxes to support the welfare socialist state for the public sector unions which constantly vote themselves more benefits from my paycheck.

Thank you from this school-teacher family that has so much cash that we don't know what to do with it. We have classrooms filled with upwards of 35 kids and usually not enough paper or pencils, but we really like selling baked goods to pay for classroom necessities.

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