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Getting ready to pull the trigger in CO


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2012 Jul 18, 4:11am   2,862 views  9 comments

by FamilyForce6   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

Family of 6, have been renting for the last 10 years and I'm finally getting ready to purchase. We love the area we live in. Good schools, great location. Rent has been going up slowly and is now at $1600/month. We've been in the same house for 5 years now.
The house next door will be available for $240K, going on the market within the next couple of weeks (tried to work out a deal with the owner directly but insisted on using a realtor). Most of the houses in our neighborhood have been selling for $260K-$280K. This house has new roof, hot H2O heater and boiler (baseboard heat) within the last 2 years. Needs updating inside, but it's definitely livable.
FHA is 3.5% down and 3.25% (!!!!). As I do the math it looks to me like this is a no brainer. Am I missing something?

#housing

Comments 1 - 9 of 9        Search these comments

1   joshuatrio   2012 Jul 18, 4:12am  

trollololololololol.

2   CrazyMan   2012 Jul 18, 4:18am  

Doesn't seem like a troll and his other comments seem pretty normal.

If I was paying $1600 a month in rent and could buy the same thing for 240K, had the down and confidence in employment, and it was a house and area I liked, I'd buy it.

3   FamilyForce6   2012 Jul 18, 4:19am  

I'm a little confused by the troll comment. Am I off topic, or is this an inappropriate post?

I haven't commented much, but I check the p.net news 3-4 times a week. Sheesh.

4   everything   2012 Jul 18, 4:22am  

Make sure you have it inspected if this is your first house, don't want to move in and find it's one of those house that makes you sick, which is pretty rare anyways. If you plan on staying awhile, ten or more years, it should be a go. Got any cash?, got good credit?, cash talks, show them your credit worthiness, tell them you'll pay for the lawyer on both sides of the deal, $600 apiece, and closing costs, Should be less than commissions. Go get your house!

5   FamilyForce6   2012 Jul 18, 4:27am  

everything says

Make sure you have it inspected if this is your first house, don't want to move in and find it's one of those house that makes you sick, which is pretty rare anyways. If you plan on staying awhile, ten or more years, it should be a go. Got any cash?, got good credit?, cash talks, show them your credit worthiness, tell them you'll pay for the lawyer on both sides of the deal, $600 apiece, and closing costs, Should be less than commissions. Go get your house!

The owners have already signed a contract with a realtor and they're unwilling to budge on that point.
Have some cash, will be using IRA money for down. 10 years may be a stretch, but I'm guessing at least 5-7 more years.
I'm thinking that we're looking at ZIRP and QE to inifinity. So I'll be paying back in dollars that are worth a fraction of what they are today.

6   leo707   2012 Jul 18, 4:36am  

Before moving my kids into the Denver metro area I would take a serious look at the plutonium contamination from the Rocky Flats nuclear bomb factory. Fires in 1957 and 1969 sent plumes of plutonium smoke over Denver.

Here is a map from the 1957 fire's plume:
http://www.cdphe.state.co.us/rf/charta.htm

Also, you may want to listen to this interview.
http://www.npr.org/2012/06/12/154839592/under-the-nuclear-shadow-of-colorados-rocky-flats

7   freak80   2012 Jul 18, 4:39am  

Those areas in red should be prime real-estate. Think of all the tomacco you could grow there! You'd be rich!

8   FortWayne   2012 Jul 18, 5:36am  

Calculate your mortgage here:
http://patrick.net/housing/mortgage_calculator.php

Check the value:
http://patrick.net/housing/calculator.php

At the end it is a personal decision, but paying interest to the bank with a 4% down loan... that's just screwing up in my opinion. If you can pay all cash you'd save a lot.

9   FamilyForce6   2012 Jul 18, 8:26am  

FortWayne says

Calculate your mortgage here:

http://patrick.net/housing/mortgage_calculator.php

Check the value:

http://patrick.net/housing/calculator.php

At the end it is a personal decision, but paying interest to the bank with a 4% down loan... that's just screwing up in my opinion. If you can pay all cash you'd save a lot.

Freedom 1789-2012

Agreed that paying cash would be the best way to go and avoid debt completely, but the only significant asset I have is an IRA and some silver bullion.
I can't help but think that the value of the dollar will continue to decline at an accelerating rate. I'm planning on putting the difference between rent and mortgage into physical precious metals which I think will continue to increase in value. My thinking is that in 5 years silver and gold will be widely used as money and I'll be able to pay the mortgage off early.

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