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A rich neighborhood is simply paying more to live a local "brand name" neighborhood. You get the same identical Polo shirt without the label. I can see very little difference between middle or upper middle class neighborhoods and "rich" neighborhoods here.
Here it's about $200 maybe $300 per month.
taxes, insurance and maintenance. still cheaper in the long run then renting?
Bitcoin saystaxes, insurance and maintenance. still cheaper in the long run then renting?
Yes, for me in Silicon Valley, it has clearly been better to rent and put my "principal" payments into the stock market. But I admit that this area is strange that way. Houses around here never "pencil out" as they say. That is, you can never cover a mortgage by buying a house and renting it out in Silicon Valley, or San Francisco.
There would be no way in hell I would sell 200K of an IRA account and pay taxes, penalties, to buy a house.
A Roth allows it of course.
Uber and Uber eats for everything instead of doing it yourse
Assuming a 20% DP, that 5x lever in real estate is pretty attractive compared to the 1x you see in the stock market. My two cents...
on vacation 4 times a year a
usually are doing it to get a respite from living in high density quarters and always having people on your ass everywhere you go
Assuming a 20% DP, that 5x lever in real estate is pretty attractive compared to the 1x you see in the stock market. My two cents...
say it's smooth sailing, they haven't had to do anything in 10 years.
Your downpayment can be wiped out by a couple of bad years. And it does happ
I rather charge less rent and have them long term then charge premium
Indians & Chinese with lots of cash will flood CA housing markets.
Bitcoin saysI rather charge less rent and have them long term then charge premium
margins are low in California, but the investments are stable in the sense of it is easier to rent out than in other markets where there is a shortage of 6 figure earners. Coastal California, for its part, does not have this problem, regardless of exodus. the issue is the cost of entry and the generally business unfriendly environment.
BayArea saysAssuming a 20% DP, that 5x lever in real estate is pretty attractive compared to the 1x you see in the stock market. My two cents...
It's a sunk cost until you sell. Then you won't have a place to live any more. And in the meanwhile, "house poor" because of too much going to the mortgage and property taxes.
But boy have you missed out on a lot of equity upside.
BayArea saysBut boy have you missed out on a lot of equity upside.
I think people who put their money into houses lost out on massive stock market upside.
I’m with Patrick,
I had a stock market equity “upside”=increase since April 2020 which is the price of a house in Santa Cruz or Aptos.
I used annuity calculators and would plug in the numbers of guys in Santa Cruz who bragged how much money they “made” with their house. I did it out of curiosity, what was the rate of return?
It never was as good as stock investments.
Patrick saysBayArea saysBut boy have you missed out on a lot of equity upside.
I think people who put their money into houses lost out on massive stock market upside.
If you strategically invested, made the right selections, and had some luck on your side, you may be right.
If you invested in the market and got market level gains, you absolutely did not beat the 5x leveraged gains available with Bay Area housing during this bull run.
If you invested in the market and got market level gains
If you invested in the market and got market level gains, you absolutely did not beat the 5x leveraged gains available with Bay Area housing during this bull run.
I used duck duck go.
If you invested $30,000 in the S&P 500 in 1964, today the account would show $7.65 million.
The land and house my parents had built in 1964 in Martha's Vineyard cost $30,000
Today Zillow shows it's worth about $1.5 million.
BUT, don't forget the property taxes; my mother told me they were $12,000/year in 1977.
Surely they have kept rising.
The S&P Index investment could be pretty tax efficient.
You can still own real estate by buying REIT's
I do think you should own your primary residence though
our mortgaged house would need to be compared to stocks purchased on margin, or maybe options.
If you own stocks of many operating companies, you own Real Estate.
All that said, clambo, who had his boots on the ground living here in this part of California for a long time, decided that he should not own his own home, and he has shared this reasoning. Who are we to know what's better for him?
I never buy stocks on margin because then:
1. I'd have to pay interest on the loan.
Generally all my other stuff outside of business investment is set and forget in tax advantaged accounts. I hate the fees
What fees? I have a 401k rollover, a Roth, an IRA, and a SEP IRA. I don't pay fees on any of them as far as I can tell. They all just have straight stock or cash, no mutual funds.
The market seems bat shit crazy to me, but I'm not at all an active investor with any serious money I personally want to control.
Unless it's your job/business,
this is exactly true; the investing has to be an active effort; some people may not want to do this. There is risk but can build wealth in 1/3 the time that one could otherwise do with stocks into a retirement fund. 10 years vs 30 years to be financially independent.
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brace for impact