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Your problem is equating property values with the true measures of individual success.
I was referring to planetary alignment. One can be born into a poor family but is destined to become rich. Or one can be born to a capitalist family but is fated to become a spiritually-successful person.
In the US some of our greatest advantages are mobility and ability. Mobility to relocate and transcend class. Ability to turn liabilities into assets and opportunity.
You are giving "free" will too much credit. The "ability to turn liabilities into assets and opportunity" may very much be innate.
A part of my problem with my parent's generation is that they always assume they know how the world works and I don't. They assume that because buying the biggest possible house worked out for them, I ought to do it too. They assume because they ended up okay with me as their kid (though they are not what you'd call kid friendly people) that I should go and pop out some ASAP.
Mr. Vincent,
Oh no problem. My folks owned several homes outright (over the years) and I have been an owner most of my adult life. I've made plenty of money through the ownership of RE as well. But there I do have reservations. If someone gave me the option to "own my home free and clear" or take that very same equity and either position it in a REIT (where I can at least get some diversification) and pay the rent with the income I believe I would take the latter. We're coming into a period where cash will be king. If it becomes more advantageous to pay it off then I suppose I would, but right now I AM accepting cash (with proper identification of course!)
@Mr Vincent,
Thanks. Since I've been blogging here, my negative views about Boomers have also been tempered by the many fine insights I've read by our many 40-something regulars.
Thanks. Since I’ve been blogging here, my negative views about Boomers have also been tempered by the many fine insights I’ve read by our many 40-something regulars.
People born after 1957 do not have Pluto in Leo...
George,
Are there any opportunities in a down market situation? Maybe work for a RTC?
I think the next time we buy it will be SFH, or mod condo with concrete floors with radiant heat. All this rain made our place mildew cottage, and we’re stingy with the heat so that didn’t help.
Townhouses are not bad either. Again, you have to look past the pergraniteel and inspect the true quality of the place.
I agree with Jon - its the noise. Loud music is only OK if it is my kind of music. That is selfish, but it makes a huge difference. Street noise rarely bothers me nor car alarms. Yes, it is mostly the unbelievable, blaring, loud music.
Loud music is only OK if it is my kind of music. That is selfish, but it makes a huge difference. Street noise rarely bothers me nor car alarms. Yes, it is mostly the unbelievable, blaring, loud music.
Loud music is never okay.
Street noise is fine if it is mostly white noise or pink noise. Car alarms are unacceptable.
We need better control over loud music. If someone likes loud music, he should build himself a listening room with 30-inch walls and sound-absorbing material. If he cannot afford that, he should use a freaking headset.
AmazedinSF,
"the rental neighbors from hell"
Well perhaps the fact that you don't really care for the wastelands where McMansions reside will help you find the "inner" neighbor from hell within you.
I always hated my ex- brother-in-law (who doesn't?) as he was one of these guys where the dogs "took over" the back yard like some kind of full time kennel and parked his fishing boat on the side of the garage when there was plenty of room in the garage. My brother and I thought about dedicating a series of books to him. We thought the title could be something like "Finding your inner putz" or "The putz within you" or "Be all the putz you can be"!
I have to agree, some teenagers find one song and play it, always.
I do not get along with young people.
Peter P,
I'd read recently about a group that calls themselves something like The American Society for Quiet. I realize that this sounds like the ultimate "grump" club but they make some valid points, like why do we NEED leafblowers? Are leaves really all that bad? I know I brought up loud motorcycles before but it's finally spring in Oregon and I swear these guys wait in the garage with the door up just waiting for the rain to stop so they can go on a "rumble". Great.....
newsfreak,
Exactly! I understand the price of progress but what is it that these things are supposed to accomplish? Ohhhh, I get it! Blow that stuff into your neighbors lawn.
In northern CA, the Coast Guard helicopters are always flying over.
In San Jose, SJPD helicopters are always looking for bad guys. Why can't those bad guys just stay at home and watch some TV?
in Paris I lived for some time in a building in which my apartment was the only one with a toilet
Huh?
Of course, they all still have day-jobs they need to get to by 6AM. There’s nothing that tears you out of your sweet dreams (of home ownership, of course) like the sound of several 2-cylinder motors ripping at top speed down the street in front of your place.
God bless the rain.
Huh?
Less bike noise in the rain.
BTW, isn't biking too dangerous? Do bikes even have airbags?
My daughter lived in a dump where the toilet had a pump that made it sound like you were on a boat. too cheap or too lazy to run the right pipes.
I like good toilets that can flush down a whole roll of toilet-paper. They should install hotel-grade toilets in homes.
Any bets on where rates will be at the end of the year? I’m leaning towards 7.25% or higher… 7% is the death nail for the Cali market…
Sounds about right.
It’s interesting to me that the mid-life crisis crowd has taken to motorcycles the way it has. Like taking up smoking.
I don't know. When I have the mid-life crisis, I will probably start eating more.
Give me hot water, working lights, and a toilet that flushes well!
Same here.
Ray W.
I'm hoping for 8% by end of year.
And on topic, I am a self-admitted JBR.
I have owned for most of my adult life, and have been a landlord for half of it. I love to build, add stlye, and rearrange my mcfloorplan.
I don't like it when my landlady comes over a pisses in the corners.
(No, not literally, guys!)
I like to create an oasis in my backyard. The ultimate party area. A place you want to live. I think it would be nice to put a wave machine in the pool in the backyard. Expensive,I know...but ya only live once.
We had low flow toilets in the rooms. They were a disaster…nothing like spending your morning unplugging somebody elses..um…stuff.
I hate low-flow anything.
Give me that ultimate water-wasting shower head!
Environmental protection is overrated. It is very arrogant of some people to think that by changing behavior we can "save" the planet. Earth will be here no matter what we do. Humanity will eventually decline and go out of existence no matter what we do.
Speaking of small machines... We had 14 acres, so we had a zillion little lawn mowers and weed wackers. Let's see... 3 push mowers, 2 riding mowers, and a tractor with a bush hog( large industrial mower) attachment. We just wore the hell out of everything, so I had to learn how to constantly fix the things, hence if bad times come along, at least I can fix those for a living.
The greatest possible environmental disaster is over-population. Control that and we can extend the human empire by a few eons.
we are all ultimately renters….
Very true. Ownership is nothing but a belief.
God owns everything.
Ray,
I drove a forklift for 6 months at this lumber yard in TN. They are pretty fun. It was a very large yard, and at the end of the day, we had to take all of the lifts to the back to be refueled. We got some new Yale front end loaders, and they would actually go 17 MPH. Why you would need to go that fast on a forklift is a mystery to me, but we'd race them to the back. The only really bad thing I can recall was a day that one of the lifts had a phenumatic hose burst and spray oil all over the floor near lawn and garden, and this older lady slipped.Other then that, it was pretty fun.
A couple of you have said that "cash will be king"
I certainly hope so.
I have rented in California, Ohio, Nebraska, and England. All good houses with good landlords. However, I always moved some distance after each rental, and lost some deposits, even though I left the properties better than I found them. Any one else get stiffed?
Then on the OTHER hand, my wife and I lived in Navy housing in Long Beach, CA during the late 80's. There was whopping $50 cleaning deposit. We'd always kept up our homes so ran out and bought this cleaner and that and spent like an entire weekend cleaning so we could get our fifty bucks back. Guess we should have just let them keep it!
Yeah, I've been stiffed and usually consider any deposit disposable but what about some of the debacles homeowners get themselves into, huh? With the rush to "get listed and cash in" while the gettin' is good we've seen a lot of homes where owners will be penalized for their "creativity". Half baked notions, ill concieved ideas and just plain stupid projects where it's obvious they lost the creative "vibe", ran out of money or more likely ran out of time. Oh, that's gonna cost ya!
However, I always moved some distance after each rental, and lost some deposits, even though I left the properties better than I found them. Any one else get stiffed?
I don't really care about the deposit. What goes around comes around. They will have bad karma.
East Coast Balla
If you are paying $750/mo mortgage, the total lof your payments is $9,000 per year. If you are married, the standard deduction is $10,000 per year. At that loan, you have no tax deduction gains whatsoever from buying over renting. Even if you are single it would be minimal.
Getting $10,000 back as a "refund" just means you over-withheld.
I look for a rental in a really posh neigborhood. It must have a nice large yard to host 3 goats and a pig and of course a rooster to help with the early morning wake up.
OK I'll try to be positive.
I've only been renting for only 8 months.
I'm in a GREAT neighborhood in Studio City.
I live in a million $ hood and next door to Robert Guillame.(actor)
There is a HUGE avocado tree in the backyard with a treefort in it.
It's a 40s house with 2+2 and hardwood floors.
The kitchen needs to be redone...but I'd rather have an old beat up kit than a mckitchen.
I rent for about a third of what it would cost to own it.
I also hope that in a few years that cash will be king.
I am still a JBR.
"we are all ultimately renters…."
Don't try telling Robert Cote that...
Newsfreak
I'd post my website...but I don't want troll action there....
I don't know how to get it to you privately...
I make cast stone fountains and statuary from my original sculptures...
A lot of european faces as fountain spouts.
I make molds and have them cast...presently I've been searching for someone else to manufacture them as running the crew isn't one of my favorite things.
@newsfreak,
Just experimenting with how to display different HTML tags and special characters like
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« First « Previous Comments 20 - 59 of 196 Next » Last » Search these comments
Folks, over the last few months we've had the "Jealous Bitter Renters" Thread (written from the P.O.V. of a rabid housing bull) and often had discussions about renting mostly in terms of how it relates to the RE market and bubble. We've had debates about renting as an alternative to buying at inflated prices, using it to as a metric to determine "fair market" housing value, Price:Rent ratios, why renters are so stupid, jealous and bitter compared to perma-bulls, etc., but so far --nothing about the finer points of the experience of renting itself.
So, this is your opportunity to share your renting insights and experiences with your fellow Patrick.net bloggers! About half of us here are homeowners, but you probably have rented at some point, and in any case should have an opinion. Tell us:
Discuss, enjoy...
HARM
#housing