The sky isnt falling(yet), but the fundamentals that are holding up values are pretty shaky at best. Youve 25-40% of homes sold recently to investors who are going to dump them on the market as prices start to drop. The expanding supply with decreasing demand (no more investors buying) will cause prices to drop. Add in the ARM resets and builders dumping the rest of their stock, and you have a lot of desperate sellers on the horizon.
I understand what you are trying to say. Can you show any data to support all of the numbers you are just throwing out there? I do have access to quite a few MLS's and were part of a few boards in certain california areas. I'd like to see any supporting data for your numbers. Speculators always end up getting burned at the end of a hot market of any kind.
Understood, I'm a public accountant.
In order to take the tax breaks you have to spend the money. You are not earning equity by paying 1.1-1.3% of your home value in property taxes and on a medain home price of $700K that is a good $700+/month. Add in water/sewer/garbage/ home-owners insurance, repairs and the cost of owning depreiciating assets like refrigerators and it starts to tip the favor to a renter paying $800 - $1200 a month.
If you expect those 20% gains I too agree that home-ownership is the way to go. Historically it is closer to 3-5% and when the median is $700K there is not much room for advancement as a a couple of double digit years of gains we will all be in a million dollar 1300 sq ft ranch houses. In order to get the gain on your home you hve to sell it and that requires you to depart with 6% of your home value to a realtor!
Sure you may lose 2-3% a year versus buying a house, however you will not be house-poor and living that lifestyle. You will not be earning sweat equity, you will have fresh countertops, new appliances, and new carpet. In a home, not!
This year I'll have travelled to:
Boston
Chicago
Dallas
Reno
Las Vegas
Washington DC
My house poor co-workers talk about laying sod................
I own properties (personal and income producing) and I'm still able to travel (though I'm not sure why everyone seems to equate happiness and success with the ability to travel). I think that you look down upon home ownership because you live in that bubble reality called Southern California. In most of the rest of the nation life doesn't flow like it does in SoCal. Sure NYC, Boston and other major metropolitan areas operate like that, meaning its "cheaper" to rent than to own, but most of thoes areas you simply cannot find a single family home within many miles of the city.
I write off more in interest on my loans than most people contribute to their 401Ks every year. On top of that the income properties have consistant positive cash flow. Then when I'm done paying for the houses I have very large property assets on top of investing in traditional vehicles like 401K. At the end of 5, 10, 20+ years of renting you have absolutely nothing to show for it, while I'm sitting on hundreds of thousands of dollars of value. Renting would just be flushing money down the toilet for me.
Then there are the benefits of home ownership. Apartment living sucks for the most part. You have other people on the other side of your wall, usually no outside amenities, shared parking areas, cramped living areas, lack of ability to really get into adapting your living space to your taste, and then in most cases you have to pay all of your utilities. Apartment living was hip while in college, after that the charm wore off quickly. Then there is that time when you potentially grow-up and decide to have a family, at that point apartment living is like being in jail. Many people also -like- owning a house and all that goes with it, I know I do. I know that when I lived in apartments I had to put in more service calls to their maintenence guys in the time that I lived there than times I've had to repair something at my house. Part of ownership is the ability to put in what you want, at what quality you want and have control over what you have. Apartment owners save money by installing junk, and unless you're willing to spend an incredible amount of money, you're not gonig to get anywhere near top notch.
Though if ownership isn't for you then that's all good. Of course living in a hell hole like SoCal doesn't help.
