dmcowen674
No Lifer
Originally posted by: thomsbrain
Originally posted by: Jumpem
I am not terribly concerned about being in an upside down situation though. Our neighbors are great and we both have good jobs in the area. I don't plan on moving in the next 8-10 years at the earliest.
Yeah, even accounting for the recent downturn since you bought, AND accounting for the chance that there's another downturn in 10 years, I think the appreciation that will happen in the meantime is plenty to cover that and make sure you have positive equity if you need to move. And if you live there for 30 years, it's almost a non-issue. Do you think the previous generation is still wringing their hands over whether they paid $5000 or $6000 for a house that is now worth $600,000? Time and inflation smooth these things out.
And if you don't have time, you should have been renting instead of buying.
For years all I heard was how renting is throwing money away.
I've always bought because rent payments and mortgage about the same but mortgage was supposed to be good for tax deduction and "equity" build up.
Obviously the drop in real estate value wipes out any "equity build up" these days so I can see people saying just rent now. Rediculous.
I'm trying to rent out the house now but live in an area people don't have the money to pay the rent amount that would cover the mortage.
People are screwed no matter what now.
There is going to be a huge boom in public housing in this country and all of this is by design and you people don't see it.
Public housing sector was in shambles and all needed re-building or torn down and start over. This totally designed housing crisis is the ticket.
Between the high gas and fuel costs and housing situation, it is the only solution other than the Tent cities popping up.