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View Poll Results: Is a home an asset or liability? | |||
Asset | 17 | 56.67% | |
Liability | 7 | 23.33% | |
I live in tater's whore of an ex-wife's chlamydia infested vag. | 6 | 20.00% | |
Voters: 30. You may not vote on this poll |
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12-14-2009, 06:10 PM | #31 | |
SFL Expatriate #2
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: Raleigh, NC
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12-14-2009, 06:13 PM | #32 | |
Elitist
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: SF Bay Area
Moto: Gix 750
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Quote:
Long term (30+ years), the stock market makes a better return than real estate does. But, when you're approaching retirement, do you really want to be still renting, with nothing to show for all the rent you paid? |
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12-14-2009, 06:14 PM | #33 | |
WSB Champion
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Location: Springfield, MO
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Quote:
Renting is the absolute worst as far as long term goes. Last edited by t-homo; 12-14-2009 at 06:16 PM.. |
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12-14-2009, 06:15 PM | #34 |
Elitist
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Location: SF Bay Area
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12-14-2009, 06:18 PM | #35 |
WSB Champion
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Springfield, MO
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When I talk about a house or property, i consider everything included with it. Property, rent from that property, mortgage, upkeep and maintenance, property taxes, etc.
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12-14-2009, 06:24 PM | #36 |
token jewboy
Join Date: Nov 2008
Moto: CBR 900, KLR ugly ass duckling, Gas Man
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Its a liability until it is paid off, then it becomes an asset
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12-14-2009, 06:29 PM | #37 | |
Elitist
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: SF Bay Area
Moto: Gix 750
Posts: 11,351
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Quote:
It's always an asset. If you can sell it to someone, even if for just $1, it's an asset. |
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12-14-2009, 07:01 PM | #38 | |
AMA Supersport
Join Date: Feb 2009
Posts: 4,756
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Quote:
For those who bought an "overpriced" house with a shitty mortgage the mortgage will probably outweigh the house. For those who are grabbing "under priced" houses now with fixed mortgages at 4-5% interest the house will probably outweigh the mortgage. That is dependent on real estate rebounding at some point, the first group selling at a loss and the second group selling at a profit. To clarify my "knowledge of the future" comment, any losses or gains are theoretical until another transaction happens (the loss or gain is "realized" at that point). To illustrate, a couple people I knew in the late 90s were buying tech stocks on margin during the tech boom (against my advice). At first they were doing great and talking about how much money they were making, and how much money I was missing out on. When the "tech bubble" burst they both had margin calls and lost all the money they had invested in a period of 1-2 months. Before the bubble burst it was a good idea. Afterwords, not so much. |
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12-14-2009, 07:02 PM | #39 | ||
Hold mah beer!
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Location: 80 Miles South of Moto Heaven
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lolz
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12-14-2009, 07:15 PM | #40 |
Moto GP Star
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 14,556
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Are you talking profit and loss? IMHO as the a non-homeowner has always been that a house is a liability(loss)... bear with me, guys. You will almost never realize an actual profit from the sale of a house except in certain unusual circumstances.
If you buy a house for $100,000, have a 5% loan and pay to term, you will have paid over $300,000. Will you be able to sell your 30 years older house for over $300,000? Unlikely. In that 30 years you will pay for upkeep, new roof every 5-10 years, paint, flooring, repairs, appliances, yard work/tools, etc. At least another $50,000 or more. Are you ever going to see that money again? Nope. What if the neighborhood goes to shit? Can you just pick up and move with the max loss being under $1,000? Hahahaha yeah right. I personally like renting, I pay $600 per month to live here total or $7200 per year vs almost double that for a house. Of course after that 30 years is up, the home owner will have a house and I won't have shit... except most likely, his wife will have a house either through divorce or death. Me I'll either have $100,000+ more shit or if I invest that money, $2-300,000 in the bank. Hmmm.... Oh well, at least his kids will have something to fight over after he's dead. |
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