Eug
Senior Member
daveto,
Ignoring extra transaction fees for the time being:
If you bought in Oct. 2008, and then sold in Jan. 2011, you would actually be 9% ahead.
If you bought in Aug. 2008 (which was the 2008 peak), and then sold in Jan. 2011, you would actually be nearly 7% ahead.
And of course, you still need to live somewhere. Whereas I may agree that speculation in the housing market may not be the best idea right now, when you buy a home to live in it for an extended period and you can afford it, then that's a completely different kettle of fish.
I don't think your smoking analogy is a very good one. If he lights his house on fire, and the fire department doesn't make it in time and the house burns down, then he loses the house and his family dies of smoke inhalation.
If he buys an affordable house to live in for an extended period, and then the real estate market drops 20%, then he continues to live there and make his mortgage payments. Somebody buying an affordable home doesn't need intervention to keep it.
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BTW, if you were very bullish about real estate in early 2008, I'm not sure you were looking at things completely objectively. Now you've swung to the other extreme. Why such a big change in such a short time?
From my posts it should be clear by now I am not a big bear. However, it should also be clear I am not a bull. I think the info out there most suggests somewhere in between, and so I'm somewhere in between too.
Ignoring extra transaction fees for the time being:
If you bought in Oct. 2008, and then sold in Jan. 2011, you would actually be 9% ahead.
If you bought in Aug. 2008 (which was the 2008 peak), and then sold in Jan. 2011, you would actually be nearly 7% ahead.
And of course, you still need to live somewhere. Whereas I may agree that speculation in the housing market may not be the best idea right now, when you buy a home to live in it for an extended period and you can afford it, then that's a completely different kettle of fish.
I don't think your smoking analogy is a very good one. If he lights his house on fire, and the fire department doesn't make it in time and the house burns down, then he loses the house and his family dies of smoke inhalation.
If he buys an affordable house to live in for an extended period, and then the real estate market drops 20%, then he continues to live there and make his mortgage payments. Somebody buying an affordable home doesn't need intervention to keep it.
---
BTW, if you were very bullish about real estate in early 2008, I'm not sure you were looking at things completely objectively. Now you've swung to the other extreme. Why such a big change in such a short time?
From my posts it should be clear by now I am not a big bear. However, it should also be clear I am not a bull. I think the info out there most suggests somewhere in between, and so I'm somewhere in between too.
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