Julia
In Memoriam
- Joined
- 10 May 2005
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Great post.Tough one, Tyler. No easy answer there, especially for the Sydney property market.
Lots of Gen Y's today don't want to own a home and are content to rent (the same amount of dead money going out in rent as compared to the interest bill). But it's not always that easy if you have plans to start a family etc. So let's assume by starting this thread you DO want to own a home.
Your one advantage now is you're young (presumably) and you don't have kids (but a better half from time to time). The point here is that you have the advantage of 'roughing it' somewhat.
There are various views about the Sydney housing market but one I read suggested it has (or is starting to) bottom out. That may be so, but I can't see it rising for awhile because the overall economic climate here and overseas is so dull, so you're pretty safe accumulating that deposit for a couple of years yet.
In the late 80's and early 90's when I was in the market for my first home, prices were rising 3 times faster than I could save, so it made sense to jump in quickly.
When I did buy my first home in 1989 (in Canberra), I rented out two rooms and so it wasn't all dead money and I could do up the place a little. From 1989 to when I sold in 1994 it went from $82k to $124k so I'm not expecting capital appreciation like that in the next 5 years. But the point of that is that became my 'base equity' for every home changing experience since then (some good, a couple of really bad ones).
I'm 50 this year and I've decided I have to resolve all remaining debt in the next 5 years as I prepare for retirement. I'm trying to imagine what the last 20-plus years would have looked like without home ownership and I probably would have bought shares in a removalist company. It's a very unsettling experience.
But in this version of my life, I'll have a substantial asset to enable me to downsize in couple of decades' time and a bit also for my kids to get them started. So it's been a worthwhile experience (I'm also a terrible saver and might have frittered it away if it hadn't been in bricks and mortar).
Hope this helps
Tech, sometimes there's much to be said for being average. I don't expect you will agree. But not everyone needs to feel 'top of the pile' and can do without the stress of competitive and ever-striving environments.Hell Burnsy that the best you've got to offer.
What every JOE AVERAGE including you think is the way to financial freedom.
Mine came from business/property/trading. Where you get this rant about how good I am comes from has me beat.---- tall poppy syndrome.
In this day and age find something you can become an expert in go into business.
Buy that house with potential ---- do it up and either use the equity or sell and do again. Timing/position and potential are everything.I know a 23 yr old who started this way. Now 30 he builds for profit as well as working full time. He rents one and lives in the other.12 mths later he sells one and lives in the other. 12 mths or so later he sells that and moves into his new one--- rinse and repeat.
He's no JOE AVERAGE.
Another young guy I know sells wine over the net.
Another imports and on sells imports from all over the world.
Both under 30
Not AVERAGE JOE'S
From 2001 to 2007 quite a few ABOVE AVERAGE JOE'S did extremely well.
My results are public knowledge with Techtrader.
So Burnsy
What was it you'd like to add? Errr rant.
It obviously suits your personality to keep building wealth. Others will be content with less. That doesn't make them lesser human beings.