prawn_86
Mod: Call me Dendrobranchiata
- Joined
- 23 May 2007
- Posts
- 6,637
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- 7
I have had very similar thoughts TD. Paying interest does seem like a huge portion of a loan and possibly a potential waste in a market that is very flat. I think what you also have to do is focus on what you currently have intead of always wanting more.
Compared to a lot of my colleagues i have WAY more money (circa 50k and should be >6 figures in 2 more years)) saved than 95% of them and am disciplined with this saving meaning that it can only be used to buy assets (house, land, shares business etc) and for us now it is just a matter of continually adding to that and then waiting for the right opportunity.
Personally i am fairly resigned to the fact that a house will take a long time to pay off if bought in Australia, but if the right opportunity came along (positive geared rental property) then i would think long and hard about buying it.
At the moment though i think as long as you have a dedicated savings plan in place you will be OK. Or as MB says, if you aren't dedicated enough, a house can be a good forced savings plan
Compared to a lot of my colleagues i have WAY more money (circa 50k and should be >6 figures in 2 more years)) saved than 95% of them and am disciplined with this saving meaning that it can only be used to buy assets (house, land, shares business etc) and for us now it is just a matter of continually adding to that and then waiting for the right opportunity.
Personally i am fairly resigned to the fact that a house will take a long time to pay off if bought in Australia, but if the right opportunity came along (positive geared rental property) then i would think long and hard about buying it.
At the moment though i think as long as you have a dedicated savings plan in place you will be OK. Or as MB says, if you aren't dedicated enough, a house can be a good forced savings plan