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- 28 August 2010
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That is a personal attack and I would appreciate it if you kept those out of the discussion.
You make a lot of assumptions in your analysis which might not be true. You also do not include expenses if you don't like them. If it were as simple as interest rate vs rent and I could own a home outright by just paying interest on fixed sum, then great.
It's not a personal attack, i actually think that you may not be budgeting correctly, i mean $100k is a lot of income, and to say you cant afford a 1 bedroom flat 1.5hr away from your work seems very weird.
I think $5000 / year is a gross over exaggeration, especially if your factoring in an amount for major renovation and body corp which covers a lot of the maintenance, but even so, there is still a lot in the owners budget left for that.
I just did some quick calculations,
If you Bought a $500,000 house, and paid it off over 25years, your total interest bill would be $394,600
If you rented that house and paid $550 / week ( and never had a rental increase ), your rent would be $715,000
If you sold near the start of the GFC, took advantage of reasonably good deposit rates until a market uptrend recurred, then bought back in, you'd have done much better than holding throughout. The market is still some distance from regaining the pre-GFC high....... the average punter doesn't make the best share market investor, and the average punter probably would have freaked and sold during the gfc,
Is that logical? Prices are driven by sentiment, supply and demand, rather than actual value.Because you're obsessed with property and like most Australians don't understand the concept of value for money, buying property, any old property for any old price is not always a good idea...
I'm not paying 400k for something used to be cheaper than a car.
Again with the generalisations. Some people do constantly make changes. That's discretionary. Normal maintenance, unless you buy some very rundown shack, won't be $5000 p.a.I worked at Bunning's for 7 years, people spend a fortune on their homes.
Because you're obsessed with property and like most Australians don't understand the concept of value for money, buying property, any old property for any old price is not always a good idea...
I'm not paying 400k for something used to be cheaper than a car.
I understand value quite well, it's my life's work.
And i am not obsessed with property, i have more invested in the stock market than i do property.
Don't really get how that is relevant.
No your attitude is just to buy any old place because you can afford it, which to live in is probably okay if you don't care about money.
The problem is that you also think that if you wait 2 yeas to buy for life reasons that having to pay another 300k for the identical thing is perfectly okay. The get in now or be in a huge amount of debt later on mentality is really ****.
I don't get what you mean by that sentence, one of the reasons I prefer to own my own home is because i do care about money.
Prices on everything changes, the market doesn't wait for mr magoo,
You don't have to buy, i don't really care if you do or not, just don't say that renting is cheaper long term because its not, and don't say there is no way you could by, because i rekon with a proper budget you could.
I think $5000 / year is a gross over exaggeration, especially if your factoring in an amount for major renovation and body corp which covers a lot of the maintenance, but even so, there is still a lot in the owners budget left for that.
Gawd I don't care about you at all. I'm simply making the statement that housing is unaffordable and to buy one now to make money is just stupid.
You don't know if renting will or won't be cheaper in 25 years.
Maintenance isn't expensive if done sensibly. I bought this house nearly 7 years ago, required maintenance thus far:
About $2000 to fix known problems before moving in, main one being new oven etc needed and also a few electrical issues.
Since moving in:
Painted exterior timber. Back door etc and also varnished the timber step. Spend $100 or so on paint and varnish, and have plenty left for next time.
Hot water system sprang a leak late 2009. $2650 for new heat pump system including plumbing work. DIY electrical (yes I'm licensed to do so).
Outdoor tap at rear needed new washer. Replaced washer. A couple of $.
Two sensor lights outside have failed. $80 for parts.
Tap came loose in bathroom. A few minutes tinkering with a spanner fixed it. No cost.
Rats moved into the roof space. Whilst I'm not keen on poisons in principle, I couldn't find any other way to get rid of them unfortunately. A few $ for a box of rat poison.
Clothes dryer seems to be developing a fault, suspect it's the motor start capacitor. Will investigate and just buy a new capacitor it needed. A few $, nothing major.
A few light bulbs have broken. But landlords don't normally pay for those anyway, so they're a cost whether renting or owning.
All up it seems pretty cheap to me, the key being that I don't go breaking things or replacing them for the sake of it etc as seems to be a reasonably common practice these days. But a real benefit of owning is that if the tap breaks then I fix the tap, no waiting 6 months and having to make threats in order to get some cheap skate landlord to pay up and get it fixed.
Overall, I've spent money on improvements but very little has needed doing in terms of repairs or maintenance. As long as you're not replacing the entire kitchen every 2 years for the sake of it or knocking holes in the walls, owning is pretty cheap in that regard.
Well, that just goes to the lack of financial and market literacy across the general population.Julia, i dont think the average punter can be expected to time the market that well, they would probably sell to late after the fall,
But this whole thread is essentially about not being part of 'the majority'. You have set yourself outside the average in your peer group by identifying opportunities and taking them up and I absolutely congratulate you for that as well as for your sensibly positive attitude.Its a mathematical impossibility for the majority to sell out at a high and buy in at a low.
Well, that just goes to the lack of financial and market literacy across the general population.
Any half savvy investor/trader with minimal understanding of trends could have done it.
I'm not saying it's possible to exactly pick tops and bottoms, but it was absolutely possible, especially with an understanding of the global situation pre actual GFC, to exit with minimal giving back of profits, and ditto on the way back up. Given that the market lost around 50%, even with very inexact timing it was possible to liquidate shares and use those funds to buy many more of the same when the uptrend returned, obviously also in the process increasing grossed up yield from the greater number of shares.
But this whole thread is essentially about not being part of 'the majority'. You have set yourself outside the average in your peer group by identifying opportunities and taking them up and I absolutely congratulate you for that as well as for your sensibly positive attitude.
Surely doing the same thing within the share market is no different?
You have set yourself outside the average in your peer group by identifying opportunities and taking them up and I absolutely congratulate you for that as well as for your sensibly positive attitude
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