JewelFreak
Ideal_Rock
- Joined
- Sep 3, 2009
- Messages
- 7,768
Getting sidetracked by a number, here. With a down payment of 2% or 50%, other factors help indicate whether someone is a good re-pay risk: credit history, employment history (spotty or steady), other debts & obligations, income of course, for example. No single issue will predict success or failure. FHA, like the banks, discarded its previous standards & handed out money to one & all. "Are you breathing? Okay, here you go!" That, combined with purchase for flipping by countless people without real estate business experience, of thousands, maybe millions, of houses, made disaster inevitable. Builders & contractors are among this group: they bought land, built entire spec developments & condo edifices, fueled by enormous loans.
Controversy over "who is to blame" will probably echo into the next generation. Take your pick: Congress, banks, hedge funds, municipalities, people with dreams & no common sense, cynical buyers & sellers, greedy contractors.
Long business experience tells me the housing market hasn't bottomed yet in most of the country, perhaps all of it. Banks have not processed, by a long way, all the foreclosures on their books; more houses coming onto the market mean still-falling prices. With loan money becoming more available, I see (in disbelief) builders around here beginning to put up more, adding a new supply of unsold properties. Can only imagine they'll regret it bitterly. So will we, as empty places around town drag down neighboring prices.
Bottom line is, if you are confident you will be able to afford payments & maintenance into the foreseeable future, buy. If the numbers don't work, immediate house ownership isn't a necessity for a satisfying life. Wait a while. Discussions get off the mark when they morph into "You insulted me by your general statement about (fill in the blank)."
Opinion: Paying rent is Not "wasted money." You buy shelter; presumably pleasant surroundings & amenities; your taxes are paid; repairs done; landscaping taken care of; depending on the place, possibly cable, heat, power and/or hot water covered. You are not buying equity, but someone else assumes all the worries & headaches. There are worse fates!
--- Laurie
ETA: The 30-yr mortgage is not likely to disappear if the gov't removes its heavy hand. Market forces DO work: it's a product buyers want. Banks make a great deal more money on a 30-yr than on a 20- or 15-yr deal. Customer demand & more profit -- you can bet it will stick around. It also offers the lender a steady predictable return on his investment (you & your house), which makes for a stable business.
Controversy over "who is to blame" will probably echo into the next generation. Take your pick: Congress, banks, hedge funds, municipalities, people with dreams & no common sense, cynical buyers & sellers, greedy contractors.
Long business experience tells me the housing market hasn't bottomed yet in most of the country, perhaps all of it. Banks have not processed, by a long way, all the foreclosures on their books; more houses coming onto the market mean still-falling prices. With loan money becoming more available, I see (in disbelief) builders around here beginning to put up more, adding a new supply of unsold properties. Can only imagine they'll regret it bitterly. So will we, as empty places around town drag down neighboring prices.
Bottom line is, if you are confident you will be able to afford payments & maintenance into the foreseeable future, buy. If the numbers don't work, immediate house ownership isn't a necessity for a satisfying life. Wait a while. Discussions get off the mark when they morph into "You insulted me by your general statement about (fill in the blank)."
Opinion: Paying rent is Not "wasted money." You buy shelter; presumably pleasant surroundings & amenities; your taxes are paid; repairs done; landscaping taken care of; depending on the place, possibly cable, heat, power and/or hot water covered. You are not buying equity, but someone else assumes all the worries & headaches. There are worse fates!
--- Laurie
ETA: The 30-yr mortgage is not likely to disappear if the gov't removes its heavy hand. Market forces DO work: it's a product buyers want. Banks make a great deal more money on a 30-yr than on a 20- or 15-yr deal. Customer demand & more profit -- you can bet it will stick around. It also offers the lender a steady predictable return on his investment (you & your house), which makes for a stable business.