HVVS
Brilliant_Rock
- Joined
- Sep 30, 2009
- Messages
- 816
Back when I was married, we bought a home that we could have afforded on one of our incomes, even though we had two. We put 5% down and paid cash for the closing costs and some extra for inspection and some repair deal that we'd negotiated with the seller, and I forget what else. If closing costs and those repair costs had been lower, we might have hit 10% down or close to it. We had a 30 year fixed rate. We were stuck with PMI, but we made extra house payments to try to get to the point where we could make the bank drop the PMI.
Some financial analyst that I read said don't buy a home as n investment anymore. Those days are done is what the article said. Historically there were two big housing value booms. One was the postwar '40s through '60s I think. The other one was the big one that just burst. The analyst thought that since the USA has global industrial competition, an aging population, and a lot of wealth concentrated in the older age groups, plus a lot of 40 and 50-somethings finding themselves downwardly mobile after jobs disappeared, that there would be no more boom even after the economy recovers. Add to that the current economic "recession" which I think the government is too chicken to call a depression, is going to kill off a lot of smaller communities as well as building contractors. With increased emphasis on waste-not-want-not, maybe the wasteful USA will finally figure out that older architecture is built to a standard that we cannot match now, and asbestos and lead paint can be dealt with, and we'd better start preserving and refurbishing and dropping some ridiculous code requirements and if we don't, we'll all be living in pasteboard shacks.
Okay, someone else can have the pulpit now. (Apologies if any pews tipped over backward.)
Some financial analyst that I read said don't buy a home as n investment anymore. Those days are done is what the article said. Historically there were two big housing value booms. One was the postwar '40s through '60s I think. The other one was the big one that just burst. The analyst thought that since the USA has global industrial competition, an aging population, and a lot of wealth concentrated in the older age groups, plus a lot of 40 and 50-somethings finding themselves downwardly mobile after jobs disappeared, that there would be no more boom even after the economy recovers. Add to that the current economic "recession" which I think the government is too chicken to call a depression, is going to kill off a lot of smaller communities as well as building contractors. With increased emphasis on waste-not-want-not, maybe the wasteful USA will finally figure out that older architecture is built to a standard that we cannot match now, and asbestos and lead paint can be dealt with, and we'd better start preserving and refurbishing and dropping some ridiculous code requirements and if we don't, we'll all be living in pasteboard shacks.
Okay, someone else can have the pulpit now. (Apologies if any pews tipped over backward.)
