Jesus TBS, what did I miss? I have no idea how you could of pissed Benny off that much for him to threaten you. Whatever, irl he is a good guy and I am certain everyone here would enjoy skiing with him.
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Nice fixer upper/starter home here in Bend for the DIY person.
https://www.redfin.com/OR/Bend/1595-...5fbnVtYmVyPTA=
Yep. I try to avoid any type of debt, even cheap debt. Would rather not have a mortgage than have a "cheap" one. Every one I know who loaded up on cheap mortgage money to use for other investments has taken it in the shorts in this downturn and is regretting it. It may pay off for them in the long run, but the headache isn't worth it to me.
It’s going to depend on the specific situation, but if you’re looking at either paying off a mortgage with a very low rate more quickly vs. investing more in a tax advantaged retirement plan, and you’re considering a long timeframe, then it doesn’t matter what the market is doing right now (except that the downturn is letting you buy stocks cheaper), and the extra money in retirement investments will have a higher expected return than the additional mortgage payments.
If the mortgage rate isn’t very low, investments aren’t going to be tax advantaged, time horizon is short, etc., that could change the calculation.
More ski town housing affordability issues. (Steamboat, CO)
https://www.yahoo.com/news/america-n...140650218.html
Cliff notes: People want single family homes that are affordable and not apartments or condos.
Hmmm, maybe those folks should move to the Midwest, plenty of affordable single family homes there!
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That’s not really how it works. Generally the best way to help with affordability is to allow more building, and especially dense building: condos, apartments, duplexes, etc.
There’s no solution that makes large single family homes, on large lots, in highly desirable locations, affordable. Allowing some dense housing will help the single family pricing a little, but I doubt it would bring it down to what these people are considering affordable.
^Not always true.
I'm pretty stoked on my cash out 2.625% 30yr fixed for Condo that enabled me to buy a house w a 2.75% 30yr fixed. Not gonna pay off either anytime soon...
Totally depends on what one does w proceeds. If u can cash flow and make a nice return significantly above ur cost of capital, Ala > 2.625%, why not hold the loan? My yield is approx 8x what I'm paying P&I on that loan and I would have never been able to pull this off w/o the loan. Even if u throw in taxes, HOA, and maintenance I'm netting 4x my total nut annually.
Poster that posted how avg. Payment has nearly doubled in last 18 mo's is a very interesting stat. It will be very interesting to see where pricing goes. My condo in Mammoth is up about 4x since 2012 based on recent unrenovated comp. Bonkers.
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For most people, condos and apartments make a lot of sense. However, most people think they need way more than they actually do and feel entitled to more than they need.
I would have been totally fine staying in my 2bedroom condo with my wife, kid, and dog. It has everything we needed, and nothing we didn't. But I'm not into status symbols (which houses are), and most Americans are VERY much into status symbols. So much so they will sacrifice their financial futures to buy a home to feel they finally "made it".
Well, ain’t no slowing here…yet. House five doors down went on the market a few weeks ago for $1.65m.
kind of dumpy house, odd layout. Can’t be redeveloped, etc. 10 bids the first day, went for $1.95m. There is simply no inventory, and that’s not really ever going to change in any way that would put downward pressure on prices.
yeesh.
Our friend who sold it has free housing with the Forest Service, is retiring in 5 years, and owns 10 acres near Glacier National Park. He’s set.
Two words: “diversified portfolio”