Allstate denied us because the previous owner had a yard sale after the sale closed and the driveway was full of yard sale crap when they came by. I told them it was cleaned up and they came back and wrote a policy, seems pretty arbitrary.
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https://www.cbc.ca/news/business/ban...rate-1.7360509
a Half percent interest rate cut but only in canada eh so who gives a fuck
https://www.cbc.ca/news/business/ban...rate-1.7360509
a Half percent interest rate cut but only in canada eh so who gives a fuck
If none of us were skiing/hiking/outdoors folks we would all be hyped living in "flatland, USA" in cheap as beautiful homes. We signed up for this shit lol.
My brother just bought a beautiful restored 1850 farmhouse on acreage in rural NJ with a barn etc etc for what condos cost here.
It's like the health insurance industry pre-Obama era. If you got sick one two many times or got cancer and spent a million bucks on medical care, you got dropped. Same thing with the homeowners racket. You file a claim, you are one and done these days. Trying to weed out the higher risk customers.
Case in point: https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/9.../5553932_zpid/
Remodeled non-flood zone waterfront with a pool and garage for $385k
Which is why I've said before and I'll say it again, homeowner insurance is on its way to being nationalized same as health insurance. Hell maybe the insurance companies even want that to happen with the way they are behaving. Doesn't seem to have hurt the health insurance companies.
Houses in the hood getting big markdowns. Lots of old boomers late to the party. The Villages will have to wait. Demographics are not housing friendly.
I wouldn't be too sure about that. Florida came up with "Citizens Property Insurance" as a state-backed solution. And now they're denying most claims.
Florida's Largest Insurer Denying Hurricane Claims Sparks Alarm
https://www.newsweek.com/florida-lar...claims-1972227
Property insurance does not cover damage from flooding. So yeah, if your house was flooded but wasn't in an area with damaging winds your claim is probably getting denied by your property insurance carrier.
Who made the recent post about those poor, poor insurance companies barely scraping by with a pittance of a profit? I noticed that post has mysteriously vanished.
Perhaps rescinded after realizing that executive compensation keeps soaring to record heights year after year after year? Hmmm.........
It was me. I tried to edit it and it was deleted because TGR still hasn't worked out the forum kinks and said fuck it to typing it again. I'm not saying poor insurance companies. I merely pointed out that it is math. Only one of the major homeowner insurance companies turned a profit on that line of business in '23. That insurer focuses solely on high cost (rich people) homes. The industry average was a 110% combined ratio. Yeah, execs make a bunch of money. That's not the argument here. The argument is, should private enterprise continue to operate at a loss year after year so people can afford their products? Sounds like a good argument to have the government step in. Kind of like how the government does with other things private enterprise can't maintain. You should call your legislators and get the ball rolling.
I don't have a dog in this fight-I choose to live in an area without much risk of weather events to insure against and I maintain my home. My primary, and only home. No vacation or investment homes in my meager portfolio.
Funny how stating facts that are not what you want to hear makes the author a sympathizer.
My wife and I started to discuss a Michigan or Minnesota move the other night asking each other could we live there. Enjoy land, lakes and cooler weather instead of the desert, mountain insanity in the winter and too big of a city now here in Salt Lake.
The NW corner of NJ is a nice place. You can do pretty good on a place to live if you bide your time and have some cash for a deposit. I lived in eastern Monmouth county which is in the commuter line for NYC and still a nice place to live with the shore and stellar stripped bass fishing but the tolls are a killer and property taxes are pretty high. The last year that I lived there we paid $14,245.00 in property taxes. Ouch.
Humidity? I moved to Savannah, GA five years ago to help take care of my in-laws and haven't been able to get over the humidity. I usually wake up and get out on my morning bike ride around 3:45-4:00 AM and in the summer it's 90 with 100% humidity. This time of year its 50 with almost 100% humidity. It sucks. I'll take upper midwest humidity any day.
wow its almost like you are stating the business case for why something is the way it is, as oposed to the usual fuck everybody, fuck everything, the morans are just ripping us off
they have the actuaries who calculate all this shit, I'm sure some of them still use slide rules, I was once told an actuary is like a CA but without a personality, or maybe it was the other way round
In all honesty a small house somewhere in Oregon is going to be the winner. It’s definitely been a topic of conversation lately. Montana is in the running as well especially since her company has expanded there. We have trips in mind to figure out our future and enjoy some vacation time in places we haven’t explored.
Combined ratio averages for insurance companies have almost never been higher. Combined ratio is (indemnity payment plus claim related expenses) divided by premium. This doesn’t include the cost of running the business (salaries, rent, marketing, etc.). All these companies are close to maxed out on liquidity requirements and reinsurance is super expensive, so there is no capacity in the market. This results in companies wanting to reduce the number of policyholders not increase them. Insurance companies are often prevented from cherry picking insureds and have to come up with a reason to drop someone. Therefore insurers do things that don’t seem to make sense on an individual by individual level.
GA has an airport that’ll fly you anywhere in the world for pretty cheap usually. That has come into my head many times as I contemplate what I would do if i ever had to move back to take care of my folks. Not to mention RE that is 1/3 the price of CO.
I lived In Michigan for a summer. It was ok. I think winters would suck balls. The summer I spent in KS was so shitty. Fuck that noise.
this is the secret to livin' like a king in teh upstates... if you got some money already, it's cheap to buy in and to live good... but if yer here and you got nothing to start with, well good luck finding a job that pays ya enough to get a little bit ahead in life. even higher education type jobs don't pay shit 'round here compared to other states.
fact.