Compressed-Village said:Everyone has to start somewhere.
When we first started out, we rented a studio in a duplex.
Save up and when we could afford comfortably without over reached we bought.
Bear in mind, our interest rate at the time was 9.5 %.
Even though the loan is smaller, but seem like I was carrying ten thousand pounds of weight on my shoulders, at the signing, to give my life away to the bank.
Scary but I would not change it any other way.
Happiness said:Compressed-Village said:Everyone has to start somewhere.
When we first started out, we rented a studio in a duplex.
Save up and when we could afford comfortably without over reached we bought.
Bear in mind, our interest rate at the time was 9.5 %.
Even though the loan is smaller, but seem like I was carrying ten thousand pounds of weight on my shoulders, at the signing, to give my life away to the bank.
Scary but I would not change it any other way.
Nothing wrong with renting if you are starting out in life. But there are some here who advocate renting as a strategy to time the market. That, I believe, is something life is too short for.
Yes, buy before you die. Or save up for a good grave.eyephone said:Happiness said:Compressed-Village said:Everyone has to start somewhere.
When we first started out, we rented a studio in a duplex.
Save up and when we could afford comfortably without over reached we bought.
Bear in mind, our interest rate at the time was 9.5 %.
Even though the loan is smaller, but seem like I was carrying ten thousand pounds of weight on my shoulders, at the signing, to give my life away to the bank.
Scary but I would not change it any other way.
Nothing wrong with renting if you are starting out in life. But there are some here who advocate renting as a strategy to time the market. That, I believe, is something life is too short for.
The opposite is buy because life is too short?
Happiness said:Yes, buy before you die. Or save up for a good grave.eyephone said:Happiness said:Compressed-Village said:Everyone has to start somewhere.
When we first started out, we rented a studio in a duplex.
Save up and when we could afford comfortably without over reached we bought.
Bear in mind, our interest rate at the time was 9.5 %.
Even though the loan is smaller, but seem like I was carrying ten thousand pounds of weight on my shoulders, at the signing, to give my life away to the bank.
Scary but I would not change it any other way.
Nothing wrong with renting if you are starting out in life. But there are some here who advocate renting as a strategy to time the market. That, I believe, is something life is too short for.
The opposite is buy because life is too short?
Happiness said:Yes, buy before you die. Or save up for a good grave.eyephone said:Happiness said:Compressed-Village said:Everyone has to start somewhere.
When we first started out, we rented a studio in a duplex.
Save up and when we could afford comfortably without over reached we bought.
Bear in mind, our interest rate at the time was 9.5 %.
Even though the loan is smaller, but seem like I was carrying ten thousand pounds of weight on my shoulders, at the signing, to give my life away to the bank.
Scary but I would not change it any other way.
Nothing wrong with renting if you are starting out in life. But there are some here who advocate renting as a strategy to time the market. That, I believe, is something life is too short for.
The opposite is buy because life is too short?
Happiness said:Yes, buy before you die. Or save up for a good grave.eyephone said:Happiness said:Compressed-Village said:Everyone has to start somewhere.
When we first started out, we rented a studio in a duplex.
Save up and when we could afford comfortably without over reached we bought.
Bear in mind, our interest rate at the time was 9.5 %.
Even though the loan is smaller, but seem like I was carrying ten thousand pounds of weight on my shoulders, at the signing, to give my life away to the bank.
Scary but I would not change it any other way.
Nothing wrong with renting if you are starting out in life. But there are some here who advocate renting as a strategy to time the market. That, I believe, is something life is too short for.
The opposite is buy because life is too short?
Mety said:I'm not sure if the rent prices are declining.
Kings said:my grave will have a 3cwg with zero-lot-lines and smell like asphalt
irvinehomeowner said:Kings said:my grave will have a 3cwg with zero-lot-lines and smell like asphalt
3CWG with zero lot lines is like corn flakes without the milk.
I think I'm the only one who doesn't really mind the smell of asphalt. Garbage on the other hand (like near Columbus Grove)... bleh.
Mety said:irvinehomeowner said:Kings said:my grave will have a 3cwg with zero-lot-lines and smell like asphalt
3CWG with zero lot lines is like corn flakes without the milk.
I think I'm the only one who doesn't really mind the smell of asphalt. Garbage on the other hand (like near Columbus Grove)... bleh.
Yeah what is that smell? That same smell is also at near University and Harvard. Is that from the creek?
The Southern California median home price was flat in August, while sales dipped from a year earlier as buyers struggled to afford sky-high housing costs.
The six-county region?s median price clocked in at $535,000 last month, unchanged from August 2018, according to a report released Wednesday from real estate data provider CoreLogic. Meanwhile, buyers purchased 1.2% fewer homes than a year earlier.
[...]
In Los Angeles County, the median price rose 0.7% to $619,000, while sales fell 5.9%.
In Orange County, the median price fell 1% to $719,500; sales fell 3%.
In Riverside County, the median price rose 2.6% to $390,000; sales rose 6.7%.
In San Bernardino County, the median price rose 5.3% to $346,000; sales fell 2.5%.
In San Diego County, the median price fell 0.1% to $584,000; sales rose 1.9%.
In Ventura County, the median price rose 2.1% to $599,000; sales rose 4.2%.
Liar Loan said:It's easy for somebody that already owns to tell a first time buyer "Hey, go ahead and throw away $200,000 of savings. Life is too short." Of course, if you told the existing owners to throw that same amount of money away, they would call you crazy.
And yet by timing the market, the first time buyers can also afford a much better location. Irvine may be forever, but so are toxic plumes.
It makes no sense to buy if:
1) Prices are declining.
2) Rates are declining.
3) Rents are declining.
Timing the market is a win/win/win because all three are happening in Irvine as we speak.
Compressed-Village said:I wonder how you plan to buy a house when you can afford it and live in it to be consider throwing money away?
Isn?t renting to no ends doing just that?
At least buying is a forced saving.
Compare a person bought at 2006 and renting at 2006 until now, who is better off?