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Here4Good

Beach Fanatic
Jul 10, 2006
1,264
529
Point Washington

Beach Dad

Beach Comber
Nov 5, 2006
33
0
Well, coming from Texas, at least you are used to high real estate taxes! Your home in Texas sounds dreamy.....is it on the market yet? Any links you can post? Maybe someone will want to trade!

I tried to post a link to my home in New Braunfels but I didn't succeed. Let me try again... (this site must be childproof and kept me out)

http://realtor.com/FindHome/HomeLis...20&y=12&sid=07B515BD199BC&snumxlid=1072323449

Click on the virtual tour and you will see why we are really going to miss this home. And not only do I have a beautiful wife and two kids, I am also married to a 60" big screen TV that no doubt misses me terribly. :)

Side note: Check out the built in bunk beds upstairs - the boys sleep there when we have guests. It frees up their rooms and I don't have to have a forth bedroom sitting idle. I give my Brother in law an A+ for that creativity.

You are right about the taxes. My property taxes are right at $4K per year. My homeowner's coverage with Nationwide is only about $1100 per year - no hurricanes in the hill country thankfully.
 

fisher

Beach Fanatic
Sep 19, 2005
822
76
I am really tired of hearing this line of crap...

If you buy, you are building equity...

If you rent, you are throwing money away...


Lets actually look at this simplistic mainstream idea a bit deeper...

Lets assume as you have stated that the market will stagnate for a few years and I am looking to buy or rent next week...

Well if I looked to buy a home in South Walton and say as example I picked Village of Blue Mountain I would be looking to pay anywhere from $700k to $1.5M depending on the size....

Well if I meander on over to the rental department I can magically rent a home over 2,000 sq ft for $2,000/month in the same neighborhood... And this comparable size home in this neighborhood would be going for about $1.25 million...

So say I bought it at $1.25 million and I even put down 20%(doubtful to have $250,000 cash on hand for a down payment... but I am giving the benefit of doubt in this argument toward the buying side... I also won't even use this downpayment against you as far as the opportunity you have wasted by putting $250k into the house rather than letting it grow in a mutual fund or even a high yield savings) my mortgage with insurance taxes and interest would be no cheaper than $7000/month... This is assuming annual taxes at $7500/year and Annual Insurance at $2500/year... pretty low assumptions...

So knowing that very little of your PITI payment each month for your mortgage actually goes to Principal for the first 5 years of the loan... why would I want to spend $5000/month more to live in the same type of home...

Assuming you even had $7,000/month to spend on a mortgage would you not rather pay $2,000 per month to rent and save the difference ($5,000/month in even a high yield savings account???)

In this scenario with house prices stagnate and the difference from price to rent in five years that person could have saved and grown his savings to close to $350k in a simple high yield savings account with absolutely no risk... or he could fork over $7,000 per month and hope and pray everynight that his house appreciates like it was 2005 all over again...

I also left out maintenance costs, HOA dues, and maybe some other small things to again give the benefit of my math to the buyer.... But in the end, in my opinion you would be crazy not to rent for a few years and see how this thing shakes out...


You are absolutely correct, but you will have a hard time getting many people that ignore logic, reason and facts to understand your post.
 

fisher

Beach Fanatic
Sep 19, 2005
822
76
I don't agree ... I don't think all areas in SoWal are the same and there is a bottom in sight to the price reductions.
Second, if you buy a house and the price falls after you buy, you are not building equity, you are losing equity [/quote]

True - but if you buy wisely, you won't be buying a house that falls in price. And if you do, and you've bought for the long term, history has told us things swing up again. Just like stocks - up and down, up and down.[/QUOTE]

Again, please be specific. I'm sure there are lots of people on this board that are looking for one of these sure fire investment opportunities that you refer to.

Hyperbole and tired old sayings won't get you very far in a market like the one we are currently experiencing.
 

Indigo Jill

Beach Fanatic
May 10, 2006
321
14
Point Washington
www.sowalscene.com
Second, if you buy a house and the price falls after you buy, you are not building equity, you are losing equity

True - but if you buy wisely, you won't be buying a house that falls in price. And if you do, and you've bought for the long term, history has told us things swing up again. Just like stocks - up and down, up and down.

Again, please be specific. I'm sure there are lots of people on this board that are looking for one of these sure fire investment opportunities that you refer to.

Hyperbole and tired old sayings won't get you very far in a market like the one we are currently experiencing



Specific examples?? It depends on what you are looking for, what your price range is, your investment goals, etc. etc. etc. Ready to buy? Do your homework, find a good Realtor and proceed.

Hyperbole and tired old sayings :lol: Funny, I could say the same thing to you, fisher! We just aren't on the same page.
 
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full time

Beach Fanatic
Oct 25, 2006
726
90
"... you will have a hard time getting many people that ignore logic, reason and facts to understand your post."

Apparently not. You seem to have "understood" it just fine. Using the Village of Blue Mountain Beach makes the exercise pointless and patently stupid from the outset.
 

destinsm

Beach Lover
May 23, 2006
92
1
"... you will have a hard time getting many people that ignore logic, reason and facts to understand your post."

Apparently not. You seem to have "understood" it just fine. Using the Village of Blue Mountain Beach makes the exercise pointless and patently stupid from the outset.


Like I had said in an early post, pick any neighborhood you would like.... 99% of the time you will come up with the same outcome I have shown..

The ONLY reason I used Village of Blue Mountain is because it was the first rental I saw when searching in the SoWal area for an example to be used to make my point...

Same can be shown in Camp Creek, Rosemary, on and on... just name your neighborhood...
 

Rather B Paddlin

Beach Lover
Feb 15, 2005
178
14
Destinsm,

You gave one hypethetical example. There are a lot of values out there. It just takes time, effort, and hard work to turn lemons into lemonade. Oh yes and a good realestate broker, which I am not.

How about a real life example. A gulf view house (much larger than your example) was purchased 3 months ago in Santa Rosa Beach for less than $900K. It will generate $70k to $75k a year in rents. Humm that works.

Renting as opposed to buying is definitely easier, but necessarily a correct decision.
 

fisher

Beach Fanatic
Sep 19, 2005
822
76
Destinsm,

You gave one hypethetical example. There are a lot of values out there. It just takes time, effort, and hard work to turn lemons into lemonade. Oh yes and a good realestate broker, which I am not.

How about a real life example. A gulf view house (much larger than your example) was purchased 3 months ago in Santa Rosa Beach for less than $900K. It will generate $70k to $75k a year in rents. Humm that works.

Renting as opposed to buying is definitely easier, but necessarily a correct decision.

I assume you are quoting gross rent. After deducting 33% or so percent for the rental agent. You are netting out $50k or so. Next deduct property taxes, utilities, maintenance, insurance, etc. You might be left with somewhere in the neighborhood of $20k to 30k. A return of 3% or less. CD's are running around 5% right now. So, you need appreciation of 2% per year to breakeven. That kind of appreciation ain't happening--in fact properties are depreciating right now. Bottom line--renting is a better option from a financial perspective right now.
 

Rather B Paddlin

Beach Lover
Feb 15, 2005
178
14
Yes, gross rent. NO Rental Agency = 0%. You do not need a rental agency. It much easier and more painless without a rental agency. Sorry to the advertisers. Also, most rental agencies charge much less than 33%, more like 20%-25%. Lastly, you have to take in the effect of the paper depreciation losses on your taxable income. I believe you could gain a taxable benefit of up to $25k per year.

Talk to a good realestate broker and enlist a good CPA, before you decide buying is not feasible for your situation. Good luck with your decision.
 
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