Buffet also off loading the airline stocks
2012Ag said:
New job this year allowed my wife and I to finish off her student loans and begin saving for a house. 401k is up to company match and we have a nice emergency fund. We hope to buy next year and have a savings plan this year for the down payment and still have some left over disposable income.
I just opened up a roth ira with fidelity and fully funded 2019. I'm thinking of dumping it all in FZROX. I heard REITs but honestly I'm pretty unfamiliar with those, any insight? Wife and I are 29.
GigEm81 said:2012Ag said:
New job this year allowed my wife and I to finish off her student loans and begin saving for a house. 401k is up to company match and we have a nice emergency fund. We hope to buy next year and have a savings plan this year for the down payment and still have some left over disposable income.
I just opened up a roth ira with fidelity and fully funded 2019. I'm thinking of dumping it all in FZROX. I heard REITs but honestly I'm pretty unfamiliar with those, any insight? Wife and I are 29.
That is a total bond index fund. At 29, you should not need a heavy allocation to bonds in your retirement accounts in my opinion. You should be investing for the long term at that age and that means equities.
REITs are like a sector. Probably not a good time to wade into it unfamiliar waters. Probably a good time to think about broad based equity index fund, not so much bonds.
Quote:
I talked with Ladder's management on Friday, which said:Quote:
"This is an acute issue because there is no income coming in. Just about every sector is seeing defaults. It's a waiting game, and nobody knows how long or how deep (it will be)."
It recently provided a liquidity update of having "over $300 million of cash after having just paid its previously announced quarterly cash dividend." And it has met its margin calls in timely manners:Essentially, we're in the early innings with coronavirus-shutdown concerns. There could still be a wave of defaults to come, so it makes complete sense that mREITs are looking for a break.Quote:
" the environment has stabilized as margin calls have subsided. We have AAA securities, the last things to default. (But investors should) ignore the screens on stock prices. We believe all of the issues haven't made its way down the capital stack yet."
id pay $1.5MM if I could afford one.Rice and Fries said:
Question for the thread:
What is the highest price you would pay for a house to live in? What is your personal threshold before saying no.
Just curious to see where others land
Quote:
What is the highest price you would pay for a house to live in? What is your personal threshold before saying no.
my manevestor1 said:Quote:
What is the highest price you would pay for a house to live in? What is your personal threshold before saying no.
I would pay whatever it takes to have a lakehouse...and then i would tear down my neighbors homes and plant trees. I would repeat this for about 5 houses in either direction.
Thank you this is what I was striving for, but not all of it:SoupNazi2001 said:Gordo14 said:
I imagine that's very dependent on your net worth, liquid net worth, income, job stability, and housing market. I don't think you can simplify a question as complex as that.
The way you could make this question relevant is what % of your current net worth (excluding your primary residence) did you pay for your house.
This is where the conversation started with the wife...evestor1 said:Quote:
What is the highest price you would pay for a house to live in? What is your personal threshold before saying no.
I would pay whatever it takes to have a lakehouse...and then i would tear down my neighbors homes and plant trees. I would repeat this for about 5 houses in either direction.
i would say the millionaire next door would stay in the $350k house forever and no one around him would know he was a millionaire.Rice and Fries said:Thank you this is what I was striving for, but not all of it:SoupNazi2001 said:Gordo14 said:
I imagine that's very dependent on your net worth, liquid net worth, income, job stability, and housing market. I don't think you can simplify a question as complex as that.
The way you could make this question relevant is what % of your current net worth (excluding your primary residence) did you pay for your house.
Basically it's two part question:
1. How much would a houses price be before you are like "no thanks, I'm out". For me, I would have a hard time paying more than $800K-1MM for a house. But I live in the metroplex and can understand that costs are way different in other areas like NYC, SF, LA, DC.
2. How much is that price point you would start shying away from is part of your total NW/Liquidity.
For example: My goal net worth is $5M, so if I am buying a house, I would not want it to make up more than 20% of my total net worth. But If I only have $1.2M NW right now, I can see how much total tolerance would be 50% of my NW.
All that said, my current house is $350K but we want to upgrade in ~5 years and just curious to see if my $800K limit passes the sniff test for a "millionaire next door" type community.
Sorry for the confusion.
I live on a lake ... You will always have something to do as far as maintenance on a lake house. You will never run out of things to do. Me, I fish during the week and do house/yard work on weekends while all the masses and many idoits are out on the lake come the weekends.Ragoo said:my manevestor1 said:Quote:
What is the highest price you would pay for a house to live in? What is your personal threshold before saying no.
I would pay whatever it takes to have a lakehouse...and then i would tear down my neighbors homes and plant trees. I would repeat this for about 5 houses in either direction.
jealous. At least you get to do your chores with a view. And when the chores are done you can sit in a chair with a cold beer and look out at the lake.drill4oil78 said:I live on a lake ... You will always have something to do as far as maintenance on a lake house. You will never run out of things to do. Me, I fish during the week and do house/yard work on weekends while all the masses and many idoits are out on the lake come the weekends.Ragoo said:my manevestor1 said:Quote:
What is the highest price you would pay for a house to live in? What is your personal threshold before saying no.
I would pay whatever it takes to have a lakehouse...and then i would tear down my neighbors homes and plant trees. I would repeat this for about 5 houses in either direction.
Ragoo said:i would say the millionaire next door would stay in the $350k house forever and no one around him would know he was a millionaire.Rice and Fries said:Thank you this is what I was striving for, but not all of it:SoupNazi2001 said:Gordo14 said:
I imagine that's very dependent on your net worth, liquid net worth, income, job stability, and housing market. I don't think you can simplify a question as complex as that.
The way you could make this question relevant is what % of your current net worth (excluding your primary residence) did you pay for your house.
Basically it's two part question:
1. How much would a houses price be before you are like "no thanks, I'm out". For me, I would have a hard time paying more than $800K-1MM for a house. But I live in the metroplex and can understand that costs are way different in other areas like NYC, SF, LA, DC.
2. How much is that price point you would start shying away from is part of your total NW/Liquidity.
For example: My goal net worth is $5M, so if I am buying a house, I would not want it to make up more than 20% of my total net worth. But If I only have $1.2M NW right now, I can see how much total tolerance would be 50% of my NW.
All that said, my current house is $350K but we want to upgrade in ~5 years and just curious to see if my $800K limit passes the sniff test for a "millionaire next door" type community.
Sorry for the confusion.
I would say mortgage at 2x annual income on the very top end. From there the purchase price of the house would be based on equity in current home.
YouBet said:
The great house debate is pretty much a weekly occurrence in our household....usually on the weekends once my wife starts perusing the Ebbie Halliday app (Dallas based). She kind of got me addicted to doing it too though.
For us, it's primarily an academic exercise and done out of boredom because we already have a second home on the coast (inherited), but here are the points I keep coming back to on upgrading to a $1M house (for example):
- It's the just two of us and once you start getting into that price range the resulting square footage would be ridiculous for two people. The idea of having to maintain that much house gives me seizures. Our current house is 3,400 and that is really too large for us, but we at least use all of it due to the layout.
- The resulting cost of furniture and crap you would have to buy just to fill it is pointless extravagance.
- Maintenance and utility bills for that house. Oy vey.
Our current struggle is that we would really like to move out of Dallas, but our commutes are awesome and I just don't know if we could survive that trade off. Also, what I would really want is a smaller, one story home that is totally decked out but those types of houses simply don't exist here. We would have to build it or completely gut and renovate an existing home which is also something I have zero desire to do. So, we stay.
2012Ag said:GigEm81 said:2012Ag said:
New job this year allowed my wife and I to finish off her student loans and begin saving for a house. 401k is up to company match and we have a nice emergency fund. We hope to buy next year and have a savings plan this year for the down payment and still have some left over disposable income.
I just opened up a roth ira with fidelity and fully funded 2019. I'm thinking of dumping it all in FZROX. I heard REITs but honestly I'm pretty unfamiliar with those, any insight? Wife and I are 29.
That is a total bond index fund. At 29, you should not need a heavy allocation to bonds in your retirement accounts in my opinion. You should be investing for the long term at that age and that means equities.
REITs are like a sector. Probably not a good time to wade into it unfamiliar waters. Probably a good time to think about broad based equity index fund, not so much bonds.
At the expense of sounding like an idiot how can you determine it's a bond index fund? Still learning, getting rid of loans have made this all very exciting.
Based on my age then it would seem FXAIX is a good first route.
That's us in a $250k home. Really don't care for huge, expensive homes. We're at 2,500 sq. ft. now and if anything will downsize once the kids leave in a few years. Both cars are also over 6 years old and nearing 100k miles (both paid for years ago).Quote:
i would say the millionaire next door would stay in the $350k house forever and no one around him would know he was a millionaire.