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Invest or Down Payment for House

9,324 Views | 99 Replies | Last: 4 mo ago by schwack schwack
Tex117
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AG
Heineken-Ashi said:

Tex117 said:

WestHoustonAg79 said:

Tex117 said:

jamey said:

My financial advisor says rent forever. I disagree.


Right, because...what do they know?

Quote:

How much of your net worth is that $50K?

I've spent a lot of time and brainpower on the rent/buy decision. I think it comes down to personal preference. The finances are about even between the two.
That's assuming you're renting something reasonable, and saving and investing. If youre someone that blows any excess funds they have, then buying is a forced way to at least invest in something.

For buying a house, you need to consider a lot more than just the monthly P&I payment.
This is what the financial advisors are saying. This right here.

I ask my financial advisor every time I talk to him about buying a house and whether not doing so yet is at least a financial neutral decision. His question is always, "do you want one?" "Me: I mean, not really, I'm renting a nice place with me GF, its all we need, and I'm putting a ton of money in the market." Him: Then, no.

More often than not, the buying the house is more of a "keeping up with the Joneses" thing rather than an investment strategy. Many if not most people can't wrap their heads around this. Rent is always "throwing money away." Yada yada. If one actually cranks out the math...the two are really not all that different.

It always comes down to individual circumstances about which one is correct.


Some of your points are fair. But I am in the camp that thinks "where you hang your hat everyday" should be what you want it to within reason. Can't put a price on the memories you and your family will make in a Home you put your heart and soul into. Not everything should be viewed as a numbers game/investment.

Obviously "within reason" is the key part here.

I get the keeping up with the joneses thought, but people are going to do what their family wants to do within reason. You could argue I went a bit over my skis on my current house, but my career is tracking well, and we absolutely love our neighborhood/community and have made thousands of longtime great family memories just in a little over a year in our current house that could be "the forever home" if it needed to be.

I'm also compensated as a contract employee and non-salary so risk comes with the territory I guess.



Sure, all makes sense. And all of this falls into "Do you want one?" Your answer to this, is yes, and you have "within reason" made financial decisions to support that. For a family, it absolutely makes sense to purchase a home within budget for all of the reasons you described.

As i've stated, my only point is that renting when considered with an overall financial strategy is not "throwing money away." When done properly, it can lead to better returns.

Quote:

He ended up borrowing from hos 401K, which he regrets now
This is "wanting" driving over a numbers financial decision...not a good place to be in.


Quote:

In addition to the 20K from not having a mortgage, I could also sell the house and downsize or use that money to invest


Sure, but you aren't getting that sweet sweet time in the market compounding returns/interest.

Investing 1,000,000 at 50 years old will not be as awesome as investing 1,000,000 at 30 years old (if one retires at 65).

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

My financial advisor says rent forever. I disagree.


Right, because...what do they know?
Please enlighten us.
Chris had a good rundown of what he did.

It ALWAYS comes down to individual circumstances.

But, the basic math one has to work from is that that the market (like the S&P) has out-performed real estate. (Sure, you will hear about someone getting lucky on their place, like "my home value jumped 150K in 3 years, but that is never sustained. On average, the market does better. And, especially while young, if you can get more money into the market and get it to grow early, you will be in much better shape than if you used that to buy a house).






But isn't there a flipside to that equation, when the house is paid off and monthly living expenses drop significantly?

I have a low interest rate mortgage so this may not make as much sense right now woth higher rates. But if my house was paid off right now it would lower my annual living expenses by about 20K, in interest and principal.

If you a figure 4% draw rate on retirement funds it would take about 500K to give me that 20K a year.

And it's not like if I'm renting I could just put the whole would be mortgage payment into the S&P since I'd have to pay rent first
Well, if you take a down payment of $60,000 you had to save up (I'm just assuming about 20% on 300k), invest that today. Then lets say in your area now, it takes about $2,500 to maintain a modest home versus $1,500 to rent, and you invest that $1,000 into index funds that return 10.26%. Over 30 years, that could theoretically be $3,197,498.46.

Now, obviously rent would go up over time, no guarantee of the same 10.26% index funds have earned, and assuming a $1,000 difference a month is, well, an assumption that may or may not be true. Even if you start at 1k a month, the rent will close in on the mortgage over time. That's the bet/gamble you are making either way. But investing consistently over 30 years the excess money it would cost to split the difference between a house(maintenance, insurance/taxes, mortgage, tools/lawn mower, etc) and renting I think likely would net you more than $500,000. I just did a quick play around changing the rent difference every 5 years, dropping it a couple hundred. It still netted over 2.5 million. Far more than the 500k needed to get 20k in your pocket in retirement.

All that said, personal preference still has to come into play, and of course the ability to sell the home in retirement if you fall on hard times to go back to renting is another option home owners have that renters do not.

Not to mention, if you really want that security, and invested that money like I showed in a previous paragraph to get a couple million, would that 300k home you could have bought in 2024 be worth less than 2mm in 2054? Over time, it likely would. If so, you can always buy at retirement and lock in your tax rate

There's a ton to factor in.
If I had invested the same amount that I used for my down payment into SPX re-investing dividends on my closing date. I'd have an 82% return today.. 1.82x

My equity in my house should I sell it today would net me a 9.6x, even adjusting for commissions, title and closing fees, and some minor repairs.

There's no comparison for me.

But again, I timed it extremely well. Which goes back to my previous post that timing matters. No, you can't predict the perfect time. Like you last post says, there's a ton to factor in. But purchasing a home is one of the main drivers of wealth creation for the middle class in this country's history. I do think the future will be different though, which is why my advice is to wait for either cheaper rates or a real estate correction if you are buying today. The rising home unaffordability rate won't just go up forever. Our economy always has and always will correct itself in some form or manner when things reach extreme levels.
This is a snapshot of what a long term investment horizon would look like. Take that down payment spending on SPX and stretch it over 30 years. Now do the same to the home price (adjusting for the typical appreciation in value).

Those numbers are likely MUCH closer than 1.82 v. 9.6.


Quote:

Quote:

My financial advisor says rent forever. I disagree.

I'd be interviewing new FA's...

Read beerad12man's post.

If you had bought the average house price in Texas after the 2008 crisis (end of 2011 - $150,000) and put 20% down, and sold today ($307,000), after adjusting for closing costs on both ends of the hold you would have netted around 4.75x. Remember this is the average texas house, so these numbers are probably on the conservative end for most of us)

SPX with dividends re-invested over the same term would be 4.47x.

Had you put 10% down on the house, even adjusting for PMI over term until today, you would have netted 7.9x.

Remember, these are state average prices. You likely would have had to do some repairs over the term, but its hard to include that in the calculation as using the average price is likely already taking that into account via the value of the house today, considering that repairs or upgrades would likely vault your value higher than average.

The average rent for a 3 bed in Texas over the same time period ($875 in 2011 to $1,430 today) would have given you an expense over the term of just shy of what you would have paid for mortgage, PMI, taxes, and insurance over the term. And let's be honest, those rent prices are probably just getting you an apartment or a lesser desired neighborhood. But we're keeping with averages.

In a general sense, your money was better off in a house than the stock market since the bottom of the great financial crisis (the last long term major point in time that you would have gone long with equity).

Like I've said multiple times now, timing matter for all investments. But historically, home equity has been the greatest generator of wealth for the average American.

http://danielamerman.com/va/HomeWealthOne.html
So, you cherry picked at the bottom of a housing crash up to today that captures a historic run up (and a decade of low interest rates) in the last 4 years, and still didn't' draw out the investment over 30 years?

Cool.

Historically, that's not true.

https://www.investopedia.com/ask/answers/052015/which-has-performed-better-historically-stock-market-or-real-estate.asp

BUT, that said, of course acute timing of the market can affect individual positions. But we are talking broad-based, on the average kind of numbers.



I bleed maroon
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Tex117 said:

Heineken-Ashi said:

Tex117 said:

WestHoustonAg79 said:

Tex117 said:

jamey said:

My financial advisor says rent forever. I disagree.


Right, because...what do they know?

Quote:

How much of your net worth is that $50K?

I've spent a lot of time and brainpower on the rent/buy decision. I think it comes down to personal preference. The finances are about even between the two.
That's assuming you're renting something reasonable, and saving and investing. If youre someone that blows any excess funds they have, then buying is a forced way to at least invest in something.

For buying a house, you need to consider a lot more than just the monthly P&I payment.
This is what the financial advisors are saying. This right here.

I ask my financial advisor every time I talk to him about buying a house and whether not doing so yet is at least a financial neutral decision. His question is always, "do you want one?" "Me: I mean, not really, I'm renting a nice place with me GF, its all we need, and I'm putting a ton of money in the market." Him: Then, no.

More often than not, the buying the house is more of a "keeping up with the Joneses" thing rather than an investment strategy. Many if not most people can't wrap their heads around this. Rent is always "throwing money away." Yada yada. If one actually cranks out the math...the two are really not all that different.

It always comes down to individual circumstances about which one is correct.


Some of your points are fair. But I am in the camp that thinks "where you hang your hat everyday" should be what you want it to within reason. Can't put a price on the memories you and your family will make in a Home you put your heart and soul into. Not everything should be viewed as a numbers game/investment.

Obviously "within reason" is the key part here.

I get the keeping up with the joneses thought, but people are going to do what their family wants to do within reason. You could argue I went a bit over my skis on my current house, but my career is tracking well, and we absolutely love our neighborhood/community and have made thousands of longtime great family memories just in a little over a year in our current house that could be "the forever home" if it needed to be.

I'm also compensated as a contract employee and non-salary so risk comes with the territory I guess.



Sure, all makes sense. And all of this falls into "Do you want one?" Your answer to this, is yes, and you have "within reason" made financial decisions to support that. For a family, it absolutely makes sense to purchase a home within budget for all of the reasons you described.

As i've stated, my only point is that renting when considered with an overall financial strategy is not "throwing money away." When done properly, it can lead to better returns.

Quote:

He ended up borrowing from hos 401K, which he regrets now
This is "wanting" driving over a numbers financial decision...not a good place to be in.


Quote:

In addition to the 20K from not having a mortgage, I could also sell the house and downsize or use that money to invest


Sure, but you aren't getting that sweet sweet time in the market compounding returns/interest.

Investing 1,000,000 at 50 years old will not be as awesome as investing 1,000,000 at 30 years old (if one retires at 65).

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

My financial advisor says rent forever. I disagree.


Right, because...what do they know?
Please enlighten us.
Chris had a good rundown of what he did.

It ALWAYS comes down to individual circumstances.

But, the basic math one has to work from is that that the market (like the S&P) has out-performed real estate. (Sure, you will hear about someone getting lucky on their place, like "my home value jumped 150K in 3 years, but that is never sustained. On average, the market does better. And, especially while young, if you can get more money into the market and get it to grow early, you will be in much better shape than if you used that to buy a house).






But isn't there a flipside to that equation, when the house is paid off and monthly living expenses drop significantly?

I have a low interest rate mortgage so this may not make as much sense right now woth higher rates. But if my house was paid off right now it would lower my annual living expenses by about 20K, in interest and principal.

If you a figure 4% draw rate on retirement funds it would take about 500K to give me that 20K a year.

And it's not like if I'm renting I could just put the whole would be mortgage payment into the S&P since I'd have to pay rent first
Well, if you take a down payment of $60,000 you had to save up (I'm just assuming about 20% on 300k), invest that today. Then lets say in your area now, it takes about $2,500 to maintain a modest home versus $1,500 to rent, and you invest that $1,000 into index funds that return 10.26%. Over 30 years, that could theoretically be $3,197,498.46.

Now, obviously rent would go up over time, no guarantee of the same 10.26% index funds have earned, and assuming a $1,000 difference a month is, well, an assumption that may or may not be true. Even if you start at 1k a month, the rent will close in on the mortgage over time. That's the bet/gamble you are making either way. But investing consistently over 30 years the excess money it would cost to split the difference between a house(maintenance, insurance/taxes, mortgage, tools/lawn mower, etc) and renting I think likely would net you more than $500,000. I just did a quick play around changing the rent difference every 5 years, dropping it a couple hundred. It still netted over 2.5 million. Far more than the 500k needed to get 20k in your pocket in retirement.

All that said, personal preference still has to come into play, and of course the ability to sell the home in retirement if you fall on hard times to go back to renting is another option home owners have that renters do not.

Not to mention, if you really want that security, and invested that money like I showed in a previous paragraph to get a couple million, would that 300k home you could have bought in 2024 be worth less than 2mm in 2054? Over time, it likely would. If so, you can always buy at retirement and lock in your tax rate

There's a ton to factor in.
If I had invested the same amount that I used for my down payment into SPX re-investing dividends on my closing date. I'd have an 82% return today.. 1.82x

My equity in my house should I sell it today would net me a 9.6x, even adjusting for commissions, title and closing fees, and some minor repairs.

There's no comparison for me.

But again, I timed it extremely well. Which goes back to my previous post that timing matters. No, you can't predict the perfect time. Like you last post says, there's a ton to factor in. But purchasing a home is one of the main drivers of wealth creation for the middle class in this country's history. I do think the future will be different though, which is why my advice is to wait for either cheaper rates or a real estate correction if you are buying today. The rising home unaffordability rate won't just go up forever. Our economy always has and always will correct itself in some form or manner when things reach extreme levels.
This is a snapshot of what a long term investment horizon would look like. Take that down payment spending on SPX and stretch it over 30 years. Now do the same to the home price (adjusting for the typical appreciation in value).

Those numbers are likely MUCH closer than 1.82 v. 9.6.


Quote:

Quote:

My financial advisor says rent forever. I disagree.

I'd be interviewing new FA's...

Read beerad12man's post.

If you had bought the average house price in Texas after the 2008 crisis (end of 2011 - $150,000) and put 20% down, and sold today ($307,000), after adjusting for closing costs on both ends of the hold you would have netted around 4.75x. Remember this is the average texas house, so these numbers are probably on the conservative end for most of us)

SPX with dividends re-invested over the same term would be 4.47x.

Had you put 10% down on the house, even adjusting for PMI over term until today, you would have netted 7.9x.

Remember, these are state average prices. You likely would have had to do some repairs over the term, but its hard to include that in the calculation as using the average price is likely already taking that into account via the value of the house today, considering that repairs or upgrades would likely vault your value higher than average.

The average rent for a 3 bed in Texas over the same time period ($875 in 2011 to $1,430 today) would have given you an expense over the term of just shy of what you would have paid for mortgage, PMI, taxes, and insurance over the term. And let's be honest, those rent prices are probably just getting you an apartment or a lesser desired neighborhood. But we're keeping with averages.

In a general sense, your money was better off in a house than the stock market since the bottom of the great financial crisis (the last long term major point in time that you would have gone long with equity).

Like I've said multiple times now, timing matter for all investments. But historically, home equity has been the greatest generator of wealth for the average American.

http://danielamerman.com/va/HomeWealthOne.html
So, you cherry picked at the bottom of a housing crash up to today that captures a historic run up (and a decade of low interest rates) in the last 4 years, and still didn't' draw out the investment over 30 years?

Cool.

Historically, that's not true.

https://www.investopedia.com/ask/answers/052015/which-has-performed-better-historically-stock-market-or-real-estate.asp

BUT, that said, of course acute timing of the market can affect individual positions. But we are talking broad-based, on the average kind of numbers.




The other factor that almost everyone ignores in this analysis is transaction costs. For the "investing the difference" approach, your commissions are zero (usually). To actually capitalize on the increased home equity value, you will have SIGNIFICANT transaction and frictional costs, including repairs, commissions, capital gains taxes, moving expenses, closing costs, etc. This doesn't even get at the time required, both personal effort and time-on-the-market, which are completely avoided in an equity sale scenario. I am currently feeling locked in to my house, due to a super-low interest rate and significant transaction costs of several hundred thousand dollars. Some of it (capital gains tax) is a good problem to have, but the hassle of the process is quite a bit worse than terminating a rental lease or selling a stock.

Please note, I am not arguing against home ownership. I have done it myself, for decades. But, it isn't right economically or logistically for everyone, so some posters should quit using incomplete hypothetical return data to argue your points...
Heineken-Ashi
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Tex117 said:

Heineken-Ashi said:

Tex117 said:

WestHoustonAg79 said:

Tex117 said:

jamey said:

My financial advisor says rent forever. I disagree.


Right, because...what do they know?

Quote:

How much of your net worth is that $50K?

I've spent a lot of time and brainpower on the rent/buy decision. I think it comes down to personal preference. The finances are about even between the two.
That's assuming you're renting something reasonable, and saving and investing. If youre someone that blows any excess funds they have, then buying is a forced way to at least invest in something.

For buying a house, you need to consider a lot more than just the monthly P&I payment.
This is what the financial advisors are saying. This right here.

I ask my financial advisor every time I talk to him about buying a house and whether not doing so yet is at least a financial neutral decision. His question is always, "do you want one?" "Me: I mean, not really, I'm renting a nice place with me GF, its all we need, and I'm putting a ton of money in the market." Him: Then, no.

More often than not, the buying the house is more of a "keeping up with the Joneses" thing rather than an investment strategy. Many if not most people can't wrap their heads around this. Rent is always "throwing money away." Yada yada. If one actually cranks out the math...the two are really not all that different.

It always comes down to individual circumstances about which one is correct.


Some of your points are fair. But I am in the camp that thinks "where you hang your hat everyday" should be what you want it to within reason. Can't put a price on the memories you and your family will make in a Home you put your heart and soul into. Not everything should be viewed as a numbers game/investment.

Obviously "within reason" is the key part here.

I get the keeping up with the joneses thought, but people are going to do what their family wants to do within reason. You could argue I went a bit over my skis on my current house, but my career is tracking well, and we absolutely love our neighborhood/community and have made thousands of longtime great family memories just in a little over a year in our current house that could be "the forever home" if it needed to be.

I'm also compensated as a contract employee and non-salary so risk comes with the territory I guess.



Sure, all makes sense. And all of this falls into "Do you want one?" Your answer to this, is yes, and you have "within reason" made financial decisions to support that. For a family, it absolutely makes sense to purchase a home within budget for all of the reasons you described.

As i've stated, my only point is that renting when considered with an overall financial strategy is not "throwing money away." When done properly, it can lead to better returns.

Quote:

He ended up borrowing from hos 401K, which he regrets now
This is "wanting" driving over a numbers financial decision...not a good place to be in.


Quote:

In addition to the 20K from not having a mortgage, I could also sell the house and downsize or use that money to invest


Sure, but you aren't getting that sweet sweet time in the market compounding returns/interest.

Investing 1,000,000 at 50 years old will not be as awesome as investing 1,000,000 at 30 years old (if one retires at 65).

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

My financial advisor says rent forever. I disagree.


Right, because...what do they know?
Please enlighten us.
Chris had a good rundown of what he did.

It ALWAYS comes down to individual circumstances.

But, the basic math one has to work from is that that the market (like the S&P) has out-performed real estate. (Sure, you will hear about someone getting lucky on their place, like "my home value jumped 150K in 3 years, but that is never sustained. On average, the market does better. And, especially while young, if you can get more money into the market and get it to grow early, you will be in much better shape than if you used that to buy a house).






But isn't there a flipside to that equation, when the house is paid off and monthly living expenses drop significantly?

I have a low interest rate mortgage so this may not make as much sense right now woth higher rates. But if my house was paid off right now it would lower my annual living expenses by about 20K, in interest and principal.

If you a figure 4% draw rate on retirement funds it would take about 500K to give me that 20K a year.

And it's not like if I'm renting I could just put the whole would be mortgage payment into the S&P since I'd have to pay rent first
Well, if you take a down payment of $60,000 you had to save up (I'm just assuming about 20% on 300k), invest that today. Then lets say in your area now, it takes about $2,500 to maintain a modest home versus $1,500 to rent, and you invest that $1,000 into index funds that return 10.26%. Over 30 years, that could theoretically be $3,197,498.46.

Now, obviously rent would go up over time, no guarantee of the same 10.26% index funds have earned, and assuming a $1,000 difference a month is, well, an assumption that may or may not be true. Even if you start at 1k a month, the rent will close in on the mortgage over time. That's the bet/gamble you are making either way. But investing consistently over 30 years the excess money it would cost to split the difference between a house(maintenance, insurance/taxes, mortgage, tools/lawn mower, etc) and renting I think likely would net you more than $500,000. I just did a quick play around changing the rent difference every 5 years, dropping it a couple hundred. It still netted over 2.5 million. Far more than the 500k needed to get 20k in your pocket in retirement.

All that said, personal preference still has to come into play, and of course the ability to sell the home in retirement if you fall on hard times to go back to renting is another option home owners have that renters do not.

Not to mention, if you really want that security, and invested that money like I showed in a previous paragraph to get a couple million, would that 300k home you could have bought in 2024 be worth less than 2mm in 2054? Over time, it likely would. If so, you can always buy at retirement and lock in your tax rate

There's a ton to factor in.
If I had invested the same amount that I used for my down payment into SPX re-investing dividends on my closing date. I'd have an 82% return today.. 1.82x

My equity in my house should I sell it today would net me a 9.6x, even adjusting for commissions, title and closing fees, and some minor repairs.

There's no comparison for me.

But again, I timed it extremely well. Which goes back to my previous post that timing matters. No, you can't predict the perfect time. Like you last post says, there's a ton to factor in. But purchasing a home is one of the main drivers of wealth creation for the middle class in this country's history. I do think the future will be different though, which is why my advice is to wait for either cheaper rates or a real estate correction if you are buying today. The rising home unaffordability rate won't just go up forever. Our economy always has and always will correct itself in some form or manner when things reach extreme levels.
This is a snapshot of what a long term investment horizon would look like. Take that down payment spending on SPX and stretch it over 30 years. Now do the same to the home price (adjusting for the typical appreciation in value).

Those numbers are likely MUCH closer than 1.82 v. 9.6.


Quote:

Quote:

My financial advisor says rent forever. I disagree.

I'd be interviewing new FA's...

Read beerad12man's post.

If you had bought the average house price in Texas after the 2008 crisis (end of 2011 - $150,000) and put 20% down, and sold today ($307,000), after adjusting for closing costs on both ends of the hold you would have netted around 4.75x. Remember this is the average texas house, so these numbers are probably on the conservative end for most of us)

SPX with dividends re-invested over the same term would be 4.47x.

Had you put 10% down on the house, even adjusting for PMI over term until today, you would have netted 7.9x.

Remember, these are state average prices. You likely would have had to do some repairs over the term, but its hard to include that in the calculation as using the average price is likely already taking that into account via the value of the house today, considering that repairs or upgrades would likely vault your value higher than average.

The average rent for a 3 bed in Texas over the same time period ($875 in 2011 to $1,430 today) would have given you an expense over the term of just shy of what you would have paid for mortgage, PMI, taxes, and insurance over the term. And let's be honest, those rent prices are probably just getting you an apartment or a lesser desired neighborhood. But we're keeping with averages.

In a general sense, your money was better off in a house than the stock market since the bottom of the great financial crisis (the last long term major point in time that you would have gone long with equity).

Like I've said multiple times now, timing matter for all investments. But historically, home equity has been the greatest generator of wealth for the average American.

http://danielamerman.com/va/HomeWealthOne.html
So, you cherry picked at the bottom of a housing crash up to today that captures a historic run up (and a decade of low interest rates) in the last 4 years, and still didn't' draw out the investment over 30 years?

Cool.

Historically, that's not true.

https://www.investopedia.com/ask/answers/052015/which-has-performed-better-historically-stock-market-or-real-estate.asp

BUT, that said, of course acute timing of the market can affect individual positions. But we are talking broad-based, on the average kind of numbers.




Read the article I posted on at the bottom of that post. Going back decades, home ownership has created more wealth than market returns.

And is it really cherry picked? I could have taken 10 years prior, and the returns in the market vs home ownership returns would have been even worse for market participants. Because the significant swings up and down in values of both mimick each other with the market sustaining far deeper drawdowns than home prices.

What you are not understanding is the difference between leverage and no leverage. People investing the equity they would put in their home in the stock market are not using leverage. If they are, then they are likely institutional level traders who are likely using similar leverage techniques to buy rental properties, thereby taking even more advantage of the value of home ownership as their expenses are wiped out by income AND they get the massive equity increase.

The average home buyer is using leverage on one investment, their home. That leverage over time has greatly exploded their wealth, with the majority of gains coming in the first 10 years of ownership.

That same person exposed to the stock market is merely making dollar for dollar with market gains.

As the currency has devalued over time, stock market participants have marginally benefitted as overall growth has beaten inflation. People with leveraged positions in the stock market have HUGELY beat those without. And again, people with leveraged positions in the housing market have HUGELY beat those without leveraged positions.
"H-A: In return for the flattery, can you reduce the size of your signature? It's the only part of your posts that don't add value. In its' place, just put "I'm an investing savant, and make no apologies for it", as oldarmy1 would do."
- I Bleed Maroon (distracted easily by signatures)
Heineken-Ashi
How long do you want to ignore this user?
I bleed maroon said:

Tex117 said:

Heineken-Ashi said:

Tex117 said:

WestHoustonAg79 said:

Tex117 said:

jamey said:

My financial advisor says rent forever. I disagree.


Right, because...what do they know?

Quote:

How much of your net worth is that $50K?

I've spent a lot of time and brainpower on the rent/buy decision. I think it comes down to personal preference. The finances are about even between the two.
That's assuming you're renting something reasonable, and saving and investing. If youre someone that blows any excess funds they have, then buying is a forced way to at least invest in something.

For buying a house, you need to consider a lot more than just the monthly P&I payment.
This is what the financial advisors are saying. This right here.

I ask my financial advisor every time I talk to him about buying a house and whether not doing so yet is at least a financial neutral decision. His question is always, "do you want one?" "Me: I mean, not really, I'm renting a nice place with me GF, its all we need, and I'm putting a ton of money in the market." Him: Then, no.

More often than not, the buying the house is more of a "keeping up with the Joneses" thing rather than an investment strategy. Many if not most people can't wrap their heads around this. Rent is always "throwing money away." Yada yada. If one actually cranks out the math...the two are really not all that different.

It always comes down to individual circumstances about which one is correct.


Some of your points are fair. But I am in the camp that thinks "where you hang your hat everyday" should be what you want it to within reason. Can't put a price on the memories you and your family will make in a Home you put your heart and soul into. Not everything should be viewed as a numbers game/investment.

Obviously "within reason" is the key part here.

I get the keeping up with the joneses thought, but people are going to do what their family wants to do within reason. You could argue I went a bit over my skis on my current house, but my career is tracking well, and we absolutely love our neighborhood/community and have made thousands of longtime great family memories just in a little over a year in our current house that could be "the forever home" if it needed to be.

I'm also compensated as a contract employee and non-salary so risk comes with the territory I guess.



Sure, all makes sense. And all of this falls into "Do you want one?" Your answer to this, is yes, and you have "within reason" made financial decisions to support that. For a family, it absolutely makes sense to purchase a home within budget for all of the reasons you described.

As i've stated, my only point is that renting when considered with an overall financial strategy is not "throwing money away." When done properly, it can lead to better returns.

Quote:

He ended up borrowing from hos 401K, which he regrets now
This is "wanting" driving over a numbers financial decision...not a good place to be in.


Quote:

In addition to the 20K from not having a mortgage, I could also sell the house and downsize or use that money to invest


Sure, but you aren't getting that sweet sweet time in the market compounding returns/interest.

Investing 1,000,000 at 50 years old will not be as awesome as investing 1,000,000 at 30 years old (if one retires at 65).

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

My financial advisor says rent forever. I disagree.


Right, because...what do they know?
Please enlighten us.
Chris had a good rundown of what he did.

It ALWAYS comes down to individual circumstances.

But, the basic math one has to work from is that that the market (like the S&P) has out-performed real estate. (Sure, you will hear about someone getting lucky on their place, like "my home value jumped 150K in 3 years, but that is never sustained. On average, the market does better. And, especially while young, if you can get more money into the market and get it to grow early, you will be in much better shape than if you used that to buy a house).






But isn't there a flipside to that equation, when the house is paid off and monthly living expenses drop significantly?

I have a low interest rate mortgage so this may not make as much sense right now woth higher rates. But if my house was paid off right now it would lower my annual living expenses by about 20K, in interest and principal.

If you a figure 4% draw rate on retirement funds it would take about 500K to give me that 20K a year.

And it's not like if I'm renting I could just put the whole would be mortgage payment into the S&P since I'd have to pay rent first
Well, if you take a down payment of $60,000 you had to save up (I'm just assuming about 20% on 300k), invest that today. Then lets say in your area now, it takes about $2,500 to maintain a modest home versus $1,500 to rent, and you invest that $1,000 into index funds that return 10.26%. Over 30 years, that could theoretically be $3,197,498.46.

Now, obviously rent would go up over time, no guarantee of the same 10.26% index funds have earned, and assuming a $1,000 difference a month is, well, an assumption that may or may not be true. Even if you start at 1k a month, the rent will close in on the mortgage over time. That's the bet/gamble you are making either way. But investing consistently over 30 years the excess money it would cost to split the difference between a house(maintenance, insurance/taxes, mortgage, tools/lawn mower, etc) and renting I think likely would net you more than $500,000. I just did a quick play around changing the rent difference every 5 years, dropping it a couple hundred. It still netted over 2.5 million. Far more than the 500k needed to get 20k in your pocket in retirement.

All that said, personal preference still has to come into play, and of course the ability to sell the home in retirement if you fall on hard times to go back to renting is another option home owners have that renters do not.

Not to mention, if you really want that security, and invested that money like I showed in a previous paragraph to get a couple million, would that 300k home you could have bought in 2024 be worth less than 2mm in 2054? Over time, it likely would. If so, you can always buy at retirement and lock in your tax rate

There's a ton to factor in.
If I had invested the same amount that I used for my down payment into SPX re-investing dividends on my closing date. I'd have an 82% return today.. 1.82x

My equity in my house should I sell it today would net me a 9.6x, even adjusting for commissions, title and closing fees, and some minor repairs.

There's no comparison for me.

But again, I timed it extremely well. Which goes back to my previous post that timing matters. No, you can't predict the perfect time. Like you last post says, there's a ton to factor in. But purchasing a home is one of the main drivers of wealth creation for the middle class in this country's history. I do think the future will be different though, which is why my advice is to wait for either cheaper rates or a real estate correction if you are buying today. The rising home unaffordability rate won't just go up forever. Our economy always has and always will correct itself in some form or manner when things reach extreme levels.
This is a snapshot of what a long term investment horizon would look like. Take that down payment spending on SPX and stretch it over 30 years. Now do the same to the home price (adjusting for the typical appreciation in value).

Those numbers are likely MUCH closer than 1.82 v. 9.6.


Quote:

Quote:

My financial advisor says rent forever. I disagree.

I'd be interviewing new FA's...

Read beerad12man's post.

If you had bought the average house price in Texas after the 2008 crisis (end of 2011 - $150,000) and put 20% down, and sold today ($307,000), after adjusting for closing costs on both ends of the hold you would have netted around 4.75x. Remember this is the average texas house, so these numbers are probably on the conservative end for most of us)

SPX with dividends re-invested over the same term would be 4.47x.

Had you put 10% down on the house, even adjusting for PMI over term until today, you would have netted 7.9x.

Remember, these are state average prices. You likely would have had to do some repairs over the term, but its hard to include that in the calculation as using the average price is likely already taking that into account via the value of the house today, considering that repairs or upgrades would likely vault your value higher than average.

The average rent for a 3 bed in Texas over the same time period ($875 in 2011 to $1,430 today) would have given you an expense over the term of just shy of what you would have paid for mortgage, PMI, taxes, and insurance over the term. And let's be honest, those rent prices are probably just getting you an apartment or a lesser desired neighborhood. But we're keeping with averages.

In a general sense, your money was better off in a house than the stock market since the bottom of the great financial crisis (the last long term major point in time that you would have gone long with equity).

Like I've said multiple times now, timing matter for all investments. But historically, home equity has been the greatest generator of wealth for the average American.

http://danielamerman.com/va/HomeWealthOne.html
So, you cherry picked at the bottom of a housing crash up to today that captures a historic run up (and a decade of low interest rates) in the last 4 years, and still didn't' draw out the investment over 30 years?

Cool.

Historically, that's not true.

https://www.investopedia.com/ask/answers/052015/which-has-performed-better-historically-stock-market-or-real-estate.asp

BUT, that said, of course acute timing of the market can affect individual positions. But we are talking broad-based, on the average kind of numbers.




The other factor that almost everyone ignores in this analysis is transaction costs. For the "investing the difference" approach, your commissions are zero (usually). To actually capitalize on the increased home equity value, you will have SIGNIFICANT transaction and frictional costs, including repairs, commissions, capital gains taxes, moving expenses, closing costs, etc. This doesn't even get at the time required, both personal effort and time-on-the-market, which are completely avoided in an equity sale scenario. I am currently feeling locked in to my house, due to a super-low interest rate and significant transaction costs of several hundred thousand dollars. Some of it (capital gains tax) is a good problem to have, but the hassle of the process is quite a bit worse than terminating a rental lease or selling a stock.

Please note, I am not arguing against home ownership. I have done it myself, for decades. But, it isn't right economically or logistically for everyone, so some posters should quit using incomplete hypothetical return data to argue your points...
My analysis did include transactional costs. 3% on the buy side and 7% on the sell side. I made a comment about repairs as well that it seems you didn't read. Capital gains taxes are definitely a component, but they are subject to the long term capital gains and do not apply to the first $250K of profit. They can also be 1031'd. You will have far more moving expenses as a renter than a homeowner, as its extremely unlikely you are staying in a single home for that long.
"H-A: In return for the flattery, can you reduce the size of your signature? It's the only part of your posts that don't add value. In its' place, just put "I'm an investing savant, and make no apologies for it", as oldarmy1 would do."
- I Bleed Maroon (distracted easily by signatures)
Seven Costanza
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
I'd like to know how they gathered some of this data. $1400/month for a 3 bedroom home is almost impossible to find. I just took a quick look online and couldn't find much of anything, even in more rural areas.
Heineken-Ashi
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Seven Costanza said:

I'd like to know how they gathered some of this data. $1400/month for a 3 bedroom home is almost impossible to find. I just took a quick look online and couldn't find much of anything, even in more rural areas.
I went through multiple websites that attempt to track average rental prices and that seemed to be the median level. Like I said, it was for all of Texas and that includes, all classes of property in all areas.. everything from Class D 1960's built apartments to high end rental homes. As I stated in that post, it was an extremely conservative analysis as the average 3 bed in areas you would want to live in are probably closer to $1,750-$2k. But since the purchase example was average Texas sales price, it was only fitting to use a best guess as average Texas rental price.

I try to be as honest as possible with the analysis I do taking into account as many factors as possible. With an analysis like this, there really is no direct apples to apples unless you can find similar homes in the same neighborhood in similar condition, one that sold in 2011 and recently, and the other that was rented in 2011 as well as recently. Very very hard and time consuming.

My analysis was overall more conservative in favor of the rental case, and home buying still came out ahead, and in some scenarios, very significantly.
"H-A: In return for the flattery, can you reduce the size of your signature? It's the only part of your posts that don't add value. In its' place, just put "I'm an investing savant, and make no apologies for it", as oldarmy1 would do."
- I Bleed Maroon (distracted easily by signatures)
Tex117
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Heineken-Ashi said:

Tex117 said:

Heineken-Ashi said:

Tex117 said:

WestHoustonAg79 said:

Tex117 said:

jamey said:

My financial advisor says rent forever. I disagree.


Right, because...what do they know?

Quote:

How much of your net worth is that $50K?

I've spent a lot of time and brainpower on the rent/buy decision. I think it comes down to personal preference. The finances are about even between the two.
That's assuming you're renting something reasonable, and saving and investing. If youre someone that blows any excess funds they have, then buying is a forced way to at least invest in something.

For buying a house, you need to consider a lot more than just the monthly P&I payment.
This is what the financial advisors are saying. This right here.

I ask my financial advisor every time I talk to him about buying a house and whether not doing so yet is at least a financial neutral decision. His question is always, "do you want one?" "Me: I mean, not really, I'm renting a nice place with me GF, its all we need, and I'm putting a ton of money in the market." Him: Then, no.

More often than not, the buying the house is more of a "keeping up with the Joneses" thing rather than an investment strategy. Many if not most people can't wrap their heads around this. Rent is always "throwing money away." Yada yada. If one actually cranks out the math...the two are really not all that different.

It always comes down to individual circumstances about which one is correct.


Some of your points are fair. But I am in the camp that thinks "where you hang your hat everyday" should be what you want it to within reason. Can't put a price on the memories you and your family will make in a Home you put your heart and soul into. Not everything should be viewed as a numbers game/investment.

Obviously "within reason" is the key part here.

I get the keeping up with the joneses thought, but people are going to do what their family wants to do within reason. You could argue I went a bit over my skis on my current house, but my career is tracking well, and we absolutely love our neighborhood/community and have made thousands of longtime great family memories just in a little over a year in our current house that could be "the forever home" if it needed to be.

I'm also compensated as a contract employee and non-salary so risk comes with the territory I guess.



Sure, all makes sense. And all of this falls into "Do you want one?" Your answer to this, is yes, and you have "within reason" made financial decisions to support that. For a family, it absolutely makes sense to purchase a home within budget for all of the reasons you described.

As i've stated, my only point is that renting when considered with an overall financial strategy is not "throwing money away." When done properly, it can lead to better returns.

Quote:

He ended up borrowing from hos 401K, which he regrets now
This is "wanting" driving over a numbers financial decision...not a good place to be in.


Quote:

In addition to the 20K from not having a mortgage, I could also sell the house and downsize or use that money to invest


Sure, but you aren't getting that sweet sweet time in the market compounding returns/interest.

Investing 1,000,000 at 50 years old will not be as awesome as investing 1,000,000 at 30 years old (if one retires at 65).

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

My financial advisor says rent forever. I disagree.


Right, because...what do they know?
Please enlighten us.
Chris had a good rundown of what he did.

It ALWAYS comes down to individual circumstances.

But, the basic math one has to work from is that that the market (like the S&P) has out-performed real estate. (Sure, you will hear about someone getting lucky on their place, like "my home value jumped 150K in 3 years, but that is never sustained. On average, the market does better. And, especially while young, if you can get more money into the market and get it to grow early, you will be in much better shape than if you used that to buy a house).






But isn't there a flipside to that equation, when the house is paid off and monthly living expenses drop significantly?

I have a low interest rate mortgage so this may not make as much sense right now woth higher rates. But if my house was paid off right now it would lower my annual living expenses by about 20K, in interest and principal.

If you a figure 4% draw rate on retirement funds it would take about 500K to give me that 20K a year.

And it's not like if I'm renting I could just put the whole would be mortgage payment into the S&P since I'd have to pay rent first
Well, if you take a down payment of $60,000 you had to save up (I'm just assuming about 20% on 300k), invest that today. Then lets say in your area now, it takes about $2,500 to maintain a modest home versus $1,500 to rent, and you invest that $1,000 into index funds that return 10.26%. Over 30 years, that could theoretically be $3,197,498.46.

Now, obviously rent would go up over time, no guarantee of the same 10.26% index funds have earned, and assuming a $1,000 difference a month is, well, an assumption that may or may not be true. Even if you start at 1k a month, the rent will close in on the mortgage over time. That's the bet/gamble you are making either way. But investing consistently over 30 years the excess money it would cost to split the difference between a house(maintenance, insurance/taxes, mortgage, tools/lawn mower, etc) and renting I think likely would net you more than $500,000. I just did a quick play around changing the rent difference every 5 years, dropping it a couple hundred. It still netted over 2.5 million. Far more than the 500k needed to get 20k in your pocket in retirement.

All that said, personal preference still has to come into play, and of course the ability to sell the home in retirement if you fall on hard times to go back to renting is another option home owners have that renters do not.

Not to mention, if you really want that security, and invested that money like I showed in a previous paragraph to get a couple million, would that 300k home you could have bought in 2024 be worth less than 2mm in 2054? Over time, it likely would. If so, you can always buy at retirement and lock in your tax rate

There's a ton to factor in.
If I had invested the same amount that I used for my down payment into SPX re-investing dividends on my closing date. I'd have an 82% return today.. 1.82x

My equity in my house should I sell it today would net me a 9.6x, even adjusting for commissions, title and closing fees, and some minor repairs.

There's no comparison for me.

But again, I timed it extremely well. Which goes back to my previous post that timing matters. No, you can't predict the perfect time. Like you last post says, there's a ton to factor in. But purchasing a home is one of the main drivers of wealth creation for the middle class in this country's history. I do think the future will be different though, which is why my advice is to wait for either cheaper rates or a real estate correction if you are buying today. The rising home unaffordability rate won't just go up forever. Our economy always has and always will correct itself in some form or manner when things reach extreme levels.
This is a snapshot of what a long term investment horizon would look like. Take that down payment spending on SPX and stretch it over 30 years. Now do the same to the home price (adjusting for the typical appreciation in value).

Those numbers are likely MUCH closer than 1.82 v. 9.6.


Quote:

Quote:

My financial advisor says rent forever. I disagree.

I'd be interviewing new FA's...

Read beerad12man's post.

If you had bought the average house price in Texas after the 2008 crisis (end of 2011 - $150,000) and put 20% down, and sold today ($307,000), after adjusting for closing costs on both ends of the hold you would have netted around 4.75x. Remember this is the average texas house, so these numbers are probably on the conservative end for most of us)

SPX with dividends re-invested over the same term would be 4.47x.

Had you put 10% down on the house, even adjusting for PMI over term until today, you would have netted 7.9x.

Remember, these are state average prices. You likely would have had to do some repairs over the term, but its hard to include that in the calculation as using the average price is likely already taking that into account via the value of the house today, considering that repairs or upgrades would likely vault your value higher than average.

The average rent for a 3 bed in Texas over the same time period ($875 in 2011 to $1,430 today) would have given you an expense over the term of just shy of what you would have paid for mortgage, PMI, taxes, and insurance over the term. And let's be honest, those rent prices are probably just getting you an apartment or a lesser desired neighborhood. But we're keeping with averages.

In a general sense, your money was better off in a house than the stock market since the bottom of the great financial crisis (the last long term major point in time that you would have gone long with equity).

Like I've said multiple times now, timing matter for all investments. But historically, home equity has been the greatest generator of wealth for the average American.

http://danielamerman.com/va/HomeWealthOne.html
So, you cherry picked at the bottom of a housing crash up to today that captures a historic run up (and a decade of low interest rates) in the last 4 years, and still didn't' draw out the investment over 30 years?

Cool.

Historically, that's not true.

https://www.investopedia.com/ask/answers/052015/which-has-performed-better-historically-stock-market-or-real-estate.asp

BUT, that said, of course acute timing of the market can affect individual positions. But we are talking broad-based, on the average kind of numbers.




Read the article I posted on at the bottom of that post. Going back decades, home ownership has created more wealth than market returns.

And is it really cherry picked? I could have taken 10 years prior, and the returns in the market vs home ownership returns would have been even worse for market participants. Because the significant swings up and down in values of both mimick each other with the market sustaining far deeper drawdowns than home prices.

What you are not understanding is the difference between leverage and no leverage. People investing the equity they would put in their home in the stock market are not using leverage. If they are, then they are likely institutional level traders who are likely using similar leverage techniques to buy rental properties, thereby taking even more advantage of the value of home ownership as their expenses are wiped out by income AND they get the massive equity increase.

The average home buyer is using leverage on one investment, their home. That leverage over time has greatly exploded their wealth, with the majority of gains coming in the first 10 years of ownership.

That same person exposed to the stock market is merely making dollar for dollar with market gains.

As the currency has devalued over time, stock market participants have marginally benefitted as overall growth has beaten inflation. People with leveraged positions in the stock market have HUGELY beat those without. And again, people with leveraged positions in the housing market have HUGELY beat those without leveraged positions.
Well, considering people that are far more experienced and do this for a living have calculated all this out and have come up with markets have done better historically than home ownership. (And a quick google search produces hits from more reputable cites that Ol' Amerman that show that the market has historically provided better returns than homeownership....he is making alot of assumptions, specifically about an average person....which he acknowledges). Here is another just random article. https://www.wallstreetoasis.com/forum/real-estate/the-fallacy-of-homeownership-as-a-vehicle-for-wealth-creation

In the end, as has always been my point, it comes down to specific circumstances. But, as always, like clockwork, a real estate focused person always ALWAYS, says homeownership is the best way. Its not. It sometimes is.

All I know is that I'd rather take one million in a brokerage account today than have one million in home equity today.







Heineken-Ashi
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Tex117 said:

Heineken-Ashi said:

Tex117 said:

Heineken-Ashi said:

Tex117 said:

WestHoustonAg79 said:

Tex117 said:

jamey said:

My financial advisor says rent forever. I disagree.


Right, because...what do they know?

Quote:

How much of your net worth is that $50K?

I've spent a lot of time and brainpower on the rent/buy decision. I think it comes down to personal preference. The finances are about even between the two.
That's assuming you're renting something reasonable, and saving and investing. If youre someone that blows any excess funds they have, then buying is a forced way to at least invest in something.

For buying a house, you need to consider a lot more than just the monthly P&I payment.
This is what the financial advisors are saying. This right here.

I ask my financial advisor every time I talk to him about buying a house and whether not doing so yet is at least a financial neutral decision. His question is always, "do you want one?" "Me: I mean, not really, I'm renting a nice place with me GF, its all we need, and I'm putting a ton of money in the market." Him: Then, no.

More often than not, the buying the house is more of a "keeping up with the Joneses" thing rather than an investment strategy. Many if not most people can't wrap their heads around this. Rent is always "throwing money away." Yada yada. If one actually cranks out the math...the two are really not all that different.

It always comes down to individual circumstances about which one is correct.


Some of your points are fair. But I am in the camp that thinks "where you hang your hat everyday" should be what you want it to within reason. Can't put a price on the memories you and your family will make in a Home you put your heart and soul into. Not everything should be viewed as a numbers game/investment.

Obviously "within reason" is the key part here.

I get the keeping up with the joneses thought, but people are going to do what their family wants to do within reason. You could argue I went a bit over my skis on my current house, but my career is tracking well, and we absolutely love our neighborhood/community and have made thousands of longtime great family memories just in a little over a year in our current house that could be "the forever home" if it needed to be.

I'm also compensated as a contract employee and non-salary so risk comes with the territory I guess.



Sure, all makes sense. And all of this falls into "Do you want one?" Your answer to this, is yes, and you have "within reason" made financial decisions to support that. For a family, it absolutely makes sense to purchase a home within budget for all of the reasons you described.

As i've stated, my only point is that renting when considered with an overall financial strategy is not "throwing money away." When done properly, it can lead to better returns.

Quote:

He ended up borrowing from hos 401K, which he regrets now
This is "wanting" driving over a numbers financial decision...not a good place to be in.


Quote:

In addition to the 20K from not having a mortgage, I could also sell the house and downsize or use that money to invest


Sure, but you aren't getting that sweet sweet time in the market compounding returns/interest.

Investing 1,000,000 at 50 years old will not be as awesome as investing 1,000,000 at 30 years old (if one retires at 65).

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

My financial advisor says rent forever. I disagree.


Right, because...what do they know?
Please enlighten us.
Chris had a good rundown of what he did.

It ALWAYS comes down to individual circumstances.

But, the basic math one has to work from is that that the market (like the S&P) has out-performed real estate. (Sure, you will hear about someone getting lucky on their place, like "my home value jumped 150K in 3 years, but that is never sustained. On average, the market does better. And, especially while young, if you can get more money into the market and get it to grow early, you will be in much better shape than if you used that to buy a house).






But isn't there a flipside to that equation, when the house is paid off and monthly living expenses drop significantly?

I have a low interest rate mortgage so this may not make as much sense right now woth higher rates. But if my house was paid off right now it would lower my annual living expenses by about 20K, in interest and principal.

If you a figure 4% draw rate on retirement funds it would take about 500K to give me that 20K a year.

And it's not like if I'm renting I could just put the whole would be mortgage payment into the S&P since I'd have to pay rent first
Well, if you take a down payment of $60,000 you had to save up (I'm just assuming about 20% on 300k), invest that today. Then lets say in your area now, it takes about $2,500 to maintain a modest home versus $1,500 to rent, and you invest that $1,000 into index funds that return 10.26%. Over 30 years, that could theoretically be $3,197,498.46.

Now, obviously rent would go up over time, no guarantee of the same 10.26% index funds have earned, and assuming a $1,000 difference a month is, well, an assumption that may or may not be true. Even if you start at 1k a month, the rent will close in on the mortgage over time. That's the bet/gamble you are making either way. But investing consistently over 30 years the excess money it would cost to split the difference between a house(maintenance, insurance/taxes, mortgage, tools/lawn mower, etc) and renting I think likely would net you more than $500,000. I just did a quick play around changing the rent difference every 5 years, dropping it a couple hundred. It still netted over 2.5 million. Far more than the 500k needed to get 20k in your pocket in retirement.

All that said, personal preference still has to come into play, and of course the ability to sell the home in retirement if you fall on hard times to go back to renting is another option home owners have that renters do not.

Not to mention, if you really want that security, and invested that money like I showed in a previous paragraph to get a couple million, would that 300k home you could have bought in 2024 be worth less than 2mm in 2054? Over time, it likely would. If so, you can always buy at retirement and lock in your tax rate

There's a ton to factor in.
If I had invested the same amount that I used for my down payment into SPX re-investing dividends on my closing date. I'd have an 82% return today.. 1.82x

My equity in my house should I sell it today would net me a 9.6x, even adjusting for commissions, title and closing fees, and some minor repairs.

There's no comparison for me.

But again, I timed it extremely well. Which goes back to my previous post that timing matters. No, you can't predict the perfect time. Like you last post says, there's a ton to factor in. But purchasing a home is one of the main drivers of wealth creation for the middle class in this country's history. I do think the future will be different though, which is why my advice is to wait for either cheaper rates or a real estate correction if you are buying today. The rising home unaffordability rate won't just go up forever. Our economy always has and always will correct itself in some form or manner when things reach extreme levels.
This is a snapshot of what a long term investment horizon would look like. Take that down payment spending on SPX and stretch it over 30 years. Now do the same to the home price (adjusting for the typical appreciation in value).

Those numbers are likely MUCH closer than 1.82 v. 9.6.


Quote:

Quote:

My financial advisor says rent forever. I disagree.

I'd be interviewing new FA's...

Read beerad12man's post.

If you had bought the average house price in Texas after the 2008 crisis (end of 2011 - $150,000) and put 20% down, and sold today ($307,000), after adjusting for closing costs on both ends of the hold you would have netted around 4.75x. Remember this is the average texas house, so these numbers are probably on the conservative end for most of us)

SPX with dividends re-invested over the same term would be 4.47x.

Had you put 10% down on the house, even adjusting for PMI over term until today, you would have netted 7.9x.

Remember, these are state average prices. You likely would have had to do some repairs over the term, but its hard to include that in the calculation as using the average price is likely already taking that into account via the value of the house today, considering that repairs or upgrades would likely vault your value higher than average.

The average rent for a 3 bed in Texas over the same time period ($875 in 2011 to $1,430 today) would have given you an expense over the term of just shy of what you would have paid for mortgage, PMI, taxes, and insurance over the term. And let's be honest, those rent prices are probably just getting you an apartment or a lesser desired neighborhood. But we're keeping with averages.

In a general sense, your money was better off in a house than the stock market since the bottom of the great financial crisis (the last long term major point in time that you would have gone long with equity).

Like I've said multiple times now, timing matter for all investments. But historically, home equity has been the greatest generator of wealth for the average American.

http://danielamerman.com/va/HomeWealthOne.html
So, you cherry picked at the bottom of a housing crash up to today that captures a historic run up (and a decade of low interest rates) in the last 4 years, and still didn't' draw out the investment over 30 years?

Cool.

Historically, that's not true.

https://www.investopedia.com/ask/answers/052015/which-has-performed-better-historically-stock-market-or-real-estate.asp

BUT, that said, of course acute timing of the market can affect individual positions. But we are talking broad-based, on the average kind of numbers.




Read the article I posted on at the bottom of that post. Going back decades, home ownership has created more wealth than market returns.

And is it really cherry picked? I could have taken 10 years prior, and the returns in the market vs home ownership returns would have been even worse for market participants. Because the significant swings up and down in values of both mimick each other with the market sustaining far deeper drawdowns than home prices.

What you are not understanding is the difference between leverage and no leverage. People investing the equity they would put in their home in the stock market are not using leverage. If they are, then they are likely institutional level traders who are likely using similar leverage techniques to buy rental properties, thereby taking even more advantage of the value of home ownership as their expenses are wiped out by income AND they get the massive equity increase.

The average home buyer is using leverage on one investment, their home. That leverage over time has greatly exploded their wealth, with the majority of gains coming in the first 10 years of ownership.

That same person exposed to the stock market is merely making dollar for dollar with market gains.

As the currency has devalued over time, stock market participants have marginally benefitted as overall growth has beaten inflation. People with leveraged positions in the stock market have HUGELY beat those without. And again, people with leveraged positions in the housing market have HUGELY beat those without leveraged positions.
Well, considering people that are far more experienced and do this for a living have calculated all this out and have come up with markets have done better historically than home ownership. (And a quick google search produces hits from more reputable cites that Ol' Amerman that show that the market has historically provided better returns than homeownership....he is making alot of assumptions, specifically about an average person....which he acknowledges). Here is another just random article. https://www.wallstreetoasis.com/forum/real-estate/the-fallacy-of-homeownership-as-a-vehicle-for-wealth-creation

In the end, as has always been my point, it comes down to specific circumstances. But, as always, like clockwork, a real estate focused person always ALWAYS, says homeownership is the best way. Its not. It sometimes is.

All I know is that I'd rather take one million in a brokerage account today than have one million in home equity today.

Go back and read all of my posts from the last two pages. What has been the common theme? Hint, I italicized the part of your post. I've maintained that timing is the most important aspect to buying and that now is not a good time due to unaffordability in home prices and high interest rates.

And I would suggest you read the Amerman article again. And not just the first couple of paragraphs. His approach isn't to necessarily sit on it for 30 years as your article has a buyer doing, because the majority of the gains come from the first 3-4 cycles of price appreciation usually taking 12-15 years. That's the period where the leverage in your home is truly outpacing anything the stock market could ever hope to do over the same timeframe. After that, the compounding of returns slows drastically while returns in the market would stay steady and eventually outpace the home equity returns. So you either rotate into a new home, refinance, or take gains and move to a rent position until the next buying opportunity presents. Anyone who has experience with financial modeling and IRR knows that leveraged returns are highest early in the hold. In the example in your link, someone is merely sitting in a home for 30 years. While that's the case for a lot of Americans, it's not what Dan advises to do in the article I posted, as you would have realized had you read it.

It's also interesting that you hand waive away an example that I provided doing the analysis for a 13 year period and giving the conservative parameters I used, while linking a website with a very static analysis of a single general example full of unsupported assumptions. You can't have it both ways man.

Long story short, home equity IS the single biggest driver of wealth in this country. Are there times and examples where being in the market would have been better. Yes. Like you and I have both said, it depends on personal circumstances and timing.

"H-A: In return for the flattery, can you reduce the size of your signature? It's the only part of your posts that don't add value. In its' place, just put "I'm an investing savant, and make no apologies for it", as oldarmy1 would do."
- I Bleed Maroon (distracted easily by signatures)
Tex117
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Heineken-Ashi said:

Tex117 said:

Heineken-Ashi said:

Tex117 said:

Heineken-Ashi said:

Tex117 said:

WestHoustonAg79 said:

Tex117 said:

jamey said:

My financial advisor says rent forever. I disagree.


Right, because...what do they know?

Quote:

How much of your net worth is that $50K?

I've spent a lot of time and brainpower on the rent/buy decision. I think it comes down to personal preference. The finances are about even between the two.
That's assuming you're renting something reasonable, and saving and investing. If youre someone that blows any excess funds they have, then buying is a forced way to at least invest in something.

For buying a house, you need to consider a lot more than just the monthly P&I payment.
This is what the financial advisors are saying. This right here.

I ask my financial advisor every time I talk to him about buying a house and whether not doing so yet is at least a financial neutral decision. His question is always, "do you want one?" "Me: I mean, not really, I'm renting a nice place with me GF, its all we need, and I'm putting a ton of money in the market." Him: Then, no.

More often than not, the buying the house is more of a "keeping up with the Joneses" thing rather than an investment strategy. Many if not most people can't wrap their heads around this. Rent is always "throwing money away." Yada yada. If one actually cranks out the math...the two are really not all that different.

It always comes down to individual circumstances about which one is correct.


Some of your points are fair. But I am in the camp that thinks "where you hang your hat everyday" should be what you want it to within reason. Can't put a price on the memories you and your family will make in a Home you put your heart and soul into. Not everything should be viewed as a numbers game/investment.

Obviously "within reason" is the key part here.

I get the keeping up with the joneses thought, but people are going to do what their family wants to do within reason. You could argue I went a bit over my skis on my current house, but my career is tracking well, and we absolutely love our neighborhood/community and have made thousands of longtime great family memories just in a little over a year in our current house that could be "the forever home" if it needed to be.

I'm also compensated as a contract employee and non-salary so risk comes with the territory I guess.



Sure, all makes sense. And all of this falls into "Do you want one?" Your answer to this, is yes, and you have "within reason" made financial decisions to support that. For a family, it absolutely makes sense to purchase a home within budget for all of the reasons you described.

As i've stated, my only point is that renting when considered with an overall financial strategy is not "throwing money away." When done properly, it can lead to better returns.

Quote:

He ended up borrowing from hos 401K, which he regrets now
This is "wanting" driving over a numbers financial decision...not a good place to be in.


Quote:

In addition to the 20K from not having a mortgage, I could also sell the house and downsize or use that money to invest


Sure, but you aren't getting that sweet sweet time in the market compounding returns/interest.

Investing 1,000,000 at 50 years old will not be as awesome as investing 1,000,000 at 30 years old (if one retires at 65).

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My financial advisor says rent forever. I disagree.


Right, because...what do they know?
Please enlighten us.
Chris had a good rundown of what he did.

It ALWAYS comes down to individual circumstances.

But, the basic math one has to work from is that that the market (like the S&P) has out-performed real estate. (Sure, you will hear about someone getting lucky on their place, like "my home value jumped 150K in 3 years, but that is never sustained. On average, the market does better. And, especially while young, if you can get more money into the market and get it to grow early, you will be in much better shape than if you used that to buy a house).






But isn't there a flipside to that equation, when the house is paid off and monthly living expenses drop significantly?

I have a low interest rate mortgage so this may not make as much sense right now woth higher rates. But if my house was paid off right now it would lower my annual living expenses by about 20K, in interest and principal.

If you a figure 4% draw rate on retirement funds it would take about 500K to give me that 20K a year.

And it's not like if I'm renting I could just put the whole would be mortgage payment into the S&P since I'd have to pay rent first
Well, if you take a down payment of $60,000 you had to save up (I'm just assuming about 20% on 300k), invest that today. Then lets say in your area now, it takes about $2,500 to maintain a modest home versus $1,500 to rent, and you invest that $1,000 into index funds that return 10.26%. Over 30 years, that could theoretically be $3,197,498.46.

Now, obviously rent would go up over time, no guarantee of the same 10.26% index funds have earned, and assuming a $1,000 difference a month is, well, an assumption that may or may not be true. Even if you start at 1k a month, the rent will close in on the mortgage over time. That's the bet/gamble you are making either way. But investing consistently over 30 years the excess money it would cost to split the difference between a house(maintenance, insurance/taxes, mortgage, tools/lawn mower, etc) and renting I think likely would net you more than $500,000. I just did a quick play around changing the rent difference every 5 years, dropping it a couple hundred. It still netted over 2.5 million. Far more than the 500k needed to get 20k in your pocket in retirement.

All that said, personal preference still has to come into play, and of course the ability to sell the home in retirement if you fall on hard times to go back to renting is another option home owners have that renters do not.

Not to mention, if you really want that security, and invested that money like I showed in a previous paragraph to get a couple million, would that 300k home you could have bought in 2024 be worth less than 2mm in 2054? Over time, it likely would. If so, you can always buy at retirement and lock in your tax rate

There's a ton to factor in.
If I had invested the same amount that I used for my down payment into SPX re-investing dividends on my closing date. I'd have an 82% return today.. 1.82x

My equity in my house should I sell it today would net me a 9.6x, even adjusting for commissions, title and closing fees, and some minor repairs.

There's no comparison for me.

But again, I timed it extremely well. Which goes back to my previous post that timing matters. No, you can't predict the perfect time. Like you last post says, there's a ton to factor in. But purchasing a home is one of the main drivers of wealth creation for the middle class in this country's history. I do think the future will be different though, which is why my advice is to wait for either cheaper rates or a real estate correction if you are buying today. The rising home unaffordability rate won't just go up forever. Our economy always has and always will correct itself in some form or manner when things reach extreme levels.
This is a snapshot of what a long term investment horizon would look like. Take that down payment spending on SPX and stretch it over 30 years. Now do the same to the home price (adjusting for the typical appreciation in value).

Those numbers are likely MUCH closer than 1.82 v. 9.6.


Quote:

Quote:

My financial advisor says rent forever. I disagree.

I'd be interviewing new FA's...

Read beerad12man's post.

If you had bought the average house price in Texas after the 2008 crisis (end of 2011 - $150,000) and put 20% down, and sold today ($307,000), after adjusting for closing costs on both ends of the hold you would have netted around 4.75x. Remember this is the average texas house, so these numbers are probably on the conservative end for most of us)

SPX with dividends re-invested over the same term would be 4.47x.

Had you put 10% down on the house, even adjusting for PMI over term until today, you would have netted 7.9x.

Remember, these are state average prices. You likely would have had to do some repairs over the term, but its hard to include that in the calculation as using the average price is likely already taking that into account via the value of the house today, considering that repairs or upgrades would likely vault your value higher than average.

The average rent for a 3 bed in Texas over the same time period ($875 in 2011 to $1,430 today) would have given you an expense over the term of just shy of what you would have paid for mortgage, PMI, taxes, and insurance over the term. And let's be honest, those rent prices are probably just getting you an apartment or a lesser desired neighborhood. But we're keeping with averages.

In a general sense, your money was better off in a house than the stock market since the bottom of the great financial crisis (the last long term major point in time that you would have gone long with equity).

Like I've said multiple times now, timing matter for all investments. But historically, home equity has been the greatest generator of wealth for the average American.

http://danielamerman.com/va/HomeWealthOne.html
So, you cherry picked at the bottom of a housing crash up to today that captures a historic run up (and a decade of low interest rates) in the last 4 years, and still didn't' draw out the investment over 30 years?

Cool.

Historically, that's not true.

https://www.investopedia.com/ask/answers/052015/which-has-performed-better-historically-stock-market-or-real-estate.asp

BUT, that said, of course acute timing of the market can affect individual positions. But we are talking broad-based, on the average kind of numbers.




Read the article I posted on at the bottom of that post. Going back decades, home ownership has created more wealth than market returns.

And is it really cherry picked? I could have taken 10 years prior, and the returns in the market vs home ownership returns would have been even worse for market participants. Because the significant swings up and down in values of both mimick each other with the market sustaining far deeper drawdowns than home prices.

What you are not understanding is the difference between leverage and no leverage. People investing the equity they would put in their home in the stock market are not using leverage. If they are, then they are likely institutional level traders who are likely using similar leverage techniques to buy rental properties, thereby taking even more advantage of the value of home ownership as their expenses are wiped out by income AND they get the massive equity increase.

The average home buyer is using leverage on one investment, their home. That leverage over time has greatly exploded their wealth, with the majority of gains coming in the first 10 years of ownership.

That same person exposed to the stock market is merely making dollar for dollar with market gains.

As the currency has devalued over time, stock market participants have marginally benefitted as overall growth has beaten inflation. People with leveraged positions in the stock market have HUGELY beat those without. And again, people with leveraged positions in the housing market have HUGELY beat those without leveraged positions.
Well, considering people that are far more experienced and do this for a living have calculated all this out and have come up with markets have done better historically than home ownership. (And a quick google search produces hits from more reputable cites that Ol' Amerman that show that the market has historically provided better returns than homeownership....he is making alot of assumptions, specifically about an average person....which he acknowledges). Here is another just random article. https://www.wallstreetoasis.com/forum/real-estate/the-fallacy-of-homeownership-as-a-vehicle-for-wealth-creation

In the end, as has always been my point, it comes down to specific circumstances. But, as always, like clockwork, a real estate focused person always ALWAYS, says homeownership is the best way. Its not. It sometimes is.

All I know is that I'd rather take one million in a brokerage account today than have one million in home equity today.

Go back and read all of my posts from the last two pages. What has been the common theme? Hint, I italicized the part of your post. I've maintained that timing is the most important aspect to buying and that now is not a good time due to unaffordability in home prices and high interest rates.

And I would suggest you read the Amerman article again. And not just the first couple of paragraphs. His approach isn't to necessarily sit on it for 30 years as your article has a buyer doing, because the majority of the gains come from the first 3-4 cycles of price appreciation usually taking 12-15 years. That's the period where the leverage in your home is truly outpacing anything the stock market could ever hope to do over the same timeframe. After that, the compounding of returns slows drastically while returns in the market would stay steady and eventually outpace the home equity returns. So you either rotate into a new home, refinance, or take gains and move to a rent position until the next buying opportunity presents. Anyone who has experience with financial modeling and IRR knows that leveraged returns are highest early in the hold. In the example in your link, someone is merely sitting in a home for 30 years. While that's the case for a lot of Americans, it's not what Dan advises to do in the article I posted, as you would have realized had you read it.

It's also interesting that you hand waive away an example that I provided doing the analysis for a 13 year period and giving the conservative parameters I used, while linking a website with a very static analysis of a single general example full of unsupported assumptions. You can't have it both ways man.

Long story short, home equity IS the single biggest driver of wealth in this country. Are there times and examples where being in the market would have been better. Yes. Like you and I have both said, it depends on personal circumstances and timing.


But your article implied that it wasn't just timing...Yet, you are saying its timing. Of course you can make alot of money if you time the market. Both in real estate and in stocks. Almost all experts agree that timing the market is a fools errand.

The fact that home equity IS the single biggest driver of wealth in the country, doesn't mean that its the BEST driver of wealth in this country without exception.

There are countless, literally countless, articles on the front page and after of google that support what I'm saying. And many more pages after that. Also, many financial advisors give the same answer.

In the end, which we do agree, and has been my only point, is that the best financial decision to accumulate wealth (I'm ignoring a difference between home equity wealth and actual liquidity), is much more fact dependent than many people give it credit for. Some people take the home ownership advice without ever questioning it. But that may not be as much as s driver of wealth as renting/investing can produce over 30 years all things considered. It could. But not necessarily.

You can't say, without exception, that if you had the funds to do the real estate play you are describing, it is the BEST way to accumulate wealth.

(I do think we are likely closer to agreeing than it seems, but the limitations of posts rather than in person conversation means things are getting lost).

Heineken-Ashi
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Ya there's no point in carrying forward with this. You've made your point and I've made mine and we agree far more than we don't. Enjoyed the discourse.
"H-A: In return for the flattery, can you reduce the size of your signature? It's the only part of your posts that don't add value. In its' place, just put "I'm an investing savant, and make no apologies for it", as oldarmy1 would do."
- I Bleed Maroon (distracted easily by signatures)
Tex117
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Heineken-Ashi said:

Ya there's no point in carrying forward with this. You've made your point and I've made mine and we agree far more than we don't. Enjoyed the discourse.
Yup. Absolutely. (And congrats on crushing it with the market time!)

Seven Costanza
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I'm sure most of you are already aware of this, but this calculator has all of the adjustable inputs you would want to make a decision (taxes, closing costs, property taxes, maintenance costs, return on investments, etc.)

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2024/upshot/buy-rent-calculator.html

It's difficult to use on mobile, in my opinion. Also, not sure how this makes sense, but it seems to not require a login if you connect to it via search engine, but does if you click on the link.
Heineken-Ashi
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I put in all of the factors from the example I gave of an average house in Texas and this was the result..

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2024/upshot/buy-rent-calculator.html?years=13&buyPrice=150000&buyInterestRate=0.04&buyPropertyTaxRate=0.025&buyGrowthRate=0.08&buyPurchaseClosingRate=0.03&buySellClosingRate=0.07&buyCommonChargePerMonth=71&buyUtilitiesCostPerMonth=0&buyInsuranceRate=0.01&buyOtherItemizations=25025&investmentReturnRate=0.146&inflationRate=0.025&TCJARenewed=1&monthlyRent=875&rentIncreasePerYear=0.05
"H-A: In return for the flattery, can you reduce the size of your signature? It's the only part of your posts that don't add value. In its' place, just put "I'm an investing savant, and make no apologies for it", as oldarmy1 would do."
- I Bleed Maroon (distracted easily by signatures)
Seven Costanza
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I can't read it since it is shared link, but I've never had any doubt that buying is a better long term option from a purely financial perspective when making an apples to apples comparison.
Seven Costanza
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I think an interesting questions is, is there a point in retirement where it would make sense to sell a paid off home in order to rent the same type of home in order to "unlock" the money that it tied up in the home?

If you have a $500k home that is paid off, then really that asset is giving you in return whatever it would cost you to rent the same type of home (let's say $2500/month, which would be low for that home). Subtract out $1000/month from that return because you are still paying property taxes, insurance, maintenance costs (just picking a round number, obviously these factors are highly variable) on the home and you are essentially only getting $1500/month or $18,000/year return on your $500k asset. That's a 3.6% annual return on your asset. It seems like it would make more sense to use that $500k in the market (of course most people are understandibly much more conservative with their investments during their latter years, so that 3.6% might not be too bad). Or if you have a "die with zero" mentality, then selling would open up a new line of money to blow before you die.

I wouldn't do it, but it's a thought.
Heineken-Ashi
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On another forum I'm with a boat load of very successful traders, that was a conversation over the weekend. Some see a real estate selloff. Some see stagnation. Some see continued strength. But many in the retirement class are considering selling out and using the equity to fund long term renting and income producing investments. Texas has beneficial tax exemptions that make it a harder decision. It was interesting hearing the multiple perspectives, similar to the back and forth we had on here today.

Close to retirement or past retirement and equity that's no longer producing returns in a paid off house, I can understand wanting to put it to better use and downsize. Might not have as much time as younger people to wait for the next buying opp to grow wealth through home equity.

Most of them were fairly consistent though in that their extra cash would be going towards metals short term.
"H-A: In return for the flattery, can you reduce the size of your signature? It's the only part of your posts that don't add value. In its' place, just put "I'm an investing savant, and make no apologies for it", as oldarmy1 would do."
- I Bleed Maroon (distracted easily by signatures)
jamey
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I'm warming up to the idea of splitting the difference and just downsize.

Dallas is out of control on housing prices but these are numbers I'm familiar with. At retirement, sell a 650K house and buy a newer
400K house just 20 miles north of the metroplex and put the 200K in proceeds in the taxable account. Call that 4%200K or 8K a year in extra cash. The 12K in taxes and insurance drops about 4K, so in total I got about a 1000 per month more money and less expenses in total. Im also not running an old AC unit to cool/heat an upstairs I never see. The living space would be bigger, turn a bedroom into a gameroom and media room I'll use
bangobango
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I don't know any truly wealthy people who rent. I'm sure there are a few examples out there, but the millionaires I know, and I know several, don't rent.

And those on this thread maybe have the discipline to invest the "savings" from renting, but the facts show that the majority of people don't.

And I have never bought into this idea that you should deprive yourself in the best years of your life just so you can save and invest a few dollars more every year and retire ten years early or something. I can't imagine being 30+ years old or having a family and living in some sheethole apartment or rent house just because I wanted to save an extra $300 month to put into the stock market.

But if that's what floats your boat, you do you. Like I said, it's just my opinion.
Petrino1
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bangobango said:

I don't know any truly wealthy people who rent. I'm sure there are a few examples out there, but the millionaires I know, and I know several, don't rent.

And those on this thread maybe have the discipline to invest the "savings" from renting, but the facts show that the majority of people don't.

And I have never bought into this idea that you should deprive yourself in the best years of your life just so you can save and invest a few dollars more every year and retire ten years early or something. I can't imagine being 30+ years old or having a family and living in some sheethole apartment or rent house just because I wanted to save an extra $300 month to put into the stock market.

But if that's what floats your boat, you do you. Like I said, it's just my opinion.
The truly wealthy people own because they can afford to, owning a home likely didnt make them wealthy. The average non-wealthy person with 30-50k in their savings, probably shouldnt put their entire net worth in an illiquid asset like a house.
beerad12man
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bangobango said:

I don't know any truly wealthy people who rent. I'm sure there are a few examples out there, but the millionaires I know, and I know several, don't rent.

And those on this thread maybe have the discipline to invest the "savings" from renting, but the facts show that the majority of people don't.

And I have never bought into this idea that you should deprive yourself in the best years of your life just so you can save and invest a few dollars more every year and retire ten years early or something. I can't imagine being 30+ years old or having a family and living in some sheethole apartment or rent house just because I wanted to save an extra $300 month to put into the stock market.

But if that's what floats your boat, you do you. Like I said, it's just my opinion.

Like Petrino said, Correlation does not equal causation. The majority of people who can afford it prefer to own their own home. I think most agree that it's a more freeing lifestyle, and usually comes with a bigger lot / garage / more room. That doesn't mean they became more wealthy going that route than renting, it just means that naturally most people gravitate towards that if they have the financial option. Also, this could be an inner circle thing. there are most definitely wealthy renters. You just may not associate with them. They are an odd breed, no doubt. But I would imagine most wealthy renters just keep to themselves and have wealth more or less in secret, not flaunting it with the big house.

That said, of course most people aren't disciplined to invest monthly(outside of automatic contributions) and make renting worth it. That doesn't mean that mathematically, you can't come out ahead. It just takes discipline, restraint, and consistency.

I will easily be a "millionaire" by the time I hit 50 at my current pace simply renting. Only possible way I won't be is if I have a major health issue derailing things. I will probably be a millionaire by 50 if I make a good home purchase and the value of the home holds, and repairs/maintenance or being potentially house poor don't cause me to dip into savings. But mathematically, it isn't as much of a certainty from the numbers I am punching.

But since I will have the money, I will likely buy as that's a goal of mine, therefore naturally making me another millionaire who owns rather than rents. But again, it won't be a financial decision to own, nor will the home ownership be the reason. I just hope to break even in my wealth from home ownership compared to investing more.

Also, your definition of "deprive" might be different than someone else. Maybe they consider someone owning a home and being relatively cash poor compared to them depriving themselves? Don't forget, that "sheethole apartment" is probably better than 95% of people lived 50+ years ago. Just because American's play keep up with the Joneses doesn't mean that another person has to buy into that, nor sacrifice other things that maybe they value differently than you. I live relatively frugal, and it's still a nicer home with nicer countertops/flooring/living space than what I grew up in 25 years ago in my fathers (still) owned home.
double aught
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Quote:

Also, your definition of "deprive" might be different than someone else. Maybe they consider someone owning a home and being relatively cash poor compared to them depriving themselves? Don't forget, that "sheethole apartment" is probably better than 95% of people lived 50+ years ago. Just because American's play keep up with the Joneses doesn't mean that another person has to buy into that, nor sacrifice other things that maybe they value differently than you. I live relatively frugal, and it's still a nicer home with nicer countertops/flooring/living space than what I grew up in 25 years ago in my fathers (still) owned home
This is a great point about perspective. A working class American getting by paycheck to paycheck is still living better than 90% of people elsewhere on the planet.
Tex117
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Heineken-Ashi said:

On another forum I'm with a boat load of very successful traders, that was a conversation over the weekend. Some see a real estate selloff. Some see stagnation. Some see continued strength. But many in the retirement class are considering selling out and using the equity to fund long term renting and income producing investments. Texas has beneficial tax exemptions that make it a harder decision. It was interesting hearing the multiple perspectives, similar to the back and forth we had on here today.

Close to retirement or past retirement and equity that's no longer producing returns in a paid off house, I can understand wanting to put it to better use and downsize. Might not have as much time as younger people to wait for the next buying opp to grow wealth through home equity.

Most of them were fairly consistent though in that their extra cash would be going towards metals short term.
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Tex117
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bangobango said:

I don't know any truly wealthy people who rent. I'm sure there are a few examples out there, but the millionaires I know, and I know several, don't rent.

And those on this thread maybe have the discipline to invest the "savings" from renting, but the facts show that the majority of people don't.

And I have never bought into this idea that you should deprive yourself in the best years of your life just so you can save and invest a few dollars more every year and retire ten years early or something. I can't imagine being 30+ years old or having a family and living in some sheethole apartment or rent house just because I wanted to save an extra $300 month to put into the stock market.

But if that's what floats your boat, you do you. Like I said, it's just my opinion.
I know plenty of wealthy people that rent. Like beard said, its correlation, not causation. After awhile, its all economies of scale. Getting to 1 million dollars invested takes awhile for most average people. 2 million, also takes awhile After that though, the market can increase in much smaller increments but you are getting much bigger jumps.

The basic idea.
https://www.investor.gov/financial-tools-calculators/calculators/compound-interest-calculator

But, as you said, for a family, it would be tough living in a sheethole apartment. For them, buying a home makes sense (no one said its a BAD financial decision, it can be, but its often not). I can say that if I had kids and knew I was staying put for awhile, I would have bought a place. Not because its the best financial decision but because its the best life decision.

Quote:

Quote:

I don't know any truly wealthy people who rent. I'm sure there are a few examples out there, but the millionaires I know, and I know several, don't rent.

And those on this thread maybe have the discipline to invest the "savings" from renting, but the facts show that the majority of people don't.

And I have never bought into this idea that you should deprive yourself in the best years of your life just so you can save and invest a few dollars more every year and retire ten years early or something. I can't imagine being 30+ years old or having a family and living in some sheethole apartment or rent house just because I wanted to save an extra $300 month to put into the stock market.

But if that's what floats your boat, you do you. Like I said, it's just my opinion.

That doesn't mean they became more wealthy going that route than renting, it just means that naturally most people gravitate towards that if they have the financial option. Also, this could be an inner circle thing. there are most definitely wealthy renters. You just may not associate with them. They are an odd breed, no doubt. But I would imagine most wealthy renters just keep to themselves and have wealth more or less in secret, not flaunting it with the big house.

That said, of course most people aren't disciplined to invest monthly(outside of automatic contributions) and make renting worth it. That doesn't mean that mathematically, you can't come out ahead. It just takes discipline, restraint, and consistency.


This is interesting. Homeowners have absolutely zero reservation about telling people how much their property value has increased. Its not uncommon (nor does it seem to be particularly frowned upon) to hear someone say "yeah, my house value increased $150K, or I bought it for X sold at Y" yada yada.

However, if a renter (whom already get "looked down upon" from a homeowner) says something like "yeah, my brokerage account increased 150K last year" or you give the balance, then that is somehow tacky. So, Im not surprised you haven't heard much about it.

I can say that most renter/heavy investors are often a bit odd because they haven't followed "THE PATH" (usually, or they have left "THE PATH". Ie, get married, have kids, get a too expensive mortgage (but its a very nice neighborhood, so it feels better), then start thinking about (i) college for kids and/or (ii) retirement.

The renting and investing thing really works when you can squirrel away some real money and get to some bigger numbers as quickly as possible while young. Then let father time do the rest.
double aught
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All my increased home value does for me in the here and now is give me higher taxes.

I guess it keeps the neighborhood nice too.
Heineken-Ashi
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Tex117 said:

Heineken-Ashi said:

On another forum I'm with a boat load of very successful traders, that was a conversation over the weekend. Some see a real estate selloff. Some see stagnation. Some see continued strength. But many in the retirement class are considering selling out and using the equity to fund long term renting and income producing investments. Texas has beneficial tax exemptions that make it a harder decision. It was interesting hearing the multiple perspectives, similar to the back and forth we had on here today.

Close to retirement or past retirement and equity that's no longer producing returns in a paid off house, I can understand wanting to put it to better use and downsize. Might not have as much time as younger people to wait for the next buying opp to grow wealth through home equity.

Most of them were fairly consistent though in that their extra cash would be going towards metals short term.
Where do you like to hang out? Wouldn't mind checking that out.
Shoot me an email. Screenname with no dash at yahoo
"H-A: In return for the flattery, can you reduce the size of your signature? It's the only part of your posts that don't add value. In its' place, just put "I'm an investing savant, and make no apologies for it", as oldarmy1 would do."
- I Bleed Maroon (distracted easily by signatures)
cwsaggie
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And the financial advisor may get a cut of the assets you invest. Funny how that works.
hedge
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I'm my own financial asvisor
cwsaggie
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Same here, maybe I should have been my own realtor too.
woodiewood
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Each situation is unique including job security and real estate location. Is your job secure or would there be employment options without having to sell the house. If you sell your house within three years of purchase, muck of the time you will be economically underwater on it.

As far as purchase of a home, a major consideration is location, location, location to a large degree. I purchased a home that is in a unique location and it has gone up right at 350% in the past 11 years. Work out of my home so I can deduct 9% of the mortgage, taxes, insurance, maintenance, utilities, and any roof and AC repairs, etc.
schwack schwack
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Quote:

extra cash would be going towards metals short term.
Not to derail this post, but would like to know more.
 
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