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For your home you need to weigh quality of life, vs. the investment. Life is too short, go for it.
I don't know about soil conditions on your coast, but around here you don't want to leave a pool empty. They can (and will ) float with wet soil conditions. They are also probably not strong enough to withstand extended unbalanced fill conditions. |
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When we sold our house in Pasadena in '02, we had 15 offers within 48 hours of it being on the market and people literally begging us to counter (all but one offer was above the asking price). We countered to 5 people at $50K above asking, had another 3 who countered higher still. ahh, them was the days... |
Congratulations, Wayne. I think you made a good choice for your family.
I am in a similar situation, and looking for the right ppty at the right price. Have not found it yet, but if I do, I see no reason to wait. Most sellers are still delusional, but it's nice to hear that some are ready to price appropriately I love PV (as does my wife). Wish I could buy there, but my job is 10-20 miles North of El Segundo. Great idea with the pool! |
Everybody's gotta live somewhere. Congratulations, Wayne. May you enjoy your home for years to come...
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Wayne... YOUR A BIG POOPYHEAD!
Naw, what everyone else said.... wife and kids need need a home, house is not a investment, blah, blah, blah... PV definitely does not suck and very likely safe as far as the property holding value. GOOD JOB! |
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Guess thats stupid economics but its a hell of a lot better than paying off the morgage for someone else. |
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What is it about the loan product you getting that is better than a fixed 30 year? Wouldn't the rate be around the same for a 30?
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Actually Wayne, I echo Kerry's curiousity about your financing. How does that loan work, and how is it better than a simple fixed rate? There's good regular rates to be had, I have a 20 year fixed at 5.75%.
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If your plan pans out, it makes sense. I think you're somewhat underestimating the security that is owning your own home, but that might be more important to me than it is to others.
However, I feel that the tax benefits of paying interest are hugely overrated. You pay thousands in interest, money you never get back, and save a fraction of that on taxes. Ultimately, you are still losing money by paying that interest, i.e. paying less interest saves you money. Being able to itemize typically saves you money, but I'd guess that you still are paying more in interest than you are saving on your taxes. |
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Email me for a killer deal on a 1% 30 year loan!
I can even do zero down! ;) rjp (PS- really don't take this a solicitation, it's just a joke. I don't need the whole board running for cover just because I said that) Quote:
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I had not heard of the changed inflation formula, if this is true I need the facts so I can ask for a pay raise ASAP. :D Is the CPI different than it used to be? Can you share any links? PS Where are those 3-car garage picks? |
Looking good Wayne.
Now to the important part, where are the pictures of the garage? How tall are the garage ceilings? Bill |
Keep the pool filled and install a baby fence - all my kids learned to swim by the time they were 4.
Do the garage floor before you move in your junk - trust me on this I was wondering how long your wifey would go |
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Seriously, congrats on a beautiful home. |
U Boyz make me laugh.
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Congrats, Wayne. Many years of happiness, there.
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From the pictures, it looks great!
I suspect that you are probably just a little "early" (probably by just a few months -- not unlike your closing your short positions on the banking stocks a few months "too early" last year -- but that's looking at your short positions in hind-sight; to have predicted, last summer, that it would have played out in the time-frame it did, wasn't so easy). As others have pointed out, the place you live in is not an "investment." And any decline in real estate would just be a "general" decline in house prices; it doesn't mean that house, or one similarly "perfect" for you, would have been available at a lower price in the months to come. And I still see the possibility -- with the government continuing to pump such liquidity into the economy -- that severe price inflation may come with such suddenness, that real estate might "recover" (on a devalued-dollar basis) much faster than expected. A lot of people with low fixed-rate home loans will actually be making money on their loans if the inflation rate is higher than their interest rate! |
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On the pool... I grew up with a pool and learned how to swim by age 4-5. Best safety net is all of the kids knowing how to swim and then a safety fence around the pool. We had a kid entrance to the pool where you could walk up a ramp out of the pool and it worked wonders for safety. Everyone knew how to swim and all they had to do was get towards the shallow end and then wade out of the pool. |
Wayne,
Congrats on the home purchase! |
We had a removable pool fence installed by: http://www.babyguardfence.com/
Works great and my son has been enjoying the pool since he was about 4 months old. The whole thing is easily removed for party's or when the kids get older. Congrats on the house! |
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I also concur they work really well and are easily taken down/put up. Good option. |
Nice casa Wayne. I'm sure you made the right move.
However, no one asked about your current or previous house, so I will in order to complete the overview. Did you sell your current house or keeping it for rental? Buying property is relatively unencumbered if there isn't a property to sell. That's the hard part in the real estate equation. It's currently a buyer's market, not so a couple of years ago. A house not an investment? Perhaps, but it shouldn't be an albatross either. People only say it's not an investment when they don't plan to sell. However, if the value tumbles and the mortgage stays the same, that's a little hard to swallow, especially when your neighbor is able to purchase a comparable home for much, much less. Let's hope the RE market stabilizes soon. Sherwood |
Good to see you are closing the pool. That's a real hazard with small kids. Drowning is the #1 cause of accidental death on kids 1-4 in CA.
George |
911 PCars - Uh Oh
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