02-26-2013, 07:56 AM | #177 | |
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By reading most of your posts in this thread I would say you are California Jaded. California is a beautiful place... but it is broke. I I would put my house in California it would be a $10-$20 million home. Every thing about california and its life and realestate is broke. Not to mention taxes and infrastructure.
NOW is a great time to buy. I live in Charlotte, fastest growing city in the country for the last few years... Second largest financial hub in the country (NYC #1). We bought a house in April last year and just had it appraised last friday... We put zero money down luckily we got a 1.9% mortgage rate. We now have 54% equity in the home with out putting money down. It is all about location and the metropolis you are closest to. Plus it helps that we live on one of the top 20 private country clubs in the USA. But once again location location location. The only realestate you can compare most of california to is Detroit. Where if you buy a house and want to get rid of it in a few years, you are going to lose your ass. But California is really Pretty... ![]() Quote:
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02-26-2013, 11:37 AM | #178 |
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California is great if you can afford it. The problem is far too many people try to live above their means just to stay here.
For the most part though, my sentiment about CA Real Estate has changed slightly. Compared to rising rents, and the typical payment for a house with 20% down, there are many places hitting rental parity. People say CA is leaking jobs, and the economy is slowing down here, but I don't see such a drastic slow down (yet).
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02-26-2013, 12:01 PM | #179 | |
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Rents are up and there are a whole bunch of first time or second time 'first time' home buyers out there. |
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02-26-2013, 04:12 PM | #180 |
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Rents are rising because the economy is recovering; in my opinion. Those that lost nearly everything in 08/09 are finding jobs. Those jobs allow them to move out of their parents/friends houses. This increases demand for rentals (because they don't have enough saved for a 20% down payment and/or their credit is shot from foreclosure).
Will be a landlords market for some time. Wahoo. |
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09-27-2013, 11:56 AM | #181 | |
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And, it's over.
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2013-0...asury-bail-out FHA has officially gone insolvent and failed. Just announced yesterday that FHA needs a bailout for the first time in its nearly 80 year history. The institution now needs $1.7 billion dollars just to stay afloat just as I predicted back in 2011. 48 laws should never ever give advice to anyone on mortgages for the rest of his life. ![]() Quote:
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09-27-2013, 12:35 PM | #182 | |
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09-27-2013, 01:22 PM | #183 | |
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That's simply the FHA's "feel sorry for us" reason for it's failure so the treasury will give them the $2 billion dollars in bailout money. "We're trying to help senior citizens!" is a lot more palatable than "We gave money to people with sub-600 FICO scores, becoming the NEW sub-prime, and f*cked ourselves. Now we need tax payer money." The FHA had delinquency rate increases of 10%, 27%, in 2010, 2011, respectively. Anyone who didn't see this coming literally had blinders on. They knew they were properly f*cked at the end of last year because they suddenly shot fees up all across the board for consumers looking for an FHA backed loan: http://www.businessweek.com/news/201...h-2012-deficit They also KNEW they had a nearly $20 billion dollar shortfall last year and would have no chance to cover their losses. But as I predicted, FHA is going to hurt all of us in the end, because guys like 48Laws, and other FHA opportunist thought 3.5% down on anything is a great idea.
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09-27-2013, 02:39 PM | #184 |
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09-30-2013, 03:23 PM | #185 |
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If you can beat rental rates, it's a good time. Rents are rising too, but in many areas of SoCal at least the rent/buy ratio is way off.
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11-22-2013, 01:26 AM | #186 |
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The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has prepared a study for Congress over the state of reverse mortgages in the nation. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is worried about reverse mortgages having a damaging effect on seniors who borrow them against the equity in their homes during retirement.
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