Rent, Don't Buy, Your Home

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Rent, Don't Buy, Your Home
By Justin Ewers, usnews.com
Jun 26th, 2008

Real-estate agents have been pushing the virtues of homeownership since homes were invented. Or since real-estate agents were invented, anyway. Paying a mortgage, they insist, is a can't-miss investment (the tax breaks, the appreciation, the thrill of fixing your own roof!). Renting is for simpletons who don't like keeping their own money.

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But does owning a home really trump renting? With the economy stumbling, house prices falling, and credit tightening, many housing experts are questioning the conventional wisdom. "Over the last decade, it may have been true," says W. Van Harlow, an economist at the Fidelity Research Institute. "Clearly, there are periods where [the housing market] will dominate. But give this market correction another 18 months, and it may not be true anymore."

Not so hot. The housing boom produced endless stories of homeowners getting twice what they paid for their homes. But "prices don't always go up," says Jay Butler, director of realty studies at Arizona State University. Even a boomtown like Phoenix has seen median rates of appreciation climb only 4.6 percent a year since 1981. According to a Fidelity study published this year, the return on a dollar invested in real estate in 1963 barely beat that of a low-risk treasury bill.

When the housing market slumps—as it has every 10 or 15 years for the past several decades—homeownership becomes little more than renting, from a bank. Without appreciation, buying a $400,000 house—instead of renting the same property for, say, $2,000 a month—can turn into an expensive, potentially money-losing proposition. Assuming home prices come out of their death spiral (prices fell 4.5 percent in the third quarter compared with last year), they would still have to appreciate at 4 percent every year for a decade—even if rents climbed well above the rate of inflation—before a family would save more owning than renting. An $80,000 down payment could be invested instead in a mutual fund earning 8 percent, and housing comes with myriad other expenses, from maintenance to insurance to taxes, none of which build equity. Tax breaks do ease the pain. But with the average family staying in a house only six years, homeownership during a slump (especially in foreclosure pits like Las Vegas and Tampa, where prices have dropped more than 9 percent since last year) can look less and less like the American dream.

Renting, meanwhile, has its virtues. It's cheaper in the short term, it offers maximum flexibility, and it pushes the headaches of maintenance and taxes onto landlords. It can also be a sound long-term investment. According to Fidelity, if renters save even $300 a month—the difference, say, between their rent and a monthly mortgage payment—that money, invested in stocks growing at only 4 percent, could add up to $114,000 in 20 years. (And that's on top of earnings on a down payment that never had to be made.) "Over long horizons, if you reinvest the savings," Harlow says, "you're probably not going to find that much difference between renting and buying." Saving hasn't proved to be the national forte, of course. But with the bloom off the homeownership rose, it may have to be soon.

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There are advantages and

There are advantages and disadvantages to both renting and purchasing, but purchasing is, by far, the best choice in the long run with "long run" being the operative term. Renting is, without a doubt, the best choice for many people, but if you are certain you are not going to be moving out of your area for the next 20 years or so and you can afford the maintenance costs, purchasing is the way to go.

My neighbor purchased the house next door to me because he was paying the same amount in rent for his spoiled children to live here while going to college (my parents, bless their hearts, couldn't afford to pay squat and I had to work 3 jobs while going to school, but that's another rant). Now, after two years, his ungrateful brats dropped out of school, took off across the country to "find themselves" and left dad, who lives 1,500 miles away, holding the bag. The dad had no luck selling the place, but had no trouble finding some renters to pay his mortgage plus a little extra to cover maintenance costs and taxes. This leaves the door open for a plethora of things that could go wrong. It is definitely not the ideal situation, but as rents go up over the next few years, his payments will remain the same and the situation will become more tolerable.

The moral of the story is that by thinking outside the box purchasing doesn't, by necessity, limit your options to an unbearable degree. The differences between renting and purchasing are 6 of one and a half dozen of the other depending on your situation. The reason many people are finding themselves in the housing crisis situation they are in is because they didn't do their homework, they had unreasonable expectations about their futures and/or they didn't bother reading or were unable to comprehend their contracts. I don't feel sorry for those people, but I generally don't feel sorry for people who choose to remain ignorant and simply hope for the best.

In any endeavor you decide to undertake, you will not be successful without doing your homework. In that respect, purchasing a home is no different than day trading or anything else in life for that matter.

Think outside the box, but only after you have done your homework first!

Posted by Nick (not verified) on Sun, 06/29/2008 - 12:08
Don't buy a house as an investment

1) Don't buy a house as an investment. Buy it if you want a place to live that you can call your own.
2) Right now may be a bad time to buy. The prices are still falling.

Posted by David S on Sat, 06/28/2008 - 23:29
This article seems to hint

at placing some blame on real esate agents. I posted an article on this. Please read:

http://www.breakthematrix.com/content/In-Defense-of-Real-Estate-Agents

AdamAdamR Posted by AdamAdamR on Sat, 06/28/2008 - 18:54
All investment whether in the stock market,

commodities, or real estate boils down to - buy low sell high.

While housing continues to plummet it would be foolish to buy -- but when it does plateau -- then it would be wise to buy. The difficulty is knowing when the low has been reached and when the high has been reached. But since real estate cycles usually run around 10 to 15 years you don't have to buy at the right second. As long as you're in the first 5 years of a cycle you should make a profit.
Many people, though, only follow trends. Once they've seen bad housing prices for 10 years they need 6 or 7 years to be convinced that it's a good time to buy. By the time they act it's too late and they're stuck holding an overvalued house.

The real estate market is like a game of musical chairs. Of course, the central banks decide when to switch the music on or off.

AdamAdamR Posted by AdamAdamR on Sat, 06/28/2008 - 15:48
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