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Originally Posted by wawaweewa
btw, I just heard in an speech by an economist that the Banks have been selling 97% of all mortgage loans that they originate to the Feds the last few years.
How long do you think the feds can keep this up? Without them the market collapses.
Originally Posted by wawaweewa
btw, I just heard in an speech by an economist that the Banks have been selling 97% of all mortgage loans that they originate to the Feds the last few years.
How long do you think the feds can keep this up? Without them the market collapses.
Originally Posted by LazyJ10
WaaaWwarfjfjakan - What exactly was said? 97% of ALL seems way too high. 97% of FHA seems likely.
Investment banks and funds are gobbling this paper up still, don't be fooled. A bunch of funds have launched with distressed debt and credit strategies.
Originally Posted by LazyJ10
WaaaWwarfjfjakan - What exactly was said? 97% of ALL seems way too high. 97% of FHA seems likely.
Investment banks and funds are gobbling this paper up still, don't be fooled. A bunch of funds have launched with distressed debt and credit strategies.
Originally Posted by North Dade Represent
Originally Posted by wawaweewa
btw, I just heard in an speech by an economist that the Banks have been selling 97% of all mortgage loans that they originate to the Feds the last few years.
How long do you think the feds can keep this up? Without them the market collapses.
Collapse? How much lower can the housing market go? It's already cheaper to buy than it is to rent in many states. A 2500 sq ft house that's worth 150K now won't go below $125K because someone will jump on the opportunity to live in that house for $750 a month vs renting for $1200.
Only way housing market goes more than 10% lower is if rents go lower. People may not want to buy right now, but they damn sure aren't going to pay $500 more a month to rent.
Originally Posted by North Dade Represent
Originally Posted by wawaweewa
btw, I just heard in an speech by an economist that the Banks have been selling 97% of all mortgage loans that they originate to the Feds the last few years.
How long do you think the feds can keep this up? Without them the market collapses.
Collapse? How much lower can the housing market go? It's already cheaper to buy than it is to rent in many states. A 2500 sq ft house that's worth 150K now won't go below $125K because someone will jump on the opportunity to live in that house for $750 a month vs renting for $1200.
Only way housing market goes more than 10% lower is if rents go lower. People may not want to buy right now, but they damn sure aren't going to pay $500 more a month to rent.
Originally Posted by Supermanblue79
I still don't understand how some of you experts on mortgages, don't even have a mortgage.
Originally Posted by Supermanblue79
I still don't understand how some of you experts on mortgages, don't even have a mortgage.
The same also applies for the buyers that did research, bought within their means, and made a sound home purchase.Originally Posted by jordanhendrix
^^^ Its cause for them a mortgage is a bad investment, at least they do the research and then make a decision. Unlike the majority.
Is is that hard to understand? Maybe you should sign up for inference 101
Yes, because so many millions of Americans who took on mortgages during the bubble were "experts". In order to be an "expert" (I don;'t think anyone claimed here to be) on debt, you need to take it on? I guess we have millions of debt experts among the American bubble. All about they're expert at is getting screwed six ways till Sunday.
That's akin to saying, "What do you mean you don't like gay sex. You haven't tried it yet!"
The same also applies for the buyers that did research, bought within their means, and made a sound home purchase.Originally Posted by jordanhendrix
^^^ Its cause for them a mortgage is a bad investment, at least they do the research and then make a decision. Unlike the majority.
Is is that hard to understand? Maybe you should sign up for inference 101
Yes, because so many millions of Americans who took on mortgages during the bubble were "experts". In order to be an "expert" (I don;'t think anyone claimed here to be) on debt, you need to take it on? I guess we have millions of debt experts among the American bubble. All about they're expert at is getting screwed six ways till Sunday.
That's akin to saying, "What do you mean you don't like gay sex. You haven't tried it yet!"
Originally Posted by UnbornSeed
Paid 400..put 200k down. Did 30 year because the payment was 800 a month plus tax and insurance and I got 5.75% apr cause it was a duplex so I wanted actually needed the breathing room and at the time I was alone but a few months later I rented out the other unit and been sending in more ever since. I loaned my sister money so its around 140k..I can show you screens if you dont believe me.Originally Posted by tim teufel
Originally Posted by UnbornSeed
in my case, I have a 30 year mortgage...3 years in and I'm 7 years away as of today to paying it off. I treat my house like my cars...send more when I have it. If I go 30 years that just means I'm paying double for loan essentially and that is not for me.
"all profit" because when I do sell I'll be in my late 30s with no mortgage and enough cash to move to a lower cost state and buy a house cash 100-200k max. My home at its peak was valued at 850k. I paid 400k in 2008 and right now its worth 380k as is. ( Ive remodeled extensively but have not reappraised to keep my taxes low). I have about 120k left on the mortgage. Knowing the market and locale of where I am at I know that I can push 650k in about 7-10 years at which point I wont have a mortgage and can move to texas or atlanta and live mortgage free for the rest of my life.
so you been in your home 3 years and you only owe 120k on it? how much money did you put down? and why would you get a 30 year mortgage? something isnt adding up fam
Paid off about 50k in 3 years. I have 142 and some change left so at the same rate of overpayment I'll be done in 7 years.
Originally Posted by UnbornSeed
Paid 400..put 200k down. Did 30 year because the payment was 800 a month plus tax and insurance and I got 5.75% apr cause it was a duplex so I wanted actually needed the breathing room and at the time I was alone but a few months later I rented out the other unit and been sending in more ever since. I loaned my sister money so its around 140k..I can show you screens if you dont believe me.Originally Posted by tim teufel
Originally Posted by UnbornSeed
in my case, I have a 30 year mortgage...3 years in and I'm 7 years away as of today to paying it off. I treat my house like my cars...send more when I have it. If I go 30 years that just means I'm paying double for loan essentially and that is not for me.
"all profit" because when I do sell I'll be in my late 30s with no mortgage and enough cash to move to a lower cost state and buy a house cash 100-200k max. My home at its peak was valued at 850k. I paid 400k in 2008 and right now its worth 380k as is. ( Ive remodeled extensively but have not reappraised to keep my taxes low). I have about 120k left on the mortgage. Knowing the market and locale of where I am at I know that I can push 650k in about 7-10 years at which point I wont have a mortgage and can move to texas or atlanta and live mortgage free for the rest of my life.
so you been in your home 3 years and you only owe 120k on it? how much money did you put down? and why would you get a 30 year mortgage? something isnt adding up fam
Paid off about 50k in 3 years. I have 142 and some change left so at the same rate of overpayment I'll be done in 7 years.
Originally Posted by trak1sh
his thread is very informative. I always thought that owning was the best choice and I will eventually own, but this makes me feel better about paying rent.
Originally Posted by trak1sh
his thread is very informative. I always thought that owning was the best choice and I will eventually own, but this makes me feel better about paying rent.
Glad you brought that up. Didn't wanna come in sounding like the conspiracy theory or turn this into a religious thread but you are totally right my man. People really should read up on the law of mortmain (death hand) and mortgages to see what's really going on with property ownership in this country and the origin of the stuff.Originally Posted by spankdaniels
Just wanted to chime in here.....isnt it ironic that MORTGAGE in French means Death Pledge? So in many cases u will be pretty old or dead by the time it gets paid off....Like many others have said, it depends on your situation and what is best for YOU...Didnt read the entire thread but there were some comparisons between the potential gains in stocks/other investments vs real estate..Not sure about the States but here in Canada you DO NOT have to pay a Capital Gains Tax when u sell your principle residence for profit, however u have to claim most investment gains yearly as income. If u sell said investments for profit u get hit with a pretty hefty tax....
Also, when u own a house u own the structure itself and not the land....i have heard of many cases where the Banks have failed to remit property taxes to the municipalities that people pay as part of their mortgage and ended up having liens placed on their properties....Its a shame what has happened in the USA with many peoples equity being wiped out and having to walk away from their houses in some instances, but herein lies tremendous opportunities for savvy investors and the low US dollar is also bonus for foreigners...
I rented initially to become responsible with managing my finances and lifestyle. Buying allowed me to build tremendous equity in a short amount of time. I was able to put over $100,000 in my pocket in 10 months Tax Free, pay off my debts, buy a vacation property, and put a down payment on a new house that will be worth More when it closes then what i bought it for. Eventually i want to live abroad because North America is becoming too expensive to live...At the end of the day do what is best for you but it is very difficult to be truly financially independant.
Look up mortmain in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
[h2]Contents[/h2] [hide] |
Glad you brought that up. Didn't wanna come in sounding like the conspiracy theory or turn this into a religious thread but you are totally right my man. People really should read up on the law of mortmain (death hand) and mortgages to see what's really going on with property ownership in this country and the origin of the stuff.Originally Posted by spankdaniels
Just wanted to chime in here.....isnt it ironic that MORTGAGE in French means Death Pledge? So in many cases u will be pretty old or dead by the time it gets paid off....Like many others have said, it depends on your situation and what is best for YOU...Didnt read the entire thread but there were some comparisons between the potential gains in stocks/other investments vs real estate..Not sure about the States but here in Canada you DO NOT have to pay a Capital Gains Tax when u sell your principle residence for profit, however u have to claim most investment gains yearly as income. If u sell said investments for profit u get hit with a pretty hefty tax....
Also, when u own a house u own the structure itself and not the land....i have heard of many cases where the Banks have failed to remit property taxes to the municipalities that people pay as part of their mortgage and ended up having liens placed on their properties....Its a shame what has happened in the USA with many peoples equity being wiped out and having to walk away from their houses in some instances, but herein lies tremendous opportunities for savvy investors and the low US dollar is also bonus for foreigners...
I rented initially to become responsible with managing my finances and lifestyle. Buying allowed me to build tremendous equity in a short amount of time. I was able to put over $100,000 in my pocket in 10 months Tax Free, pay off my debts, buy a vacation property, and put a down payment on a new house that will be worth More when it closes then what i bought it for. Eventually i want to live abroad because North America is becoming too expensive to live...At the end of the day do what is best for you but it is very difficult to be truly financially independant.
Look up mortmain in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
[h2]Contents[/h2] [hide] |