I agree. And it helps the economy because it establishes a clearing price in which to work down the excess inventory.
What if nobody bought them.
Talk about disaster.
I agree. And it helps the economy because it establishes a clearing price in which to work down the excess inventory.
I have built over half my assets in a similar way, buying homes that people can no longer afford.
It's smart buisness if you ask me.
Good marketing helps drive people to do nutty things too. On Team1040 sports radio in BC these days is an ad that says "Kelowna is the hottest real estate market in Canada. Get in on this secure investment with a guaranteed rate of return of 15%." Where have we heard that before? Reminds me of the hype that Eron made in the 90's before it imploded.
Oh, yeah. For sure.
People just can't help themselves.
I don't think anyone was referring to you Avro. It's great you've done well.Not sure I should feel ashamed for being smart.
For a Janitor by trade my net worth is sort of sick.
I don't think anyone was referring to you Avro. It's great you've done well.
There is a reason why the S&P500 returned approximately an annual average of 11 or 12 % in the 90's through to '05-ish and yet the average investor recieved about 4%. Chasing yesterday's winners and getting caught in hype is the mistake the average person makes. That's how the big guys make their money. As Warren Buffett said, it's fear and greed. "When people are greedy I get fearful. When people are fearful I get greedy". Right now in Canada there is a lot of hype in real estate and fear of most other assets. We'll see how it plays out over the next few years.
Not sure I should feel ashamed for being smart.
For a Janitor by trade my net worth is sort of sick.
As long as you don't over-extend yourself. Read this article in The New York Times:Good for you for seeing a bargain.
I like to hear when people make shrewd investments.
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/30/wa...hp&oref=sloginHomeowners’ Pleas Put G.O.P. Lawmakers in Bind on Defaults
Published: March 30, 2008
HIALEAH, Fla. — In Los Portales, a pink and terra cotta condominium complex in this city of hard-striving Hispanic immigrants and often harder luck, many of Juan Carpio’s neighbors are losing their homes.
But as Congress returns from a two-week recess on Monday for a furious debate over whether to help homeowners on the brink of default, Mr. Diaz-Balart is caught in a crunch of his own.
On one side, Democrats emboldened by the Federal Reserve’s intervention in the collapse of Bear Stearns are demanding help for “everyday Americans.” On the other, Republicans including Senator John McCain, the party’s presumptive nominee, are urging restraint, reluctant to commit taxpayer funds to what they say is simply a bailout for greedy lenders and reckless buyers.
That's what one gets when living in a free society! The vultures and hyenas are only stopped, if they hang themselves! People seldom regulate themselves and share their good fortune or invest it for the common good.Dancing_Loon
Vultures and hyenas have been a part of human commerce forever. One man's shrewdness is another mans con game.....
I come from poor peasant stock!:lol: My grandparents of both sides had many children they could hardly feed. The landowners they worked for had once been plunderers and crooks, now they were rich and lived in castles or big mansions. My father told me he never got enough to eat, was always still hungry leaving the table. They lived in little wee houses, with one bedroom, kids slept 3 or four in one bed! On Sundays the landowner would be driven to church in a fancy wagon with four horses. He and his company would sit in the front row on upholstered benches, while the poor workers stayed in the back, standing. The in-between benches were occupied by the families of the teacher, the merchants, the trades people... all the little ranks above the common laborer. My Dad decided then there was no God. Or if there was, he sure didn't care about the poor!What's happened and what's happening as we speak is that we are witnessing the outcomes of "shrewdness" as exercised by the wealthy for generations.
Yes, we do!! Their excesses are shining examples for us to follow!!;-)....We owe a great deal to the wealthy.......
Sounds good to me. "Poltically connected groups of investors" have a sterling reputation for honesty. What could possibly go wrong?Richmond would carry out the purchases with the help of Mortgage Resolution Partners, an advisory firm run by a politically connected group of investors. … After Richmond seizes the loans, new lenders arranged by MRP would step in and essentially refinance them. The borrowers would stay in their homes, and the new loans would reflect the current value of the properties. In this scenario, a family in Richmond that bought a $300,000 house that’s now worth $200,000 would see its monthly payments decrease by $300 to $800
No, I'm from Oklahoma. Thankfully, FAR from Oklahoma.Are you in Oklahoma?
Has the housing market stabilized in the last few years?
No, I'm from Oklahoma. Thankfully, FAR from Oklahoma.
I work in Washington, DC and live in suburban Maryland. Housing's good here.
Not quite, but it's pretty bad. When you consider that house value is well over half of the total wealth of most home-owning Americans, foreclosures are a sign of Very Bad Things. Essentially, being forclosed upon means a family is [dwama]ruined![/dwama]I ask because you hear the horror stories re: mass foreclosure rates.... Based on the (sensationalist?) news casts, you'd think that every 3rd house in America was in default.
Not quite, but it's pretty bad. When you consider that house value is well over half of the total wealth of most home-owning Americans, foreclosures are a sign of Very Bad Things. Essentially, being forclosed upon means a family is [dwama]ruined![/dwama]
Here's a table on foreclosures from 1990-2010. http://www.census.gov/compendia/statab/2012/tables/12s1194.pdf
When roughly one out of twenty families is financially wrecked every year, you got a problem.