I definitely believe your home is a consumption item. No doubt for me about that. It costs money to upkeep, pay taxes, repair, etc. And if you move and sell it, you need to take the proceeds often to put into another house that has gone up just as much in value. So you can't really harvest the profits effectively. Not to mention you have a lot of money tied up in the house in other ways.amp wrote: Really? You consider it a "consumption item"? What other "consumption items" not only retain their value, but keep pace with inflation, and can be financed for 30 years at 4% fixed?
Now if you can effectively run rentals that is another story they can be profitable. But I openly admit I don't have the personality for it so I don't do it myself. But I still consider that activity highly speculative.
Yes but that's the rub! You can buy a rental and then find out it was a bad move and it loses you money. There is a certain skill to doing it well.If it's a rental, then it should produce some income otherwise you shouldn't buy it!
Like I said I don't have the personality for it and have known many people burned by it. But that's just my experience. I'd rather just buy REITs if I wanted to play with real estate. You get the dividends, but don't get the calls at 3AM about a leaking toilet.Like everything in life, there are pros and cons to real estate. Frankly, I'm surprised at how dismissive many "savvy investors" are about real estate.
When I was 18 I got turned off to rentals when I was working at a locksmith. We were called out to a townhouse in a nice area that had the door kicked in by a drug raid. The home was rented to people that turned it into a drug flophouse. Because tenant laws work to protect the renters in many cases the landlord had a hard time evicting. To make a long story short when we got there we went inside and the place was destroyed. We went outside to get our tools and my pants were covered in hundreds of fleas. It was disgusting. It made an impression on me about the risks of operating a rental for income. I'd rather not deal with the hassle. But again, that's just me.
But also I do agree with the Eichholz study that long term real estate is often not a good investment:
http://arno.unimaas.nl/show.cgi?fid=10696