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Attn Second Home Owners in Vermont

AdironRider

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Nov 27, 2005
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Yeah, because renting in a metro doesn't have the same problem of the landlord raising the rent unsustainably, converting it to an airbnb, or selling it. Most people have encountered this situation before they owned a house in their respective city and its not fun.

Nevermind a mortgage is relatively inelastic, you are bound to just insurance, tax and utility cost increases. For arguments sake let's say maintenance is 2-3% of current market value regardless. That is highly predictable and much more easier managed over time than renting, which inevitably always goes up. Meanwhile, a family who is in year 15 of a mortgage is virtually guaranteed to pay less than they would be renting for the same house in the same area.

I could not imagine getting a 30 day notice of my lease being up and suddenly having to not only find a new place and move, but also have the uncertainly of what my monthly budget would be depending on what rental I could find.
 

1dog

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Oct 2, 2017
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Not sure anyone is taking foreign real residential estate investment into account here. Its pretty massive, and over half are cash buys above market rates- driving prices and prop. taxes higher. Mostly urban areas and vacation spots but it affects all RE prices. Many times they remain empty as well. Creates shortages and for most part are detrimental to US citizens.

When the top 10% of income earners are responsible for 50-55% of consumer spending, that can only spell trouble, never mind adding in wealth from other countries to compete with.
 

Former Sunday Rivah Rat

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Mar 26, 2020
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The American dream will just have to die. Even people earning six figures will have to make a choice. Buy a house and have it be your life (some love that), or live a life not preoccupied with your domicile and invest as heavy as you can for retirement. Pick your poison. This won’t apply to those from wealthy families.
Don't give up on the American dream yet. A 2%-4% drop in mortgage rates would make a huge difference in payments. The last 3 recessions the 10 year yield dropped on average 2.65%. The next recession should move the 10 yr yield down another 2% which would slash mortgage payments.
 

BenedictGomez

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Jan 26, 2011
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Wasatch Back
The next recession should move the 10 yr yield down another 2% which would slash mortgage payments.

To get back to pre-pandemic affordability you need a bit more than a 4% drop in mortgage rates. Very unlikely.

Not sure if a job loss recession's coming, but yes, that would drop rates a bit, but of course if you're the one who loses his/her job that's not helping you either.

But in terms of game theory, JPOW's only got 12 months left, and Trump will 100% replace him with someone who's going to lower interest rates. The market, of course, will also likely anticipate that belief of mine & rates should drop ahead of that. Maybe January'ish or so.
 

Hawk

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Nov 22, 2016
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Mad River Valley / MA
I think part of the benefit from home ownership is the forced savings into equity (assuming you don't burn it with constant re-fi or HELOC). Most renters won't have the discipline to save/invest the dollars from payng lower rent vs owning.

I have more confidence in the work ethic and ingenuity of the general population. Housing may change, but the bigger American dream is to build equity and have some leisure time.

The American dream of the 1800's was to journey west and homestead some land and start a family. No one does that anymore. Dreams change. Your grandchildren will have different dreams.
I have two observations.
I have 22 neices and nephews ranging in age from early teens to thier 50's. My family is very close so I know them all very well and most of thier friends. All of them have the exact same dream of owning a house and maybe a second home for leisure. I guess my wife and I have been a great uncle and aunt roll model. Most of them come to ski here at Sugarbush with us at some point in the season. Some of them are halfway there. None of them have achieved the second home. All of them strugle with finances because they were put under the wieght of a large school lone or pay super high rent and can't save enough money.

Second, most of them lack the commitment to really hard work, sacrifice and the saving ethic. They just don't get it. It was not pounded into them like my father did for me. Instead they talk about vacations, expensive cars, going out to eat, living in town and paying rediculous rent. They want to work from home, get paid $250K and work 30 hours. LOL I grew up like 2 planker with the same amount of hours for that kind of pay. So it is hard to understand the "New" expectations. I guess I am just an old fuck.
 

jimmywilson69

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Oct 18, 2010
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Dillsburg, PA
Second, most of them lack the commitment to really hard work, sacrifice and the saving ethic. They just don't get it. It was not pounded into them like my father did for me. Instead they talk about vacations, expensive cars, going out to eat, living in town and paying rediculous rent. They want to work from home, get paid $250K and work 30 hours. LOL I grew up like 2 planker with the same amount of hours for that kind of pay. So it is hard to understand the "New" expectations. I guess I am just an old fuck.

well when we say this stuff, it does make you feel old, but the fact of the matter is that the younger generation is VERY much defined by the bolded above.

I see it every day as a senior member of my engineering firm. Hell we even are an outlier and pay everyone hourly, so working extra hours equals straight time extra pay. I often have to mandate OT as opposed to folks seeing that we need to hit deadlines and do it voluntarily... And then when its mandated, people hate it. Which is totally understandable.

I'm thankful my son sees the value of saving. He's working 2 part time jobs while going to grad school. We're also helping him out as much as I can so He's not saddled with such an enormous amount of debt.
 

Former Sunday Rivah Rat

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Mar 26, 2020
Messages
251
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43
Second, most of them lack the commitment to really hard work, sacrifice and the saving ethic. They just don't get it. It was not pounded into them like my father did for me. Instead they talk about vacations, expensive cars, going out to eat, living in town and paying rediculous rent. They want to work from home, get paid $250K and work 30 hours.
I must be an old fuck too. I can't wrap my mind around the Gen Z + Millennials need to piss money down the drain on car payments, vacations and eating out. If your trying to save for a house it means sacrificing most of those luxuries.
 

kbroderick

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Dec 1, 2005
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Maine
I must be an old fuck too. I can't wrap my mind around the Gen Z + Millennials need to piss money down the drain on car payments, vacations and eating out. If your trying to save for a house it means sacrificing most of those luxuries.
So how many Gen Z and Millennial folks saw their parents sacrifice, work hard (including plenty of unpaid/salaried OT), and still end up suffering through layoffs, restructuring, etc?

Now throw in the economic conditions after the dot com crash and 2008 financial crisis, add current COL (particularly housing and health insurance, nevermind healthcare), and it's pretty easy to figure that if you're not going to come out ahead, you might as well enjoy the ride.

I was born in 1980, which makes me Gen X by at least some standards (anyone who wants to call me a millennial can kindly shove their avocado toast somewhere unpleasant), and anyone who has lived with me can verify that I inherited and/or was taught a Yankee attitude towards saving, reusing and repairing, and working hard--but I don't blame younger coworkers who aren't inclined to work 60 hours a week, especially on salary.
 

BenedictGomez

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Regarding the aforementioned student loans, the Trump Administration announced this week students need to start paying up, the many years of "perma" forbearance is finally over. And they're going to start garnishing wages of those heavily behind, an estimated 5.3 million people.

What I'd really love to know from a sociological experiment standpoint, is how many of these people used the unprecedented financial gift of literally years of interest free loans to save themselves many thousands of dollars of debt, pay down, and get ahead, versus how many of these people were like @Hawk suggested, decided visiting Barcelona and Rome or buying a Tesla was more important, squandered this "gift" and saved nothing.
 
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