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Originally Posted by bdahlg68
Same here. Bought a place that has gone down 30%+ since purchase in 2005. Over the last 7 years, we've gotten right side up through persistence and low interest rates. Although it would have been easy to just make minimum payments and walk away now that we're buying a new place, but that is not us. We made the conscious decision to buy and got caught in bad timing. We've been lucky to be in a position to pay it down and still save for a new place. We're now moving into a great place and we are looking forward to separating ourselves from this poor investment we currently call home!
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Well Done Guys... Kinda my rant and point from earlier.
I sat down with my in-laws way before they lost, or excuse me, WALKED, away from their home..
They pulled money out to fund the remodel, hot tub, private college for the BMW boy, Europe, and on, and on....
In the end , they gave up their HOME, for all this.And with 40K in a 401K, and they are 50 plus..Had they followed my plan, they would have never been in this mess.
I am in California , in an Area of fancy cars, and High end remodels, all done on the bubble equity..
so much of what is around me is built on Leverage and not ownership..I am the consumer debt free guy..kinda a rare breed here..
The survivor I told you about earlier, one left out of 9 homes. She bought in 2000, made all the payments, and NEVER took out any FALSE equity.
Her house is still worth what she paid for it, 10 years later, not under water, and she will be fine. All the other houses,eight of them including mine, went to foreclosure and were resold.
It was scary to buy when i did...Am i buying into a ghost town ??? so many for sale signs on ONE street. now everything has changed and the homes have been resold to more qualified buyers and the area is beautiful.
Big Banks are as immoral as it gets, But I went old school when i went to get a Loan.. FICO, Healthy Down payment, ect..., and I read the contract..
And I had lost a home in 1993 due to non payment and foreclosure... that was another housing Dive, So i know the drill. no pay...go away...Also I was going through a divorce, so no strategic default there...
The bubble had people relying on a quick buck and unrealistic views of the equity that was being built on thin air..
Rather than talk morality, since this is Investing102, we can say that for some, it was bad investment decisions that led to personal decisions that i will not Judge.
I would think that just going through the experience would make people make better decisions..