Dabills wrote:
Ah yes, all based on the lowest interest rates in history. (i see you did 3.59) and that graphs includes consistent appreciation which again i am not seeing in the next decade. good job skewing the numbers for your argument. i punched them in for what they are i didnt have to skew, it would take 15 years for buying to be better.
See this is where we differ. Yes, interest rates are a historic low but they are also unpredictable. It's a gamble like anything. Will they go up? Likely. Will they hit 12% like in 1989, not likely. All I can do is use the data we have at this moment. Historically real estate has gone up on average 6% per year with inflation adjustment in the 2.9% range. Will it continue, who knows. But it's all we can base this hypothetical question on.
Dabills wrote:
you know how i rent for $1600 by the lake in oakville? Because that's what good renters with great credit and a commitment are willing to pay. what you fail to see is people are listing homes and not selling them, then they reluctantly lease them out because they are not getting the price they want. most of these people have bought a house already. There are people around the GTA renting homes "valued" at 900K for 2100 dollars per month. Again, rent is what incomes will bear not what credit can manipulate.
While you are very lucky. I'm not doubting you. I'm just saying that I don't think everyone is that lucky. I think most renters are well above that or renting much smaller homes. You also have to realize if the supply of rental units dries up, there will be more competition and it might take more than a good credit rating and a good tenant when someone is offering several hundred dollars more per month than you.
Dabills wrote:
ofcourse buying and holding over the long term will be fine, i never said it wouldnt. my whole point has been if you are buying be prepared to stay there for a long time cause the days of the 5 year appreciation madness are over.
This is one statement we both agree on totally 100%. I do think the madness is over - it has to be - interest rates are as low as they will go. I would *NOT* buy a property for short term at this point. The time to do that was 3-5 years ago. If I was looking to invest, I would definitely *NOT* buy. If I was looking to buy and up-size/move in a few years, *NO*. I would only buy if you are looking at 7-10 years minimum residence. This is not because I fear a crash... this is because I totally expect a major cooling in real-estate for the next few years. Likely very minimal increases if any. I agree this is needed -- unfortunately when I say this, everyone comes back that is impossible to have a cooling off and the only options are major growth or a massive crash. I disagree.
Quote:
DTC, we will never see eye to eye on this, lol. good discussion though. the fact that you just put (6-11%) in there kind of proves we are way apart with what is coming next.
I look at the average rate of increase in the GTA over the past 10 years. We can only go on history -- in fact it's historic states that you keep claiming explain why rent/house and income/mortgage ratios tell it all. You are looking at what happened in the past historically and applying it to what might happen in the future.
The one big thing you didn't account for in the calculation is that it's totally based on renting/living in the very same area. Your calculation of rent to own makes a great point when you key in prime downtown Toronto location figures (house prices, rent, etc.) but fall very quickly when you are willing to do a commute.
When you take away the 1800$ rent vs. 550k house (Toronto) and key in something more affordable and modest like $1600 rent vs. 375k townhouse/semi/detached (Milton, Oshawa, Whitby, Newmarket, Guelph etc.) the numbers quickly change -- and you would actually do much better owning than renting (if you are comparing rent in Toronto to own in Oshawa). You would make more money and have a much higher valued portfolio.
Now this doesn't account for commute costs etc. but you get my idea I think.