Dabills wrote:
DTC is correct, that is what i am saying. its a consumption item more than an investment. it doesn't mean its bad at all.
the phenomenon part is people buying 700K houses and expecting to be worth 900K in 5 years, i know these people.
I like to consider it on par with a savings account -- the benefit being you get to live in it and enjoy it vs. seeing a number on a bank slip. But I also am under no illusion it's an "investment" -- now this can change. Bought the house cash? Investment. Paid off within 5-10 years? Maybe even then investment.
For the average Joe, it's just like a savings account (although not as liquid).
Average price in Toronto 1982 was $95,496
Average price in Toronto 2012 was $497,301 (30 years later)
Imagine the 30 year home owner sells out their finally paid off home:
$497,301
-$95,496
----------
$401,805 "profit"
-$114,790 (interest payments on 90k principal 6.5%)
--------------
$287,015 "net profit"
-24,865 (real estate fees for sale)
---------------
$262,150
-98,465 (property tax over 30 years *took current tax and multiplied by 60% to get average)
--------------
$163,685
-$120,000 (maint at 4k per year)
---------------
Actual Profit $43,685
Of course, subtract things like legal fees ($2000), land transfer tax (????) etc.
But generally you made $43,685 on that house over 30 years.
A return on investment of about $1,500 a year.
Not a very good "investment".
But as a forced savings, you did pretty good because at the end of the day, when you sell, you get back everything you put in (even the interest) and then a little extra -- while getting to live in the house the entire time and enjoy it with your family.
Selling would equal a withdrawal of $497,301 - $24,865 (real estate fees) = $472,436.
This wouldn't mean you made the difference between your original purchase price and the $472k. That's really just YOUR money that you've put in over the 30 years.