How do you pay for your Benz?
I had 3 houses here before these anti-investor policies kicked in due to all of you Cali guys buying "second homes"
Amazing, isn't it when you can buy a house for $200,000, and by the time you close on it (9-10 mo) it's already worth $300,000! And by the time the long term capital gains is up, it's now $400,000! Kaching!
But I didnt have to finish it out w/landscaping and window treatements, etc.If anything, we helped drive prices up! You're welcome
However, rents are crappy
are they really that controlling? I hope they even appreciate they have a certain standard of living.. how about a thankyou? I don't think I'd change much any of my financial reasoning because she wasn't happy with it, but mainly because I have that background. Situational, I'm sure.. but dang. My mother sure does point my father's where ever she wants. Life is a compromise
But I didnt have to finish it out w/landscaping and window treatements, etc.If anything, we helped drive prices up! You're welcome
However, rents are crappy
Rents do suck, because of all the investors trying to cash flow their houses.. but the reality is, and I don't have any tenants in any of my houses, the two years you hold them will cost you a fraction of the return the house will make, and with no head ache of tearing up the carpets, interior, etc.. I am not interested in being a land lord, just taking advantage of a hot real estate market.
are they really that controlling? I hope they even appreciate they have a certain standard of living.. how about a thankyou? I don't think I'd change much any of my financial reasoning because she wasn't happy with it, but mainly because I have that background. Situational, I'm sure.. but dang. My mother sure does point my father's where ever she wants. Life is a compromiseit's like this... Had the money to buy our current house come from my family inheritance, I would have had more "weight" in the matter. But it was (to be fair) her family's estate that paid for it, and even though we're married, and she's not working (outside the home).. we don't always treat money the same way.. if I earn it thru work, we treat it as "ours" if it comes from her family or mine then we treat it as the individuals money to do as they wish... Having said that.. once the money is spent on a car or house, that item is now community property, and the house has me listed first on the title.
Make sense? Each family is different.. I have a friend who he and his wife both work and both keep totally separate books, cars, assets, 401K, etc... for me, that's not what marriage is about.

The Best of Mercedes & AMG
1) Affordability index is low here... i.e. people who don't make $100,000/yr can still buy a normal new home with a conventional mortgage.
2) Phoenix (AZ in general) is the fastest growing large city in the country for the past 2 years according to my data. There are many major companies re-locating here. Example is the $2 Billion investment Intel made down in Chandler, and the $1B USAA Campus that just finished in North Phoenix, not far from where I live. There is also a $2 Billion investment from AMEX for a mirror data center for their world wide business that just went in North Phoenix.. All of those, come with net 49,000 well paid jobs... and that's just three of 13 I can list.
3) Fed projections are for the currently 3.2M population to double in 10 years. This is not the case in Cal/Fl since most of this growth is from those two states, as well as Mass, and Mich.
4) Weather here is being "discovered" The heat is over rated.. usually dry and feels much better than summer in FL, NY, TX, all except really CA. Also, the winter is great, and there are NO, repeat, NO natural disasters to contend with (Hurricanes, Earth Quakes, Tornados, etc..)
5) Taxes are low, and business loves it here. nuff said.
6) There is unlimited cheap land for expansion, infrastructure is among the best in the world (Freeway system rated above all US major cities for it's condition and quality).
Keep in mind.. I'm a Cali native, and am only siting all of this because I am a "convert" I choose to live here rather than my native Bay Area because here is where the big opportunities are. I lived in Atlanta, Dallas, and most recently SoCal and I can tell you.. this is where it is now.
As for the "real estate bubble" hell, let it happen... I've got 4 houses that cost me less than 1M paid for, and currently appraised for double that... even if we have a 30% correction (likely in SD, SF, DC) it's still gravy for me. I'm sitting on 20 acres of commercial zoned land that I picked up for $1/foot in 2001 for my family trust and now worth 5 times that (three offers turned down already) I'm waiting on the city to build the freeway exit there next year, and see the values jump by another 5 times.
Last edited by CE750; Aug 23, 2005 at 05:02 PM.
I'm very interested in land - would like to talk to you about that if you don't mind?
I'm very interested in land - would like to talk to you about that if you don't mind?
The peace and calm of being debt-free.....Priceless!
does the term opportunity cost, and risk free return mean anything to you anti-debt people?
does the term opportunity cost, and risk free return mean anything to you anti-debt people?




The peace and calm of being debt-free.....Priceless!
I have a major concern with our "debt riding" society. As soon as a strong recession hits, it will send far too many people into the poor house. Did you know that half a million Americans declared personal bankruptcy last year? Imagine what would happen in the middle of a major recession? A while back I read that the US is approaching and by now exceeding the 20% debt to income ratio. With a ratio like that, even a mild recession could turn into a freaken nightmare.
Yup, peace and quiet of beign debt free.....


