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10 Reasons to Buy September 30, 2010

Filed under: Real Estate — tracee ribar @ 1:25 pm

We tend to like, and digest, ideas or arguments in list form. The following from the Wall Street Journal is easily digestible.

The Wall Street Journal, By Brett Arends

September 16, 2010

Enough with the doom and gloom about homeownership.

Sure, maybe there’s more pain to come in the housing market. But when Time magazine starts running covers that declare “Owning a home may no longer make economic sense,” it’s time to say: Enough is enough. This is what “capitulation” looks like. Everyone has given up.

After all, at the peak of the bubble five years ago, Time had a different take. “Home Sweet Home,” declared its cover then, as it celebrated the boom and asked: “Will your house make your rich?”

But it’s not enough just to be contrarian. So here are 10 reasons why it’s good to buy a home.

1. You can get a good deal. Especially if you play hardball. This is a buyer’s market. Most of the other buyers have now vanished, as the tax credits on purchases have just expired. We’re four to five years into the biggest housing bust in modern history. And prices have come down a long way– about 30% from their peak, according to Standard & Poor’s Case-Shiller Index, which tracks home prices in 20 big cities. Yes, it’s mixed. New York is only down 20%. Arizona has halved. Will prices fall further? Sure, they could. You’ll never catch the bottom. It doesn’t really matter so much in the long haul.

Where is fair value? Fund manager Jeremy Grantham at GMO, who predicted the bust with remarkable accuracy, said two years ago that home prices needed to fall another 17% to reach fair value in relation to household incomes. Case-Shiller since then: Down 18%.

2. Mortgages are cheap. You can get a 30-year loan for around 4.3%. What’s not to like? These are the lowest rates on record. As recently as two years ago they were about 6.3%. That drop slashes your monthly repayment by a fifth. If inflation picks up, you won’t see these mortgage rates again in your lifetime. And if we get deflation, and rates fall further, you can refi.

3. You’ll save on taxes. You can deduct the mortgage interest from your income taxes. You can deduct your real estate taxes. And you’ll get a tax break on capital gains–if any–when you sell. Sure, you’ll need to do your math. You’ll only get the income tax break if you itemize your deductions, and many people may be better off taking the standard deduction instead. The breaks are more valuable the more you earn, and the bigger your mortgage. But many people will find that these tax breaks mean owning costs them less, often a lot less, than renting.

4. It’ll be yours. You can have the kitchen and bathrooms you want. You can move the walls, build an extension–zoning permitted–or paint everything bright orange. Few landlords are so indulgent; for renters, these types of changes are often impossible. You’ll feel better about your own place if you own it than if you rent. Many years ago, when I was working for a political campaign in England, I toured a working-class northern town. Mrs. Thatcher had just begun selling off public housing to the tenants. “You can tell the ones that have been bought,” said my local guide. “They’ve painted the front door. It’s the first thing people do when they buy.” It was a small sign that said something big.

5. You’ll get a better home. In many parts of the country it can be really hard to find a good rental. All the best places are sold as condos. Money talks. Once again, this is a case by case issue: In Miami right now there are so many vacant luxury condos that owners will rent them out for a fraction of the cost of owning. But few places are so favored. Generally speaking, if you want the best home in the best neighborhood, you’re better off buying.

6. It offers some inflation protection. No, it’s not perfect. But studies by Professor Karl “Chip” Case (of Case-Shiller), and others, suggest that over the long-term housing has tended to beat inflation by a couple of percentage points a year. That’s valuable inflation insurance, especially if you’re young and raising a family and thinking about the next 30 or 40 years. In the recent past, inflation-protected government bonds, or TIPS, offered an easier form of inflation insurance. But yields there have plummeted of late. That also makes homeownership look a little better by contrast.

7. It’s risk capital. No, your home isn’t the stock market and you shouldn’t view it as the way to get rich. But if the economy does surprise us all and start booming, sooner or later real estate prices will head up again, too. One lesson from the last few years is that stocks are incredibly hard for most normal people to own in large quantities–for practical as well as psychological reasons. Equity in a home is another way of linking part of your portfolio to the long-term growth of the economy–if it happens–and still managing to sleep at night.

8. It’s forced savings. If you can rent an apartment for $2,000 month instead of buying one for $2,400 a month, renting may make sense. But will you save that $400 for your future? A lot of people won’t. Most, I dare say. Once again, you have to do your math, but the part of your mortgage payment that goes to principal repayment isn’t a cost. You’re just paying yourself by building equity. As a forced monthly saving, it’s a good discipline.

9. There is a lot to choose from. There is a glut of homes in most of the country. The National Association of Realtors puts the current inventory at around 4 million homes. That’s below last year’s peak, but well above typical levels, and enough for about a year’s worth of sales. More keeping coming onto the market, too, as the banks slowly unload their inventory of unsold properties. That means great choice, as well as great prices.

10. Sooner or later, the market will clear. Demand and supply will meet. The population is forecast to grow by more than 100 million people over the next 40 years. That means maybe 40 million new households looking for homes. Meanwhile, this housing glut will work itself out. Many of the homes will be bought. But many more will simply be destroyed–either deliberately, or by inaction. This is already happening. Even two years ago, when I toured the housing slumpin western Florida, I saw bankrupt condo developments that were fast becoming derelict. And, finally, a lot of the “glut” simply won’t matter: It’s concentrated in a few areas, like Florida and Nevada. Unless you live there, the glut won’t have any long-term impact on housing supply in your town.

 

Color and Herman Miller September 22, 2010

Filed under: Art "Seen",Home Innovations — tracee ribar @ 3:44 pm

As you know, I love Dwell Magazine.  When you have a minute, take a look what lies at the heart of making furniture the Herman Miller way, so holistic that there are bees involved… enjoy a litle backround music from Wonderful.   Nothing accidental or uninspired here.

Video » 

 

Buy Already Will Ya! September 18, 2010

Filed under: Real Estate — tracee ribar @ 4:04 pm

We all know about the great interest rates. But here is another underliner. Had to do it.

Today’s mortgage interest rates may never be this good again

Posted: 8/9/2010
Columbus Board of REALTORS®

Today’s mortgage rates are at historic lows but history suggests they won’t stay there. Because home buyers may never see these rates again, they need to BUY NOW, says Marc Roth, president of Home Warranty of America.

In an article written for Business Week, Roth states, “If you want to buy a house, now is the time, and if you don’t act soon, you will regret it. Here’s why: historically low interest rates.”

According to Mortgage-X.com, the average mortgage interest rate in 1970 hovered around 7.25 percent. Shortly thereafter, it began crawling upward, landing near 10 percent in late 1973 and settling back to nine percent between 1974 and 1976. Although high by today’s standards, people in 1976 would have been happy with nine percent.

From 1977 to 1981, the 30-year fixed rate was near 18 percent. Rates jockeyed for several years, hitting 11 percent in the late 1980s before slowly declining in the 1990s.

 Era Mortgage Interest Rate 
July 1970 7.00
July 1980 12.19
July 1990 10.04
July 2000 8.14
July 2010 4.59

Every quarter of a percent counts! On a $200,000 loan with a 10 percent interest rate, the monthly payment would be $1,755. With a 4.5 percent loan, the payment would be $1,013.

Take advantage of today’s 4.5 percent interest rates or it may be another 20 years before rates are this favorable again. Combine that with the reasonable home prices we are seeing today, and this era exemplifies what we mean by a “buyer’s market.”

 

Green Kitchen Know-How September 16, 2010

Filed under: Home Innovations — tracee ribar @ 9:00 am

I have mentioned Greenovate (www.greenovate.com) in my blog before.  The Columbus source for Green home building innovations. Check the site periodically for their Greenovate In-Focus series events. Green kitchen design event coming up on the 19th. Great stuff!

September 19, 2009
“Green Kitchen Design: Something You Can Sink Your Teeth Into” 

Come find out what’s cooking with green kitchen design. We will discuss current trends and highlight a range of ecologically responsible design options, such as recycled paper countertops and wheat board cabinets. 

M.K. Piras
M.K. Piras Interiors/LDC Associates 

Rochelle Stallings, CID, GCP
Stallings Design Studio

 

Creativity in Your Life September 15, 2010

Filed under: Uncategorized — tracee ribar @ 10:43 am

My vast readership, ahem, knows that I volunteer as a docent at the Columbus Museum of Art. The Museum is undergoing a long-awaited  much anticipated expansion and remodel. Contained within the new and improved Museum is a ground-breaking component–The Center for Creativity. The Center, to me, is truly the "center" of CMA philosophy. It will be a place for the community, teachers, school groups, families, seniors, juniors–everyone to engage in creative interaction with the museum and their own imagination. The CMA mission, if you will, and i do because it is my blog, is to connect and commit the community to the importance of the museum and instill a sense of collective ownership or guardianship. A sense of mutual commitment.  The Center for Creativity is a "creative" way to establish  community outreach and connection and an embraced understanding that without creativity there is no future in art–or anything else.

To launch the Center, the CMA is hosting a 4 day Creativity Summit, the first day of which, Creativity in Your Life, October 14th, is open to the public. Keynote speakers for that session include author Michael Chabon, Wonder Boys, Adventures of Kavalier and Clay, and Liz Lessner, CEO of Betty’s Family of Restaurants. See the bottom of this post for more sign-up info.  "The Creativity Summit will "kick-start" conversations with multiple audiences and partners to introduce CMA as a vitally important resource for teaching and learning initiatives that reinforce twenty-first century skills in our schools and the community." Skills we are falling behind in nationally. I want to sustain creativity in my life-and encourage and facilitate creativity in my children’s lives. This, to me, is an opportunity for personal and professional development.

Without Creativity there is no innovation. No moving forward to capture ideas in business, art, science, which of course includes constant changes in technology in our homes and throughout our daily lives.  All that makes us passionate and engaged in life requires creativity.

What is creativity? As defined in the July 19,2010 Newsweek article, Creativity in America, "to be creative requires divergent thinking, (generating many unique ideas)and then convergent thinking (combining those ideas into the best result)."

For 50 years children GLOBALLY have been given CQ (creativity quotient test) and, much like IQ tests, children have shown a steady point increase due, as the article states, "enriched environments are making kids smarter." American test scores might argue this but…more frightening is that measured CQ tests for American children show that creativity scores are falling. And have been falling since 1990. American ingenuity, what this country was built on, is in the decline. Superpower? Hardly.

This speaks, frighteningly, to future leadership and creative political solutions. "Such solutions emerge from a healthy marketplace of ideas, sustained by a populace constantly contributing original ideas and receptive to the ideas of others." (Newsweek article)

Yikes.

 

To register for Creativity in Your Life on October 14 (8:30-4:00)

Register by October 7 by calling 614-629-5947 or on-line at www.columbusmuseum.org

cost is $45 includes lunch, $30 for students and seniors

Hope to see you there.