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glomag
  • Scientist
  • Beer Drinker
  • Advocate for distributed / user-supported communities and media

I wish that I was skinnier but I love beverages.

Posts
46
Comments
37
Joined
2 yr. ago
  • I'm sorry to be pedantic but this is a pet peeve of mine. If you bought a house you would not have any mortgage payment. You (and everyone else usually) are talking about financing a house.

    Maybe I'm the crazy one but when I buy something I like to look at the total amount that I'm paying for it.
    If I wanted a house listed for $300,000 5-years ago and I wanted to finance it, the rate might have been 3% so the total amount I would be paying would be $455,332.36 over 30yrs. Therefore I would only finance if I thought $450,000 was a fair price. If I thought the house was only worth $300,000 then I would need to pay in cash.

    Today rates are at 7% so a house listed at $300,000 actually costs $718,526.69 when financed. Do I think the houses I see listed for $300,000 are worth over $700,000? No. Do I have more than $300,000 needed to afford to pay in cash? Also no. Therefore, I'm not buying.
    These calculations are ignoring the down payment but the principle is still valid.

  • Where's my boy Doug?

  • If they're going to get the same suspension either way, they might as well..........

  • I believe that was Norway.

  • Tampa @kbin.social
    glomag @kbin.social
  • Is your mind on your money?

  • feminem

  • But nice cause I texted Haiti
    90 lady cops on the road and I'm arrested for doing 80

  • Damn, I like The Smiths, Radiohead, Joy Division, Nine Inch Nails, Pavement, and Weezer. Somehow I managed to cover the whole board.

  • Elon Musk wants to know your location

  • Cirno plushes are limited and in high demand?

  • People aren’t pulling and storing tens of thousands of lbs of load every day.

    Hey, speak for yourself ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)

  • Yes it sounds like everything worked out great for you. Good job on timing your investment! But this is a perfect example of the type of financialization of the housing market that I'm against. You used leverage to buy an expensive, risky asset and sold it for a profit just a few years later. This doesn't always work out so well (ask anyone who bought a house in 2007) and I don't want to put essentially all my savings into a wallstreetbets style gamble just so I can have somewhere to sleep at night.

  • I'm not saying mortgages should completely go away. I'm sure a mortgage is the right decision for many people's situations. It's just the way that people talk about buying a house, a mortgage seems to be assumed. If it wasn't just assumed then maybe people would put more thought into whether they want to save for a larger down payment (or the full price) or whether they want to pay $750,000 for a $400,000 house.
    I don't know, maybe people see these numbers and think its a great deal. All I see is a bank making a huge amount of money from me that I would rather keep for myself. Also, if people stopped stretching their budget to the absolute limit with financing nonsense (3% down, variable rate loans, rate buydowns), in aggregate there would be less demand for houses at these high prices and sellers would have to start accepting lower offers.

  • Your partner wants to finance a house someday. I know I'm on the losing side of this battle but I really wish people would stop associating BUYING a house with taking out a LOAN from a bank.

    It just feels like people are only deceiving themselves by saying "I need good credit to buy a house" when what they really mean is "I need good credit so I can take on a lot of debt and pay out hundreds of thousands of dollars in interest over the next 30 years."

  • That's a good point. But the US is not offering this same path to citizenship to anyone willing to buy a house in rural Alabama. I assumed these visa programs were aimed at attracting wealthy foreigners which is why the US has something similar for anyone willing to invest $800K in a commercial enterprise. That's why I was curious if $263K is considered relatively wealthy in Greece and could buy a house even in desirable areas. The fact that apparently this is not the case makes the goals of this program unclear.

  • "Greece’s golden visa program requires a minimum investment of approximately $263,000 (€250,000) in real estate."
    Is that enough to buy an average house? Is the economy still this bad over there?

  • The busses don't take metro card? I've only ever ridden the subway in NYC.

  • Whenever I go to Aldi (US) there's usually at least a couple carts with quarters left in the parking lot so I just put them back. The quarters pile up in my car until I eventually bring them inside.

  • Rock Auto? Probably have to wait more than 2 days for your order to arrive though.

  • Memes @kbin.social
    glomag @kbin.social

    At least they won't be going to waste.

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    glomag @kbin.social
    Tampa @kbin.social
    glomag @kbin.social
    Tampa @kbin.social
    glomag @kbin.social
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    Memes @kbin.social
    glomag @kbin.social

    I keep seeing that number...

    Tampa @kbin.social
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    Tampa @kbin.social
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    Tampa @kbin.social
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    Florida abortion ballot initiative hits threshold for state Supreme Court review

    Floridians Protecting Freedom, a coalition aiming to put abortion access on next year's ballot, reached the signature threshold needed to trigger a state Supreme Court review of the ballot question's language.

    Yes, but: The group needs more than 800,000 signatures by February to get it in front of voters in 2024.

    Tampa @kbin.social
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    Expect more new apartments across Tampa Bay

    Roughly 8,817 new apartment units are expected to be completed across Tampa Bay this year, according to a new report.

    Tampa @kbin.social
    glomag @kbin.social
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    Tampa @kbin.social
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