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by logicchains
4012 days ago
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Does this take into account the risk of a housing market crash? For me, the biggest reason for renting rather than buying is to avoid putting all my bags in one basket; I wouldn't buy $500k worth of shares of one company, so spending $500k on a single house seems similarly risky. |
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The picture is a bit different if that $500k is all your assets or even substantially more than all your assets (a common situation for a first-time buyer with a big mortgage). Which suggests you should rent until you've built up substantial investments of other sorts, and then consider buying.
Historically, I think the variability in price of a single house hasn't been any worse than that of, say, a typical index fund. (Disclaimer: I haven't actually checked the figures.)
Of course, all the above treats houses as just another investment. This is a useful perspective, but you're going to be living in your house too, and questions like "can I redesign the bathroom?" and "if there's a flood or an earthquake, am I liable for fixing/replacing everything?" and "am I bothered by the possibility that my landlord might just throw me out one day?" and "can I get up and move somewhere else with minimal hassle?" may be just as important to you as "what is likely to leave me with more valuable assets 20 years from now?".