It is what happens when Gus wins.
I think you meant to say, "It is what happens when WE LET Gus THINK he won."
I'ma hug you anyway. Though it may be around your knees.
'Jaynestown'
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
It is what happens when Gus wins.
I think you meant to say, "It is what happens when WE LET Gus THINK he won."
I'ma hug you anyway. Though it may be around your knees.
t winces on the x-post
Still, Maria, that was a local thing. Your DF-parents notwithstanding ...
Gawd, I hate to be a cocksucker, but can we compare 150K against the interest they paid over 30 years?
t sweeps into thread, hugs Gus, runs away from scary financial talk
Gawd, I hate to be a cocksucker, but can we compare 150K against the interest they paid over 30 years?
Assuming no money down and a 7% interest rate, a 30-year fixed had them paying ~$42K in interest. They're still ahead $108K.
I hate to add to the arguement - but if I remember the (fake)number of the loan my house needs to go up another 230k - if I pay the loan at the way it is set up. over 30 yrs - quite probable.
My parents never lost on a house. even being in the military and being in one house for just over a year.
It is possible to lose in the houseing market. there are bad places to buy and bad times. but if you can sit, it usually pays.
t nibbles Gus' ear, driving silly financial chatter from his pwetty bwain
assuming no money down and a 7% interest rate, a 30-year fixed had them paying ...
All generous assumptions, but not unreasonable. Let us now factor in 1975 dollars against today's dollars. Woops.
I want my 1975 bux back.
t makes out with Trudy in a way that makes money a dim, distant memory
I want my 1975 bux back.
But it's a hypothetical. Even if a house had never been purchased, you still wouldn't have your 1975 dollars back.
Don't forget they were paying down the 1975 value of the house. The amount of their mortgage didn't increase with the cost of living, so their $200/month payment--which in 2005 terms would equal $713--is still far less than it would cost to rent a house of comparable size.
If they had saved that $200/month, starting in 1975, they would have $98,500 today (assuming a standard savings account at 2% interest). Less than the $108K they've made on the house.
and of course they couldn't have saved that 200.... or not all of it because you have to live somewhere...