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Your home is not an investment

Posted Aug 25 2009, 07:57 AM by Karen Datko
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This devil's advocate post comes from Jim Wang at partner blog Bargaineering.

A few years ago, when the housing market was sizzling hot, everyone and their mother talked about how their home was a fantastic investment. They talked about how a home that sold 10 years ago had quadrupled in value over the last five and cursed themselves for not buying more.

I knew someone who owned four rental properties, all bought with adjustable-rate mortgages, and was making a "killing" on the rents and appreciation. I knew someone else who was looking at his paper riches and marveling at how wonderful homeownership was.

Then the housing market stalled. ARMs reset. People were in rough shape. Those who overextended learned something the prudent have always understood: As much as your home is a great place, it's not an investment.

Value appreciates with inflation rate

There's a great analysis of home appreciation versus inflation that concludes that home prices don't appreciate faster than inflation. Michael Bluejay takes a look at historical data provided by the U.S. Census, the National Association of Realtors, and the Case-Schiller Index, so it's not a guess. It's based on hard data.

One big insight that I think many other analyses miss is the increase in the average size of a home. When you look strictly at census data, new homes increased in value an average of 5.4% a year, compared with 4.4% annual inflation over that same period (1963-2008). However, when you consider that the size of a home increased from 983 square feet to 2,349 square feet, you'll see that we're simply buying bigger houses.

An investment has to beat inflation, not match it, because otherwise you're taking a risk for no reason.

No improvement is profitable

Every year, Remodeling magazine does a survey on the best home value renovations. No matter which year you look at, there is never a remodeling job that ends up being profitable. In 2007 and 2008, the best home value renovation was adding a deck and that topped out at 85.4% and 81.8%, respectively.

So, as your home ages and needs major repair work, you're immediately taking a loss on that "investment." Our home was 25 years old when we bought it. In the last three years we've replaced all the windows and replaced the roof at a total cost of $12,000.

Carrying costs

When people talk about how they bought their house for X dollars and sold it for Y dollars, they rarely talk about the interest and property taxes they've paid. It's very exciting to hear about a home that has doubled or even tripled in value (or more!), but property taxes and interest are annual expenses that often get ignored when we're looking at the headline numbers.

Even when you account for the tax benefits, the costs can be substantial. The national average effective property tax rate (2000 census data) is 1.1127% and the national average value of a home is $158,934, so you can expect to pay $1,768 a year in property taxes. Slice off 25% for income taxes and it's still $1,326 a year. It's not an inconsequential amount to pay each and every year.

Transaction fees

If you want an investment, buy a stock. You can get into and out of a stock for free at Zecco, for $2.95 at OptionsHouse, and for $4.95 at TradeKing. Want to buy or sell a house? Be prepared to fork over 4% to 6% of the sales price as a commission to the real estate agents involved. Can you imagine paying 4% to 6% of each stock transaction? No one would ever do it.

Not only are the transaction fees high, the market is illiquid. Buying or selling a home can take a long time. With a stock, you can expect it to be gone within minutes in a marketplace that has many participants. You sold it at the best price possible the moment you sold it. With a home, you can't be sure. If you have only one buyer or you are the only buyer, you don't know if you have a good price because it was determined in an open marketplace.

Summary

There are many benefits to owning a home and I'm a huge fan of it, but don't justify buying a home by thinking a home is an investment. It's not.

It is, however, a place to live, a place to make your own, and a place to make yours. It's a place to put down roots, to raise a family, and to grow old in. It's a place to call your own, it's just not an investment. It's a home.

Related reading at Bargaineering:

CD rates

TradeKing vs. Zecco: Discount broker comparison

How to win the lottery

Comments

 

Yes, a house IS an investment. It is something alien to most modern Americans; a long term investment. Yes, your home will eventually appreciate in value. Yes, you pay taxes, but SO DO RENTERS. I'm also building equity. Equity is a good thing. After 15 years I'll have something worth something that I COULD sell, but will instead choose to live in.

I never understood the house flippers and the rental moguls. Their actions reeked too much of day trading.

But your home IS an investment in your future!  Haven't you seen the National Association of Realtors commercial?  It doesn't matter what the housing market does, they always put out their propoganda about how it's "A GREAT TIME TO BUY A HOME!"  

A home is not an investment. What you sell a house for in 15 years will not cover the price you paid, the interest on the mortgage, the taxes you paid, the extra utilities, and the maintenance costs. A home is a place to live, but it's also a money pit. You will lose just as much money when you sell the house in 15 years that a renter will lose by renting for 15 years. It's basically wash. The only extras you get with a house are liabilities, the inability to move suddenly if you need to, and maintenance responsibilities.

I'll continue to rent and continue to invest the extra money I have from not owning home. In the end I'll have way more liquidity and net worth than any house owner with the same income.

I'm basing this off of a comparison of my apartment to my parents' house. Same area, same square footage, but my parents pay way more per month in total costs on their  PAID OFF home than I do on the apartment.

Plus I get a renter's deduction on my state taxes for the entire amount of rent I pay.

Here's another thing I tell people (and they usually get angry and defensive):

Do you have a mortgage payment?  Then you don't OWN your home...the bank does.  Until that mortgage is paid off, the house is like a financed automobile.   As long as you make the payments, life is OK.  But if you miss a couple payments, they tow your baby away at 2 AM.  

Split hairs.  This is nearly the same discussion as:

blogs.moneycentral.msn.com/.../americans-still-believe-home-investment.aspx

It is an important topic for those considering a home purchase.

Your home is an investment, if your intention is to stay in it long term, not constantly thinking that you will move to something bigger and better in 5, 10, or 15 years.  When you get old you will have all of your stocks, maybe a pension, 401k, IRA etc, but if you also own your home, you will have that too as a fall back option if you need it.  When it's paid off, you will only owe for upkeep and property taxes.  The big issue is that people aren't staying in their homes long term, yet they keep thinking that it's an investment...an investment in what?  It's not as though people are staying in their homes for 40 years and think this is the place where I will retire and spend the rest of my days.   For those that are staying in the home for the rest of their lives, it is an investment, just not making them the hundreds of thousands that people who are flipping would like to make.

The only good reason to buy a home is to live in it!  We've never had a house that recouped all the money we spent on it while we were there.

You have to live somewhere.  I get way more for my mortgage than an equal amount of rent.  I wouldn't recoup anything if I lived in an apartment, at least I will get something back when I sell my house.  I have no illusions that I am adding value when I fix things, replace worn carpet, etc.  I'm just keeping up and hopefully not losing value.  

I just bought my first home for $120K in California!  Which is pretty damn cheap for the area. Its not huge, but big enough for me and my fiance.  Its also cheaper than the rent we have been paying for the last 2 years by quite a bit.  We dont ever plan on having kids, so we don't have to worry about upgrading in 5-10 years.  So in 30 years from now, when we are retired and on a fixed income, and we have no mortgage, I will consider it a pretty damn good investment! And when I pass, I can leave a paid off house to my niece and nephew.  Its unlikely that in 30-50 years you will still be able to buy a house in Cali for $120k, so yes I put maintenance and pay taxes on it, but it equals the same as my rent, and in the end, I have a paid off house worth a small chunk of change.  A house in only an investment if you plan on holding onto it until its paid off!

As a Realtor it's important to look at the stock market as one blogger suggested. Stock have depreciated how much in the past year. And for those lucky enough to not have paid to much in highly overinflated areas of the country, the homes in many areas have continued to appreciate. I'll take 3-5% appreciation per year before losing all in the market any day. And once you pay off your home (which should be a quick goal for any homeowner), you can put that extra cash in another venue and then you'll have double when you do sell if you take care of it correctly. Sorry Denneara you're incorrect. If you were then people would never buy a home. If you look at the millionaires in the country, 99% of all of them have at LEAST 89% tied up in personal real estate, rentals, and flips. There has to be a reason for that. I"m choosing to follow their example, try to live below my means on a budget, pay of my home and have $$ when we retire. It's the only solution.

Holly, Realtor, SC

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