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How many people do you know who have gone into the stock market and bought one
security, other than the company they work for, and never considered buying
another share of another company? How many stamp collectors do you know who
have one stamp? Art aficionados who own one painting? I believe you get my
point.
What about housing? Why should you limit yourself to one house (finances aside
for this point of the discussion)? Who says you can't have a second home, a
rental property, a vacation place? More importantly, have you considered the
upside of additional real estate from a utility, enjoyment and financial stand
point? Enough questions, lets look at some of the answers.
About 2/3 of American citizens own their home, leaving 1/3 to either live with
an owner or rent. Residential real estate was never considered an
"investment," specifically one's home, until inflation and the baby boomers
arrived in the 1970s. We had a demand-pull inflation created by excess demand
for houses by an unusually large group of people forming families at one time
without enough supply.
Voila, prices in desirable areas started increasing. The rest is history. In
that history are thousands of stories of people becoming fabulously wealthy
simply owning their own home and eventually selling it for previously
unthinkable profits.
I must note here, not every area in the country had the amazing increase in
housing prices found on the two coasts, sunbelt, specific sections in various
states in the continental 48, Hawaii and Alaska. Not to say that special areas
in every state do not exist where the demand for residential real estate far
exceeds the supply and is reflected in the prices. If you are not looking in these areas, you can easily miss them.
I grew up in Southern California, about 20 minutes from the Pacific Ocean. Nine
of us started hanging together in high school and the group still exists today.
None of us ever considered buying a house at the ocean's shore. Two who
became doctors now live by the sea in Hawaii, another who also became a doctor
eventually bought a house by the ocean in Orange County and a fourth who became
a builder bought a second home at the beach in Orange County as well. Our
oversight was very costly. Had we seen what those who came from other parts of
the country without an ocean had seen, a uniqueness that is both desirable and
scarce, we could have captured ocean front properties at land locked prices.
Who knew?
One important point at the crux of this discussion is real estate, as with any
other investment, does not go straight up or straight down, but has over the
modern history of our nation, maintained an upward bias.
In the late 1980s, the aerospace companies moved out of Southern California and
real estate took 5 to 7 years to come back, but back it came with a vengeance.
At the turn of this century, the telecom companies abandoned the Denver area
where they had recently arrived, and real estate dropped for years but is now
on the comeback trail. Until we find a way to live without structure(s),
residential real estate is here to stay and eventually will resume the upward
long term trend.
The major benefit of owning residential real estate is using it or getting a
financial return from others using it. Therefore, you can have a primary
residence and a second home for your use or a rental home for financial gain.
One can rent their place for short periods to help defer the cost, especially
in unique locations. Continued... |