Home As an Investment

By Jonathan Clements

This year, I sold one apartment and bought another. It was a reminder that the words “home” and “investment” don’t belong in the same sentence

Don’t get me wrong: I’m all in favor of home ownership. The tax breaks are impressive. Home ownership forces us to save: With each mortgage payment, we whittle down the loan balance, so eventually we own a valuable asset free and clear. Most important, a home provides us with a place to live.

But what about the price appreciation? According to Freddie Mac , home prices have climbed just 3.7% a year over the past 30 years, not much above the 2.8% inflation rate. To make matters worse, this figure doesn’t reflect the hefty costs of buying, owning and selling a home. What if you include those? Consider one columnist’s sorry tale.

Carrying Costs

This is a topic I’ve tackled before, most notably in a June 2005 Wall Street Journal Sunday article entitled “How Houses Eat Money.” That column, which appeared a year before the real-estate bubble peaked, detailed how I had fared financially with the home I then owned in New Jersey.

read more at: http://www.wsj.com/articles/dont-buy-a-home-as-an-investment-1419728902

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purpose only

California Adds Electrical Vehicle Incentives

car

California’s plug-in electric vehicle drivers are about to get new financial perks.

Members of the California Public Utilities Commission are scheduled to sign off today on guidelines for an annual credit against utility bills or a one-time vehicle rebate. The commission will let individual utilities decide which incentive to offer.

Southern California Edison is proposing a one-time rebate of $250 to $350 per new vehicle owner.

San Diego Gas & Electric intends to provide an annual bill credit but declined to say how much.  “We just don’t have any specific numbers at this point. It’s too early,” said Erin Coller, an SDG&E spokeswoman. “The numbers are not available right now.”

read more at: http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2014/dec/18/electric-vehicles-get-new-perk/

disclaimer: for entertainment and information purposes only

Home-Price Gains at 2 Year Low

The pace of home-price appreciation in San Diego County fell last month to its lowest rate since June 2012, the period just before real-estate investors pushed annual gains into the double digits for a nearly 18 month stretch.

In November, the median price for a home sold in San Diego County was $430,000, up 3.6 percent from November 2013, real-estate tracker CoreLogic DataQuick reported Monday. That’s the slowest annual gain in home prices since they grew 1.7 percent year-over-year in June 2012. Over the next year, however, the pace would skyrocket to 24.1 percent in June 2013, as investors fixed and flipped bank-owned properties left over from the Great Recession.

Foreclosure resales now make up just 3.6 percent of all transactions, and as such the pace of appreciation has descended to single digits. The market is now paced by traditional factors like income, employment and overall affordability, which decreases activity because it puts less pressure on people to buy now or get priced out, said Mark Goldman, a loan officer and real-estate lecturer at San Diego State University.

read more at: http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2014/dec/15/dataquick-november-realestate-listings-mortgages/

disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only