Or, the market could crash on you, you bought high and now have a $100k mortgage on a house worth $50k... Now you are paying, over 30 years, $200k on a house that is worth $5ok... expected to mature at a rate of 5% per year... you got hosed.
And you have teh recourse of default if the drop is too big.
If you save for 5 years and buy the house for $125,000 right before the drop to $50,000 you are simply out $75,000.
Any investment entails risk, and a mortgage also has a mechanism to reduce some of the risk.
And the average house will trend upwards over a period of time, each case is different and you as an investor must make the decision.
True, but rent is typically lower, you aren't STUCK there for 30 years, etc. You also don't have to pay insurance (sometimes) and real estate taxes...
You can always pay it off early or transfer the mortgage to a new property. There are costs to these things, but you can get out of the 30 year term (or you could get a shorter term).
And rent vs mortgage payments will vary on a case by case basis, but they will often be similar and rent could be higher. Of courses there are taxes and maintenance costs so you have to look into each individual case.
The real estate market, when not in a bubble, is generally a 5% growth in value per year... if you can't outperform that in your investment, you don't deserve a house... And, you can also wait to buy low, get a short sale with cash, etc...
If I have the $20,000 (a 20% down payment) and can earn 10% while adding $5,000 per year it would take me 13 years to get enough to buy a $100,000 home at a 5% growth rate. That is a considerable period of time.
Please explain this better... it is confusing.
If you have the cash, you could use it to invest in other things, while you pay a mortgage, and outperform the value added in your housing investment, I think that is what you mean. This is true, but also risky... stock market crashes are way more frequent than housing market crashes. But, still, you should do better over time.
I'd personally like the security of not having a home payment to make, then you've no monthly massive bill, so you can invest with the extra cash on hand...
If I can get a mortgage for 6%, with a 8% investment return and a 5% growth in property values I am come out well ahead of buying the home outright. Of course there is risk, as I said, every investment carries risk and it is the investor's job to balance risk and rewards. But this scenario has the added benefit of diversifying. Whereas you buying your house outright are entire crippled id the housing market collapses, I could have investments in various industries through stocks and/or bonds or other investment vehicles that each face their own risk, but any individual drop is of far less consequence to me than the housing market to you.
I am not saying you should go out and get the maximum mortgage, but that it sometimes is a good idea to get a large mortgage. You have to assess you needs and options in each case just like any other investment. I have in the past argued both sides of this issue (and of renting vs buying) when somebody came in and asserted an absolute because there are no absolutes.