Renting vs. Buying a Home: The 5% Rule

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  • čas přidán 31. 05. 2024
  • Meet with PWL Capital: calendly.com/d/3vm-t2j-h3p
    Please note that while this content is broadly applicable, it was originally intended for a Canadian audience.
    You can't compare rent to a mortgage payment. This way of thinking about the rent versus buy decision is extremely flawed. Comparing a mortgage payment to rent is not an apples to apples comparison. In order to properly assess the rent versus buy decision, we need to compare the total unrecoverable costs of renting to the total unrecoverable costs of owning.
    That may sound like a complicated task, but I have boiled it down to a simple calculation.
    Referenced in this video:
    The Case for Renting a Home - Part 1 - www.pwlcapital.com/the-case-f...
    The Case for Renting a Home - Part 2 - www.pwlcapital.com/the-case-f...
    The Case for Renting - www.pwlcapital.com/resources/...
    The Credit Suisse Global Investment Returns Yearbook 2018 - www.credit-suisse.com/media/a...
    Read up on more investing advice, insights and white papers here.
    www.pwlcapital.com/teams/pass...
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    PWL Capital Blog Post: www.pwlcapital.com/rent-or-ow...
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Komentáře • 8K

  • @sometheam6136
    @sometheam6136 Před 5 lety +19306

    Why am I watching this with $31 in my bank account

    • @EdgarDeSola
      @EdgarDeSola Před 5 lety +188

      Buy a lotto, then it will make sense to you (If you win, of course)

    • @jrg305
      @jrg305 Před 5 lety +839

      @@EdgarDeSola that is horrible advice.

    • @jrg305
      @jrg305 Před 5 lety +184

      @@EdgarDeSola the lotto is not free... She would be wasting her money.

    • @EdgarDeSola
      @EdgarDeSola Před 5 lety +97

      @@jrg305 There's never a free lunch! You pay one way or another.!

    • @TheCoachRC
      @TheCoachRC Před 5 lety +147

      That's all you can afford to do at this time. Keep stacking your paper and take notes from this video.

  • @EmiliaGeelan
    @EmiliaGeelan Před 6 dny +788

    You might not have a hundred million dollars to invest, but that doesn’t mean your money can’t share in the same opportunities available to others. You work hard for your money; make sure your money works hard for you.

    • @Williamesq12327
      @Williamesq12327 Před 6 dny

      The wealth you pass to the next generation can have a profound impact on your heirs, providing educational opportunities, the capital to start a business, or financial support to your grandchildren.

    • @tahirisaid2693
      @tahirisaid2693 Před 6 dny

      To manage investment risk, consider maintaining a broad diversification of your investments that reflects your personal risk tolerance, time horizon, and the nature of your financial goal. Remember, diversification is an approach to help manage investment risk. It does not eliminate the risk of loss if security prices decline.Because investing can be complicated, consider working with a financial professional to help guide you on your wealth-building journey.

    • @GeralynWinnifeld
      @GeralynWinnifeld Před 6 dny

      can you endorse any ?

    • @tahirisaid2693
      @tahirisaid2693 Před 6 dny

      Angela Lynn Schilling, does a perfect job. look her up on the web

    • @tahirisaid2693
      @tahirisaid2693 Před 6 dny

      Angela Lynn Schilling is the licensed advisor I use. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment.

  • @DanCooper404
    @DanCooper404 Před rokem +1371

    1.7% inflation? 😍 Ah, the good old days.

    • @fablouis9783
      @fablouis9783 Před 3 měsíci +38

      15% today ❤

    • @homomorphic
      @homomorphic Před 3 měsíci +31

      Ahhh, the good old days when someone would call the days of 1.7% inflation the good old days.

    • @homomorphic
      @homomorphic Před 3 měsíci +17

      ​@@fablouis9783 actually, 3.7% annualized here in the US.

    • @shaprensteel1
      @shaprensteel1 Před 3 měsíci +4

      @DanCooper404 does the inflation number actually matters, if both real estate market and the stock market catch-up inflation in a similar way

    • @homomorphic
      @homomorphic Před 3 měsíci +9

      @@shaprensteel1 yes it matters. The value of real estate tends to rise at at least the rate of inflation, while the market tends to decrease during times of high interest (which is the typical governmental response to high inflation).
      This is why real estate is usually considered a hedge against inflation.

  • @gavendano92
    @gavendano92 Před rokem +2044

    Ben - it would be extremely interesting to see an updated version of this video using the latest interest rates.

    • @adpmilne
      @adpmilne Před rokem +94

      This. Both sides of the equation are quite different right now. He's looking at long term averages, but I wonder who's buying on long term averages after wathcing home prices crash 15% last year.

    • @samanthasamuels4645
      @samanthasamuels4645 Před rokem +5

      😂😂😂😂

    • @FratAsh
      @FratAsh Před rokem +65

      The 10% rule 😢

    • @stuckupcurlyguy
      @stuckupcurlyguy Před 10 měsíci +126

      The whole point of this video (and most of Ben's videos) is that you shouldn't react to short-term changes in the market because it's impossible to predict or extrapolate these into the future.

    • @fallonfpv1097
      @fallonfpv1097 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Lol

  • @snooppee7459
    @snooppee7459 Před 4 lety +8423

    Came here to learn if I should buy or rent.
    Learned that I cannot beat this man in a staring contest.

  • @suehwan
    @suehwan Před 4 lety +3254

    we gonna need Renting vs Live in a Van down by the River comparison

    • @deborahundergrace2776
      @deborahundergrace2776 Před 4 lety +28

      hahahAHAGAHAHA

    • @wordzmyth
      @wordzmyth Před 4 lety +27

      Live in a camper up by the barn on the hill for me, but yeah.

    • @Unforgiveness
      @Unforgiveness Před 4 lety +84

      in all seriousness, i think this 5% rule still applies. You would then be taking the Van as owned property, and the unrecoverable cost would be gas, maintenance, and maybe parking tickets?

    • @tonythetiger9839
      @tonythetiger9839 Před 4 lety +51

      van wins every time

    • @vihbidao7143
      @vihbidao7143 Před 4 lety +2

      Lol

  • @ivesvaz2894
    @ivesvaz2894 Před 3 měsíci +112

    Man this is gold, I'm seeing a lot of comments on the numbers you've used - but people don't get the point. Just being able to pin down which variables to consider in this decision is a game changer, the numbers can be defined by you based on your actual reality - as you said about the investor's profile

  • @LarryAnthony-ut8ok44
    @LarryAnthony-ut8ok44 Před 2 měsíci +166

    For me, I believe retirees who struggle to meet their basic needs are the ones who could not accumulate enough money during their active years to meet their needs. Retirement choices determine a lot of things. My wife and I both spent same number of years in the civil service, she invested through a wealth manager and myself through the 401k. We both still earning after our retirement.

    • @JerryLuca-nm9ru55
      @JerryLuca-nm9ru55 Před 2 měsíci

      This is true. I'm in my mid 50's now. My wife and I were following this same trajectory. Last two years, I pulled out my money and invested with her wealth manager. Not catching up with her profits over the years, but at least I earn more. I'm making money even before retiring, and my retirement fund has grown way more than it would have with just the 401(k). Haha.

  • @sensitiveecoterrorist
    @sensitiveecoterrorist Před 4 lety +2005

    this dude blinked like four times thru the whole lecture i swear to god bro u on another level

    • @ITM95
      @ITM95 Před 4 lety +87

      Bro I just tried to keep my eyes open as long as he does and I nearly went blind 😂 wtf

    • @Someone-ig7we
      @Someone-ig7we Před 4 lety +7

      There are cuts lol

    • @EdekLay
      @EdekLay Před 4 lety +84

      No he just blinked every time you blinked, that's why you didn't see it

    • @MsNovazz
      @MsNovazz Před 4 lety +7

      Lol this comment and those replies surely made my day! 😂😂😂😂

    • @virgilioreneau1862
      @virgilioreneau1862 Před 4 lety +5

      Dude, it's contagious. I didn't blink until I saw him blink.

  • @frogery
    @frogery Před 3 lety +3541

    what i learned: keep living at home with parents

    • @sanakiddy2883
      @sanakiddy2883 Před 3 lety +269

      Thats not silly ...thats what billionaires, millionaires and politicians children do. Why start from level 0 in every generation. Thats the secret of rich. Thats the culture in asian countries too. Rich kids start from a higher platform bcoz they do not fly the nest. Kids flying the nest is the worst thing for a family tree in practicality.

    • @sanakiddy2883
      @sanakiddy2883 Před 3 lety +115

      @@David_prod-eNGee ha ha ..dont know ..may be what i commented is an obvious open secret. By the way i am from asia ..in our culture ..if a father has two kids he tries his best to have his children live with them all through life ...split his home into 3 portions one for parents one for son one for daughter. Some dads simply buy two homes for two kids. And the next generation kids do the same so there is no bankruptcy / no homeless poverty or there is no this weird thing of every kid starting from zero. Every kids stands on his dads wealth platform and go above from there . Cheers. In my case ..my grand dad has 3 kids so he left 3 homes for 3 kids ...my mom got 1 home and my dad got 1 home .i myself purchased 2 homes. So thanks to my grand dads wisdom ..i own 4 homes on my side alone. My wifes parents have a home including that we have 5 homes for our 2 kids. This is how wealth is built. Cheers have a great day. And all the while we lived and living with our parents in a same home. Their guidance is added bonus.

    • @pingdingdongpong
      @pingdingdongpong Před 3 lety +276

      At the expense of unrecoverable cost of sanity.

    • @sanakiddy2883
      @sanakiddy2883 Před 3 lety +39

      @@pingdingdongpong when we say living with parents, its kind of the home is split into 3 portions.of living area ..we have common kitchen, common electricity bill, common cars, common cooking and cleaning maids, common property tax, our parents guide our kids we never risk baby sitters, kids get monitored when we tour on work assignments, and the list goes ...its a win win ..with some give in take back.cheers.

    • @sanakiddy2883
      @sanakiddy2883 Před 3 lety +20

      @@pingdingdongpong and in the western world ..children of millionaires, billinaires, politicians, business men mostly follow asian life style and they dont become homeless all of a sudden like other common man westeners. Its weird someone from a well to do family going homeless in a matter of a few years.

  • @Frutoses
    @Frutoses Před rokem +26

    You didn't consider being homeless and investing all of the money in stocks.

  • @billowspillow
    @billowspillow Před 4 měsíci +220

    Thinking of owning a home as only a financial and wealth-building decision is part of the reason that the real estate market is out of control these days. The primary reasons I own my house are familial. There's no way I'd have ever weighed my options of using my downpayment to buy my home vs. investing it into the stock market and continuing renting, even if the latter scenario was more lucrative.

    • @JLfpv
      @JLfpv Před 3 měsíci +7

      So make a decision based on emotions and not logic. Ie make a decision for the emotional win instead of yhe financial win.

    • @ChrisCypher
      @ChrisCypher Před 3 měsíci +112

      ​​@@JLfpvit's not making a decision based on emotion over logic. It's simply valuing other things beyond financial return. Homeownership is not exclusively a financial investment.

    • @ChrisM541
      @ChrisM541 Před 3 měsíci +15

      Well put. Property is, today, almost 100% seen as an investment. Tied to this is the fact lenders have been increasing payback length into retirement and salary multipliers, meaning buyers have more money....meaning sellers will naturally increase prices further. Today's mortgage is a chain round your neck till you die.

    • @billowspillow
      @billowspillow Před 3 měsíci +13

      @@JLfpv Is life harder or easier when you're that simple?

    • @rafaelz1580
      @rafaelz1580 Před 3 měsíci +6

      This doesnt make sense, either way you have to pay for property, who says you cant rise children of have a family in a rented space? You still have to work and pay, if anything wouldnt saving more money on housing help pay stuff like food, better education, clothes…?

  • @jtstanley26
    @jtstanley26 Před 4 lety +3391

    Takes a shot every time he blinks.. still sober

  • @fazdoll
    @fazdoll Před 5 lety +845

    I am just mesmerized by those cute little swaying pine trees.

  • @savinayn
    @savinayn Před rokem +462

    THIS is the summary of the rent vs buy decision I’ve been trying to figure out for years. The rental income vs mortgage payment calculation never made sense to me. But this is much more logical and makes far more sense. Thank you for simplifying this!

    • @barryallen5507
      @barryallen5507 Před rokem +29

      Its an accurate breakdown with good explanations, but his entire explanation is a counter argument to his original statement.
      Apples to oranges or not, they're both money sinks, and they're an equivalent cost, then home ownership is the better choice.
      Not really sure why he went on a weird tangent about the stock market, but I have no interest in treating the stock market like a savings account.

    • @chreechree6900
      @chreechree6900 Před 9 měsíci

      @@barryallen5507 The point about the stock market is that if you take your would-be down payment and invest it instead of buying, that's money you'd be earning returns on vs money that would be tied in your house, that, according to him/ his formula, would be appreciating at a lower rate. It's valid... to a point. The problem is that he never accounts for no longer having a payment when the mortgage is paid off, potentially for decades, greatly improving your cash flow. I guess the idea is that, if you invested, you'd have more money to draw on to continue your rent payments, and the other costs of ownership (maintenance, tax, insurance) never go away. Still, the other big flaw, I'd argue, is that it doesn't account for the rising costs of renting. Overall, rents are forever rising, so what might have been easily affordable in younger working years might become a huge burden during retirement. There's also always the issue of being forced out of your rental. You can't guarantee you can stay forever, and moving has financial (and potentially social, community based costs). Let's say you're renting with kids. Housing in your area has skyrocketed and your landlord wants to cash in and sell the property. You're forced to move, and you've now been priced out of your current area. Your kids are now forced into a new school district, new sports teams, perhaps a new church/ doctor/ dentist, and it's harder for you to see your own friends, you have a longer commute to work, etc. Just as one of the advantages of renting is not being tied to one place and being easily mobile, one of the advantages of buying is being secure in your community/ being able to put down roots, etc. So, yeah, renting might be the right solution for some people and at certain times in the lives of others, but I still think that ownership is better long-term for most.

    • @spoookyspencer
      @spoookyspencer Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@barryallen5507the stock market is essentially your avenue to retirement. Without it you have no hope. Basically he's saying that if you can pay less in rent and be able to invest more into the market, setting yourself up for retirement, it could outweigh the benefits of owning a home. If you pay $1000 in rent and invest $2000 every month, that could outweigh having a $3000 mortgage and being unable to invest.

    • @scottclowe
      @scottclowe Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@barryallen5507Investing in the stock market (e.g. with an all-share index tracker) will in the long run give far better returns than a savings account. If you're going to compare options of what to do with your money, it makes sense to compare against the more favourable options.

    • @bjjking1000
      @bjjking1000 Před 7 měsíci +15

      This summary is very misleading. Don’t forget that you play with borrowed money in the real estate scenario. A 3% return would be worth much more than even a 10%return in stocks. Be careful

  • @jacksonpohl
    @jacksonpohl Před 11 měsíci +619

    For newbies, be aware that this is a grossly oversimplified scenario. For one thing, you can't get a mortgage on an investment property without at least 25% down payment. Two, it's easy to see comps for house purchase prices, but it takes a lot of research to understand the comps on rent prices. The trick is to find a place where renting is more expensive than buying, but those places are less common because of this very type of scenario. Three, you have to remember that rent number he's using is supposed to be net income, not gross. So you have to think about costs for taxes, insurance, maintenance and vacancy when you're researching investments. All that said, real estate investing is a good tool for wealth accumulation. But it isn't foolproof.

    • @rogerwheelers4322
      @rogerwheelers4322 Před 11 měsíci +6

      Very soon, affordable housing will no longer be affordable. So anything anyone want to do, I will advise they do it now because the prices today will look like dips tomorrow. Until the Fed clamps down even further, I think we're going to see hysteria due to rampant inflation. You can't halfway rip the band-aid off.

    • @CrystalCorporation3
      @CrystalCorporation3 Před 11 měsíci +6

      Home prices will come down eventually, but for now; get your money (as much as you can) out of the housing market and get into the financial markets or gold. The new mortgage rates are crazy, add to that the recession and the fact that mortgage guidelines are getting more difficult. Home prices will need to fall by a minimum of 40% (more like 50%) before the market normalizes.If you are in cross roads or need sincere advise on the best moves to take now its best you seek an independent advisor who knows about the financial markets.

    • @jeromepersaud7367
      @jeromepersaud7367 Před 11 měsíci +31

      But if you're shopping for an investment property it isn't a rent vs buy scenario

    • @silasgramer6153
      @silasgramer6153 Před 9 měsíci +7

      7:34 He literally said that it was an oversimplification. I hope everyone watching this (and being able to apply the information at some point in their lifes) will use this as an eye-opener to look into related topics more thoroughly. Which is most likely a main goal of this video.

    • @chreechree6900
      @chreechree6900 Před 9 měsíci +14

      This is about renting vs buying to live in, not about buying investment properties. That's a whole other discussion.

  • @samknobeloch503
    @samknobeloch503 Před 3 lety +1049

    "An unrecoverable cost is a cost that you pay with no associated residual value..." The term is easier to understand than the definition

    • @unknownip6741
      @unknownip6741 Před 3 lety +2

      Somehow i clicked on your name and saw your subs... good shit man

    • @kyrie4451
      @kyrie4451 Před 3 lety +38

      Welcome to the finance industry where we make simple things more complicated.

    • @reasonableattempt1918
      @reasonableattempt1918 Před 3 lety +18

      This was the sentence which made me think I was going to need to actually focus

    • @usernameluis305
      @usernameluis305 Před 3 lety +12

      Pseudo intellectuals love making the definition harder to understand than the term.

    • @reasonableattempt1918
      @reasonableattempt1918 Před 3 lety +2

      @@usernameluis305 wow, way to ruin the fun

  • @jobe8764
    @jobe8764 Před 4 lety +959

    As an older man, the wisest thing I did was buy a humble hidden home on a large property. No way would I have the energy or money to keep paying escalating rents in my old age. Think about your future self as an old and weak person one day. You will need a place to live that is paid for.

    • @roxannegordon6162
      @roxannegordon6162 Před 4 lety +119

      Kenton Huges: FINALLY someone said it like I say it. Rent is FOREVER. Mortgage is NOT!! It will end. Then take that money and use it to pay property taxes and any repairs. I have no repairs on my house, but I am going to remodel, update my kitchen. I can do this with out a problem. I'm ALLOWED to do it since it's MY house.

    • @avinashl3762
      @avinashl3762 Před 4 lety +114

      The problem sometimes is the property taxes. I live in an up and coming area. I know of many old folks who had this in mind, bought a house and have 'paid-off'. No one anticipated that part of town to have such a big boom. Now the property taxes are higher than the cost of rent in other areas of the city. Many are being forced to make hard choices at old age.

    • @nameommited
      @nameommited Před 4 lety +12

      @@avinashl3762 and thats the worst, everyone knows old people should never have to do anything challenging! Cause breathing can be hard enough!

    • @danielsummerson7662
      @danielsummerson7662 Před 4 lety +219

      You completely missed the point of the video. You are failing to see that there is an opportunity cost associated with the purchase of real estate. You could have rented that humble home rather than buying it and the difference could have been put towards some other investment class which would have provided you with greater returns than your real estate. Those returns could then have funded your retirement. There's always a trade-off to every decision you make (the opportunity cost).

    • @eezy251able
      @eezy251able Před 4 lety +39

      That's when the rich will tell you you're wrong. If you are smart I'd invest that money to make growth. Putting all that money into house you wont see unless you sell. I'd invest that money to buy property to rent out. Set yourself up. That house you will buy will never pay you!

  • @eliastouil7686
    @eliastouil7686 Před 22 dny +8

    Watching in 2024 💀

  • @user-iu5jz2zi9q
    @user-iu5jz2zi9q Před 4 měsíci +163

    You have made a very valid example about opportunity cost. That's something not many people talk about

    • @ketelin4285
      @ketelin4285 Před 4 měsíci +1

      I have a hunch that only the big fishes reap the benefits of investing . And anyway how can everybody can benefit from doing it ? Who is paying ? Don't tell me , the late comers ...

    • @vitorguerreiro3902
      @vitorguerreiro3902 Před 3 měsíci +5

      @@ketelin4285 you come to a financial video to scream at a random dude about your "hunch" that the stock market is a pyramid scheme. I wonder how much experience you have actually investing lol

    • @Mrhalligan39
      @Mrhalligan39 Před 3 měsíci

      A lot of people trying to push you into the stock market forget that you can’t live in your stock market investments, but you CAN put your down payment money into investment accounts until it’s time to buy the house. “Opportunity cost” is bunk.

    • @astropioneer3296
      @astropioneer3296 Před 3 měsíci +3

      I’m 52 yrs old. Inherited nearly a million dollars in my 20s. Today have a home with a small mortgage but little else. Didn’t invest or spend wisely. Wish I had seen this video 25 yrs ago.

    • @fsociety6983
      @fsociety6983 Před 3 měsíci +2

      @@Mrhalligan39 Nobody forgets that lol. Learn the difference between "this advice isn't right for me" and "this is bad advice, no one is as smart as me"

  • @jays7287
    @jays7287 Před 4 lety +1407

    buy a home, rent it out to someone equivalent to your mortgage payment, then go live in a tent that's how you get ahead

    • @sgtdevildog7134
      @sgtdevildog7134 Před 4 lety +12

      Lmfao !!

    • @LauraStar127
      @LauraStar127 Před 4 lety +17

      Oh my fucking lord that was hilarious 😂😂😂

    • @maxhouse2409
      @maxhouse2409 Před 4 lety +61

      The general idea is to buy one house with two units. While you live in one unit, rent out the other. The rent collected will cover your household expenses. This will allow you to build up equity, but you are committed to the area for some years to come.

    • @thebobman69
      @thebobman69 Před 4 lety +44

      Max House yeh that just isn’t true. Once you take tax, Agent fee’s, maintainer and repairs, and mortgage, there isn’t that much left over.
      The only time you’ll get a meaningful profit is when the property is paid off in full

    • @therealjag
      @therealjag Před 4 lety +66

      If you want to live in a tent just buy a tent, fuck the house.

  • @thebikehippie6562
    @thebikehippie6562 Před 5 lety +1524

    In my case. Should I keep renting my apartment or buy a van and live down by the river?

    • @BenFelixCSI
      @BenFelixCSI  Před 5 lety +566

      Lifestyle choice. If I had no kids I'd take the van.

    • @thebikehippie6562
      @thebikehippie6562 Před 5 lety +88

      @@BenFelixCSI 😂

    • @vapeking466
      @vapeking466 Před 5 lety +79

      I seen a couple folks on youtube who lived in thier van while saving for a down payment on a house and they did very well in a year.

    • @pugtortuga3406
      @pugtortuga3406 Před 5 lety +124

      I lived in my car for 7 years. It’s actually not that bad. Gym, for showers and working out. Laundry mats. Good to go. Lol

    • @grizzly8859
      @grizzly8859 Před 5 lety +24

      The best person to ask would be Matt Foley buds.

  • @FlackNCoke
    @FlackNCoke Před rokem +36

    This only really matters if you look at home ownership as a monetary investment, rather than a “not being homeless and dying in an alleyway because I can’t pay my constantly increasing rent” investment.
    The other thing is you can get a set interest rate mortgage way easier than you can get a rent controlled apartment, and while home value generally goes up with inflation, rental costs have skyrocketed way beyond the rate of inflation and will likely continue to do so unless the government steps into prevent it.

    • @eleftheriosmas
      @eleftheriosmas Před 3 měsíci

      He said the figures he talks about are after inflation. That also means that theoretically your wage and rent are increased by inflation equally. If they dont, then it effectively means that you are getting a cut in your monthly income and that is sth irrelevant with the comparison of what one option and the other offer in returns.
      You can bring in the factor you talk about when his analysis, gets specific enough to include the factor of volatility in the housing and job market vs volatility in interest rates, which ofc is a big win for ownership since interest rates volatility is much lower than rent and the job market one, plus mortgage ends while rent is eternal😂

    • @danijelkurincic
      @danijelkurincic Před 3 měsíci

      Well, yes, but at the end of the day it IS an investment, with its pros and cons. Social sacurity of owning is not included in this calculus as is not the "being on my own" feeling or being forced not to blow your cash when you get that wage, but then the cost of feeling of being in debt or the cost of no liquidity. These are all legit, not so financial reasons that afe being completely omitted ... because this is a strict investment-to-investment comparison.

  • @tushartgi72
    @tushartgi72 Před rokem +304

    I think the increase in rent needs to be considered here. During initial years, owning might look expensive but then in GTA market people have started making cash surplus due to almost fixed EMI and a lot higher rents now.

    • @haph2087
      @haph2087 Před rokem +18

      True, but it's also hard to pin down.
      In this sense, owning is simple because (ignoring refinancing), you know what you will have to pay each month for the capital and tax portions of the costs of the house. (Maintenance is volatile, but likely to roughly follow inflation)
      Rent price changes could stay as they are, follow inflation, or go crazy, depending on how your local housing market changes going forwards, and that's not possible to accurately predict very far into the future.
      If you think of this as "this is just how much the costs will be next month", and keep in mind changes in the housing market are more likely to hurt the renter, and changes in the "whatever you use to make money" market is more likely to hurt the owner, then it's still useful.

    • @HanzShaoPing
      @HanzShaoPing Před rokem +30

      The taxes on your house can also go up.

    • @harrywang9375
      @harrywang9375 Před rokem +3

      Not at all. Rent increases are offset by compounding returns on other investments like stocks and bonds

    • @haph2087
      @haph2087 Před rokem +6

      @@harrywang9375 Negative. That’s the cost of capital.

    • @alismithhernandez7181
      @alismithhernandez7181 Před rokem +7

      wait.. why is nobody talking about the house itself, i mean owning abhouse you can sell any time and get your money back, not with renting... or what am i missing here?

  • @sailingfromsamsara9972
    @sailingfromsamsara9972 Před 4 lety +938

    As a 30 year veteran of the financial services industry I’ve had this discussion many times. Your approach is top notch.

    • @Daniel-fv1ff
      @Daniel-fv1ff Před 3 lety +23

      I have some things that I don't understand. Maybe you can help me out:
      Dont we need to adjust the real estate return for the leverage that has been taken? Say you buy a house for $100 with $20 of equity. If the house goes up by 1% To $101 your equity has gone up to $21, a 5% increase!
      Dont we also need to adjust the cost of debt for inflation? If you borrow $80 and pay say $2.4 interest every year (3%) but inflation is 2% ($1.6) your real cost of funds is only 1%, $0.8 per year.
      Obviously I've made simplfying assumptions but because you can get so much leverage on house purchases at cheap interest rates, it changes the calculations a lot.
      Rent is normally 2-3% the value of a house every year, so with the 5% rule it would almost never make sense to buy a house. This 5% rule seems to imply that the market prices houses incorrectly.

    • @gkoshy63
      @gkoshy63 Před 3 lety +2

      @@Daniel-fv1ff I agree. I understand he had to keep it simple for a CZcams video and he's trying to give an easy rubric to follow. But to do this correctly, you should ideally do the projections in a spreadsheet and include the actual split monthly between principal and interest payments, tax effects, upfront costs (various taxes and fees) etc. Would it make much of a difference? Don't know but I'd have more confidence in his conclusions if he said he had done it and checked.

    • @Golfnut_2099
      @Golfnut_2099 Před 3 lety +24

      @@gkoshy63 Here is what I look at...
      Rent --> Always increasing... Always have to pay...
      Mortgage --> Fixed (assuming you were smart and chose a fixed rate mortgage)... Eventually goes away...
      If you are going to be in a city or place for a short time, then renting works. There is no cost associated with getting out of a rental. If you plan to stay in one place for a long time (5 years... arbitrary...), than buying a REASONABLE home makes sense.

    • @nispelsm
      @nispelsm Před 3 lety +5

      @@Daniel-fv1ff Where do you live that rent is only 3% of the cost of a home? In the area where I live, it's $900/mo+ to rent a 3BR apartment, or just under $11k per year in unrecoverable costs, yet a 3BR home in the same neighborhood sells for $120k. Using the 5% rule, buying the house only has a unrecoverable cost of $6k per year.

    • @jerel42
      @jerel42 Před 3 lety +14

      @@Golfnut_2099 Yes, that is exactly the key point that Ben missed! When you own your home, no landlord can raise your rent 10 or 20% because the market will bear it -- YOU own it. When you get a fixed rate loan, in inflation-adjusted terms, your mortgage *decreases* over time, while you bet your bippy the rent is increasing. This is a **very** important factor that he did not build in.
      That said, it is certainly true that there is investment opportunity cost, cost of repairs, and property taxes, and that those should be considered before buying a home.
      Home ownership gives you control over your housing costs -- while renting causes you to constantly worry if you will be able to afford (or be allowed) to stay where you currently live. That could be considered tangible (future cost of renting) or could be considered an intangible -- safety and security of home ownership.
      Another intangible is the pride of home ownership, and higher societal status of home owners as compared to renters. When you include the fact that your fixed-rate mortgage constantly goes down in real terms, while the rent goes up annually in real terms, and when you include the intangibles of having control over your life, pride in home ownership, and better societal treatment, then home ownership becomes a much stronger proposition.
      As a financial coach, my default recommendation is that unless a person has "rent stability" (like they pay rent to their parents, a very nice landlord, or it is in a rent-controlled city) that they should probably buy a home, ASSUMING that they can comfortably manage all of the costs of home ownership in their budget, and certainly not ignoring the cost or location of the home.

  • @rolfbell7829
    @rolfbell7829 Před 3 lety +51

    Ben,
    For the US perspective the information not covered that influences the buy vs rent calculations are the following:
    1- There is very good historical data here on appreciation of real estate by zip code which influences value.
    This is an important assessment tool that should not be overlooked when selecting property.
    2-Mortgage interest can be written off on your income tax to lower your income tax.
    3- When you purchase your property for $500k at 20% down your $100k down leverages four to one so when your property
    appreciates (in our case) at 4% annually this is a 20% return on the $100k investment or $20,000 increase on the $500k.
    This in turn is compounded annually which is also not factored into your analysis. SO at the very least a 20% return subtracting the
    6.9% stock average is outperforming the stock market by 13.1%.
    4- Then US law provides a $500k non taxable profit for married couples and a $250K non taxable profit limit for singles at the point of sale while a
    stock sale requires a 20% tax on profit and will probably be going up under President Biden.
    Best to realize how to present to the US market as well.
    5- The additional factor would be to introduce how the math changes if you purchase a multiple unit property to live in.
    We purchased a duplex, live upstairs & have income from the second unit that covers 75% of our mortgage plus allowing tax depreciation
    on 50% of the value of the property plus tax write offs for improvements/ replacements.

    • @alexland7747
      @alexland7747 Před rokem

      Also on mortgage interest deduction, you are in reality getting 20% of the payment deducted because it isnt a credit

  • @NZLion
    @NZLion Před 3 měsíci +15

    I already knew I would never be able to afford to buy, but this has given me the tools to understand just how far out of my reach that really is.

  • @Gaijin101
    @Gaijin101 Před 3 měsíci +18

    2024: the 15% rule

  • @nickdejesu
    @nickdejesu Před 3 lety +208

    Buying a home is like a “forced” savings as many of us would find ways to spend the savings if it were easily accessible, like in a brokerage account.

    • @jmnthe3rd
      @jmnthe3rd Před rokem +6

      Retirement accounts are a great way to force yourself to save.
      A lot of people take home equity loans. Realistically, there is no legal way to truly tie up money in a way that you can't borrow against it.

    • @stuckupcurlyguy
      @stuckupcurlyguy Před rokem +2

      This is true - the numbers hold up if people are entirely rational and self-controlled. In reality the majority of people would benefit more from home ownership as it forces them to be good money managers. But if you ARE an excellent money manager, renting has many perks

    • @mn-ru4li
      @mn-ru4li Před 6 měsíci

      Not true. I only got true financial freedom when I got a mortgage. I have an offset with $50k min in there, which I use to travel, shop, afford healthcare, etc. How you structure your loan is important

    • @Matt-wf7ry
      @Matt-wf7ry Před 4 měsíci +2

      Only if you stay in the same house for a very long time, the savings evaporate if you keep buying and selling homes every few years due to the costs involved.

  • @chrisd6736
    @chrisd6736 Před 3 lety +599

    I need a rent vs squatting comparison.

    • @compresswealthdivideeconom3757
      @compresswealthdivideeconom3757 Před 3 lety +7

      Overpaid power monger cops love to hurt the poorest. Long ago I got kicked out from having a terrible mother and I couldn't find a place to park and sleep as cops keep wanting to ruin my existence.

    • @candidosantay6142
      @candidosantay6142 Před 3 lety +1

      😂

    • @sirving1297
      @sirving1297 Před 3 lety +11

      What is the unrecoverable cost of becoming a heroin addict gutter punk?

    • @kyrie4451
      @kyrie4451 Před 3 lety +1

      LMAO. I have considered parking my car in the company underground parkade to eliminate rent/utility cost...

    • @May13Tiffanyyy
      @May13Tiffanyyy Před 3 lety +1

      🤣🤣🤣👌🏽💪🏾

  • @median-man
    @median-man Před rokem +230

    What about the rate of increase in rent over time? Maybe I missed it, but it seems like expected annual rent increases should be considered since a fixed rate mortgage payment doesn't change.

    • @jcunanan3
      @jcunanan3 Před rokem +37

      This is a good point. If you buy at a time when fixed interest rates are cheap (e.g.,

    • @flatlanderfl
      @flatlanderfl Před rokem +13

      Good point. Also take into account rising costs in regular maintenance and repairs. Contractors will raise rates and material costs will always increase.

    • @bass_journey
      @bass_journey Před rokem +14

      @@flatlanderfl but far less than a rent. Also, you don't break your house every year.

    • @flatlanderfl
      @flatlanderfl Před rokem +23

      @@bass_journey unless you own a house like mine that’s 100+ yrs young and full of “character”. Then, yes, you Do break your house every year hahaha

    • @curtisw0234
      @curtisw0234 Před rokem +4

      Rent is just as likely to go down as up, you can expect it on average to keep pace with inflation

  • @houseofmilano
    @houseofmilano Před 7 měsíci +24

    Always nice to watch these videos - so informational and thought through. One thing this analysis confounds is using real estate rate of return as the rate of return on your equity. You are 5x leveraged - so the rate on equity will be 5x the rate of return on the house. Leverage in real estate is a very interesting kind - you don't get a margin call if the value of house drops (in fact, other way around! people are sometimes able to renegotiate their mortgage - like 2008 meltdown aftermath). You can keep you leverage as long as you can keep paying the mortgage. So the risk adjusted rate of return on equity, despite the leverage, is 5x of rate of return of the property. (Not quite, but you get my drift. Lots of simplifications here - like assuming constant leverage over the life of investment etc.)

  • @donutlovingwerewolf8837
    @donutlovingwerewolf8837 Před 4 lety +894

    This is suppose to be a Educational video but instead i am laughing so much after reading a comment about this dude not blinking at all in this video

    • @appiphynie
      @appiphynie Před 3 lety +12

      Me too😂😂
      Like how is that even possible.

    • @TheSarge75
      @TheSarge75 Před 3 lety +47

      Plot twist: he blinks when you blink

    • @pamjamas
      @pamjamas Před 3 lety +7

      Maybe he’s an android

    • @saurabhkumarsingh5970
      @saurabhkumarsingh5970 Před 3 lety

      @@TheSarge75 thriller scene

    • @manuunam23
      @manuunam23 Před 3 lety +1

      0:14... it’s not even that long of a time

  • @bobjacobson858
    @bobjacobson858 Před 2 lety +610

    I accepted a job in a small city, and was encouraged to buy a house. However, I was single and didn't really want the responsibility of a house, as I had never owned any real estate. I managed to find a rather inexpensive apartment, and was left with the ability to max out my 401k and IRA, and still have plenty of money left. I was able to travel while my colleagues were mowing lawns, etc. A house simply was much more space than I needed, and although real estate prices were relatively low, properties were quite difficult to sell, and if I had lost my job (or decided to retire, which I did), I liked having the freedom to move easily as I had no desire to stay in the area after retirement. This worked out very well for me, and I'm now enjoying my retirement in another state. There is a lot to be said for living below one's means (and my salary would only have been considered "average").

    • @awesomekj5812
      @awesomekj5812 Před rokem +12

      Are you still renting ?

    • @bobjacobson858
      @bobjacobson858 Před rokem +35

      @@awesomekj5812 Yes, but this is at my sister's/BIL's place now. I pay rent, but don't have to pay any other expenses except for my cell phone. I moved here a few years ago when our parents were getting to the point they needed help, so I retired a year and half early from my job several states away, and got to spend time with both of them during their last few years. Now I'm trying to figure out where to go next, as I don't really want to stay here although there are some advantages. Between the COVID disruption, climate change, increasing crime rates and other factors, it's not as easy a decision as I had anticipated. (Where I am now is a very safe neighborhood in a nice suburb of a larger city, but I'm getting bored with it and want better weather--and have much of my stuff in a storage unit here which is a waste of money plus not good for the stuff itself.)

    • @williamlau2405
      @williamlau2405 Před rokem +68

      In my opinion, renting vs buying a home is an issue of personal philosophy. Return on investment is only one factor. For some people, the personal satisfaction of home ownership and the ensuing stability of knowing you will never be kicked out of your home is worth any additional cost. This also allows the home owner to not have to spend time in searching for rental properties if he or she is kicked out by the landlord. I know bankers who do not believe in buying their home. They are now paying huge rents because rents have sky rocketed over the years.

    • @bobjacobson858
      @bobjacobson858 Před rokem +33

      @@williamlau2405 Now that I'm retired, I have the freedom to find areas that are relatively inexpensive because I don't have to be near a job. However, it all comes down to one's priorities and lifestyle. However, in the US there's a certain mentality that causes some people to disparage others whose choices don't fit into the stereotypical American dream. I have a good friend who moved to a different area, rented for a while and then bought a house, but when it was time for him to move again, he lost a lot of money because the market at the point was such that he couldn't sell it for what he had paid. I asked him why he had bought a house, and he said he was basically under the impression that this is what a person is expected, or supposed, to do! He's been very bitter about it since.

    • @kitkat3501
      @kitkat3501 Před rokem +13

      This sounds like my current situation. I'm just in the process of buying a little unit which I'll have paid off before retirement. Then I'm free to travel but use the unit as a base

  • @VictoriaWood-uc6mp
    @VictoriaWood-uc6mp Před měsícem +4

    The issue is that either the renter or the owner must in some way pay insurance and property taxes if they want a "permanent roof" with utilities like electricity, gas and water. Because of this, many people-at least in California, where I currently reside-are living in tents. No taxes, rent, mortgages, or insurance. The number of people who tell me they live in their car that I meet amazes me. Its crazy out here!

    • @Williamsmthe
      @Williamsmthe Před měsícem

      this is definitely considerable! think you could suggest any professional/advisors i can get on the phone with? i'm in dire need of proper portfolio allocation

    • @EmersonLoyal
      @EmersonLoyal Před měsícem

      She appears to be well-educated and well-read. I ran an online search on her name and came across her website; thank you for sharing.

  • @user-ne3qh8bs7i
    @user-ne3qh8bs7i Před 2 měsíci +122

    investing requires good experience and knowledge to carry out a good and successful trade, I have lost a lot trying to trade all by myself May I ask which investments are good??>>>>

  • @MBrewah04
    @MBrewah04 Před 5 lety +338

    Buying a home and not having to deal with crummy rental companies and landlords = priceless! Rented for 13 years before purchasing a home. Any extra cost is worth it.

    • @alankoslowski9473
      @alankoslowski9473 Před 5 lety +19

      Good point. If you're in an area with limited or shady rentals owning might well be better or at least more secure and comfortable.

    • @jrg305
      @jrg305 Před 5 lety +30

      HOA is not much better...

    • @MBrewah04
      @MBrewah04 Před 5 lety +18

      Honestly I lucked out with no HOA. There is a city park across the street but my neighborhood doesn't offer any pools or parks so I guess there is nothing to charge for.

    • @jrg305
      @jrg305 Před 5 lety +7

      @@MBrewah04 I am in a condo and they take 197 a month for HOA. I moved in last October and there was a leak into my unit within the first week during a storm (hasn't leaked since for some reason). Im not the top floor and it is an HOA thing. It is late May and I still haven't had it fixed because the HOA is slow. Will bring it up next meeting and get a new management company. They are just sitting on our money.

    • @alankoslowski9473
      @alankoslowski9473 Před 5 lety +2

      @@jrg305
      Like any most organizations it depends on the members. I have an HOA and it doesn't seem to make much difference for most of us.
      With most HOAs there are usually two vocal and opposing minority perspectives at odds with each other while most of us don't care either way.
      In you're in a bad rental situation you can leave when the lease expires. It's not that easy with an HOA but at least you have some say since it's a democratic organization.

  • @tenshi53
    @tenshi53 Před 3 lety +405

    So, if I understood:
    -if you have no money, rent
    -if you have some money, rent and invest
    -if you have lots of money, buy
    if you have too much money, buy and invest

    • @KnowledgeSeeker78491
      @KnowledgeSeeker78491 Před 3 lety +21

      If you had bought your home during this video, you would have the options to skip payments up to 365 days due to this pandemic... If you are renting then you better have a very empathic landlord
      Always buy real estate... Look at my avatar 😂😂😂😂

    • @teliramirez3914
      @teliramirez3914 Před 3 lety +24

      Go ahead and rent just remember your landlord dosen't love you. If your landlord could repair everything with duct tape and still keep you paying rent he would do it.

    • @ironmonkey1512
      @ironmonkey1512 Před 3 lety +28

      I am in contract now, I have been renting the last 14 years and it stinks. In two cases, the owner decided to sell so I had to move my family with 30 days notice. You are always in someone else's house, you cannot have anything they way you want it. My house now has dripping shower the owner refuses to fix. It makes sense if you are a young professional and want to stay mobile but it is a lousy long term lifestyle.

    • @ironmonkey1512
      @ironmonkey1512 Před 3 lety +3

      @@3timesiller the entire valve needs to be replaced smart guy

    • @ironmonkey1512
      @ironmonkey1512 Před 3 lety +13

      @@3timesiller what kind of idiot are you? Yes I can fix. No I am not going to do it. It's not my house or responsibility.

  • @pedrohdalla
    @pedrohdalla Před 3 měsíci +26

    One thing to point out, rent isn't just the fixed cost, you pay to moving in/out and in many cases the owner obligates you to expend money fixing their own house.
    The power dynamic is absolutely something to considerate

    • @Cycology_Major
      @Cycology_Major Před 3 měsíci +1

      In the US, state tenancy laws vary- as with most any regulations, but tenants typically have rights to health & safety that property OWNERS are required to follow, not the renters. It’s very easy & worthwhile to online check state laws.

    • @pedrohdalla
      @pedrohdalla Před 3 měsíci +2

      @@Cycology_Major again, you are assuming that the power dynamic is neutral
      The state law means nothing if you have nowhere else to go

    • @TheNewGreenIsBlue
      @TheNewGreenIsBlue Před 3 měsíci +1

      Maybe true... however, you also end up paying a lot to move when you buy a house. Usually in homes where the owner wants you to fix their house it's because the rent is pretty cheap... which is usually why the renter is still there. Otherwise, they'd move out. As such, the owner is subsidizing your rent.
      Had a friend who rented their whole house for $2400 when the house was worth 1.5 million. I tried to explain that the passive income $2M would generate would FAR surpass what he's getting in fully taxable rent payments. He just said it's an investment. Few home owners actually understand opportunity cost.

    • @spacetoast7783
      @spacetoast7783 Před 3 měsíci +1

      ​@@pedrohdallaIt's way easier to move as a tenant than as an owner.

    • @pedrohdalla
      @pedrohdalla Před 3 měsíci

      @@TheNewGreenIsBlue brother, Real estate speculation is a thing too
      There is a reason for 24% of all houses in the US being owned by investors and/or big companies.

  • @justinhall9802
    @justinhall9802 Před rokem +103

    Forgot to include the tax benefits for owning a house.
    Also, one thing always lost on these are transaction costs for buying/selling a house. Those can significantly erode the returns on a house investment.

    • @ljshoreslokal
      @ljshoreslokal Před rokem +8

      Exactly, lets not forget over time you build equity, which creates generational wealth, or you can sell and live off that cash and rent in your golden years. Win, win.

    • @Inc.Co.
      @Inc.Co. Před rokem +22

      @@ljshoreslokal or you can keep renting and just invest the difference.

    • @Sinoops
      @Sinoops Před rokem +8

      @@Inc.Co. You would still lose money in the long run.

    • @brianpleshek5593
      @brianpleshek5593 Před rokem +14

      @@ljshoreslokal if you sell your house and live off the cash, you still need a place to stay so now you're back to paying rent and what is mentioned in the video still apply. The home you live in isn't really an investment. It's a choice of lifestyle. If you become a landlord, then that house is an investment because it is actually making you money.

    • @afiqzul-star8768
      @afiqzul-star8768 Před rokem +3

      @@brianpleshek5593 or u can be smart and buy a duplex and rent the other half

  • @barrbudo
    @barrbudo Před 5 lety +416

    Nice video! I will watch it again until I understand it completely.

    • @Pfsif
      @Pfsif Před 5 lety +5

      ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    • @KadianUrquhart
      @KadianUrquhart Před 5 lety

      Me too

    • @leo729717
      @leo729717 Před 5 lety +9

      I am soo lost!!!!! I wish he said all this in english lol

    • @addiemaysonet1
      @addiemaysonet1 Před 4 lety +1

      Yeah, i couldn't understand a word either!

    • @alcaedafiebre
      @alcaedafiebre Před 4 lety

      @@leo729717 ikr canadians with their off brand english, too polite

  • @pizza4me298
    @pizza4me298 Před 3 lety +304

    Legend says he's still not blinking to this day.

    • @kevinfritsch2620
      @kevinfritsch2620 Před 2 lety +2

      He did once👀

    • @Cyberpuppy63
      @Cyberpuppy63 Před 2 lety

      Looks like an artificial generated image, and not a real person. The real person might be talking, but a fake image is super-imposed with lip sync lip movement and realistic muscle gestures. What graphical mumbo jumbo!

    • @marysutton434
      @marysutton434 Před 2 lety

      Pizza 4me lol

  • @aqibejaz7253
    @aqibejaz7253 Před 3 měsíci +9

    Not having to deal with a bloody landlord is a joy that itself is worth a lot.

  • @devonpeters9458
    @devonpeters9458 Před rokem +96

    I think a major factor you’re not including is rent appreciation vs Property tax appreciation.

    • @johnraviella6561
      @johnraviella6561 Před rokem +26

      This video misses the fact that you’re purchasing an asset that you LIVE IN and borrow against. Renting sucks

    • @DTFFP
      @DTFFP Před rokem +7

      rent goes up and so does taxes, but renting will never build any equity to anything you have. Property taxes will go up but at least the amount of money left post interest/post taxes will go directly to the property's principal... don't forget that property values go up as well.
      the questions is "what is the true cost between renting and buying?" I can tell you without getting into a rabbit hole that renting is never going to make sense unless you are someone that works in different places very often, in which hotels make sense.

    • @devonpeters9458
      @devonpeters9458 Před rokem +1

      @@DTFFP agreed!

    • @HevaNaisdey
      @HevaNaisdey Před rokem +14

      @@DTFFP The money you use to pay mortgages, a renter uses to invest in stocks; that's their equity. They can sell it or use it as collateral to take out a loan exactly the same way you would with a house. You pay property tax forever, a renter also have to rent forever. It's the same thing. However, stocks always have bigger ROI because it's riskier. Nothing about it doesn't make sense.

    • @rredamon
      @rredamon Před rokem +5

      @@DTFFP Renting is actually cheaper than buying in most high-cost cities (New York, Toronto, San Francisco, etc.). You're better off financially renting and investing the difference (total cost of buying minus renting cost) in a stock index fund

  • @jakegingrich7214
    @jakegingrich7214 Před 5 lety +152

    Tip: Don't buy a house with large swaying trees immediately beside it.

    • @BenFelixCSI
      @BenFelixCSI  Před 5 lety +36

      Solid advice right here.

    • @stuarthirsch
      @stuarthirsch Před 5 lety +15

      @@BenFelixCSI Learned that the hard way. Trees are very expensive to maintain and can cause damage to the house. Also never buy a house with wood siding or T11 plywood siding. I made that mistake too.

    • @AlexManiacPavlenko
      @AlexManiacPavlenko Před 4 lety +1

      @@stuarthirsch why wood siding is not OK?

    • @stuarthirsch
      @stuarthirsch Před 4 lety +8

      @@AlexManiacPavlenko Have you ever had a house with wood siding? It needs to be stained and painted. Insects eat it including carpenter bees and termites. Woodpeckers peck holes in it. Squirrels, mice, rats, and rodents chew holes in it and can get in the house. Hope there is never a fire near the house. I have a house with wood siding, never again.

    • @iammaximus614
      @iammaximus614 Před 4 lety

      Mayhem & Chaos waiting to happen
      🌬 🌳🍃🏡

  • @HinesBrad
    @HinesBrad Před 4 lety +512

    You did not calculate the likelyhood of moving. Moving costs eat us alive when relocating and that greatly impacts return. Don't buy if you won't stay put for at least 5 years.

    • @whatsupbudbud
      @whatsupbudbud Před 4 lety +23

      Try living with less stuff, it feels great. I can move with my small car with 2 to 3 rides for practically nothing.

    • @andrewgingrich8281
      @andrewgingrich8281 Před 4 lety +256

      @@whatsupbudbud he is talking about the cost of selling the house bud, not the cost of moving your small amount of shit

    • @Wise_That
      @Wise_That Před 4 lety +11

      Yeah, the transaction costs (e.g. realtor comission) will easily add another 3% to the costs of the home. So the rule should be 8%

    • @alfredmashava2277
      @alfredmashava2277 Před 4 lety +24

      @@Wise_That The transaction costs would be a once-off cost, while the 5% represents recurring annual expenses, so the two can't be added together.

    • @michealdrake3421
      @michealdrake3421 Před 4 lety +3

      This. My wife and I want to buy rather than rent, because when we have kids we want to raise them in our own house. But we're also planning on moving across the country within the next five years so we're throwing money into the rental hole for now

  • @thedroneosphere1760
    @thedroneosphere1760 Před rokem

    I didn't think I would like this dude but as I watched more and more I really really like they way he breaks this stuff down.

  • @dendrites
    @dendrites Před 4 měsíci +5

    Had you bought a home when this video was posted, you would have a 3% APR mortgage and your house would be worth 40% more than you purchased it. Had you not, you would be paying historically high rent prices, and are priced out of the housing market.

    • @tagore161
      @tagore161 Před měsícem

      False. You are clearly not a home owner. Try selling them, none will fetch you 40% returns

  • @przemeklesniak4056
    @przemeklesniak4056 Před 4 lety +634

    This guy is like Johnny Sins of finances

    • @jteds711
      @jteds711 Před 4 lety +9

      Przemek Leśniak Lmaoooo

    • @slutmonke
      @slutmonke Před 4 lety +5

      This guy is the Rener Gracie of finance.

    • @adityarao7703
      @adityarao7703 Před 4 lety +1

      I feel so dumb 😵

    • @4everinpanama
      @4everinpanama Před 4 lety +10

      Lmao this is a serious video and this comment was the first one I see smh.

    • @mrtony1985
      @mrtony1985 Před 4 lety +2

      This wins

  • @pipebliss
    @pipebliss Před 5 lety +358

    One of the other factors to consider is flexibility. When you rent, you have the ability to move for a very small cost. If you have kids and want to move to a better school district, or if you have a job change and want to move closer to work, if your neighborhood deteriorates or your neighbors change; you can even upsize and downsize based on your needs, you may need a larger home if you have a few teenage children, then 5 years later when they go to college/university, you may only need a small home or condo. If you are a homeowner, the cost to move (real estate fees, legals, land transfer taxes) could be in the neighborhood of 6-7%.
    There is also the diversification factor. With a house, you are heavily invested in one small area of the world, the investment grade of the area you have a house could change. With Equities, it's relatively easy to be globally diversified and industry diversified.
    Ben, your math looks correct. Obviously, there are so many input factors. People in Ontario that believe real estate will increase at 5-10% long term are fooling themselves. The last 20 years, the driver of appreciation has been the fall of interest rates and the influx of Asian investors.
    Tax is definitely a consideration. If a couple maxes out their tax-free accounts every year, the decision is likely a no brainer. A mortgage is definitely forced savings for many people, so it is a bit of protection for the undisciplined because they typically have an asset that has appreciated come retirement time. In theory, if that's all they have in the way of assets, they could sell it, rent and use the 4% rule to subsidize their pension.
    I think the point you are trying to make is home ownership is not a no brainer decision. I would agree, especially at the inflated prices currently in Canada.

    • @BenFelixCSI
      @BenFelixCSI  Před 5 lety +31

      All good additional points. Thanks RazoRock.
      Yes the main point here is that renting and buying can be equivalent from purely a financial perspective.

    • @108mreko
      @108mreko Před 5 lety +19

      Not only is a home not a diversified investment, it probably covaries with your employment income. A localized recession in your city or province could mean not only losing your job, but also a good portion of the value of your home. Just look at Detroit.
      A couple of things the video neglected to mention would be strata fees and utility fees.
      The video does a good job of explaining the basic financial considerations. I'm glad to see a CFA making finance videos rather some of the less knowledgeable folks out there.

    • @karldc83
      @karldc83 Před 5 lety +3

      Razarock good points. Although buying a property vs renting could be considered less liquid/transient it depends on the mindset. I bought a 2 bedroom flat to live in with the intention to never sell it. When I out grow of the flat I will rent it out and partially offset my renting a bigger mid sized place. When I my family outgrows that I hope to buy our forever home. I plan to pay down my flat mortage in 8-10 years with 100% offset account rather than 30 years saving 100s of thousands in interest on the mortgage. While living in the flat offset return is equivalent to interest currently 4% tax free here in Australia and when renting out will be 4% less tax but then tax is deductible against income of the rental.

    • @JUNAID187
      @JUNAID187 Před 5 lety +6

      Not really an issue in the USA. If you decide to move then you can simply turn it into a rental property. Or you can sell the house if it would be profitable which it often is.

    • @BenDonahower
      @BenDonahower Před 5 lety +4

      i was thinking about the transaction fees and taxes as well.

  • @williamledbetter2223
    @williamledbetter2223 Před rokem +3

    Really great teaching tool, Ben. Despite being an idiot when it comes to numbers and investing (and getting the chills every time investment jargon is used!) I feel I understood your framework quite well. Thank you for this.

  • @soihearyoureintoproperty6207

    Brilliant - the type of detail loved around real-estate investment decision making. It's not a small thing to go out and buy property, best to be fully informed.

  • @kleophantos4565
    @kleophantos4565 Před 4 lety +22

    Nice format and without too much shilling or saying “here is what I do, buy my book you mouthbreather -etc” appreciate your effort and unbiased information

  • @sunnyd4734
    @sunnyd4734 Před 3 lety +15

    Never wanted to deal with the whole mortgage thing let alone home maintenance and repairs. It's a matter of personal preference. Happy as a renter.

  • @captainnerd6452
    @captainnerd6452 Před rokem +4

    You can tell it's old when he says "assume inflation of 1.5%"...

  • @petervad
    @petervad Před 4 měsíci

    Wonderful video, thank you. You raise a very important concept and explain it very well despite the concept being fairly complex. Fantastic.

  • @AudioJunkie79
    @AudioJunkie79 Před 3 lety +34

    Great video.The one thing not accounted for is time. For most people, myself included, I can't afford landscapers and all the professional help to maintain a home, plumbers electricians, mason etc. The amount of time you have to spend maintaining a home properly is huge. Re-caulking the tub, cleaning the gutters, fixing the leaky pipe, adding an outlet, all the damn landscaping, the AC filters, water filters, furnace maintenance, chimney maintenance, appliance repair or replacement etc. etc. After owning two older homes in decent shape for a total of 15 years and renovating both and now renting after a move to a new state, the time and aggravation saved is priceless. I have not seen the inside of a HomeDepot or Lowes in a year and I LOVE it! Time is a real unrecoverable cost. I now can use that time to do something I really love. Some people love maintaining their home all the time and all the projects. I do not. It's always something. Not one project was ever just one trip to the hardware store. Even in new homes, its always something. There are plenty of nightmare stories of new homes being a disaster. If you decide to buy a home, new or old, ask yourself how much your time is worth. If you care about your house you will be spending a LOT of time maintaining it.

    • @abalkhailomar
      @abalkhailomar Před 3 lety

      Since you are on CZcams I will assume that you are lazy and can't have responsibility of taking care of your house, and just justifying your theories of time unrecoverable cost

    • @AudioJunkie79
      @AudioJunkie79 Před 3 lety +8

      Omar Abalkhail no that isn’t the case. I was just trying to add a variable to the conversation. Both my homes I renovated the entire house and sold for a profit. I wouldn’t consider that lazy. I was simply reflecting on my experience of owning, maintaining and upgrading two homes compared to renting and wanted to add to the conversation. If you are someone that loves constantly working on a house, great. After a certain point for me constantly working on your house becomes a drag. I would rather spend my time doing more enjoyable things in life.

    • @holdencawffle626
      @holdencawffle626 Před 2 lety +3

      Audio junkie...well put. Time is the biggest unrecoverable cost. My landlord just spent beaucoup dollars on installing a new two-door gate. Old gate was rotting away.
      I looked at the gate, and as a non-handy man, hell I could have done that job for way less $$$.
      But it would have taken me 4-5x the amount of time to do it, multiple trips to Lowes, headache and aggravation, etc. You are 100% correct, time is a the biggest unrecoverable cost.

    • @sarahs3619
      @sarahs3619 Před 2 lety +1

      Yes! I love that any work that needs to be done is my landlords problem, not mine. (I have a good landlord.) The relief I felt the first few years of renting after owning (and being a landlord) was worth it's weight in gold.

    • @suzannederringer1607
      @suzannederringer1607 Před 2 lety +2

      After a lifetime as a renter in NYC, I returned to the city where I grew up and was encouraged to buy a house. A small old house with a large garden. I'd always wanted a big sunny garden. And for a few years, I had it. But the house basically needed a gut renovation - new heating, plumbing etc. Windows, doors, floors replaced. I couldn't afford it...and my handyman skills are limited to things like painting. Can't do plumbing! The big garden was too big - and mostly on a hillside - for me to maintain, and I couldn't afford regular lawn maintenance etc.
      I sold, at a loss, to a flipper this winter. I will never buy anything again.

  • @yardmasterswealtheducation8424

    I begin my work day with education. I go to CZcams and select something from the many business style offerings, and today I began my day watching this video. And I am so glad I did!
    First, the video production was excellent on many points. The person speaking was a great speaker. The editing was done well. Also, the style used to put words and graphics up really added to my ability to easily follow what I know is complex territory. Great Job!
    Now, to content. My wife and I have studied real estate investing for about a decade now, and this is the first time I have ever heard this means of comparing the difference between buying and renting. I think it is an excellent tool you can carry with you everywhere to see if a potential deal is even "in the ball park" so to say.

  • @ahmedaz5501
    @ahmedaz5501 Před 22 dny

    One of the wonderful videos I have ever seen analysing this topic perfectly. Thank you for sharing.

  • @jamesdc9595
    @jamesdc9595 Před 4 měsíci +4

    Those inflation and interest rate estimates did not age well

  • @SunnyGirlFlorida
    @SunnyGirlFlorida Před 3 lety +71

    So much of it has to do with emotional pride of ownership and being able to do whatever you want on your own property. Also a feeling of stability and not being a slave to your landlord.

    • @robertschill2686
      @robertschill2686 Před 3 lety +2

      I always remember flying into Phoenix Arizona after the 2008 debacle. 1/3 of the suburbs still had green lawns, but the other 2/3rds was a brown dustbowl. Half of the houses were in foreclosure, with another 1/6th underwater. Large swaths were brown because they had all stopped watering their lawns.

    • @jaybartgis5148
      @jaybartgis5148 Před 2 lety +5

      @@robertschill2686 and now you will return to see the homeless tent cities from the apartment leased skyrocketing up 200% while the the homeowner rides inflation

    • @ViburaBlanca
      @ViburaBlanca Před 2 lety

      Yeah, do you know anything about HOA?

    • @holdencawffle626
      @holdencawffle626 Před 2 lety

      Grant cardone says buying a house for your own use is an emotional thing, and although I don't always agree with professor GC, he is right about this

  • @Ravensonng
    @Ravensonng Před 5 lety +24

    I inherited my house mortgage free. Its a small house in a very nice neighborhood. All I have to pay is taxes and very small maintenance. Since I am already retired, I think maybe I'm better off continuing to live in the house myself.

    • @NotShowingOff
      @NotShowingOff Před 4 lety +1

      Ravensonng yea, no interest for you.

    • @miosis23
      @miosis23 Před 4 lety +1

      that's swell! you're all set!...others are not. hence the video.

  • @saratakkoush6109
    @saratakkoush6109 Před 9 měsíci +1

    the concepts in this video are amazing!! and shoutout to the graphics

  • @kamilzakrzewski4338
    @kamilzakrzewski4338 Před 3 měsíci

    Great video and lots of easy to understand arguments. But I think it's more useful to someone with investing in mind than just having a place to live.

  • @miketracy9256
    @miketracy9256 Před 4 lety +32

    Makes sense unless you live in a big city where rents have been increasing more than 7% every year.
    So if your rent in 2009 was $800/month, in 2019 it will be $1,600.month.

    • @FraserChorley
      @FraserChorley Před 4 lety +3

      Hi Mike,
      In Ontario rental increase is capped by statute. Last year it was 1.8% and this year it is 2.2%. As long as you rent the same place your rent will stay relatively the same.
      I do think that was something missed by the video though, but again it was round numbers.

    • @heedmywarning2792
      @heedmywarning2792 Před 4 lety +1

      Your comment applies to me as I rent in California. The numbers are about 98% accurate.

    • @BedtimePasta
      @BedtimePasta Před 4 lety +3

      Basically
      My first year in the apartment, rent was $785 a mo, not including utilities and insurance.
      3 years later, it was raised to $1400, again, not counting utilities or insurance. Landlords are lousy.

    • @FraserChorley
      @FraserChorley Před 4 lety +3

      @@BedtimePasta Got to move to Ontario. They are legally not allowed to do that. Rent increases are set by the government. As long as you live in the same place they can only raise rent in small increments.

  • @raheelbelal5848
    @raheelbelal5848 Před 2 lety +123

    Living in a rental place for 29 years of my life... owning is better. You do what you wish with it and have no one to answer if you want to redecorate or change anything.

    • @bluekeybo
      @bluekeybo Před rokem +8

      Heard of HOAs?

    • @bro7269
      @bro7269 Před rokem +31

      @@bluekeybo Don’t buy with an HOA……?

    • @alexland7747
      @alexland7747 Před rokem +5

      Good luck on that, almost any house in a subdivision is overseed by an HOA

    • @pprb123
      @pprb123 Před rokem +10

      @@alexland7747 80% of new builds in the US are in an HOA

    • @pprb123
      @pprb123 Před rokem +4

      But you do have someone to answer for maintenance and repairs

  • @CanalDoRaphaelDeLio
    @CanalDoRaphaelDeLio Před 3 měsíci +3

    Love this video. In the Netherlands we can finance a house up to 100% including future renovations.

  • @alexmaclean6132
    @alexmaclean6132 Před 4 lety +197

    The piece of mind of owning your own place, the ability the grow a large garden, put up a workshop, repair vehicles etc make owning far more enticing than renting to lousy landlords any day

    • @Off_the_clock_astrophysicist
      @Off_the_clock_astrophysicist Před 4 lety +17

      Excellent point. The non-financial factors. The ability to keep pets and animals, establishing residency for college tuition (OK, that last one, completely financial)...

    • @kuolettavaVids
      @kuolettavaVids Před 4 lety +51

      This video isn't arguing those points, its for the people who believe that renting costs you more financially then owning via a mortgage. A decent amount of home owners choose owning for the non financial reasons, so this video is not for them. The audience for this video are those who are looking for the most financially wise option, which might still be owning, it depends on the local areas listings.

    • @Lindenyasuo
      @Lindenyasuo Před 4 lety +36

      There are also benefits to renting. A huge one is mobility, you can move cities whenever you like. mortgages put significant barriers and youre commited to the same area for a big part of your life.

    • @ozik1995
      @ozik1995 Před 4 lety +6

      Peace of mind*

    • @themangastand8475
      @themangastand8475 Před 4 lety +4

      Also the fact you can make money off your home by renting it. Some people are even willing to pay your mortgage for you.

  • @Vkob
    @Vkob Před 5 lety +49

    No gimmicky intro. Excellent credentials. This guy knows what he's talking about.

    • @EternallyGod
      @EternallyGod Před 5 lety

      He makes money off you, how is that good credentials? If you dont spend, he makes no money and is homeless.

    • @BenFelixCSI
      @BenFelixCSI  Před 5 lety +10

      Do you really want me to be homeless, Kirk? Where is this animosity coming from?

    • @EternallyGod
      @EternallyGod Před 5 lety

      @@BenFelixCSI You arent so good at reading, I was proving a point that your credentials are pointless. You literally live off other peoples money. With your response to me though, i am guessing you voted and support Trudope. White priviledge and a racist.

    • @BenFelixCSI
      @BenFelixCSI  Před 5 lety +19

      Kirk I may be wrong here, but I'm pretty sure that every single human that earns an income is living off of other peoples' money. I provide a service that people are willing to pay for. This is no different than any other service provider, whether they are providing professional services or labor.
      What do you do for a living, Kirk?

    • @Parasite743
      @Parasite743 Před 5 lety +2

      Kirk Wilson these days everyone has equal opportunity. the opportunity cost of his schooling (YES, it takes TIME to become a professional) not only that, but loads of money as well. Some people can just blab on about nothing.

  • @markkelley453
    @markkelley453 Před měsícem

    Ben, this is the first of your videos I've seen. Good stuff! It's nice to see videos where we are spoken to as adults who actually have a brain

  • @g99se9
    @g99se9 Před rokem +13

    In our next episode, we analyze the cost/benefit ratio of eating food.

  • @Tarvisman
    @Tarvisman Před 4 lety +30

    I appreciate the breakdown, how you elaborated on tangents to explain your reasoning. I like the comprehensiveness of this video. Thank you!

  • @supremebeing7834
    @supremebeing7834 Před 4 lety +8

    As someone who lives near Vancouver bc and is a young adult the housing market was pretty much ripped out of my grasp as prices skyrocketed when I was a teenager. I’m now 3/4 done an apprenticeship to become an electrician and plan on living in a van for a few years to save up enough for a solid down payment and rent out whatever I buy, I can’t stand how home ownership was stolen from our generation without being forced to have zero cost of living in order to save up

  • @mgntstr
    @mgntstr Před 3 měsíci +1

    This really really hammers home how much of a waste of money it is in renting a home that is a glorified shoebox compared to owning a home at the same unrecoverable cost value. Almost at the construct a brand new and spacious house level.

  • @WINGCHARGER
    @WINGCHARGER Před dnem

    Awesome video I never thought about the benefits of renting and how it compares to buying

  • @romelindareyes7337
    @romelindareyes7337 Před 2 lety +125

    Investing is buying yourself a better future you don't have to work hard again.

    • @kelvinl.3875
      @kelvinl.3875 Před 2 lety

      You can say that again.

    • @kelvinl.3875
      @kelvinl.3875 Před 2 lety

      I have archived many things in my life since I started investing.

    • @jasmineheidi1427
      @jasmineheidi1427 Před 2 lety

      There are different kinds of investment, what kind would you advise someone new to start with?

    • @grazynstevic3170
      @grazynstevic3170 Před 2 lety +1

      You sound like a motivational speaker, I detest your kind.😒

    • @melpatriarca4498
      @melpatriarca4498 Před 2 lety

      @@jasmineheidi1427 I'm into real estate investing.

  • @mikardo8864
    @mikardo8864 Před 4 lety +381

    When I’m sat in a home that I’ve lived in for 15 years without a landlord telling me that I can’t paint my kids bedroom, can’t change the ugly tiles in the bathroom, he’ll fix the mould problem soon (just open the windows for now), he’s thinking about selling the house so better start looking for something new, renegotiate rent from a stupidly high anchor price EVERY DAMN YEAR..... that’s when I know the VALUE of owning my own home, not how much it’s cost me.

    • @esoteric_chaos
      @esoteric_chaos Před 4 lety +24

      Can I ask you a serious question. If it’s that bad why have you stayed there for 15 years? There will be other rental options within minutes from where you live currently.

    • @mikardo8864
      @mikardo8864 Před 4 lety +52

      A you’ve completely missed my point. The reverse of what I’ve said mate.

    • @misspriss2482
      @misspriss2482 Před 4 lety +21

      Again, that depends on where you live. If you have a good landlord, you're pleased with your place, and you don't want to change anything, renting is a good option. As for the value of owning your home, I can understand that. However, it takes actual money to pay for it so how much it costs has to be a consideration for people. Otherwise, they either become house poor or lose the home when they can't afford the mortgage, the taxes, or the repairs.

    • @brooksreece7525
      @brooksreece7525 Před 3 lety +33

      Miss Priss a good landlord is VERY hard to come across, that’s the problem. They may seem great in the beginning, when really all they want is your money.

    • @billeebills7562
      @billeebills7562 Před 3 lety +16

      I personally don’t like the responsibility’s of owning a home it’s too much damn work 🤦🏾‍♀️

  • @victorcretu7741
    @victorcretu7741 Před 5 měsíci

    Based on your hypothesis, a positive differential between the capital gain from stocks vs borrowing cost, we can reduce the cost of borrowing by using the Smith maneuver. We borrow back the equity we pay every month (as principal) via a revolver home equity line of credit and invest in stocks. The borrowing cost becomes tax-deductible. It's now a recoverable expense.
    If Smith's maneuver is too complicated (many banks do not like it anyway as it's introducing a risk factor - they prefer to give you a normal/non-revolver HELOC), to some extent you can achieve a similar effect by downsizing.
    You sell your home from the city and move to a smaller/cheaper place. But you do not use the whole equity as a downpayment for the newly purchased home. You only use the minimum required. You extract some cash and use it to invest in the stock market.

  • @HKSMahjong
    @HKSMahjong Před 4 měsíci +1

    Where this argument falls apart, especially in Australia, comes down to two factors. First, renters don't invest the capital saved in the sharemarket. They tend to spend the money. Second is that it ignores the significant incentives for 1st home buyers, and the tax subsidies for investors

  • @michael2275
    @michael2275 Před 5 lety +83

    The 3% equity return on the house is leveraged 5x (20% down) compared the assumed alternative of an un-leveraged stock purchase. So it's really more like 15% compared to 6% expected return.

    • @ericserena2023
      @ericserena2023 Před 5 lety +16

      This is exactly what I was thinking when watching the video. You cannot direct compare a return of 500k x 3% = 15k per year VS 100k x 6.57% per year 6.57k per year. Basically you have borrowed a whole lot more of money to invest in the property to gain 5 times more, also having the benefit of locking future inflation rate on the house too. I hope Ben can reply to this...this makes a huge impact on this 5% rule.

    • @ThomasFoolery8
      @ThomasFoolery8 Před 5 lety +13

      When you’re leveraged 5x you lose 5x as much too. You can easily leverage 5x in stocks too through futures contracts.

    • @michael2275
      @michael2275 Před 5 lety +4

      @@ThomasFoolery8 that wasn't the scenario he was supposed to be comparing though....

    • @BenFelixCSI
      @BenFelixCSI  Před 5 lety +22

      The leverage is declining over time, the cost of the leverage is paid by the home owner (unrecoverable cost), and equities have substantially higher expected returns than the unlevered real estate asset. The expected return on the levered house is 15%-3%=12% in the first year, and declining thereafter due to decreasing leverage. If you need to see how this plays out in a side-by-side comparison I suggest this paper: www.pwlcapital.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/2017-07-07_Felix-Benjamin_The-Case-for-Renting_FINAL.pdf

    • @michael2275
      @michael2275 Před 5 lety +14

      @@BenFelixCSI You already accounted for the 3% interest in your prior calculation so it is 15% vs. 3% not 12%. I agree that is the starting point and deleverages with time. Still means this basic assumption for your video is wrong and messes with the results.

  • @jaishetty8586
    @jaishetty8586 Před 4 lety +148

    with the land prices getting unaffordable by the day, and boats being out of reach, I wonder if a hot air ballon living would be cheaper...

    • @jacobday3826
      @jacobday3826 Před 4 lety +8

      It's so much cheaper until you realise that you need to keep a flock of owls to receive mail. It's Harry Potter on steroids. You may be thinking, why not just lower the balloon? But everytime you cross the 200m (vertical) threshold you are required to pay a toll, which means you pay two tolls everytime you drop down to receive mail. And don't even get me started on the amount you'll fork out for beans. You'll go mad with all the beans required to produce enough gas to stay afloat.

    • @TheRealVivia
      @TheRealVivia Před 4 lety +9

      Jai Shetty they will start to tax airspace for anyone with the ingenuity to make the sky a livable place.

    • @darth_vader4824
      @darth_vader4824 Před 4 lety +1

      It's unaffordable only in major cities due to demand.If you really need a place there is plenty on earth itself.

    • @phlushphish793
      @phlushphish793 Před 4 lety +9

      Yeh I read an internet article last night on surviving homelessness. They had a good idea of keeping a gym membership so they can shower & a PO box so they can have an address. Not all homeless are mental cases, alcoholics or drug addicts. Some are people with jobs who fell on hard times. Hope I don't have to make any of those decisions!

    • @normalchristian3963
      @normalchristian3963 Před 3 lety +3

      The cost of propane to keep your balloon in the air 365/24/7 would make buying and renting property look very cheap.

  • @Ashtonishing1812
    @Ashtonishing1812 Před 3 měsíci +4

    Interesting video, but I don’t want to keep paying rent for the next 50 years when I only have to Pay mortgage for 25

  • @plz7788
    @plz7788 Před rokem +2

    Might I point out that, depending on your geographic location, the unrecoverable costs of renting can be significantly more than just the rent paid. For example, a property renter may not be allowed to fix a broken plumbing system of the house, and has to wait for the property owner to arrange for it. This can incur significant opportunity costs, intangible costs, and other costs, such as for laundry/food that are over and above what would typically be spent when the plumbing system is functional. I have lived in places where renters rights do not exist, and thus the pressure to buy instead of rent is extremely high. On top of that, with markets where renters rights do not exist, the cost of having to constantly move every year or two due to rent hikes or a horror landlord can add up very quickly, depending on the size of the household.
    A more careful assessment of the risks associated with your rental situation is vital to making a rational choice. Suffice it to say that my personal experience has not been very positive.

  • @homesottawagatineau
    @homesottawagatineau Před 4 lety +40

    This is so excellent that it beats out the majority of CZcams videos out there for this subject matter. It's intelligently thought through and uses tremendous discipline to give an objective analysis. The best I have seen on the subject. Deserves a thanks on behalf of all of us viewers. Keep it up.

  • @craiglist308
    @craiglist308 Před 3 lety +29

    Thank s for this rule of thumb, that has some variations, if a person wants to do the research to adjust for them. By showing how it was achieved, it gives a tool to relate, sorta, apples to oranges, and make a more informed decision--- easier to weigh the differences, and therefore easier to make a decision.

  • @sandman0829
    @sandman0829 Před rokem +7

    What an absolutely top-notch video on the topic. Rational, thorough, informative, and accessible. Bravo sir, and thanks.

  • @bergellemers2316
    @bergellemers2316 Před rokem

    This is an excellent breakdown - exactly what I was looking for. Thanks

  • @ItsZarif
    @ItsZarif Před 4 lety +79

    This has to be one of the best videos on this topic yet. You did an incredible job at explaining the nuance between the two. Great job!

  • @KennethYimHomes
    @KennethYimHomes Před 4 lety +47

    Love the theory, thank you!
    Keep in mind that there are also other non-financial reasons as to why it might make more sense to own or rent. If you own, as long as you pay your bills, no one can force you to move. If you want the flexibility move due to your job or say you need more space or just get bored easily, there’s far less transaction costs when you rent.

    • @nispelsm
      @nispelsm Před 3 lety +7

      This, the decision to rent vs own is more about your job and lifestyle than about pure financials. I was once told you should only consider buying if you plan to live there for at least 5 years. Any less than that isn't practical for home ownership, not to mention you are more likely to lose money overall.

  • @myyt.handle
    @myyt.handle Před rokem

    Hi Ben, very short and informative video. Thank you for this

  • @user-gs9qb3uw8q
    @user-gs9qb3uw8q Před měsícem

    I just found your channel and it is a wealth of knowledge.

  • @wesdonhauser8222
    @wesdonhauser8222 Před 3 lety +20

    A more advanced extension of this problem would be to factor in consumer risk aversion and how that interplays with the higher variability in stocks. V. Housing. Also a liquidity premium for stocks because houses are not liquid.

  • @daddytubewatches
    @daddytubewatches Před 5 lety +37

    Age is a primary factor in any equation of rent- buy.

  • @ShawnForno
    @ShawnForno Před 3 měsíci +1

    The interest rates just four years ago are amazing. Totally different video today!

  • @carrillo1228
    @carrillo1228 Před rokem +1

    This is a very interesting way to think about this common problem. I’m in finance and I’m about to breakout a spreadsheet and start doing some math.

  • @BrentsTreehouse
    @BrentsTreehouse Před 4 lety +7

    This is a pretty good video. Opportunity cost of the 20% downpayment -- it used to be that stock markets went down and there was a risk of borrowing to invest, but that lesson has largely been forgotten.

  • @randymoreno9345
    @randymoreno9345 Před 4 lety +89

    We also have to take into consideration the fact that the cost of rent increases drastically over time. The cost of your mortgage will remain the same for the next 30 years. 20 years ago rents were significantly cheaper than they are today. Sure I can rent now for the next 10 years but I guarantee that in 10 years the cost of rent will catch up to what my mortgage would've been if I would've bought 10 years prior.

    • @bromers2971
      @bromers2971 Před 4 lety +10

      Wrong, Your mortgage will reflect the interest rate at the time. No bank will EVER offer a fixed rate home loan for a 25-30 year period

    • @randymoreno9345
      @randymoreno9345 Před 4 lety +41

      @@bromers2971 WRONG, I just bought a house with a 30 year fixed rate .

    • @randymoreno9345
      @randymoreno9345 Před 4 lety +26

      @@bromers2971 Perhaps you're in a different country but plenty of banks will offer you fixed rate mortgages on 30 year loans here in the United States.

    • @freshurb8963
      @freshurb8963 Před 4 lety +4

      since when has property tax remained fixed ? #fknIDIOT

    • @joaoafonsoa.pereiradasilva8923
      @joaoafonsoa.pereiradasilva8923 Před 3 lety

      @@bromers2971 They do but at a higher rate than what you would get if going a variable indexed one.

  • @spencerhill5262
    @spencerhill5262 Před rokem +5

    I hear what you're saying about house as an investment of capital, and the costs of owning a home, but in the long run there is limited habitable land and a steady increase of people. Its about values, land is finite. I think people are realizing this. Houses in Toronto bought in the 50s and left to become dilapidated are still worth multi millions because if the LAND and potential for redevelopment. They just lifted single family dwelling rules so your potential to own a small apartment complex is huge.

  • @dafreakingusername
    @dafreakingusername Před rokem +39

    I'd like to see you revisiting this with latest developments: housing depreciation and increased interest

    • @Kaodusanya
      @Kaodusanya Před 4 měsíci +3

      And also consider the massive increases in rent prices during the pandemic

  • @whatsthebigfndeal
    @whatsthebigfndeal Před 4 lety +44

    There are positives and negatives to owning a home. My home is paid for, so no mortgage, but it will never truly be mine. If I don't pay annual property taxes for the rest of my life I'll be on the street. I'm basically "renting" from the state. Any improvement I make to the home adds to the property tax and any repairs are my responsibility. My central ac unit just went down last month. That's $3,900 out of my pocket. There are a million and one things/expenses that you never think about when you're renting. Plus, my neighborhood has went downhill so my home is worth less now than it was 20 years ago. Still, though, considering my income compared to the cost of renting these days, I'd have to live in a shithole apartment and be very frugal just to get by. In my current area (small town south Georgia) ownership is a better option as houses are cheap, generally making monthly mortgages much lower than monthly rent, but when I was living in Philly ownership wouldn't have made sense for me. I think it's mostly a choice you have to make based on where you are in life. I'm old and settled so owning is nice but if I were still a young man it would be hard to make that kind of commitment. Renting with short term lease agreements allowed me to move around whenever I got tired of where I was. I'd probably still be rambling around if it weren't for a pretty girl with bright blue eyes and a smile that still makes me feel all warm and fuzzy.

    • @gabrielladots5990
      @gabrielladots5990 Před 4 lety +3

      Aw ......the bottom line: women make men better 💕. All the best to both of you.

    • @isaaczaiek487
      @isaaczaiek487 Před 4 lety

      how is that any different from China where people can't own property? People rent from the state.

    • @darthnatas953
      @darthnatas953 Před 2 lety +1

      @@isaaczaiek487 No different. Governments everywhere are blood suckers.