• @hactar42
    link
    6911 months ago

    I did buy a house in 2008. January of 2008. Two months before the market crashed. It took me years not to be upside down.

    • @rockSlayer
      link
      2511 months ago

      Fucking brutal. Glad you managed to bounce back

  • @LemmyKnowsBest
    link
    5911 months ago

    EVERYONE NEEDS TO STOP USING HOUSES AS AN APPRECIABLE INVESTMENT. THIS IS WHY THE OTHER HALF OF THE POPULATION ARE HOMELESS. of course wealthy people don’t care about homeless people so this shitty-human-problem will never end, will it

    • Kalkaline
      link
      fedilink
      2311 months ago

      Houses aren’t an appreciable investment, the land is. Look at what happens to the values on mobile homes.

        • @MisterFrog
          link
          611 months ago

          You do, they’re just extremely poorly applied and mostly undervalue weathly neighbourhoods and overvalue poor ones 👍

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      2311 months ago

      For individuals and families who actually live in them, a house is a perfectly valid investment with positive side-effects for the overall economy. The issue is with investment firms trading around real estate like it’s candy, which takes housing out of regular use and inflated prices for everyone who actually needs it.

  • @Shadywack
    link
    English
    5411 months ago

    Just be born rich, and use Daddy’s money to start a business. It’s so easy, anyone can do it.

    • @Son_of_dad
      link
      611 months ago

      Vince McMahon bought the business, with the business’s own money, that’s how you grift!

    • Flying SquidM
      link
      111 months ago

      Pull yourself up by your designer bootstraps!

  • @CrowAirbrush
    link
    2511 months ago

    I was 20 and my father took all my savings a little before that year, gone was my future.

    I saved up and tried again but with the prices we needed help of some dear friends, who turned out to just be after our money and we ended up trusting then too much.

    Now should be attempt 3, but i can’t summon half a million for a house that cost 100k when i saved up for my first attempt at buying a house.

    Oppertunities have gone, life is over as far as i give a damn. It was…something…while it lasted alright.

    • @LavaPlanet
      link
      1011 months ago

      Be angry, also, at the people who have rigged the game, those in power, artificially inflating prices to line their own pockets. And I’m so sorry you’ve had such bad runs! I’m also a little proud of you for, not only getting as far as you did, but a few times! Well done! I say we fucking eat the rich.

      • @CrowAirbrush
        link
        411 months ago

        I’ve stopped being angry, i can’t spare the energy to do so.

        I just went into: “it’s over anyway” mode. Straight up work, eat, sleep wait for death.

  • @paddirn
    link
    English
    2211 months ago

    Bought a house in 2017 and seemed to have lucked out. Got a semi-decent price at a semi-decent rate, but now the market just looks absolutely bonkers insane by comparison.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      1111 months ago

      I bought my house a couple years before you. I have no idea how I’d be able to afford one now. It’s just impossible.

  • @HeyJoe
    link
    1711 months ago

    As someone who was 24 at the time, and probably the perfect age to buy one if it was my parents’ generation, I was nowhere near ready to buy a house still… honestly, 23-30 were the best years of my life, then I got married and brought one in 2014, which was still semi decent to buy at the time. It was super hard, though, and I have no idea how all these people today are somehow paying above asking price in cash or getting mortgages paying crazy amounts over asking with these interest rates! Either I did things completely wrong in life or these bad decisions people are making today will come full circle a few years from now.

    • Cosmonaut_Collin
      link
      811 months ago

      My wife and I just cancelled buying a home because we took a step back and realized that $2700 for living in a house is crazy. And of course the mortgage company is telling us we can afford it. After expenses, we would have no room left to budget for starting a family. Especially with medical care costs. I’m not sure how we’re gonna make it work unless prices come down significantly.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        211 months ago

        2700 is a lot. But if your lender thinks you can handle it, that means you have *some *deposable income. I think you shouldn’t buy a house, but invest some in the SP500 or some government bonds. Putting money away for your future greatly helps you grow some equality.

  • kase
    link
    1311 months ago

    I was 3 :/

  • @Son_of_dad
    link
    811 months ago

    Vince McMahon’s face when he realizes you don’t have to spend $20,000,000+ for sex

  • @JoMiran
    link
    711 months ago

    2010-2012 was the sweet spot.

    • @The_v
      link
      3
      edit-2
      11 months ago

      2009 with the $8K tax credit. My wife and I purchased our first home then. Nothing but foreclosures on the market. Most prices had dropped by 50-60% from the peak.

  • TWeaK
    link
    fedilink
    English
    311 months ago

    The best time to plant a tree…