by pup55 » Mon 19 Sep 2005, 12:22:11
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'h')ave seen an ever-increasing number of elaborate log home resorts constructed and completed, at what would seem to be great expense, only to remain largely inactive during the height of the previous and most recent summer seasons
I'll tell you why...
You go buy a lot, maybe it's $50,000, and pay one of the local hillbilly contractors to put an $80,000 log cabin on it, and you wait a couple of years, and in theory, you sell it for $200,000.
At 6% interest, the monthly payment on your 100% loan is $775 per month. In two years, you have paid out only about $19,000.
So you invest 20K and get back 200K, that's a 1000% rate of return. Maybe the bank makes you put $20K down, so you invest $40K and get back $200K, so only a 500% rate of return.
It beats the heck out of the stock market, which has not made squat since 2001.
Of course, the system breaks down if either of two things happen: a. you get laid off, and you can no longer afford to come up with the $800 per month. b. You can't sell the place in two years for $200K.
The investors assume that the next couple of years will be like the last couple of years, so this is a no brainer. We do not need to go into much detail on the reasons why this might not be the case, but probably 75% of the investing public do not see it, therefore to them, this is a no brainer.
The potential buyers who are going to fork over the $200K see that in this area, home values have appreciated by 60% in two years, so they also see it as a good investment, because they think they can get $320K out of it two years from now.
So that's the system. Will the system work, or will it come back to bite them in the tail? We will see.