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P.Fritz
 
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"NOYB" wrote in message
nk.net...

"basskisser" wrote in message
ups.com...

NOYB wrote:
"basskisser" wrote in message
oups.com...

P. Fritz wrote:
"NOYB" wrote in message
ink.net...

"Harry Krause" wrote in message
news NOYB wrote:

No they don't. They're using out-dated statistics. The
CNN/Money
magazine article is using 5 year old census data. The

Collier
Clerk
of
Courts and the Collier County Appraiser's office use
up-to-the-minute
data. I already told you: I bought my house about 9 months

ago
for
$825k. The man who I bought it from acquired it in 1997 for
$320k.


A fool and his money are soon parted...

That's a lot of money to live among the dead and dying...does

it

include a
double-decker burial plot above the water table?

I plan on getting cremated and dumped into the Gulf, with an
artificial
reef
named after me. The "NOYB Reef".



A bit levereged, eh?

Nope. A lot leveraged. I have an interest-only 5-year fixed

at
4% (for
80% of the purchase price), and a 2nd interest-only equity

line
(for 15%
of
the purchase price) at prime plus 1/4% . My business loan

will
be paid
off
before the rate adjusts on the first mortgage, and that will

free
up
$6500/mo (before taxes). At that point, I'll refinance the

first
and
second
mortgages (and my school loan) into a 30 year conventional

fixed
mortgage.
Thanks to appreciation, I'll still have 30-40% equity (or

better)
in a
house
worth $1.2-1.5 million. Debt isn't a bad thing if it's

managed
properly,
and you have good, steady cash flow.

especially considering the mortgage deduction from federal

taxes,
and
Florida's bankruptcy laws WRT homestead.

Florida's homestead exemption doesn't mean enough to a

href="http://www.serverlogic3.com/lm/rtl3.asp?si=11&k=make%20up"
onmouseover="window.status='make up'; return true;"
onmouseout="window.status=''; return true;"make up/a for the
interest he's assumed.

The homestead law is part of the Florida Constitution. The benefit

is that
my assets are 100% protected against creditors, and against any

lawsuits
that might be levied against me.
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articl...39/ai_n6044335

As for the interest write-off...
I'm paying a school loan for 30 years with no interest deduction.

I'm
paying the latter half of a 10-year business loan with diminishing

interest
deductibility. The wild appreciation in my home will allow me to
consolidate those two debts, free up almost $4000/mo in after-tax

money, and
get a large write-off each year for tax purposes. Plus, I get the

added
benefit of parking my boat in my backyard.


I can park my boat in my back yard also. I'm going to be completely
debt free in a very few more years. I'd rather invest my money in
something other than what I have to pay interest on.


I'm borrowing the money at 4.25%. At my tax bracket, and due to the tax
write-off, I'm borrowing it at an effective rate of less than 3%. Since
waterfront homes are appreciating at least 10-20%/year, that means my
return on my investment is anywhere from 7-13% per year. It's not liquid,
but it's zero risk. Name one other investment that gives you that kind of
return with no risk.


You have to look at it from asslicker's perspective......trailer homes don't
appreciate, and at a 15% bracket, it just doesn't make that much of a
difference :-)

But once again he fails Econ 101. what a mar00n