Money Pits Investments pay you each month; homes do not
But when it comes to housing its not a mans world. Women dominate housing decisions. There are not millions of guys out there pining for new homes. But, there are millions of women who are; the only ones who arent just moved into a new home. But even these women will be thinking about their next dream home within 30 days. The ones with good sense will wait a while before they say, Honey, in our next house, I think we should get ... Ah, but the bloom is off this housing-market rose. However, that doesnt mean that significant other of yours has given up on moving into that next dream house. Unfortunately, unloading the current dream seems to be mission impossible. Anyone who watched his obnoxious neighbor, who used to live down the street, sell out for peak prices in 2005, cant bear to accept a lower price than what that S.O.B. got. Even though you were never in his home, you know your house is better. Most working stiffs dont trade assets for a living. They trade their time and talent for a paycheck. There are very few people mentally equipped to buy and sell investments profitably. And now houses are investments. One young professional asking my advice about whether he should sell his home at a loss and buy the new home his wife desired, wanted to make sure that any guy he was buying from was losing as much as he was. In her book, Overcoming 7 Deadly Sins of Trading, Ruth Barrons Roosevelt explains: Pride is attaching your ego to the event or situation instead of simply attempting to do your best. When you bring your ego into trading, you lose twofold. You lose your money, and you lose your self-esteem. There are plenty of people with homes for sale desperately hanging on to their self-esteem, at the expense of not being able to sell their house and find another more suitable one. Our brains are even wired to work against us when it comes to making rational decisions about selling something like a house. The hippocampus is a key portion of the reflexive brain, writes Jason Zweig in his book Your Money and Your Brain. It is packed with neurons that are called place cells. These neurons allow us to tell each feature of our surroundings apart from others. The reflexive brain responds favorably to things that are familiar. As Zweig points out, it is because employees are constantly receiving stimulus about the companies they work for that 5 million U.S. investors have more than 60% of their retirement funds in their employers stock. Investing in the company you work for feels good.
In an article asking whether homeownership may be bad for America, The Atlantics Clive Crook puts his finger on what homeownership really is it makes employees less mobile. Indeed. People need reminding that homes arent investments. Investments pay you money every month. Homes are just the opposite money pits. This article originally appeared in Liberty Watch Magazine. December 14, 2007 Doug French [send him mail] is executive vice president of a Nevada bank and associate editor for Liberty Watch Magazine. He received the Murray N. Rothbard Award from the Center for Libertarian Studies. Copyright © 2007 Doug French
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