DisneyBamaFan
Alabama - 2009 National Champions
- Joined
- Jan 10, 2009
- Messages
- 7,630
If the commercial real estate market doesn't improve soon, we may see a banking collapse that makes the last wave look like a sunny day at the beach.The problem is--the market isn't in a position that it "wont' ever recover"--people will always need places to live and while you may not recoup the entire investment, over time you do pay it down. You'd have to pay rent anyway. So you don't lose all the money.
ETA: Funny thing is, people don't hesitate to plop thousands down on a new vehicle and the moment they drive it off the lot, it is worth less than what they owe. But people don't flood the dealer with voluntary repo's b/c of loss in value. To me--a house is no different...
In principle, no - but in practical application they are very different unless we are talking Bentley. The numbers are too different to compare. It is like saying that all investments are equal no matter their value. Clearly we are willing to accept immediate losses on items of lower value. The lower the cost, the more inconsequential the outcome...