300UGUY
Super Member
Mossflower purchased his property in 2010, well after the housing bubble collapse in 2007. A number of posts were those who were on the bad side of the bubble and are suffering because of it. I'm sure some ont this board could give examples of profitting from the rapid increase in property value.
In Mossflower's case the problem was caused by a bad appraisal, either the first or the second. It is a local problem and the bottom line is, what advice or possibilities can we offer? His is not a housing bubble problem. Many have been caught in a similar situation for other external reasons (major corporation leaves area or military base closes, etc.)
Sometimes there is an advantage in the long run when something causes a delay in aquiring more debt. He has been offered many options and will make his choices. As I pointed out earlier I would probably do a small project on my own and make do with the space I have.
Loren
A coworker of mine bought 4 houses in 2009 and 2010. He thought he had got great deals. Then the local market dropped another 20 to 30%. I think it is still dropping in some areas. Location and time matter. As for Mossflower, I think he has a lot of debt. Real estate folks always advocate buying big. A realtor will tell you that a 150K income will support a 400K house, easily. I've seen my income go up an down too much, I think you need at least 200k income to support a 400K property. 250K would be better. When you have a big house, horses and lots of stuff, your costs go up. I know several guys that are going broke, slowly. The big house is bleeding them to death.