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8 votes
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Tesla boom ushers in trailer parks, tiny homes in red-hot Austin
5 votes -
IKEA furniture and homeware prices are to rise as a result of lasting disruption to its supply chain – increased cost of raw materials knocked its full-year profits
5 votes -
Restrictive Californian zoning laws worsened the supply chain crisis
8 votes -
Financial innovation is actually happening
6 votes -
Nestlé: The most evil business in the world
10 votes -
Why everything is suddenly getting more expensive — and why it won’t stop
8 votes -
US Securities and Exchange Commission report on Gamestop, AMC stock price jumps in January 2021
7 votes -
America’s cash glut
4 votes -
Hundreds of banned crypto miners were siphoning power at China’s state firms
3 votes -
The art market is a scam... and rich people run it
7 votes -
Anyone seen Tether’s billions?
9 votes -
A bitcoin mining power plant secretly set up shop in Alberta. Now it's being forced to shut down
5 votes -
What’s driving the huge US rent spike?
11 votes -
Many economics experts are rethinking longstanding core ideas, including the importance of inflation expectations
12 votes -
Pandora Papers - Billions hidden beyond reach
26 votes -
Leeks, tropicalizers, and cutting the soap: A guide to global startup slang
1 vote -
Inside America’s broken supply chain
4 votes -
El Salvador has started mining Bitcoin using the renewable energy from volcanoes
8 votes -
Lego profits more than doubled in first six months of the year – Danish toymaker was one of the winners from Covid restrictions
7 votes -
China deems all cryptocurrency transactions illegal
25 votes -
Banking regulations and collateral damage: Tweetstorm by patio11
6 votes -
Norway agrees to increase natural gas exports to the rest of Europe as prices soar – increase corresponds to nearly 2% of Norway's annual pipeline gas exports
8 votes -
Why Monero
6 votes -
El Salvador’s new bitcoin wallets could cost Western Union $400 million a year
15 votes -
What’s going on with the ‘Great Resignation’? You’d better work on hanging on to your workers, or you may end up shutting your business doors.
17 votes -
The Age of Disorder: Long-Term Asset Return Study
5 votes -
Two percent inflation over the next year: Should you take the over or the under?
5 votes -
Leaving QE, never easy
4 votes -
Thirty-three non-existent businesses tied to one Denver office got millions in COVID-19 relief money
16 votes -
Landlords from Florida to California are jacking up rents at record speeds
15 votes -
McDonald’s runs out of milkshakes amid ‘supply chain issues’ in UK
11 votes -
A painful trade shock is coming to Afghanistan
8 votes -
US to erase student debt for those with severe disabilities
15 votes -
Sheldon Wolin, on his coined 'inverted totalitarianism' and the motivations of citizens under it
3 votes -
Buying a house relatively soon, lay your advice on me!
I'm in the market for a house, been looking pretty seriously for the past week or so. I've got two pre-approvals for mortgages, and I think I'll probably look for at least two more for fee...
I'm in the market for a house, been looking pretty seriously for the past week or so. I've got two pre-approvals for mortgages, and I think I'll probably look for at least two more for fee comparison purposes. I have yet to actually see a house unfortunately, since every house we try to view gets sold that very same day :/ Hopefully the streak is broken, since we have an appointment with another house today!
Anyway, who here has advice for (any part of the process of) buying a house? Things to look for when viewing a house, things to consider that the common person might not, tips for making offers, tips for not giving up because of the market, etc.
I'll lead with some tidbits that I've gained from asking around friends and family that have already bought places recently.
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Apparently, sending a personal letter to the owners with the offer letter has gotten multiple people a house even when their offer wasn't the highest. For example, my sisters friend knew the owners had a cat, and has cats herself. So in the letter she wrote, she mentioned how happy her cats would be laying on the windows and running around in all the new space and such.... and she got it! The owners realtor was kinda pissed.
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Try to find out the reason the owners are moving out. My sister and her husbands realtor asked around, and they were able to close on their house because the owner needed a quick turnaround to get out as fast as possible. They got the house for 60K under asking price because they were able to sweeten the deal to suit the owner.
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Location is (generally) more important than furnishings. You can add or remove things from a house, but you can't move it once you buy it.
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Once you make an offer on a house and the owner accepts, make sure the contract includes the following two parts that are (apparently) very important:
- House must appraise for at least the same value you've agreed to buy it at
- Inspection must show no more than
$buyer_defined_valuedollars of necessary repairs, otherwise the deal should be re-negotiated or considered void.
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Always leave enough money in your savings account to pay for any extras (because there are always extras) after the house is yours. New furniture, carpets, smaller repairs, paint, etc. You don't want to drain your account for the house only to find out you can't do anything afterwards.
I'm very excited (and exhausted already), but I want to make sure I'm as thorough as possible since I'll be spending the next several years of my life in it!
Forgot to mention(Thanks @Thra11), this is the US East Coast.
22 votes -
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The end of ownership: How big companies are trying to turn everyone into renters
29 votes -
Sex-toy makers Lovehoney and WOW Tech merge in $1.2 billion deal as lockdowns spur demand
11 votes -
Pay cut: Google employees who work from home could lose money
16 votes -
Xsolla fires 150 employees based on big data analysis of their activity
14 votes -
What's the point of a company? Philip Morris is attempting to purchase a respiratory illness treatment company, let's talk about it.
10 votes -
Walmart to pay 100% of college tuition and books for associates
11 votes -
Why do women earn less than men? Evidence from bus and train operators
10 votes -
Young, dumb, and broke: Why outdoorsy types suck at money
13 votes -
We infiltrated a counterfeit check ring! Now what?
12 votes -
Janne Poranen: ‘If you have an invention, don't sell your technology too early to anyone’
4 votes -
All money is fiat money
10 votes -
Cape Cod businesses struggle to find T-shirts, hats amid shortage
3 votes -
WhaleFarm RugPull
7 votes -
Trump Organization charged in fifteen-year US tax scheme. Longtime CFO Allen Weisselberg was also charged with evading taxes on $1.7 million of income.
12 votes