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Is Taking a Mortgage the WORST Decision Ever??
deadpoet
#261 Posted : Wednesday, June 11, 2014 3:56:33 PM
Rank: Member

Joined: 9/27/2006
Posts: 506
Has anyone dealt with the 105% mortgage financing from Housing Finance?
mungaits
#262 Posted : Wednesday, June 11, 2014 4:56:01 PM
Rank: Member

Joined: 9/20/2007
Posts: 252
Well said @ Angelica _ann!

Very practical view, different from the doomsayers and alarmist.

Next they will say dont take a car loan, development loan because of fundamentals, ROI, NPV blah blah fueled by their google driven wisdom!

I have also just taken a mortgage, plan is to clear it in 3-4 years and take another one.

In the meantime, some "know it all" is in a rented house, trying to save and build his palace. Only if they knew how time flies.

We must accept there is a price/cost to pay for money borrowed regard less of the use for the loan.

So unless your dad is often mentioned on "who owns Kenya", sign on the dotted line, work hard to repay in a few years and move one.

Otherwise jenga yako and let others be!

Asanteni

Part home owner (other part is owned by the bank, for now!)
Omena
#263 Posted : Wednesday, June 11, 2014 7:00:33 PM
Rank: New-farer

Joined: 4/12/2014
Posts: 36
By the time one is completing their house after six years using 'salary', the costs of smiti, roofing, finishings, labour your own man hours, stress, security, pilferage etc etc will be close to 3 times the current costs.

Going by current trend, the mortgaged house if well selected can be offloaded to recoup your cash or even at a profit, in the event you know what hits the fan.
 It’s what you learn after you think you know it all that counts.
dunkang
#264 Posted : Wednesday, June 11, 2014 8:06:29 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 6/2/2011
Posts: 4,824
Location: -1.2107, 36.8831
mungaits wrote:
Well said @ Angelica _ann!

Very practical view, different from the doomsayers and alarmist.

Next they will say dont take a car loan, development loan because of fundamentals, ROI, NPV blah blah fueled by their google driven wisdom!

I have also just taken a mortgage, plan is to clear it in 3-4 years and take another one.

In the meantime, some "know it all" is in a rented house, trying to save and build his palace. Only if they knew how time flies.

We must accept there is a price/cost to pay for money borrowed regard less of the use for the loan.

So unless your dad is often mentioned on "who owns Kenya", sign on the dotted line, work hard to repay in a few years and move one.

Otherwise jenga yako and let others be!

Asanteni

Part home owner (other part is owned by the bank, for now!)

This is laughable, to say the least. Ati accelarate mortgage to 3-4 years. Laughing out loudly Laughing out loudly Laughing out loudly Laughing out loudly

A 9,000,000/- mortgage at 15% "accelerated" for 4 years would require one to be paying atleast 250,000/- monthly.

A 9M house in Nairobi is ............
Receive with simplicity everything that happens to you.” ― Rashi

jaggernaut
#265 Posted : Wednesday, June 11, 2014 8:16:04 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 10/9/2008
Posts: 5,389
Omena wrote:
By the time one is completing their house after six years using 'salary', the costs of smiti, roofing, finishings, labour your own man hours, stress, security, pilferage etc etc will be close to 3 times the current costs.

Going by current trend, the mortgaged house if well selected can be offloaded to recoup your cash or even at a profit, in the event you know what hits the fan.


Interesting to note that when i was putting up my house in Nairobi 4yrs ago, cement was 720 bob while now it's 650 bob. Cost of chumas has also gone down. Labour hasn't changed much, maybe up 10%. Cost of fittings (kitchens, bathrooms, lighting, mdfs etc) has actually come down, e.g. the bathroom faucets i bought at 8k 4yrs ago are now going at 4.5k at the 'Big Sale' at the Ideal Ceramics stores in Nairobi. I have even had to change the bath i installed in the master en suite into a jacuzzi after jacuzzi prices came down and became affordable.

My wife and I had a few millions (savings plus selling 2 plots) which we used to buy land within Nairobi. Then we each took 5yr loans to put up a 5bdrm house, which we put up in 6 months and moved in. So next year we will be loan free. The good thing is that the house allowance from our employers is more than our loan repayments.

If we had taken a mortgage to buy a 5bdrm house (with own compound) we would have been stuck/'mortgaged' for 20yrs paying over 200k pm. But next year we will be loan free, and we intend to take new loans and slowly develop some flats on a plot we own in kitengela. So hopefully within 10yrs, we will be owning a house and a block of flats giving us 400k pm.

However, since all wazuans situations are different, i would advice that each takes the option that's best suited to them, whether short term loans or mortgages depending on their circumstances.
lisaox
#266 Posted : Thursday, June 12, 2014 1:58:34 PM
Rank: Member

Joined: 7/4/2010
Posts: 118
Has someone dealt with KCB S&L? I have been trying to get information concerning a property on their website since Friday last week. I have called like 6 times. and each time i have been told 'the person who has that information is out' or is busy or has left. and today's response was classic. 'the person who has that information is not currently in, he is the only one with internet access so he is the only one who can see what properties our website has and therefore can advise on properties we have listed on our website'. Are you for real, there's only 1 guy at S&L with internet access who can see what S&L has put up on its website and therefore advise on these properties? Yoh! In 2014, are you serious KCB, S&L?
whiteowl
#267 Posted : Thursday, June 12, 2014 2:22:05 PM
Rank: Veteran

Joined: 4/16/2014
Posts: 1,420
Location: Bohemian Grove
dunkang wrote:
mungaits wrote:
Well said @ Angelica _ann!

Very practical view, different from the doomsayers and alarmist.

Next they will say dont take a car loan, development loan because of fundamentals, ROI, NPV blah blah fueled by their google driven wisdom!

I have also just taken a mortgage, plan is to clear it in 3-4 years and take another one.

In the meantime, some "know it all" is in a rented house, trying to save and build his palace. Only if they knew how time flies.

We must accept there is a price/cost to pay for money borrowed regard less of the use for the loan.

So unless your dad is often mentioned on "who owns Kenya", sign on the dotted line, work hard to repay in a few years and move one.

Otherwise jenga yako and let others be!

Asanteni

Part home owner (other part is owned by the bank, for now!)

This is laughable, to say the least. Ati accelarate mortgage to 3-4 years. Laughing out loudly Laughing out loudly Laughing out loudly Laughing out loudly

A 9,000,000/- mortgage at 15% "accelerated" for 4 years would require one to be paying atleast 250,000/- monthly.

A 9M house in Nairobi is ............


I think guys in here have lots of other sources of cash to fund this "acceleration" or its just theories
Mo
#268 Posted : Thursday, June 12, 2014 2:47:25 PM
Rank: Member

Joined: 9/21/2007
Posts: 326
too much hullaboo for nothing. the way i see it is - a house is not an investment, its simply a basic human need! it doesnt give you an income and costs you money to maintain but it gives you loads of peace.
my advise when you are still young and stupid, please spare some money from colognes, mitumba cars, phombe and other midrro class niceties to put up a hood either through mortgage or whatever, just do it.
Speak your truth quietly and clearly; and listen to others, even the dull and the ignorant; they too have their story.
quicksand
#269 Posted : Thursday, June 12, 2014 2:55:21 PM
Rank: Veteran

Joined: 7/5/2010
Posts: 2,061
Location: Nairobi
jaggernaut wrote:
Omena wrote:
By the time one is completing their house after six years using 'salary', the costs of smiti, roofing, finishings, labour your own man hours, stress, security, pilferage etc etc will be close to 3 times the current costs.

Going by current trend, the mortgaged house if well selected can be offloaded to recoup your cash or even at a profit, in the event you know what hits the fan.


Interesting to note that when i was putting up my house in Nairobi 4yrs ago, cement was 720 bob while now it's 650 bob. Cost of chumas has also gone down. Labour hasn't changed much, maybe up 10%. Cost of fittings (kitchens, bathrooms, lighting, mdfs etc) has actually come down, e.g. the bathroom faucets i bought at 8k 4yrs ago are now going at 4.5k at the 'Big Sale' at the Ideal Ceramics stores in Nairobi. I have even had to change the bath i installed in the master en suite into a jacuzzi after jacuzzi prices came down and became affordable.

My wife and I had a few millions (savings plus selling 2 plots) which we used to buy land within Nairobi. Then we each took 5yr loans to put up a 5bdrm house, which we put up in 6 months and moved in. So next year we will be loan free. The good thing is that the house allowance from our employers is more than our loan repayments.

If we had taken a mortgage to buy a 5bdrm house (with own compound) we would have been stuck/'mortgaged' for 20yrs paying over 200k pm. But next year we will be loan free, and we intend to take new loans and slowly develop some flats on a plot we own in kitengela. So hopefully within 10yrs, we will be owning a house and a block of flats giving us 400k pm.

However, since all wazuans situations are different, i would advice that each takes the option that's best suited to them, whether short term loans or mortgages depending on their circumstances.

Applause Applause Applause
This is the road to follow ....ati accelerate mortgage payments? with what? Business and economics are not always that benevolent, luck runs out or you fall on hard times ...deals zinakataa kuingiana au mabonus za job zinakatwa. Do not saddle yourself with colossal debt (when there are other options) hoping that 'windfall incomes' will save the day. And if they don't?
Angelica _ann
#270 Posted : Thursday, June 12, 2014 2:55:35 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 12/7/2012
Posts: 11,937
Mo wrote:
too much hullaboo for nothing. the way i see it is - a house is not an investment, its simply a basic human need! it doesnt give you an income and costs you money to maintain but it gives you loads of peace.
my advise when you are still young and stupid, please spare some money from colognes, mitumba cars, phombe and other midrro class niceties to put up a hood either through mortgage or whatever, just do it.

Yap smile Applause Applause Applause
In the business world, everyone is paid in two coins - cash and experience. Take the experience first; the cash will come later - H Geneen
89 Pages«<2526272829>»
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