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Economy
More Than A Quarter Of Prospective Millennial Home Buyers Have Less Than $1,000 Saved
2020-01-16
[Zero] In one of the most comprehensive reports we've seen about millennial attitudes toward home buying, Clever surveyed 1,000 millennials to discern their thoughts about homeownership as part of the company's second annual "Millennial Home Buyer Report."

And what they found - while not exactly surprising - certainly speaks to the difficulties that millennials are facing compared with their predecessors: 84% of millennials believe that owning a home is a critical part of the American dream. This is true, despite the fact that the number of millennials who own homes is 10% lower than the number of Gen Xers who owned homes at the same age.

Posted by:Besoeker

#9  Millennials are ass deep in college debt too.
Posted by: Texhooey   2020-01-16 23:44  

#8  Bet they have $1,000 phones, $5k computers, and a new car.
Posted by: 49 Pan   2020-01-16 18:18  

#7  Almost nobody has money to buy a house in China. We bought a small one, but that is mostly because GF had some equity built up in two small houses we sold.

Here, parents normally give their son a house, so someone will marry him. Girl's are on their own, and they know it, so they are incredibly tough.
Posted by: Beau   2020-01-16 12:57  

#6  3.5% down is needed for FHA financing. The article points out that many of those prospective buyers plan on using gift funds from family for that down payment.
Posted by: Crusader   2020-01-16 10:05  

#5  $1000 would buy about 3 tattoos - kids have their priorities...
Posted by: Glenmore   2020-01-16 09:22  

#4  I bought when Las Vegas started going to big tract subdivisions. Talked to the sales team, filled out the paperwork, got a Visa card, then used the card cash advance for the down payment.
Posted by: Skidmark   2020-01-16 08:47  

#3  We bought our first house in 1982 with an FHA mortgage. In those days it was about 2% down at 19.5% interest — and we were thrilled we caught it on the dip from 21% in those early Reagan years — plus another fraction of a percent for mortgage insurance until we’d paid the thing down to 20% equity.

The house did have to pass a more stringent FHA inspection, but we were happy for the added feeling of security — especially because we were buying a fixer-upper. Mr. Wife wanted profit and pleasure from exercising skills acquired working for his uncle the contractor. That first house was a two-family, and the rent from the first floor apartment paid about half our monthly payment, which mean most of our paychecks went into building materials for the next five years. Working ‘til midnight five days a week is fun when one is young, and one saves a small fortune by not going out drinking...

FHA-backed mortgages are still available, according to the website.
Posted by: trailing wife   2020-01-16 08:29  

#2  Seems all the "liar loan" action is in new car financing these days. The housing market is tight enough supply-wise that there's no need for it.
Posted by: M. Murcek   2020-01-16 07:14  

#1  Really? Back in the ancient times which I seemed to have lived through, 10% down and enough to cover the costs of processing were the standard. In other words, they're not even close to be being a home buyer (unless you're working hard on the next big mortgage default to shut down the economy).
Posted by: Procopius2k   2020-01-16 06:01  

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