Special offer

Home Ownership for Young People

By
Real Estate Agent with Sutton Group-Associates Realty Inc., Brokerage

HOME OWNERSHIP FOR YOUNG PEOPLE!

 



No one likes to think they will get old but we all seem to...

 

 

No one likes to think that they will be living in their parents' basement until they're thirty-something, but it happens all the time!

Saving for a mortgage may be the last thing on young minds, who are preoccupied with sports, dating, or academics, but it's never too early to plan for the future. A few small steps can become giant leaps towards financial security!

 

If there are two key words every young adult and teenager should know they are "compound interest".


A simple mathematical calculation demonstrates how savings can build.
If the initial investment is $100 at a conservative interest rate of 5% per year, by the end of that year the investment will be $105.

If the money remains invested through the next year, the investment will grow to $110.25 ($105 x 5% = $110.25).



The following year it would be $110.25 x 5% = $115.76.



So it is easy to see how quickly an investment can grow.

 

It's a great habit to get into setting aside a certain amount from every paycheque.

 

Regular "payments" to your investment not only result in greater savings, they can help even out the ups and downs of the marketplace.

 

 

 

 

There is nothing worse than investing one large sum of money and immediately afterwards seeing the stock market or interest rates plummet.

Also try to think of invested money as being out of reach and avoid dipping into those savings.



A credit history can go as far back as the first loan (even those co-signed by a parent) or the first credit card. A bad credit rating can make it hard to lease a car, get a mortgage, or any type of loan.

Always pay at least your minimum monthly credit card payment and pay it on time. Of course, the best plan is to never carry a balance. The lure of credit, however, can be too hard for anyone to resist especially for a young adult on a limited budget. If you can establish good habits early, think of how much you will save by avoiding years of paying 18-20% credit card interest. (That's compound interest too, by the way.)


A poor credit rating can haunt you for years but a good rating can help you get a loan or mortgage in the future. Most lenders need to see that a borrower is financially responsible. Credit cards can be a great beginning. Most credit card companies will give accounts to students in their last year of university or most applicants over the age of 21.


No one can predict where the future will take him or her. Educational pursuits or new jobs often force people to leave their hometowns and relocate in other cities or provinces. Wherever a person decides to put down roots, it's important to research the market.

Talk to local real estate agents. Most will be happy to share their knowledge and experience.

 

 

Some important questions to ask include:

"How much will I expect to spend in order to purchase a house with a certain number of bedrooms or a certain square footage?"


"What sort of features should I look for in a home?"

"Is there a strong resale market in this area?"

Also check out the local real estate companies on the Internet to get an idea of local home prices and sizes.



Even if buying a home is years away it's a good idea to start planning today!

 


The slow steady building of your investments pays off richly in the end.

 

 

 

 

 


Save a specific percentage of your income on a regular basis starting from your very first part-time job. Also try to make payments to your credit cards on time and don't carry a balance.

Eventually we all get to the finish line but it's nice to get there in style!

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sylvie Conde, Broker  -  Your Toronto Realtor!
Sutton Group-Associates Realty Inc, Brokerage  416-966-0300
Independently Owned & Operated
sconde@sutton.com
www.sylvieconde.com
www.torontorealestatelife.com

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

  Toronto Real Estate and Life Blog ....

   .... information on buying - selling - mortgages ... and all things Toronto and the GTA

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Posted by

 

Comments (12)

Brian Griffis
Realty Choice - Springfield, MO

Hi Sylvie.  Sounds like you have been listening to Suze Orman?  It is good that young people are becoming more educated about finances (or are they?).  In your country, are they starting to teach such things in schools?  Here, it is still a sorely lacking subject.

Sep 29, 2009 02:41 AM
Sylvie Conde
Sutton Group-Associates Realty Inc., Brokerage - Toronto, ON
Broker, Toronto Real Estate

Brian, I don't think anything is being taught in school, but I think it should be mandatory.  Most students have huge financial troubles already by the time they leave University.  It's not a good way to start life.   I've taught my son from an early age, and although he still spends more than I would like to see him spend, he's actually got a savings account and doesn't have any credit card or other debt.  I haven't given him a penny, not for a movie, or anything else, since he was about 15. 
Kids should learn, and parents should teach them properly, since we know no one else will do it.

 

Sep 29, 2009 03:00 AM
Terry Chenier
Homelife Glenayre Realty - Mission, BC

Syvlie,

The Wealthy Barber said 10% of all you earn is yours to keep.

Sep 29, 2009 03:56 AM
Sylvie Conde
Sutton Group-Associates Realty Inc., Brokerage - Toronto, ON
Broker, Toronto Real Estate

Terry, the problem isn't what you're keeping. The problem is that a lot of young people not only do not know how to save ANYTHING, let alone 10%, they also get into very bad debt.  I think by the time a child is old enough to get an allowance, they should be old enough to learn how to start saving 10% of THAT.  It has to start somewhere, so it may as well start there.

 

Sep 29, 2009 04:06 AM
Erby Crofutt
B4 U Close Home Inspections&Radon Testing (www.b4uclose.com) - Lexington, KY
The Central Kentucky Home Inspector, Lexington KY

Ah yes, the power of "Compound Interest".  We'd all be a lot better off if we all used it wisely.

Sep 29, 2009 04:54 AM
Sylvie Conde
Sutton Group-Associates Realty Inc., Brokerage - Toronto, ON
Broker, Toronto Real Estate

Erby, it depends what we're talking about ...and in this case, if it's your SAVINGS account, you want to continue adding to it, so that compound interest works in your favour.

Once you are paying money to someone else, that's another story. :)

 

Sep 29, 2009 07:07 AM
Kathy Clulow
Uxbridge, ON
Trusted For Experience - Respected For Results

Sylvie - I wish they would teach some life skills like managing your finances in school as there are a lot of youg people who do not know how too.

Sep 29, 2009 01:38 PM
Bruce Walter
Keller Williams Realty Lafayette/West Lafayette, Indiana - West Lafayette, IN

Hi Sylvie,

I really enjoyed your post.  As a former Economics teacher, they are certainly words to live by.

Sep 29, 2009 04:51 PM
Sylvie Conde
Sutton Group-Associates Realty Inc., Brokerage - Toronto, ON
Broker, Toronto Real Estate

Kathy, I agree. These skills should be taught, at minimum, at the beginning of high school.

Bruce, thank you.

Sep 29, 2009 10:19 PM
Brian Griffis
Realty Choice - Springfield, MO

I would have to encourage teaching money lessons much earlier, starting in grade school.  By the time kids get to high school it is already too late.  They have been inundated with television, radio, and billboards promoting consumerism since they day they were born.  They need effective denunciations of these influences or else they will fall victim to the scourge of debt that afflicts most of our society.  It is never too early to start positive reinforcement of good values. 

Sep 30, 2009 03:07 AM
Jenny Kotulak
RE/MAX Real Estate Centre Inc., Brokerage - Oakville, ON
Broker - Oakville Ontario Real Estate

I wish I'd followed all your tips when I was younger.  Maybe I'd be rich now.  Well money rich.  I'm life rich instead.

Sep 30, 2009 01:49 PM
Sylvie Conde
Sutton Group-Associates Realty Inc., Brokerage - Toronto, ON
Broker, Toronto Real Estate

Brian, you are absolutely correct.

 

Jenny, I didn't follow my own advice either (no one taught me back then).... but I'm certainly trying to do a better job with my son.  He's been saving and looking after his own money since he got his first part time job in high school.  I have not given him a penny since then.  He is saving for his own car, and for his insurance, and he has a couple of Canada Savings Bonds.  Hopefully he will be very rich before too long, so he can look after me. LOL :)

 

Sep 30, 2009 02:05 PM