Renting vs. Buying a Home: The 5% Rule - YouTube

Channel: Ben Felix

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- I have talked about the decision
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around renting versus buying a home before.
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But in this video
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I wanted to take a bit of a different angle.
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The common perception is that if you can purchase a home
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with a mortgage payment that is equal to
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or less than what you would otherwise pay in rent
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then buying is a good decision.
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This way of thinking
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about the rent versus buy decision is extremely flawed.
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Comparing a mortgage payment to rent
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is not an apples to apples comparison.
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In order to properly assess the rent versus buy decision,
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we need to compare the total unrecoverable costs
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of renting to the total unrecoverable costs of owning.
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That may sound like a complicated task
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but I have boiled it down to a simple calculation.
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I'm Ben Felix, portfolio manager at PWL Capital.
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In this episode of "Common Sense Investing"
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I'm going to give you a simple way to think
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about the rent versus buy decision.
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(upbeat music)
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Before we get to the 5% rule,
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I need to lay out the assumptions that have gone into it.
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An unrecoverable cost is a cost that you pay
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with no associated residual value.
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When we are talking about the total unrecoverable cost
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of renting, the number is very easy.
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It's just the amount that you're paying in rent.
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For a home owner the unrecoverable costs are a bit harder
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to pin down.
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A homeowner has a mortgage payment,
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which feels kind of like rent,
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making it an easy number to compare to rent.
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But it is not a meaningful comparison.
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A mortgage payment is not an unrecoverable cost.
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It is a combination of interest and a principal repayment.
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The unrecoverable costs for a homeowner are
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property taxes, maintenance costs, and the cost of capital.
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It is these costs that we need to compare to rent.
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Property taxes are pretty easy
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for most people to grasp.
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You pay the tax to own the home.
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And there is no residual value.
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Property taxes are generally 1% of the value of the home.
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That's the first piece of the 5% rule.
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Then we have to think about maintenance costs.
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Maintenance costs cover a huge range of expenses.
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It can be large items like replacing a roof
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or renovating a kitchen to maintain the value of the home.
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But it can also be small things,
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like redoing the caulking in the bathroom.
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Pinning down the right number
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to estimate maintenance costs is not easy.
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And the data on average maintenance costs
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are not readily available.
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But most people suggest using 1%
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of the property value per year on average.
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This is the second piece of the 5% rule.
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Finally, the last and most important piece
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to the 5% rule is the cost of capital.
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This unrecoverable cost has to be broken down
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into two components,
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the cost of debt and the cost of equity.
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Most homeowners finance the purchase
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of their home using a mortgage.
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Let's use a new homeowner as an example.
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Say they put down 20%
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and finance the remaining 80% with a mortgage.
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The 80% that has been financed with a mortgage will result
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in interest costs.
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As of April, 2019, I can easily find the mortgages online
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for just under and just above 3%.
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Let's call mortgage interest a 3% unrecoverable cost.
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Up until this point. I think that all
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of the inputs to the 5% rule are fairly intuitive.
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Property taxes, maintenance costs, and mortgage interest.
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The last one,
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the cost of equity capital is a bit less intuitive
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and it requires digging into some data.
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In our example for the mortgage, we put 20% down.
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It's on that 20% that there's a cost of equity capital.
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When you put 20% down
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you are making a choice to invest in a real estate asset.
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Alternatively, you could have continued renting
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and invested the down payment money in stocks.
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It is that alternative that creates an opportunity cost
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which is a real economic cost incurred
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by a homeowner.
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To estimate this cost we need to come up
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with an estimate for expected returns;
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both for real estate and for stocks.
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A good place to start is the historical data.
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Looking at
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"The Credit Suisse Global Investment Returns Yearbook 2018"
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We can get an idea of the data going back to 1900.
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Globally, the real return for real estate,
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that's net of inflation from 1900 through 2017 was 1.3%.
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While stocks returned 5.2% after inflation.
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If we assume inflation at 1.7%
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then we will be thinking about a 3% nominal return
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for real estate and a 6.9% nominal return for stocks.
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I have had many commentators
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on my other real estate related videos mention
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that 3% might work for global real estate,
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but not for Ontario.
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That's way too low for Ontario.
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It should be closer to five or 10%.
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Let's clear that up right now.
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The problem with this thinking for any asset class,
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is that markets price assets based
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on the information that is available at that time.
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You would never sell your house for $500,000,
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if you knew that the buyer could resell it a year later
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for $550,000.
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If you knew that you wouldn't sell for $500,000.
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We can't assume that high recent historical returns
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like we've had Canada will persist forever.
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That is not a sensible way to make a decision.
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Instead, we can look at the risk premium
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that the market has placed
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on those types of assets over time
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and use that as an estimate for the future.
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That 6.9% historical return for stocks includes Russia
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and China's stock markets going to zero.
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It also includes the aftermath of world wars.
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If we were to cherry pick, say US stocks,
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the argument for stocks becomes a whole lot stronger,
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but it doesn't make a whole lot of sense to do that.
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That was a bit of a digression
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but I think it was important to put it out there.
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At PWL Capital we do not use the historical return
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for stocks as the estimate of future returns.
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We use a combination of the 50 year historical return
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and the current expected return based
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on the price earnings ratio.
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The effect of this is that when prices are high,
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as they are now relative to the past,
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our expected returns are lower.
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Our current nominal expected return
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for a 100% equity portfolio is 6.57%.
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Quite a bit lower than the historical average.
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If we take these numbers
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as they are: 3% for real estate and 6.57% for stocks,
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we would have an expected return difference,
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between real estate and stocks, of 3.57%.
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To keep things simple, and to be conservative,
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I think that we can round that down to 3%.
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We now have a cost of equity capital of 3%,
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which is conveniently equal to the cost of debt capital.
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So no matter how you finance the home,
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the cost of capital is 3%.
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We now have a total of 5% of the value of the home
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that you would expect to pay an unrecoverable costs.
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Remember rent is an unrecoverable cost that is easy to see.
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Homeowners also have unrecoverable costs
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but they are harder to see.
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The 5% rule can be used to think
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about the unrecoverable cost of renting
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and owning on an apples to apples basis.
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I think that this thinking can be used as a quick reference
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for anyone considering the financial aspect
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of their rent versus buy decision.
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Take the value of the home that you were considering,
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multiplied by 5% and divide by 12.
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If you can rent for less than that
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then renting is a sensible financial decision.
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A $500,000 home would be estimated to have $25,000
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in annual unrecoverable costs,
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or $2083 per month.
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It goes the other way, too.
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If you find a rental that you love for $3,000 per month
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you can take $3,000 multiplied by 12 and divide by 5%.
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The result in this case is $720,000.
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In other words, paying $3,000 per month in rent
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is financially equivalent in terms of unrecoverable costs
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to owning a $720,000 home.
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There is no doubt that the 5% rule is an oversimplification.
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When we start considering variables
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like tax rates and portfolio asset mix, the 5% rule changes.
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For example, the 6.57% expected return
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for stocks is a pretax return,
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which is fine in an RRSP or TFSA,
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but in a taxable account the after-tax return might
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be closer to 4.6% for someone taxed
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at the highest marginal rate in Ontario in 2019,
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reducing their cost of equity capital.
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Similarly, if the investment portfolio is less aggressive
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than 100% equity,
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the cost of equity capital decreases.
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If we think about this
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in terms of making financial decisions,
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it would just mean adjusting the 5% rule downward,
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reducing the total unrecoverable cost of owning.
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I feel like that might be a bit of a head spinner
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if you haven't thought about home ownership
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from this perspective.
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So let me try saying it another way.
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One of the largest cost of owning a home
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is the opportunity cost of equity capital.
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If you pay $500,000 cash for a home,
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you have now spent $500,000 on real estate,
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as opposed to using it for something else,
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like investing in stocks.
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The difference in expected returns
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between real estate and stocks is an opportunity cost.
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It is a real economic cost that the homeowner pays,
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and it has to be accounted
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for in the rent versus buy decision.
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The opportunity cost
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of equity capital changes depending largely
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on your mix between stocks and bonds,
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and whether or not your investments are being taxed,
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and if they are being taxed, your tax rate.
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Based on these variables,
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the 5% rule might need to be decreased,
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making home ownership less expensive in terms
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of unrecoverable costs.
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That is an interesting point to chew on.
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The cost of owning a home decreases
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if you have maxed out your registered accounts
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or if you can't handle the volatility
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of an aggressive portfolio.
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For any aggressive investor,
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who has not maxed out their RRSP and TFSA,
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I think that the 5% rule can be a useful tool
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in the rent versus buy decision.
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For anyone with a more conservative portfolio
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or for a taxable investor,
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I might use something closer to 4%.
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Either way, thinking about the cost
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of home ownership in terms
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of the estimated unrecoverable costs
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makes it much easier to think about the financial side
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of the rent versus buy decision.
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How do you think about the financial side
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of the rent versus buy decision?
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Tell me about it in the comments.
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Thanks for watching.
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My name is Ben Felix of PWL Capital
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and this is "Common Sense Investing".
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If you enjoyed this video,
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please share it with someone who you think could benefit
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from the information.
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Don't forget,
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if you've run out
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of "Common Sense Investing" videos to watch,
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you can tune into weekly episodes of
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The "Rational Reminder" podcast
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wherever you get your podcasts.
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(upbeat music)