imported post
tsptalk
wrote:
Great stuff! Am I allowed to call you guys
assets to the site?

hehe...As long as you don't trail off on the
"-ets" part. :dude:
azanon wrote:
Your house is an equity and a liability, but not an asset. The same goes for cars, boats, cards, wine, anything.
As a preface, i think this is to a large extent, this is a semantics issue.
Yes and no. When we lose precision in the terminology, we lose perspective on the roles the things the terminology represents.Truths become half-truths, and eventually, we are 180° from where we need to be. Religion is a good example: how many diametrically opposed "semantics" come from the same Book?
{heh, grenade!}
azanon wrote:
Tell me the lamens term formula for net worth. Its assets minus liabilities, is it not? What if you owned a house? Are you going to put your owned house in the liability column? I should hope not!
I did not emphasize this enough but merely hinted at it by calling
Net worth a
footnote on a financial statement.
Net worth is an entirely different subject and largely trivial. Net worth does not say anything about income, it only says "
If I were to sell everything right now at these values, I would have this much cash." That is a lot of
if's.
This very topic came to mind today when I was talking to a guy this morning who is filing for bankruptcy. There were a lot of circumstances that caused his situation, but the number one mistake was calling his investment properties
assets. What gave that away? When I asked how the heck did he wind up in that situation, the first words out of his mouth were, "Well, everything looked good on
paper..."
His plan was sound and all, but the reality is that onlyhalf of his properties were true assets since they generated income and the other half were liabilities. Yes, their fair market value was double of what he paid for them, but that is not relevant and he did not get FMV when he sold them for a lesser profit.
Net worth is completely hypothetical; it has no place in the income/expense financial statement.
azanon wrote:
Ok that out of the way, I believe you said "expense" in the original statement i objected to - not exactly the same thing as the terms you are using now, equity and liability. I would definitely not object to characterizing a house as an "equity", but liability? I still hesitate to say that and i'll try to explain why:
For starters, what are the alternatives? I'd feel self-conscious to toss around the word "expense" and "liability" when referring to a house, because someone might get the mistaken impression that renting is a better long-term solution. Ya know - you've got to live somewhere.
But you are carelessly tossing around the word
asset and people get the impression that their primary residence generates income.
booyah!

hehe
Renting v. buying is an entirely different subject. In some cases, renting would be better. But, that is not even tangentally related here and it is that
asset word that makes people think it is.
azanon wrote:
My second objection is based on this: Do you know what the average person's #1 asset is when they retire (ok, you prefer equity

)? Yep, you guessed it. Their house.
Oh, I was gonna say "personality", hehe.
You are half-right, for that is a half-truth. Their house is the average person's #1 money-hole. Why? What income did that house provide? None. It is an equity that has value, but it still costs.
The value is not related to the money flow.
Here is an example of a primary residence being an asset: Buy a multi-family building, say a duplex. Live in one side, rent the other. If the rent
income pays for the entire mortgage plus taxes, insurance, and maintenance with a little left over, then you have an
asset--positive cash flow. Lose the tenant, and it becomes a liability. I will concede to saying that breaking even still makes it an asset, since it is not costing you anything and it is providing a residence for free.
isnt that difficult to liquidate into cash. I've never heard of a "liability" that can be liquidated for massive amounts of money and you not owe anyone for it after you did so (assuming you owned the house).[/quote]
Or if interest rates rose and the real estate bubble pops, one's "asset" could severely depreciate. Did the condition of the "asset" change? No, but the market did, and the market is what sets the value, hence my calling it somewhat arbitrary. The market also affects liquidity. In this case, when the valueis falling, would you then consider the house a liability?
azanon
wrote:
To that point, and i know you will throw it out, I wouldnt even call a car a liability. Its also an asset (equity); granted a depreciating one in almost all cases, but if it has value, its an asset(equity).
Yes, cars are also money-holes and illustrates my point as well. Most people do not consider a car an "investment" and rightfully so. Some cars do appreciate in value, but they are still liabilities...just liabilities that may recover your expense in owning them and possibly turning a profit. Even then, it is still a liability, whether it is an equity that appreciates in value that is eventually realised is moot.
My PT Cruiser, of which I am very fond, has a market value that is higher than what I paid for it (I negotiated a great deal), not to mention the modifications that add more to its value. However, it is still a liability since is costs me to own it--tohold that beautiful, shiny, fast, tangerineequity.
Yes, you can say that the car/house has value and it is the
loan that is the liability. There are two things wrong with this. 1. The equity still has an expense, whether it has a loan against it or not. 2. The loan and the equity are married, you would not have the loan without the equity.
azanon
wrote:
Regardless, home ownership is one of the wisest things one can do with one's money.
If done properly, and for most people, yes, I agree. However, many people do it improperly, largely thinking that it is an "investment" when it is really usurping their cash flow and they come to a point when they ask, "I have all this net worth, so why am I broke!?"
booya!, hehe)
Also, stop paying full-coverage insurance on your car and let your lender know. I think they will seriously object. Explain to them thatit isyour car, it isyour
asset,and you will do as you please! :dude:
If I lost you somewhere in this tome (hopefully from chuckling rather than sleeping), the point is:
[align=center]
Your house, your car are assets on your bank's financial statement
Your house, your car are liabilities on your financial statement[/align]