I'm sorry, but I call BS on anyone who says they do not care that the value of their home goes down or not. It doesn't matter if you plan on selling or not, it isn't worth what it once was, and your "wealth" is no longer what it once was.
As someone, who is a homeowner, and whose home has gone down 30% from the peak, it hurts, no really... it sucks. Some may say, ouch 30%, my home hasn't gone down that much. BS, it has, reality is if you want to <em>sell </em>your home and not <em>list </em>your home, this is what it will take to sell it. If you want someone to put it on the MLS, and have an agent sit around on weekends playing solitaire, then fine don't price it 30% below peak, but to sell it... that is what you need to do. So, what am I to do? Snort a line of Kool-Aid, and think it will be back to peak in 2010? Yay! Oh wait... the same peak price will not be the same when adjusted for inflation, a $1mil in 2005 will definitely not be the same in 2010.
I get a net rent check every month that covers half my mortgage (Oops... more, thanks Ben!), and using that as a way to justify a down market is silly. Seriously, the increase in rents will never make up for the losses in value, well... maybe in 2012. But, come on, these excuses are weak at best. Laughable is more like it. Thank gawd I have accepted being a stage 5er.
In the Marketplace section of the OCR today they have the properties listed by agents, and one was in Maybury Ranch in Orange. A nice big house 2850 sqft., remodeled, on a big lot 9750 sqft., that last sold in the peak of 1990 for $405k. Ouch! I remember when those homes would be tough to sell in 94-97 for more than $350k. Anyway, it is <em>listed </em>for $825k, and if miracles happen and it sells for that... then do the math on what a 6% investment will get you over the same time. If they wanted <em>sell </em>it, then the investment return with costs factored in, would be barely above inflation. There is a lesson to be learned here.
And, I have said it before, and I will say it again... If you are not making money in the stock markets, then you do not know what you are doing. You can either figure out how to use the intarwebs, or just stay away, but don't complain you can't make money in the markets. Saying this is... well... just dumb too. The S&P 500 has always beat housing in the "long term" of investing.