Gambling away the nest egg

From CNN/Money:

Retirement interrupted

Walking along a pier in Daytona Beach with their youngest grandson on a recent Saturday afternoon, Steve and Carol Daimler stopped to see what fish the locals were catching. The fishermen wowed 10-year-old David with a big flounder they’d just landed and photos of a 500-pound, nine-foot shark they’d once caught.

After a day spent playing miniature golf, eating homemade ice cream and splashing around in his grandparents’ in-ground pool, David declared, “This is the best day of my life.”

Such perfect afternoons are exactly what Steve, 61, and Carol, 60, had in mind when they retired to Florida from Virginia two years ago. But those days are rare. Instead, the Daimlers spend most of their time consumed with selling two investment properties they bought shortly after the move – holding open houses, distributing fliers, cold-calling realtors and catering to prospective buyers.

A more typical day: On a midweek afternoon, Carol got a call from a prospect who said he and his wife were just outside one of the houses and wanted to see the interior. The only hitch: The house is an hour’s drive from where the Daimlers live. The caller said he’d wait, so Carol and Steve jumped in the car. But by the time they arrived, the phantom buyers had disappeared – the frantic trip was a bust.

To this day, the properties remain unsold, draining nearly $6,000 a month from the Daimlers’ dwindling retirement kitty. The couple had thought the properties would help finance the lovely new life they planned to lead in Florida. They had retired from their jobs – Steve was a sales executive and Carol a benefits consultant – and moved to Florida to be closer to David and twins Mark and Nicole, 13, their oldest daughter’s kids.

To supplement their retirement savings of $260,000, they figured they’d buy fixer-upper homes to renovate, then sell at a profit in the state’s hot housing market. “We thought we’d make $100,000 without batting an eye,” says Carol.

But when the housing bubble burst, so did their dreams of a real-estate funded retirement. The properties have been on the market for nine months without a serious offer, and the carrying costs are killer: The Daimlers pay more than $65,000 a year on their mortgages (including loans for their primary residence and a vacation house in North Carolina), plus tens of thousands more for property taxes, insurance and maintenance.

The couple are pulling out $15,000 a month from savings to cover their expenses, and they’ve already run through more than half of their nest egg. The irony: On paper they seem to be in great shape, with a net worth of $1.6 million. But since most of that money is tied up in real estate – assets they can’t easily sell – it doesn’t ease their current cash crunch.

This entry was posted in National Real Estate. Bookmark the permalink.

9 Responses to Gambling away the nest egg

  1. sc says:

    no sympathy here

  2. Lindsey says:

    Here either, but these have to be two of the dumbest people on the planet. How do you hemorrhage cash like that for 9 months? They need to make a call to Booyaa Bob and their bank and make a couple of short sales.

  3. 3b(former bergenbubbleburst) says:

    We thought we would make 100k without batting any eye;well there you go.

  4. pesche says:

    morons

  5. thatbigwindow says:

    “We will do anything but lower the asking price. I mean, what are we supposed to do? Give the properties away for nothing?” Steve Daimler stated…

  6. R Patrick says:

    TheWindow,

    Yes, yes he is.

    Pice it right it moves

  7. UnRealtor says:

    Supreme Bagholders.

  8. UnRealtor says:

    “The couple are pulling out $15,000 a month from savings to cover their expenses, and they’ve already run through more than half of their nest egg.”

    Retired, no income, $15,000 out the window each month. Don’t they know the market has “stabilized”?

  9. New Today! Paulson Now Sees “Major Housing Correction”

    http://www.paperdinero.com/BNN.aspx?id=194

    Excerpt features Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson discussing his assessment of the housing decline and his outlook for the future. Paulson suggests that the US has experienced a “major” housing correction that was inevitable after years of historic gains. “That correction has now been significant, we think it is near the bottom, it will take a while to work its way through the system.” Unfortunately, Paulson only reiterates the same guidance he offered last year prior to the housing market taking another major leg down.

    Originally aired on: 5/21/2007 on New Hour

    Running Time: 1 minutes 29 seconds

Comments are closed.