My idea is some non profit gets setup to manage a system where someone announces their mortgage and then they can have friends, family and second and third degree friends and families finance your loan.
Let’s say someone buys a $250k house. Each person puts in $100 and then they get a receipt showing they are owed $200 against their 1/2500th share of the mortgage. Repayments are paid the $200 in return in a random time frame of between the first month to the last month 30 years later. Repayment is completely randomized, meaning you could get your money back really soon… Or a really long time from then.
There are a lot of other ways you could build on this idea.
No quicker way to negatively influence a friendship than loaning money. Doubly so with the expectation of interest.
I think you mitigate that by the related party knowing that repayment could be 30 years later. Its more like buying a low pot raffle ticket then a regular loan.
In this case, there’s no interest, but there is a big legal fight when they take out equity lines of credit and spend the money on hookers and blow.
Yes - Building Societies
If you asked everyone in the US to give you one dollar you could buy a pretty nice house
I asked this baby in this stupid rolling cart thing for a dollar and all it did was cry, and the adult lady pushing the stupid cart thing punched me in the face, so I didn’t get a chance to ask her. Then everyone in the area chased me out of town. This is proving to be a difficult task already. Will update further. Stay tuned.
Especially if you’re operating out of India or Myanmar.
Like a credit union?
there was a microloan thing to get some small stuff for people from poor countries to get equipment they need to farm or start a business. I would imagine something like that might work. Um but the whole friends and family you need to realize we are talking over a thousand people.
Isn’t this effectively what getting a mortgage from a co-op bank is?
I see no benefits to me owning even 1/2500th of somebody else’s house. I’d rather give my friend $100 so they have a place to live and be done with it.
If you take this idea a little further, you’ll eventually get a credit union.
That’s good, but for it to scale everyone should participate. Maybe we could manage it centrally to maximise the outcome, I guess maybe the state could do that? Kinda like taxes? And then the government could buy or build the house and give it to whoever asked for it… Wait a second!
When people describe what they hate about communism and socialism, they often describe capitalism.
A lot of people would be in favour of communism or socialism, they just don’t know it, due to propaganda against it.
A great example for this are insurances. If you’re not from the US, you pay a small amount of money or portion of your income and never have to worry about medical expenses again.
This concept can be applied to virtually anything! Food, water, shelter, you name it!
Sounds like the community land trust portion of moms 4 housing
Isn’t this what jeff Bezos is doing with fractional real estate investment, except evil?
Not pooping on the idea, I would totally toss money towards a fractional mortgage to help someone else get a home, just noting how the upside down universe version of this idea is already out there.
sauc: https://arrived.com/
I had a similar idea. If you’re saving money for a down payment in a traditional bank account, the money is growing slower than real estate, so you’re falling behind. Investing in real estate backed security solves that. And the beauty of it is that if the market turns down, so do house prices so you’re not getting farther from your goal of home ownership. Whereas if you invest in stocks you could have the stock market drop while housing stays high.
as long as the investment mortgages aren’t sub prime 🙃
I did a quick skim of that website and it seems to be marketed towards the opposite side of the equation, the investors.
My idea is more about the mortgage and using crowd sourcing in social circles. The way I have structured the “investment” in my scheme is purposefully done to reduce lender animosity by making the payout more of a gamble, than a traditional investment.
I have been toying with ideas to even further tweak the model to increase investment. For example giving slightly better odds on repayment to investors that have used the platform/process to procure their own mortgage.
There are a lot of corporations doing this with investments too.
This idea got me thinking, and I started coming up with ideas to streamline it and pay investors more consistently and then I realized that between the two of us, we’ve invented banking.
I think this is an amazing idea. I would treat it like a charity though. I would much rather give $100/month towards this, than some random charity where the ceo makes millions per year.
Set it up so it’s kind of a co-op non-for-profit, where there are legal papers that can be bought instead of a head entity. That way, there’s no ceo in the future making millions per year.
Oh…
Enjoy: https://www.kiva.org/
Former mortgage broker here. This is basically a credit union, or a private lender.
Now I’ll explain why those exist, but your idea doesn’t exist.
Repayments are paid the $200 in return in a random time frame of between the first month to the last month 30 years later.
Every year that $200 loses 2.2% of it’s value. So you have to charge interest or else people would be signing up to lose money (buying power).
But that creates a new problem, who gets paid when?
Assuming 5.5% interest (low end of rates right now) and a 25 year amortization, the people who got paid out at year 1 would receive $207 while the people paid out at year 25 would get $788(~$450 of buying power though).
Than there’s the aspect of insurance. Your mandatory mortgage insurance covers the bank, not you. So now you need to find an insurer that can work with up to 2500 beneficiaries.
Or how bout when the bank forecloses for non payment?
It gets messy really fast and I’m just scratching the surface.
Assuming 5.5% interest (low end of rates right now) and a 25 year amortization
Where is that ? That seems crazy high to me. I bought last year in Germany, at a “bad time” and my interest rate is 3.4% fixed for 10 years.
So the idea is its a cross between charity and gambling, who gets paid when is the gambling. It’s a feature.
Also, I don’t think your math is taking into account the $200. You borrow $100 and pay back $200, the interest is baked into the repayment amount. It’s a gamble, the people paid in year 1 get hella interest. The people paid back in year 26 basically break even on inflation and people paid back in year 30 lose money.
But I am fascinated to know what procedural hurdles one would face trying to set something like this up.
Oh I missed the part about $100 buy in. That makes a bit more sense. But where are you getting the cash to pay out the investors? You buy the house and then every 4.4 days you’re on the hook to pay out $200 for 30 years. Where is that cash coming from?
I think you may have jumped the shark with the “loses 2.2% of its value” comment. I feel like most of the world doesn’t understand inflation / the difference of real vs nominal dollars.
I tried explaining it to someone once and they kept just saying, “but the money in my bank account is real”.
Yeah, credit unions are awesome and anyone not in one in good standing should join one. This idea however is nuts
Not the same, but we had a crowd source house insurance setup. Basically, all the costs of the year were added up and then split between members. It was about half the cost of regular insurance.
This!
Interesting! Did everyone have their mortgage paid off or do lenders accept that kind of insurance? Who manages the funds?
I don’t know the answer to the first question. It was a Mennonite thing. All members had to be Mennonite or in a Mennonite church (there are lots of non-Mennonites going to Mennonite churches), or connected to a Mennonite organization.That probably helped to keep costs down as we tend to be honest and experienced at community cooperation. I believe the management was hired by one of the Mennontie conferences.






