Colton and others each have their own failures of comprehension of pure genius. Franklin never said get yourself a foreclosure experience. Franklin is of the school that considers Dave Ramsay the polar opposite of aggressive investment. Most people can't effectively play the markets in stocks, bonds, gold, commodities, etc. . . but I did what Frank is saying on my first home. No way in hell would I have qualified for any bank loan, and it was a wild ride. I found a seller who carried the contract, and I paid off the 15 year loan in ten years. What Frank is saying is here is an investment opportunity if you have the guts to do what it takes.
genius, I say. When there's no open door, you make your own way somehow.
Stoked is not as poor as I was, so maybe he can luxuriate in playing small scale investor in other ways. My only problem with Frank's advice is timing. It takes a rising market to win that game, and I'm not so sure we have that right now. Our 2008 "bubble" didn't really pop yet. Our govt. has tried to guide it to a soft landing, but nationally wages haven't done so well, except in the oil drilling areas which are right now in contraction. Utah is amazing. Stable people who pay tithing and live by Colton's mantra kept this state from going on the extreme roller coaster ride Vegas did, for example. My observation in California is that young people generally believe they will never be able to buy a house, which for starters is 500K. But someday housing prices will adjust down to the 30% of earnings ratio for all classes of buyers, and California houses will be like Utah houses in prices. Frank might know more about Utah wages than I do, but I haven't seen inflationary wage increases in Utah. Maybe in some sectors like young technology/computer/science talents or business but not at the production plants or service jobs.
Cedar City or St. George are going to grow disproportionately with the rest of Utah, and that might, even now, be a place to take a strong investment position in real estate, particularly a tax sheltered investment like a home.
I don't even try to sell in Utah because so many people are so conservative. That's a good indication Utah won't see much of housing bust, too.