You are making a buying-vs-renting decision. You have the following information: RENTI BUYI The house you like costs $200,000. You expect home values to increase by 10% every year. Property taxes: 2% of house value, due at the end of each year. (In other words, the property taxes due at the end of year 1 are based on the house value in year 0.) Maintenance: $1,000 per year. You would take a home mortgage loan with an LTV of 80%. Loan information: 30-year term, fully amortizing with fixed annual payments, 5% annual interest rate, remaining balance due upon house sale. When you sell the house the estimated selling expenses are $5,000, and you expect no capital gain taxes. If you instead rent a house just like this one, you'd be paying $15,000 on rent every year. Your income puts you in a 25% income tax bracket Calculate the after-tax cash flows if you buy rather than rent. Use them to calculate the after-tax Internal Rate of Return (ATIRR). (a) If you can earn a 45% annual return on other investments, investing your money into this house and selling it after 2 years is a (Select] (use "1" for "good" or "2" for "bad") idea financially. That's because the calculated IRR is (Select) (use "1" for "greater than" or "2" for "lower than") the 45% required annual return. The calculated after-tax IRR equals (Select] [Select V Select) [Select) % (round to 2 decimal places; use "O" for any blank values). (b) If you can earn a 45% annual return on other investments, investing your money into this house and selling it after 3 years is a (Select] (use "1" for "good" or "2" for "bad") idea financially. That's because the calculated IRR is [ Select) (use "1" for "greater than" or "2" for "lower than") the 45% required annual return. The calculated after-tax IRR equals (Select) v Select) [Select Select % (round to 2 decimal place; use "O" for any blank values) (c) Using 45% as your required return, in order for you to be indifferent between buying and not buying for 3 years, the LTV needs to approximately equal (Select]