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Real Estate Roller Coaster


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2007 May 29, 4:23am   19,938 views  88 comments

by Randy H   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

Roller Coaster

"It never goes down", "it's always a good time to buy", "you're just paying someone else's mortgage", "rich dad poor dad", "renters are loosers [sic]", "San Francisco median is up another 6%"...

This link is for you, the mentally challenged who cannot comprehend that the price of a house goes up, goes down, goes up, goes down. Since even the most slobbering imbecile has likely ridden a roller coaster at some point in his or her life, here:

Pretend you're riding this roller coaster, and the hills are the actual historical prices to-date. You tell me, what do you think is coming next?

---Randy H

#housing

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14   HARM   2007 May 29, 8:13am  

@Marty,

Perhaps you missed the "[sic]" right after the intentional mis-spelling "looser", but obviously Randy was self-consciously using Serin-speak here.

15   Peter P   2007 May 29, 8:25am  

Any misspelling hear is intentional. :)

16   StuckInBA   2007 May 29, 8:36am  

Maybe this was discussed already.

http://www.sanjoseproperty.com/newsletter.html

Now has the April report. Santa Clara Country has sales down not just YOY but also MOM. So April has less sales than March.

17   Randy H   2007 May 29, 8:51am  

I am a sic [sic] looser [sic].

18   e   2007 May 29, 10:13am  

What depresses me the most is that whenever I see a "bad news" article about the Bay Area, it's not about the Penn/South Bay.

Like this one:

http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/05/29/BUGCGQ1S9V1.DTL

I get my hopes up, thinking that it will be about a crash here in Fortress - but instead it's about Vallejo, Antioch, Pittsburgh - all parts of the Bay Area that I've never even been to.

19   StuckInBA   2007 May 29, 11:49am  

I get my hopes up, thinking that it will be about a crash here in Fortress - but instead it’s about Vallejo, Antioch, Pittsburgh - all parts of the Bay Area that I’ve never even been to.

Are those cities / towns even part of the "Bay Area Proper" ?

No, I am not one of the snobs who look down upon any place that requires paying a toll to come from "there" to the "Bay Area Proper" ;-)

But places around 101 (Only south till San Jose)/280/880 are to me BA. Gilroy / Morgan Hill are not Bay Area to me. If you travel on 680 and go to Pleasanton/Danville etc you are so far away form the bay - there is a clear range of hills separating them from the bay. I like those towns, but they are neither Silicon Valley, nor Bay Area to me.

I might want to buy there for specifically that reason. Not Bay Area :-)

20   OO   2007 May 29, 12:37pm  

See what the problem is? Please refer to StuckinBA and eburbed's attitude :-)

OK, kidding aside, I myself went to Danville and San Ramon the first time over the weekend, although I have always known people who commute from these places. Not bad at all, particularly Alamo and Danville, since both of them have rain shadow mountains on the west, so the western foothills of these two places are very similar in geographical setting to the western foothills of the Bay Area, although 5-10F hotter. Most of the places I went to are brand spanking new, very nicely landscaped.

I am not encouraging people to spend so much time commuting from there (about 45 miles from the fortress or centers of employment, which may mean 1.5 hours peak hour traffic). But I have to say they are not as dreadful as one would imagine. I myself like Alamo, it actually reminds me of a hotter version of Woodside and Portola Valley. The problem is, it is quite pricey as well, you are still looking at $1M+, but with far more reasonable choices compared to 1000 sf shack on 6000sft lot. I am sure San Ramon, Danville or Alamo will crash much sooner and harder than the fortress, just judging from the # of listings alone (e.g. Alamo with a pop of 12,800 has more listings than Cupertino that has 5 more times pop). For those who can tele-commute, I'd say these towns just behind the mountain range are very decent choices.

21   OO   2007 May 29, 12:47pm  

One thing, though, worries me about the San Ramon area. It seems that the employment center is centered around Pleasanton. We drove around Pleasanton just to get a feel for the place, there were soooo much office space for rent, more than those you'd see in Santa Clara and Milpitas from 237, however not as much as those in Evergreen. I think I described my drive in Evergreen a few months ago, the vacant office space in Evergreen alone seemed abundant enough to hold the entire BA population!

I don't see much office space in Danville or San Ramon, so I presume most people living there commute to Pleasanton for work, or they will really have to spend 2 hours a day to East Bay, 3 hours to the West side. That sucks.

I don't think there is a hard definition of BA, it depends on how much time you are willing to spend on the road in exchange for a piece of heaven when you hit home. If you don't have to commute during peak hours or can tele-commute, then Morgan Hill or Danville can be a part of BA (technically MH belongs to another valley, so the cut-off point should be Almaden/Santa Teresa).

22   jtfrankl   2007 May 29, 1:42pm  

Google street view- I live in Mountain View and was able to view my landlord's house, complete with my car in the driveway. Very cool.

Nice timing on this thread. Just yesterday I rode the Giant Dipper in Santa Cruz with my wife and was thinking about the video as we rose above the boardwalk.

23   Jimbo   2007 May 29, 2:12pm  

Ah, beautiful suburban Danville:

http://www.exuberance.com/photos/Sprawl-EastBay-2003/2875.html

Though to be fair, that is probably San Ramon, not Daville.

25   astrid   2007 May 29, 2:26pm  

The houses look like a glacier. Danville is very mysterious.

I'm going to pretend that Jimbo's second link is a picture of the Mountains of the Moon.

26   Randy H   2007 May 29, 2:51pm  

I took the turn in the roller coaster to symbolize the, well, "turning point".

The accelerations and velocities are, of course, wrong if you assume the length of the track is proportional to time. However, it's not that tough to imagine the distance traveled to be proportional to percentage change in price instead of time, therefore the speeds would change dramatically. (But still they are in the wrong direction; should be fast up hills and slow down hills because of stickiness, but now we're ruining an otherwise cool little video with economics).

27   EBGuy   2007 May 29, 3:19pm  

I get my hopes up, thinking that it will be about a crash here in Fortress - but instead it’s about Vallejo, Antioch, Pittsburgh - all parts of the Bay Area that I’ve never even been to.

Well, the Craigslist Bay Area ReduceOMeter hit 204 listings for May25&26, a new record, mostly on the strength of "places you've never been". Patience grasshopper, reductions are coming to a neighborhood near you. Buried in the listings was a 10,000 sq. foot Mill Valley lot, "reduced" to around a million and change. Only a bit over $ 5 million an acre -- I bet Randy is ready to scoop that up and build his custom dream home.

28   OO   2007 May 29, 3:42pm  

Actually the landscaped roads hide the sprawl really well in San Ramon. We drove along the main roads on the east (Crown Canyon, Tassajara), both sides have planted trees and stone-faced fence blocking your view of the valley sprawl. Only when you drove to a high point and looked back did you realize how many new houses were still being built.

The sprawl in Dublin is completely disgusting, because most of the new houses are being erected on bald hills with the east-bay-signature annual grass, which is all dead by now. No trees, absolutely none. Dublin looks like a whole town built on dirt. Parts of Dublin looked like east Redwood City, or east San Jose, if you still don't get the picture.

Danville and Alamo are the only two towns in that neck of woods with plenty of grown trees. Pleasanton is quite shaded too, but I didn't see too many residential houses there.

29   danville woman   2007 May 29, 3:58pm  

OO

Danville and Alamo are lovely places to live. Another area around here that I like is Bridges - it is a recent development in San Ramon with homes that look Mediterranean with plenty of growing trees.
Many of them have more interesting architecture than the usual McMansion box.
When I walk into one of them, I can sense my mood get better. School system is very good, also.

30   Jimbo   2007 May 29, 4:18pm  

This is what I think is nice:

There is a MUNI metro station about 300 yards from that fountain. The homes are not cheap, but probably not much more than in Danville. They tend to be a bit smaller and on smaller lots, but I prefer the walkable neighborhoods.

West Portal is about half a mile away, with restaurants, bookstores and a little one screen movie theatre.

I don't think I will ever be able to talk my wife into buying there though, even if we could afford it. Too foggy for her.

31   DinOR   2007 May 29, 11:35pm  

@EBGuy,

Hey thanks! Seriously though, the timing issue was hardly one of my choosing. Given the dollar amounts involved I'm aware that a lot of posters here wonder why I even bother tracking the bubble?

Which brings us to our next "point of the matter". Because there are (I'm told) several other "full price offers" on the table they are sweatin' me big time!

"Got that appraisal done yet?" "If you need help financing I've got a really great gal that.....". I get a call from the seller's (nominal) realtor every 3rd business day "just checking in" or "wanting to see if things are still on track". Sheesh, I mean after all, it HAS been all of 2 weeks! My wife and I sat down last night and agreed if they don't cool out and I mean fast we may STILL walk! We're very unhappy with this urgency but even more unhappy w/ the fact that we're "competing" totally with local realtors. Still flush w/ bubble bucks and probably looking for that golden parachute of a completely paid off place from their "great run".

The unit below us was sold.... to a realtor, that is selling her McEstate post haste and downsizing "for spousal health reasons". Now I DO happen to know the poor guy is sick, (but he's been sick for a LONG time!). Again, why the sudden urgency!? With all that's going on in our lives (and being self-employed) this may be a big priority for them (they seem obsessed with having the other offers walk) but it's hardly a priority for US! I just can't seem to get that across?

32   Randy H   2007 May 29, 11:57pm  

Only a bit over $ 5 million an acre — I bet Randy is ready to scoop that up and build his custom dream home

In the past week I walked through three, yes 3, +1 acre properties with decent (one quite nice) homes on them in Mill Valley & surrounds. The most pricey was $1.8mm.

These jokers trying to sell 1 acre for $1mm on virgin lots located in a municipality are dreaming. There's one lot in Corte Madera adjacent to county preserve land which has been for sale for years. The problem isn't the lot; it's the fact the price doesn't reflect the risk or cost to develop it, given the years you'll have to spend fighting the city and NIMBY activists.

33   e   2007 May 30, 2:59am  

They tend to be a bit smaller and on smaller lots, but I prefer the walkable neighborhoods.

Walkabout neighborhoods are EXACTLY what the terrorists would want us to do. They hate the freedom that we get from cars.

34   Peter P   2007 May 30, 3:10am  

I like walkable neighborhoods too. But view is the number one priority. If a house is uninspiring, it is useless to be "close to transit" or "close to employment."

35   Peter P   2007 May 30, 3:14am  

Ha Ha, by the time your business faces serious competition, you better just close down and pioneer something else. I guess large public companies cannot do that.

I am not afraid of competitions, just anti-competitive.

36   DinOR   2007 May 30, 3:44am  

"Walkabout neighborhoods are EXACTLY what the terrorists would want us to do. They hate the freedom we get from our cars."

Are you suggesting we make our neighborhoods more camel friendly? :)

37   StuckInBA   2007 May 30, 6:01am  

I used to live right next to CA-85. At night, the freeway sounded like waves.

You can paint something like beach/ocean scenery on the freeway wall and pretend that you are in Hawaii.

38   StuckInBA   2007 May 30, 6:05am  

Why is Danville so expensive, compared to say Dublin/Pleasanton ? Or they are all similar in terms of cost of housing ?

39   Peter P   2007 May 30, 6:08am  

You can paint something like beach/ocean scenery on the freeway wall and pretend that you are in Hawaii.

I do not like Hawaii. Too hot and humid.

40   DinOR   2007 May 30, 6:12am  

The funny thing is these people RAVE about the "convenience"! There is something to be said for that but you'll notice most people will choose peace and quiet over convenience in the long run. Yeah, inspiring would be great but.... don't these people have homes to go to!

41   Peter P   2007 May 30, 6:13am  

Somehow I do not like open ocean view. Water must be backed by mountains.

42   Peter P   2007 May 30, 6:17am  

RE: peace and quiet

What do you guys think about the Spring Valley area in Milpitas? Does it have smaller homes?

44   DinOR   2007 May 30, 6:25am  

Oh... what they strategically leave out of the pictures is the 10' fiberglass satellite dish on one of the mountains required to get game on. Rabbit ears just don't cut it.

45   StuckInBA   2007 May 30, 7:42am  

Somehow I do not like open ocean view. Water must be backed by mountains.

OK. Then paint a picture of some waterfall.

46   StuckInBA   2007 May 30, 7:44am  

ubermonkey :

Thanks.

47   DinOR   2007 May 30, 8:09am  

salk1,

Haircut? How about a scalping!? :(

Do you recall when it was assigned a bubble value of 2.3 mil?

I'd heard stories coming out of FL (Sentinel Journal?) back about 6 months ago where fine folks in upscale areas had their homes on the market for a year with NO offers! Then all of a sudden they get an offer 100-150-200k above asking? Turns out everybody was playing 'musical houses".

Isn't it great when neighbors stick together like that?

48   Peter P   2007 May 30, 8:53am  

However, a couple of years ago, I met an Australian navy officer who said they were still dealing with piracy around the Sulu archipelago.

Perhaps Global Warming will not affect this area.

49   OO   2007 May 30, 9:14am  

Honestly if not for the commute, I would seriously consider living in Alamo or Danville. East Danville has lots of newer gated golf communities while the west side is considerably older and more rural. West Alamo is quite like Woodside with long narrow and shaded roads going into acre+ properties. I don't know if A/C is needed for summer nights since both places are noticeably hotter than BA.

They also seem to have higher median income than most parts of the Fortress (PA, Saratoga, Cupertino, MV, etc.), $125K for Danville and $149K for Alamo. I guess that both are newer developed areas with fewer prop 13 retirees to drag down the median or average. The housing price there, although similarly inflated, is more reflective of the general wealth of households, unlike in Los Altos Hills, there are no shortage of asset-rich, cash-poor seniors who could have been long kicked out of their homes if not for prop 13.

The good news is, both places are definitely heading for a fall sooner. Their listings are like 3x per comparable size of pop as opposed to the "fortress". The bad news is, you still have to commute.

Both places are also considerably more reflective of the demo breakdown in the US, aka, whiter. We stopped by a Safeway to get some drinks on the way back, it was a Sunday, and we didn't see one single Asian in the store. Can you imagine not seeing ONE single Asian in any Safeway in BA?

50   Peter P   2007 May 30, 9:18am  

Honestly if not for the commute, I would seriously consider living in Alamo or Danville.

Honestly if not for the commute, I would seriously consider living in Northern Arizona. I will give up fresh sushi for the inspiring views.

51   EBGuy   2007 May 30, 9:24am  

Business is good in Silicon Valley. If you are in the South Bay, maybe it is time for to start looking in Tracy -- the Altamont Commuter Express is your friend. And they are making more land out there...
The Silicon Valley Leadership Group's annual CEO Business Climate Survey showed that close to two-thirds (63 percent) of respondents stepped up hiring in the past year, while only 11 percent downsized.

Housing "screams out as the most important concern of every group," the report said. A staggering 99 percent of respondents said housing costs are among the top three cost-of-living challenges, and 84 percent listed it among the top five business challenges.

Some executives said Silicon Valley housing costs have become a deal-breaker when they're recruiting.

"As I interview (job candidates) who might be living in another state, the idea of moving here frankly is a nonstarter," said Kim Fennell, CEO of DeCarta Inc., a San Jose company providing location-based services. "Most of them realize the cost of living here versus anywhere else in the United States is significantly more. As a result, the pool you're recruiting from ends up smaller."

52   DinOR   2007 May 30, 9:39am  

SP,

I've always felt one of the most dangerous things you can do is make the assumption "you know what's up" in the P.I so I don't pretend to be an expert. I can say this though, as far as I know piracy is alive and well there.

One of the more high profile cases was the scuba divers at the resort in Palawan that were abducted in a long ranch, open sea, daring operation. When Arroyo was in office she took the position that these "extremists" or rebels were doing nothing more than abductions for hire and were really just criminals. Or pirates if you prefer. Even locals stay close to shore or in numbers when making a crossing. Bringing at least a revolver onboard is pretty much a given.

Still, I love the place. Tombobo Cove is one of the most beautiful places on the planet. IMHO.

53   FormerAptBroker   2007 May 30, 9:56am  

OO Says:

> Can you imagine not seeing ONE single
> Asian in any Safeway in BA?

Try the Marina Safeway or the Burlingame Safeway (not as white as Alamo, but I would not be surprised if I didn’t see a single Asian, Black or Hispanic while shopping)…

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