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Where, exactly, do you see or will see home building going through the roof?
The Bay Area is a very unique region. It was always overpriced, and continues to be so. Just watch the population figures in the BA. If it keeps increasing, nothing can stop the rise in home prices.
Also many high-end properties have price cuts like fuck. I'm talking more than 20% easily. And they're not selling. The pressure remains in "starter" shacks.
Basically free money to those who bought what they could not afford.
lets Wait and hope for a great RE crash
A very interesting article supporting the fact that some housing markets have become unsustainable. Amazon is literally concerned that employees will end up in foreclosure, which would cause labor problems.
https://phys.org/news/2018-02-amazon-hq2-finalists-overvalued-housing.html
We had the great RE crash 10 years ago. Who did it help?
Strategist saysWe had the great RE crash 10 years ago. Who did it help?
Obama and the left to get elected. Those were the only real benefactors.
FortWayne saysStrategist saysWe had the great RE crash 10 years ago. Who did it help?
Obama and the left to get elected. Those were the only real benefactors.
If bush hadn't cut taxes, slashed regulations on the financial industry, and raised government spending that wouldn't have happened. Good thing trump isn't going to cut taxes, slash regulations on the financial industry, and raise government spending. Oh wait, never mind.
Cutting taxes is good unless you are a communist like Bernie.
Yup, perusing Zillow, surprising number of foreclosures. Get the cash and buy at 60-70 percent "face" value on comps from bank.
Hope the housing market holds up thru Sept. so I can sell my rental in Pasadena, CA.
Time to cash out.
If bush hadn't cut taxes, slashed regulations on the financial industry, and raised government spending that wouldn't have happened
Either somebody got a deal, or this is the beginning of severe pricing discounts in San Diego County.
This house sold for $205 per foot. It is 70s construction, but it looks like it was somewhat updated. For comparison, I sold for over $400 a foot for $445K last November. My house was under 1,100 square feet. 80s construction, but not even as nice as this house.
Southern California home prices soared to all-time highs in March, pushing values further out of reach for some buyers and causing others to stretch their finances more than expected.
Home sales, meanwhile, dipped from year-ago levels due mainly to a persistent lack of inventory.
bob2356 saysIf bush hadn't cut taxes, slashed regulations on the financial industry, and raised government spending that wouldn't have happened
Par for the course. Who signed the repeal of Glass-Steagall?
Either somebody got a deal, or this is the beginning of severe pricing discounts in San Diego County.Better charge your phone
This house sold for $205 per foot. It is 70s construction, but it looks like it was somewhat updated. For comparison, I sold for over $400 a foot for $445K last November. My house was under 1,100 square feet. 80s construction, but not even as nice as this house.
We'll have to see. A valid sale is hardly anecdotal evidence. If you look, the reason isn't lack of inventory, it is lack of sales at the lower level. This is significant because it shows what the smaller houses are potentially worth. The median price will go up, just like last time, but it is misleading, because it is reflecting discounted larger homes and a drop in the smaller ones. You are also corroborating my observations that sales are down 6-10%. That's actually pretty significant. I can show you pages of larger homes selling between 200-300 per square foot. When smaller homes sell for 200 a foot, like this one did, that is the price they were going for in 2004 in this area. I bought in that area in 2000 and have lived in San Diego since 1990, so I have a general feel for the county's price history. One last thing, I am now seeing multiple open house and for sale signs on corners, we are not hurting for inventory, it is growing.
No one will sell a $545,000 house for $380,000 unless it's a fixer upper, has earthquake damage, structural problems, inter family transactions or some other issue.
Find me a genuine deal like this and I will give you a $20,000 finders fee.
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Unbelievable.http://keepyourhomecalifornia.org/programs/principal-reduction/