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2005 Apr 11, 5:00pm   142,134 views  117,730 comments

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115272   SoTex   2022 Apr 3, 11:22am  

Eman says
Pay $4M to live next to the freeway? No thanks.


Cancer rates rise the closer one lives to a freeway.
115273   BayArea   2022 Apr 3, 12:52pm  

Still not a single description of the suspect

Not even an attempt.. not even “tall” or “blue shirt”

6 dead, 12 injured, dozens of witnesses… no description from our media.

What does that mean?
115274   SoTex   2022 Apr 3, 12:59pm  

BayArea says
What does that mean?


They aren't biologists?
115276   FuckTheMainstreamMedia   2022 Apr 3, 2:03pm  

Eman says
FuckTheMainstreamMedia says
I’ve been questioning why people in California don’t punch their lotto ticket. While the top of the market has been missed, the boat hasn’t so long as sellers aren’t greedy. If your $1.5 million dollar cracker shack will only sell for $1.4 million now, just kick yourself in the rear end for being irrationally stubborn, and take a $600k profit instead of $700k.


Imagine sold at the top of the housing market in 1989

Imagine sold at the top of the housing market in 2006

Imagine sold at the top of the housing market in 2022

Where will housing prices be in 2038? 🤔


How many owned and were in a position to sell in 1989 and are still alive today?

I have this same argument on hobby boards for Sportscards. Yes very cool that you have those mid 70’s boxes of unopened wax packs…whole boxes worth in the tens of thousands. But you’re 85 years old so who really gives a fuck? If your kids inherit, they’re selling immediately to the first shark that offers 40-50% of market.

Better to have sold 15 years ago for a few thousand and take the wifey on a dream vacation.

This is better known as stubborn irrationality.

If I could have sold my cracker shack in 1989, I’m sure as hell not alive 50 years later in 2038.
115277   AmericanKulak   2022 Apr 3, 2:08pm  

FuckTheMainstreamMedia says
This is better known as stubborn irrationality.


Great post.

"Nobody ever went broke from selling too early" - Bernard Baruch.
115278   steverbeaver   2022 Apr 3, 2:26pm  

I do appreciate that Logan at least argued in good faith. That practice is becoming increasingly rare in the world.
115279   Ceffer   2022 Apr 3, 2:47pm  

Did anybody see Soros handing the gunmen a check?
115280   BayArea   2022 Apr 3, 3:27pm  

Can you imagine how bad the casualty rate would have been if CA wasn’t the strictest gun state in the USA?
115281   Hircus   2022 Apr 3, 11:38pm  

Fortwaynemobile says
if someone falls it ain’t my fault. insurance companies now sell using fear tactics


No, but if someone were to step in you house, and fell through the carpet into the basement, because you had a hole in the floor but just cosmetically covered it with carpet, I think most people would say you were negligent and should be held responsible, unless you warned the person.

But someone who trips on a normal rug and sues is a fucking dbag, and so are the people who allow such laws / legal environment to permit it. I hope not all states allow this, but I think at least some do.
115282   SunnyvaleCA   2022 Apr 4, 3:10am  

Fortwaynemobile says
if someone falls it ain’t my fault

True, but, depending on where you live, a court may hit you with a $250k civil judgement. An umbrella plan is like pre-purchasing a team of lawyers who will get out front to protect the insurance company's $500k before you have to get involved. You're pre-purchasing a legal defense.

The same argument can be made about getting only minimum car liability insurance or getting heftier liability coverage. You could afford the $30k minimum required liability out of pocket, but you want the insurance company to fight for you if needed, so you get the $100k plan. Umbrella raises your car liability as well as home liability coverage, by the way.

As far as car comprehensive and collision, the maximum loss is limited to the car's book value. For me, I usually get the full coverage for the first 6 months and then drop. If I haven't crashed by then, I'm probably fine. It's not like the insurance company greatly lowers my premiums after the first 6 months. My current car is the only exception, as I feel the risk (of vandalism) is far greater than the insurance company estimates.
115283   Al_Sharpton_for_President   2022 Apr 4, 4:53am  

A 30% decline in the S&P 500 index fund VFINX takes us back to June 2020.

A 20% decline takes us back to November 2020.


115284   zzyzzx   2022 Apr 4, 4:54am  

DooDahMan says
No better in Florida.


I would go self insured in Florida, after hurricane proofing the house. I would not buy anyplace that would flood (and would have a crawlspace to make sure it doesn't get into the house as well).
115285   Al_Sharpton_for_President   2022 Apr 4, 4:57am  

DooDahMan says
unexpected things sometimes happen with pets



115286   gabbar   2022 Apr 4, 5:08am  

I have car insurance policy through Geico. Should I buy umbrella policy through Geico or find some other insurer?
115287   BayArea   2022 Apr 4, 5:50am  

It’s not fair to say what’s in the title of this thread without also pointing out what happened to Las Vegas just before that 10yrs.

Vegas was one of the hardest hit cities in the USA.
115288   FuckTheMainstreamMedia   2022 Apr 4, 6:59am  

Las Vegas was waaaaay undervalued in 2012.

And yes prices will come down from where they currently are, at least in real terms.
115289   Goran_K   2022 Apr 4, 7:10am  

As a former Nevada resident who "cashed-in" in this crazy market, you have to be careful with places like Vegas. In terms of volatility, Las Vegas tends to be near the top of the list when there are market corrections.

Definitely a great time to sell, pretty much anywhere, at the moment.
115290   GNL   2022 Apr 4, 7:12am  

Goran_K says
Las Vegas tends to be near the top of the list when there are market corrections.

Why would you say that is?
115291   GNL   2022 Apr 4, 7:12am  

Goran_K says
Las Vegas tends to be near the top of the list when there are market corrections.

Why would you say that is?
115292   HeadSet   2022 Apr 4, 7:17am  

zzyzzx says
I would not buy anyplace that would flood (and would have a crawlspace to make sure it doesn't get into the house as well).

In coastal Va, you cannot build in a flood zone unless the house is built to take 4 feet of water with NO damage. How this is done is typically having the garage under the house, constructed of block or poured. This does make a few steps to climb, though.
115293   HeadSet   2022 Apr 4, 7:24am  

When I had rental property, I had a $1million umbrella policy that cost about $320 per year. The cost of the umbrella policy factors in lifestyle. For example, it will increase if you have a jet ski, or hobbies like skydiving. The umbrella policy will also require that you maintain certain minimum coverage on your home and auto policies.
115294   Tenpoundbass   2022 Apr 4, 7:35am  

Umbrella Insurance... For when you absolutely positively want to be fucked out of every cent you have.

Has anyone ever met someone that managed to successfully file a claim on an Umbrella insurance policy?

I've never met anyone that ever benefited from Gap Insurance.
115295   Tenpoundbass   2022 Apr 4, 7:40am  

Hircus says
No, but if someone were to step in you house, and fell through the carpet into the basement


The funny thing about Florida home insurance polices, that the banks require you to have on your home for the mortgage.
It covers all of the accidental stuff where people might sue you, but wont cover sink holes, meteor strikes, flood water damage unless you add flood insurance on your policy.
115296   Tenpoundbass   2022 Apr 4, 7:47am  

SunnyvaleCA says
True, but, depending on where you live, a court may hit you with a $250k civil judgement.


If someone came to my house and got injured due MY negligence, I would sell my house to make it right.
But if some opportunist came over and faked a slip and fall to sue me, and forced me to sell my house.
Let's just say that would be their last grift. I would be looking a gun not an insurance policy.
I'm not a gazilionare and work hard for what I do have. If I were rich and had lots of assets worth going after, I might view insurance differently.
115297   WookieMan   2022 Apr 4, 7:54am  

My health insurance wanted and literally asked me to sue my neighbor when I fractured my heel on their property. No joke. They said their insurance would pay your deductible and all their costs.

I said, so you're asking me to fuck over my friends and neighbors who will pay a higher premium forever because I was playing a frisbee game with no shoes on? That's their fault? Told them to fuck off, I'm not doing that to friends when it was my fault. I probably lost $5k from that. It wasn't their fault though.
115298   Goran_K   2022 Apr 4, 8:02am  

WineHorror1 says
Goran_K says
Las Vegas tends to be near the top of the list when there are market corrections.

Why would you say that is?


I call Las Vegas a canary market. Speculators tend to enter and exit quickly to take advantage of the market, and there are "less" organic transactions from real owner occupant buyers (though that has increased as well). This tended to be the case due to low cost/easier market entry, and high chance of profit. Because of this, when the market swings one way, or the other, you tend to get easy appreciation, or lots of investors exiting causing depreciation as we saw in 2008-2013.

From 2001 to 2007, it's estimated that out of the $35 billion or so in real estate transactions, about 50% were investor initiated. I suspect when all is said and done, 2015 to 2022 is going to look very similar, if not more heavily stilted towards investor transactions.

Because of market conditions, some investors have turned from short term hold to long term hold to take advantage of the market appreciation over the past 5 years. But if appreciation begins to falter, or even stagnate, look for investors to start cashing in, and volatility to begin appearing again as it did in 2008. I won't call it a crash since the catalyst won't be a credit crunch, but I definitely see prices softening a lot once investors start to cash in.
115299   richwicks   2022 Apr 4, 8:09am  

They are going to engineer a housing market crash is my bet. Most people have most of their equity in homes, I think that's about to be wiped out, along with the stock market, at the same time. Biden might just be a fall guy for all this shit.
115300   NuttBoxer   2022 Apr 4, 9:47am  

DooDahMan says
When he starts to change his tune, it is time to pay attention since he has a stellar track record on being right.


You got half of that right. Logan is like Dykstra. In a Bull market, everyone looks like an investment genius.
115301   SunnyvaleCA   2022 Apr 4, 10:57am  

I see two categories of classic mistakes among those stories:

• People buying fixer-uppers that have no skills or experience in fixing things. Relatively minor problems instantly become expensive emergencies. For example, a constantly-flushing toilet means a call for a plumber because they don't know how to turn off the water and they don't know how to buy and install a $15 flapper valve.

• People who bought without carefully considering the neighborhood or neighbors. Buying a condo is always going to be a crap shoot with respect to the neighbors. People should visit the street at several different times of the day (and night) to get a feel for what living there would be like.
115302   SunnyvaleCA   2022 Apr 4, 11:32am  

Tenpoundbass says
If someone came to my house and got injured due MY negligence, I would sell my house to make it right.
But if some opportunist came over and faked a slip and fall to sue me, and forced me to sell my house.
Let's just say that would be their last grift. I would be looking a gun not an insurance policy.

There's a lot of space between those two extremes. Plus, seems like a few hundred dollars a year is better than a murder #1 charge.
115303   SunnyvaleCA   2022 Apr 4, 11:34am  

gabbar says
I have car insurance policy through Geico. Should I buy umbrella policy through Geico or find some other insurer?
You probably get a discount if you go with all one company. Also, since the coverage is somewhat overlapping (and the umbrella is contingent on the correct standard coverage), splitting between two different companies could cause the companies to point at each other for a claim and leave you in the lurch.
115304   HeadSet   2022 Apr 4, 12:23pm  

DooDahMan says
We didn’t hire a realtor,

If you already have a seller and buyer set up, there is NO need for a realtor.
115305   B.A.C.A.H.   2022 Apr 4, 1:07pm  

SunnyvaleCA says
I see two categories of classic mistakes among those stories:

• People buying fixer-uppers that have no skills or experience in fixing things.

• People who bought without carefully considering the neighborhood


Sort of along your second category:

People who parachuted in buying a place in a city or region they never lived in, instead of renting for a year or so to get their own local knowledge and perspective.
115306   SunnyvaleCA   2022 Apr 4, 2:05pm  

From BACAH we have
• People who parachuted in buying a place in a city or region they never lived in, instead of renting for a year or so to get their own local knowledge and perspective.

I'll add another general problem:
• People buying their first house — there's a lot you learn about homebuying, financing, etc. from the first house. Plus you learn about what you want and what you don't want.
115307   AmericanKulak   2022 Apr 4, 2:33pm  

When all these financial and real estate investment vehicles come running for bailouts when the market normalizes, the answer should be:

"Issue more stock, after all, you brought much of it back. That's how you can raise money. Or issue some bonds."
115308   B.A.C.A.H.   2022 Apr 4, 3:33pm  

When will they run out of water?
115309   B.A.C.A.H.   2022 Apr 4, 3:41pm  

And another two categories, though really just the same category. Sort of out of vogue during nowadays' federal reserve moneyprinting, but might make a comeback:

- folks with adjustable mortgages;

- folks with balloon payment mortgages.
115310   Ceffer   2022 Apr 4, 4:17pm  

Sunol Grade at 4:15 PM Monday. Green is clear. Definitely recession time.

Tri Valley reporting increasing numbers of organized burglar groups stalking homes and garages, mail thefts, people being approached for scams, third worlders and ghetto snipes knocking on doors and even hit and runs. Thank you, Joe and Dems, for all that compassion at the borders.
115311   SunnyvaleCA   2022 Apr 4, 6:20pm  

B.A.C.A.H. says
And another two categories, though really just the same category. Sort of out of vogue during nowadays' federal reserve moneyprinting, but might make a comeback:

- folks with adjustable mortgages;

- folks with balloon payment mortgages.
I think that's the category of:
• Buying a house that you can't afford by using risky mortgage schemes.

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