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Average weekly wage: $1,706
I don't see how you can buy a $1 million house with $1700 a week.
You can't.
But the kid of a Princeling in some foreign place, fresh out of his/her US grad school program, can just pay cash.
If we were to believe the RE shills, realtors and journalists.. there are many people in SFBA who earned an extra $40-50,000 over last year... SFBA is just like SoCal.. no substance!
Well, here's the wage growth:
San Francisco-Oakland-Mateo, Calif.
> 1-yr. wage growth: 24.7%
> Average weekly wage: $1,706
> Dec. 2011 unemployment: 7.2%
> Dec. 2012 unemployment: 6.1%
> 1-yr. employment change: +4.1%
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/american-cities-where-wages-are-soaring-172506054.html?page=2
what percent of those rising Bay Area wages are directly or indirectly tied to rising housing prices? what is it ? 50% 75% 80% 100% ? What percent of Detroit's top line in 2005-2007 came from HELOCs and all that housing mania wealth effect ? what was it ? 50% 75% 80% 100% ? I'm sure the wages in and around Detroit suffered a bit when they got their answer.. SF Bay Area wage/income prognosticators will as well..
House prices can only double from here though open houses seem to be popping up at every corner here in the sunset!
The reason behind that growth is likely the social media company, Facebook Inc.
(FB),
good one, but I don't think so..
People seem to use "overall" employment numbers when looking at the high end houses in the bay area. If you make 50K/year in the bay area, you're renting with someone else, not buying. And if you do look at buying it will be the outskirts of tracy in a condo or gilroy.
Those 1M houses go to the people making 200-300K and they get that from dual income couples. And there are a lot of them.
Wage increases below 50K are bleak, 50-100K are doing ok, wage increase over 100K are great! People are paying up for those employees.
50K of housing, costs around 3K extra per year in mortgage payments. If you're making 150K and only got a 5% raise last year, you can afford to offer up that extra 50K for a house, or 100K...
I don't see how you can buy a $1 million house with $1700 a week.
I agree. And I don't think the median household is buying a $1MM house either.
I don't see how you can buy a $1 million house with $1700 a week.
I agree. And I don't think the median household is buying a $1MM house either.
Trulia shows meidan home-price for SJ as 600K and SJ has been reported as having the highest median income in the nation, 77K plus.
If you are single income, and can put 200K down, with no outstanding debt, that gets you close. If you are home buying, you are likely doing better than 77K, may be dual income, and probably have 200K or more to throw down.
Trulia shows meidan home-price for SJ as 600K and SJ has been reported as having the highest median income in the nation, 77K plus.
I think we need to be careful--the median household isn't really buying the median home. There are 35% of the people renting, mostly in apartments.
The bay area is cranking out the overpriced house slaves. get large wage and feel rich - overpay for POS house - lose job in the next recession - lose house.
Rinse and repeat.
- overpay for POS house - lose job in the next recession - lose house.
Rinse and repeat.
I think you're referring to those who OVERBORROWED. There's lotsa wealthy immigrant elites who paid cash or made very large down payments. They may have overpaid but they did not OVERBORROW. Their "cost" is only their property tax, and besides they can always get more cash from "back home".
I think you're referring to those who OVERBORROWED. There's lotsa wealthy immigrant elites who paid cash or made very large down payments. They may have overpaid but they did not OVERBORROW. Their "cost" is only their property tax, and besides they can always get more cash from "back home".
Those people are a tiny portion of the average housebuying fool.
Trulia shows meidan home-price for SJ as 600K and SJ has been reported as having the highest median income in the nation, 77K plus.
I think we need to be careful--the median household isn't really buying the median home. There are 35% of the people renting, mostly in apartments.
So 65% have a house ... ok.
What is the median household income buying then? Or are you saying they are all renting? Is that likely, even with your 35% are renting number?
I agree, it isn't straight median income that is purchasing homes, it is those making over that ... but it looks comfortably within their reach.
I thought the Japanese bought everything in the US in the late 70's/early 80's?
I thought the Japanese bought everything in the US in the late 70's/early 80's?
I didn't say that. Their rich didn't send a tsunami of their kids here for grad school + H1. That's the difference.
Those people are a tiny portion of the average housebuying fool.
Agreed.
But in The Fortress, they are the average buyer.
What is the median household income buying then?
I don't know, but it's almost certainly higher than the quoted median income. So, to really look at income/house price, you need to understand that using median income is not really accurate. Especially as disparity grows.
o 65% have a house ... ok.
What is the median household income buying then? Or are you saying they are all renting? Is that likely, even with your 35% are renting number?
I agree, it isn't straight median income that is purchasing homes, it is those making over that ... but it looks comfortably within their reach.
65% are home owners.
More than half of existing homeowners may not be able to afford to buying their own home today! Their payments and tax bills are much lower because they bought the house a long time ago (either low monthly payment to begin with or refied to low payment) or have have paid off already or inherited the house.
More than half of existing homeowners may not be able to afford to buying their own home today! Their payments and tax bills are much lower because they bought the house a long time ago (either low monthly payment to begin with or refied to low payment) or have have paid off already or inherited the house.
That's true for my family and for everyone on my culdesac. Silly-Con Valley is only for the rich to buy into nowadays. God bless'em paying those super high assessments to subsidize local government for the rest of us.
More than half of existing homeowners may not be able to afford to buying their own home today! Their payments and tax bills are much lower because they bought the house a long time ago (either low monthly payment to begin with or refied to low payment) or have have paid off already or inherited the house.
This is a huge point. Many people bought when SJ wasn't a big deal, or when their neighbourhoods were like living in Gilroy or Tracy, but today they're front and center.
The people buying now, have the high levels of income necessary to buy there. The 77K average income is pretty high, but if you remove the 35% who are renting, I bet that shoots up. If you remove the people who have lived there 20+ years, the income probably shoots up even further.
Those people are a tiny portion of the average housebuying fool.
Agreed.
But in The Fortress, they are the average buyer.
I live in the Fortress, and while most of my neighbors are immigrants, they came through the "traditional" path; come as a student, work in high tech, save money, then buy a house. Just because someone speaks a foreign language or is named Wong doesn't mean they have access to unlimited commie dragon gold. There's many wealthy immigrants, but most made their money here.
Yes, there are more Asian buyers with foreign-earned cash nowadays than 10 years ago, but it's not the majority.
I live in the Fortress, and while most of my neighbors are immigrants, they
came through the "traditional" path; come as a student, work in high tech, save
money, then buy a house. Just because someone speaks a foreign language or is
named Wong doesn't mean they have access to unlimited commie dragon gold.
There's many wealthy immigrants, but most made their money here.
Yes, there are more Asian buyers with foreign-earned cash nowadays than 10
years ago, but it's not the majority.
This demographic is also very diligent and skilled in saving money. They don't blow all their cash at the mall every weekend to stimulate the economy aka transfer their money to the 1%.
More than half of existing homeowners may not be able to afford to buying their own home today! Their payments and tax bills are much lower because they bought the house a long time ago (either low monthly payment to begin with or refied to low payment) or have have paid off already or inherited the house.
This is a huge point. Many people bought when SJ wasn't a big deal, or when their neighbourhoods were like living in Gilroy or Tracy, but today they're front and center.
The people buying now, have the high levels of income necessary to buy there. The 77K average income is pretty high, but if you remove the 35% who are renting, I bet that shoots up. If you remove the people who have lived there 20+ years, the income probably shoots up even further.
So, short summation, we are saying lots of people own their homes, they are worth a lot more than they were in the past, they make a lot of money, and can afford to buy/sell in the South Bay.
To original post : Must be #5 then!? Unless economic total disaster or Tech suddenly collapses and is replaced by ... ? ... sounds like a good bet.
I live in the Fortress, and while most of my neighbors are immigrants, they
came through the "traditional" path; come as a student, work in high tech, save
money, then buy a house. Just because someone speaks a foreign language or is
named Wong doesn't mean they have access to unlimited commie dragon gold.
There's many wealthy immigrants, but most made their money here.
Yes, there are more Asian buyers with foreign-earned cash nowadays than 10
years ago, but it's not the majority.
This demographic is also very diligent and skilled in saving money. They don't blow all their cash at the mall every weekend to stimulate the economy aka transfer their money to the 1%.
No, they transfer it to the 0.1% who run the banks.
I live in the Fortress, and while most of my neighbors are immigrants, they came through the "traditional" path; come as a student, work in high tech, save money, then buy a house. Just because someone speaks a foreign language or is named Wong doesn't mean they have access to unlimited commie dragon gold. There's many wealthy immigrants, but most made their money here.
how are they any different from other past silicon valley worker bees... so why didnt the former worker bees who did all the heavy lifting make more...
did these people make the CPU run from 8mhz to 3 Gigh or expand Storage space from 10 megbytes to 2 Terabytes... evolve software from DOS to what it is today...the list goes on.. and on...
Nada... not even close! so in fact they are overpaid in their projects and product innovation. Seems to me many are just collecting a pay check.
Must be #5 then!? Unless economic total disaster or Tech suddenly collapses and is replaced by ... ? ... sounds like a good bet.
And thats what pushed prices down from late 80s to mid 90s. Japanese entered
the Tech business/industries and dumped products on US/Global markets way
below their cost to produce. All hell broke lose and shit hit the fan for manufacturing.
And Product Dumping below cost happens still everyday.
Remember when Netscape went bust when Microsoft gave Web Browsers for free.
Must be #5 then!? Unless economic total disaster or Tech suddenly collapses and is replaced by ... ? ... sounds like a good bet.
And thats what pushed prices down from late 80s to mid 90s. Japanese entered
the Tech business/industries and dumped products on US/Global markets way
below their cost to produce. All hell broke lose and shit hit the fan for manufacturing.
And Product Dumping below cost happens still everyday.
Remember when Netscape went bust when Microsoft gave Web Browsers for free.
I remember the dot com bubble, sure, but that wasn't due to competition. Sony didn't make low cost goods and it ruled that era. They were the premium, and they rated it, with best products.
You think tech will crash, trend down, because knockoffs will flood the market taking out Goog, Sam, and Apple? I've watched tons of cheap tablets and media players sell in insignificant numbers and not impact things at all over the past couple years. Cheap is cheap and you get what you pay for. I don't see it having an impact.
The big US corps. aren't actually too focused right now in the US. The markets they want are the emerging market spaces. (India, china, Latin America, eastern Europe) The knockoffs and cheap goods rule in volume there, but the demographics are changing, and as soon as the better products take hold, they are brand sticky.
I'd like to see a knock off with integrated cloud, store, or automotive integration hit the market. Hint: cannot happen. That takes an integrated and costly service or 3rd party partnership to happen. The knock offs won't touch the leading edge at all. Cheap HD TVs, etc etc ... sure ... but any of the new innovation, even if the Chinese manage to patent troll/steal won't be able to copy what is being done.
I think the effect will be negligible. Tech probably isn't going to be as lustrous as say energy or maybe bio/pharm ... but it looks like it will hold. The complex products of today take huge coordinated effort to produce. Unlikely a few factory theft and grey market manufacturers will compete at all.
You think tech will crash, trend down, because knockoffs will flood the market taking out Goog, Sam, and Apple?
...
I'd like to see a knock off with integrated cloud, store, or automotive integration hit the market. Hint: cannot happen....I think the effect will be negligible. Tech probably isn't going to be as lustrous as say energy or maybe bio/pharm ... but it looks like it will hold. The complex products of today take huge coordinated effort to produce.
Thomas, you are old and jaded and you just don't get it.
It's different here.
It's different this time..
Nada... not even close! so in fact they are overpaid in their projects and product innovation. Seems to me many are just collecting a pay check.
Well, they don't spend all day posting on patrick.net.
Just like Xenogear, Wong is a last name.
He will not change it even he was born in US.
What would you recommend me?
1) Wait for a 5% decrease in good school districts, then buy
2) Wait for a 10% decrease in good school districts, then buy
3) Wait for a 25% decrease in good school districts, then buy
4) Wait for a 30% decrease in good school districts, then buy
5) Close your eyes, take a deep breath, and just buy! now! overbid everyone!!
Obviously it depends (a lot) on your situation and why you are buying. If it is for investment purposes primarily, you have to evaluate your plan with some assumptions about the future. If you are going to live there, and owning a house is important for whatever non-investment reason, you have to evaluate against that.
Interest rates aren't as important if you are going to flip it in a market that is going up, but overpaying could be a big deal....if you hold it for 20 years, a 1% interest rate change might be more important than a seemingly significant price swing...etc
For me it was a mix -- I wasn't necessarily looking for an investment but I didn't want to make a bad financial decision. I had to find a place that "worked" for my family, and the requirements (price, school district) we had drastically limited the inventory that was available to us. I did *not* want to pay for someone else's flip -- I don't mind paying their profit on the job, but they typically make decisions that I wouldn't make....why pay for that? Also I enjoy projects, so a house that needed some work was a plus in that way.
In the end we feel fortunate to have found a place that was within our budget, in the school district we are currently in, and hadn't been ruined by a flipper....It wasn't ideal in every way, but we are thrilled with it. In hindsight we almost missed out -- we were too timid, underbid the market, and only by some luck were able to secure the deal. I fretted and obsessed about interest rates, prices, trends, owner's equivalent rent, tax deductions, opportunity costs etc....I should have focused more on the emotional stress that we were enduring by being in house limbo for so long (committing to renting long term would have been an OK option too...it was the uncertainty that was a problem)
If I had it to do over? I'd worry less about the financial side (still being prudent, of course) and more about finding the right house. I'd be more aware of the emotional cost of being in limbo, and I would put more weight on acting sooner rather than waiting for some possible price drop in the future.
Apparently someone missed the boat
I guess I did miss the boat since I was 15 in early 2009 and currently live in North Carolina. You are so wise and don't at all sound like a pompous douchebag when you make forced assumptions about someone.
You are so wise and don't at all sound like a pompous douchebag
Welcome to The Bay Area, Cool And Hip.
That's why we're better than you / smarter than you. Because we are Bay Areans, Cool And Hip.
Apparently someone missed the boat
I guess I did miss the boat since I was 15 in early 2009 and currently live in North Carolina. You are so wise and don't at all sound like a pompous douchebag when you make forced assumptions about someone.
So, why are you commenting on the Bay Area housing market?
So, why are you commenting on the Bay Area housing market?
Same reason why I read worldwide news. To be informed. But I didn't know you had to live in an area to pay attention to the news there. If only you spread your genius sooner then I wouldn't have wasted my time reading about the Zimmerman trial since I don't live in Florida.
If only you spread your genius sooner then I wouldn't have wasted my time
You got that right sista!
The Bay Area (Cool and Hip) has the highest concentration of patent holders and Smarty-Pants geniuses in the world!
You think tech will crash, trend down, because knockoffs will flood the market taking out Goog, Sam, and Apple?
...
I'd like to see a knock off with integrated cloud, store, or automotive integration hit the market. Hint: cannot happen.
...I think the effect will be negligible. Tech probably isn't going to be as lustrous as say energy or maybe bio/pharm ... but it looks like it will hold. The complex products of today take huge coordinated effort to produce.
Thomas, you are old and jaded and you just don't get it.
It's different here.
It's different this time..
It comes and goes in cycles. Are you going to be so scared your whole life of that, that you stay out of the water, or are you going to finally jump in and catch a wave.
(This is CA after all. We all surf, right?)
If only you spread your genius sooner then I wouldn't have wasted my time
You got that right sista!
The Bay Area (Cool and Hip) has the highest concentration of patent holders and
Smarty-Pantsgeniuses in the world!
The bay area has the smartest people in the world!!!:
1) In Y2K they thought that companies with losses would keep seeing theirs stocks rise!!. And they were fighting for buying stocks at 1000s times earnings (and most times, negative P/E!).
2) In 2006, some of them bought in east palo alto!!!! Thinking that east palo alto was the next palo alto :-)
3) In 1991 same thing happened. The only difference is ... i bet you, nobody remembers. Or better, nobody wants to remember :-).
Nothing personal, just to add to the discussion.
I guess a good question would be: Is the bay area about to make an all time high in house prices???
Again, just to add to the discussion folks. I do not know what's gonna happen. You home owners in the bay area: this is your time to explain that your houses will keep rising in price. (and to add a bit more spice: explain how is that gonna happen although they are 40+ years old and although most of your neighbors, while sitting in a $1M asset, do not have money to build a new house)
(btw, I would not be surprised if palo alto and other cities double in price in the next 5 years. But it would be interesting to see what you guys think the reasons behind it would be)
Thomas, you are old and jaded and you just don't get it.
It's different here.
It's different this time..
Perhaps.. but it different for all the wrong reasons.
The bay area has the smartest people in the world!!!:
It seems only the media believes this.. but its not true if you been in the trenches..
we might have a few brilliant people here and there.. but certainly not many.
We certainly could argue in past decades we had smarter people real engineers working in Semiconductor, Storage, Telecom vs what they call Engineers (programmers ) today for advertising companies.. Google- Face Book- Pandora..
As such i cant see anyone justify such comments.. It all stinks..
Your 1-3 above are all good points...
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http://news.theregistrysf.com/bay-area-housing-market-on-the-cusp-of-change/
What you say?
What would you recommend me?
1) Wait for a 5% decrease in good school districts, then buy
2) Wait for a 10% decrease in good school districts, then buy
3) Wait for a 25% decrease in good school districts, then buy
4) Wait for a 30% decrease in good school districts, then buy
5) Close your eyes, take a deep breath, and just buy! now! overbid everyone!!
#housing