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Excellent graph showing SF Bay Area still in housing bubble


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2012 Mar 6, 5:51am   85,336 views  138 comments

by Patrick   ➕follow (61)   💰tip   ignore  

Clearly prices can come down a lot more and still be above the inflation rate.

#housing

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121   FunTime   2012 Aug 14, 2:15am  

B.A.C.A.H. says

sorry I am a lifelong Bay Arean, I gotta agree with dunross, BayAreans in general and 'Friscans in particular are rude. It's not an -in-your-face-rude, though. It's an aloofness rude.

I bet you'd like some of the lifelong SFers on my block. Three generations on the same street. Regular people who just happen to live here and, maybe, chose to stay because they inherited their parents' houses.

Who knows, maybe I'm the same as the people you describe. I've not found generalities about big places to work. I think I can find the same kind of people you describe in Palo Alto? ; ) Some people are just weird.

122   FunTime   2012 Aug 14, 2:16am  

Danaseb says

I rate SF lower than Portland Oregon.

Portland is awesome! I lived there for almost four years and lived in the NW for almost ten. I've just found I'm happier when I see the sun more than not. Maybe a result of growing up in Colorado.

123   FunTime   2012 Aug 14, 2:17am  

Danaseb says

gotta concur with the sentiment that San Franciscans, and most bay areans are up their own ass.

Well hopefully you've all seen the South Park episode with that theme, because that shit was hilarious!

124   The111   2012 Aug 14, 10:30am  

This graph is now 18 months old. Is there any similar data being maintained currently?

125   dunnross   2012 Aug 14, 3:09pm  

FunTime says

Since you provided no survey results and I'm thinking your point is based on acecdotes, I'll match every one of your anecdotes with stories of the envy expressed by people telling me San Francisco is their favorite city of all the cities they've visited on Earth.

You've just proven my point #4:

>> 4. Only people who live in San Francisco think it's something special.

You live in San Francisco, don't you?

126   B.A.C.A.H.   2012 Aug 14, 3:22pm  

Fun,

I am a lifelong resident of San Jose, except for a couple of months of sharing a rental home in Sunnyvale with some coworkers.

I've known lotsa oldtime San Franciscans over the years, most of them that I've known migrated out of The City to raise their kids in the suburbs. Including even descendants of Gold Rush Era Cantonese immigrants. Quite a few came down to San Jose and other places around the Bay in the 1950's and 1960's when they started having kids. Left the grandparents and any childless uncles/aunts back in The City. I agree, those old-time San Franciscans are friendly people like New Yorkers.

But over the decades S.F. has morphed into a kid-less (one of the lowest kid population per 100K in the U.S.) self-absorbed family-unfriendly, unfriendly kind of a place. World-class place to visit like a tourist or go to the shows or whatever, though.

127   dunnross   2012 Aug 14, 4:09pm  

FunTime says

If you love wearing jeans and a tshirt during the day and throwing on jacket in the later evening, you will love San Francisco weather during those months.

There isn't a single day in the year where you can wear a t-shirt in san francisco. September is the warmest month of the year, and it only gets as high as 70, which is definitely, not t-shirt weather.

128   BoomAndBustCycle   2012 Aug 14, 4:25pm  

dunnross says

CDon says

Finally, even if they did magically "revert to the mean" today, SJ would fall to 300K. Meaning at the end of the day, our poor guy would refuse to buy at 250K, rent for 18 years waiting for prices to fall, and then buy at 300K.

Yes, except the recession in the 90's was nothing at all, like what we are experiencing now. That was just a small bump in the Roaring Boom of the post WWW-II era. What we have now is a multi-generational depression, a complete paradigm shift.

So what is the point in fighting against the inevitable economic destruction you predict!? Do you really think simply not buying a home is going to save anyone in these doomsday scenarios of yours?

129   dunnross   2012 Aug 14, 7:53pm  

BoomAndBustCycle says

So what is the point in fighting against the inevitable economic destruction you predict!?

I am not predicting anything. The depression is here and now. The FED has thrown everything into trying to save the economy, with ZIRP policy, 2 rounds of QE, Operation Twist, etc, but has not been able to create any jobs or prop up consumer spending. Every post-recession recovery since the 80's has produced less and less jobs, but, this last one, has trumped them all. The recovery has barely started, and we are already headed into a new recession.

BoomAndBustCycle says

Do you really think simply not buying a home is going to save anyone in these doomsday scenarios of yours?

No, that's just one of the ways one can protect oneself against the depression. Other ways is the preservation of capital by keeping a portfolio balanced with cash and precious metals.

130   Danaseb   2012 Aug 14, 8:44pm  

i think i can sum of the sentiments of many here; would love the bay area and SF in particular if it wasn't soo $%^&ing overpriced. At least downtown Vancouver knows our pain, yes i grew up here but traveled enough to know how absurd it is.

131   dunnross   2012 Aug 15, 2:27am  

Danaseb says

i think i can sum of the sentiments of many here; would love the bay area and SF

But this totally ignores the sentiments of many on this blog who agree that:

1. People live everywhere, and for every person who lives somewhere, he is voting with his feet. For him that place is special.
2. For the past 5 years, there was a net outflow of residents out of the Bay Area. Obviously, all those people were voting with their feet.
3. San Francisco and BA has its pros and cons, just like any other place. There is absolutely nothing special about this city, only that some people who live there, think it is special.

132   FunTime   2012 Aug 15, 3:17am  

dunnross says

There isn't a single day in the year where you can wear a t-shirt in san francisco.

You've posted average data and written the phrase "single day" so hopefully you see the error in the connection between what you've written and the information you've provided.

I get your point, though. There' s only about a month a year where you'd walk around all day in San Francisco in a T-shirt and risk serious sunburn. About half those days are 80s F and above and about half are mid-seventies and above. Definitely depends on what part of San Francisco too. I live on Potrero Hill, so have a particularly sunny view of the weather. My first place was on the West side of Twin Peaks, so I've also experienced the heavier fog of the area and they are very different.

133   FunTime   2012 Aug 15, 3:21am  

dunnross says

You've just proven my point #4:
>> 4. Only people who live in San Francisco think it's something special.
You live in San Francisco, don't you?

I do, but I disagree. I was trying to make a point with the same thinking as yours. I'm sharing stories about what people who don't live in San Francisco have said to me, the person living in San Francisco.

134   dunnross   2012 Aug 15, 4:57am  

FunTime says

I do, but I disagree. I was trying to make a point with the same thinking as yours. I'm sharing stories about what people who don't live in San Francisco have said to me, the person living in San Francisco.

Could it be that you, having lived in San Francisco, just filtering out any negative San Francisco reviews, and only responding to the positive ones? Or just, maybe, the people you talked to live in some awful place, like Afganistan. I know most of the people I meet here, who are perfectly satisfied with the Bay Area are all from 3rd world countries like Vietnam and Mexico, but hardly any Europeans like it.

135   FunTime   2012 Aug 15, 5:23am  

dunnross says

Could it be that you, having lived in San Francisco, just filtering out any negative San Francisco reviews

Oh, no, I'm not saying I only hear positive reviews. I grew up in rural Colorado, where people think, at best, you'll turn gay if you go to San Francisco! So I'm familiar with negative views of San Francisco.

One of the people I have in mind, when I write what I've written here, lived in Munich. He dreamed of moving to San Francisco and finally was relocated by his company. He and his wife have now lived in San Francisco five years and seem to really celebrate their opportunity to be here. He and others seem to think San Francisco has a desirable aspect of European cities. I've not traveled to the European continent much having only visited Rome, Amsterdam, Athens, Munich, Dublin, and Galway, so I'm not sure why they think that about San Francisco. That also seems to be an opinion held, though, by colleagues in Rome, Milan, Stockholm, London and Nuremberg.

136   thomaswong.1986   2012 Aug 15, 8:20pm  

It wasnt expensive in the past... why anyone would thing we should be overpriced is weird to say the least...

Below are May 1997 prices..http://archive.dqnews.com/AA1997BAY06.shtm.. factor in inflation and income growth.. we are looking at 30-40% higher prices today..
that would mean prices below would range within the forecast below with actual recent prices at July 2012

as you can see Contra Costa / Solano are just right with 1997 prices + inflation (40%)
Sanoma isnt too bad, but like the chart above stll indicates... others need to still correct. With 40% the numbers may be over-optimistic. You may need those Facebook options after all to skyrocket to buy any home at the median. I would discount Marin ... old money doesnt need income...LOL! Santana is doing just fine!

.............................Actual ..Frcst..Actual Delta + Over - Under priced
Alameda... ............$219 $306 $385 .....78
Contra Costa .......$225 $315 $308.......-7
Marin .....................$357 $499 $660 ......160
Napa ......................$170 $238 $372 ......134
San Francisco ......$289 $404 $565 .......160
San Mateo .............$324 $458 $714 .......260
Santa Clara ...........$302 $422 $618 .......195
Solano ....................$149 $208 $188.........-21
Sonoma ...................$210 $294 $320 ........26
Bay Area ...................$258 $361 $421 .......60

137   1sfrenter   2012 Aug 16, 7:40am  

Danaseb says

Idle time is the root of all culture and Bay Areans are far far too busy working overtime for their mega mortgages.

Just go to Dolores Park any weekday in the middle of the day. It's a party all day long as long as the sun is shining.

138   coriacci1   2012 Aug 18, 1:53am  

Those are renters in Dolores Park. The ones whose over priced apts have been spliced and diced to fit as many techie turds as possible. Dolores Park is the rec room for all those without personal space, at $1000 a room a month a pop!

Repeal prop 13!
Ubber tax absentee cutthroat landlords!
Vacancy control now!

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