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The East Bay is on Fire


               
2012 May 3, 7:13am   54,391 views  153 comments

by gregpfielding   follow (2)  

It's not that sales are through-the-roof, but they certainly are very high compared with the number of properties for sale. The Supply/Demand balance is looking like 2005.

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1   tannenbaum   @   2012 May 3, 7:22am  

If the market is as hot as you say it is, all the more reason NOT to participate in it.

2   David9   @   2012 May 3, 7:25am  

Patrick, business idea, set up a site where the Realtors can go and bang their drums.

You can call it 'Patrick Fox' lol

3   gregpfielding   @   2012 May 3, 7:29am  

I'm not saying it's legitimate or that it will last, but the numbers are what they are.

4   RentingForHalfTheCost   @   2012 May 3, 7:33am  

My prediction is the next time we see a headline like above, it will really be on fire. Literally.

5   zhanka   @   2012 May 3, 7:58am  

What about numbers of homes available for sale in 2005 and now? Same dynamics?

6   zhanka   @   2012 May 3, 8:03am  

zhanka says

What about numbers of homes available for sale in 2005 and now? Same dynamics?

This comment was in response to:

It's not that sales are through-the-roof, but they certainly are very high compared with the number of properties for sale. The Supply/Demand balance is looking like 2005.

7   gregpfielding   @   2012 May 3, 8:13am  

zhanka says

What about numbers of homes available for sale in 2005 and now? Same dynamics?

There was more inventory, but also more sales. The ratios were similar.

8   zhanka   @   2012 May 3, 8:19am  

gregpfielding says

There was more inventory

Exactly, thats was my point, more inventory, more people were willing to sell and more people were more confident to buy than right now.

Population in California is increasing by 1% every year

Even considering cal. population is increasing by 1% every year, it does not justify such a low inventory, obviously the inventory shortage due to the others reasons.

9   edvard2   @   2012 May 3, 8:23am  

... and once more we have an argument between the house investors who will naturally always project housing as the best thing ever since their financial futures count on it and the home buyers or would be buyers who want prices to fall dramatically and perhaps unrealistically.

Both will be disappointed.

Anyway, there's nothing amazing going on here. There is less supply. Thus less supply means more demand and more demand means more sales per capita.

Secondly, yes- the population of California is increasing. But its also losing population as well as the middle class moves out and more working class moves in, thus if that's the case that would actually indicate future home value declines.

10   tannenbaum   @   2012 May 3, 8:32am  

Doesn't really matter if the population is increasing. It's about household formation. Lots of people can't afford to live entirely on their own anymore for a variety of reasons, but mostly economic ones. Population growth doesn't necessarily tell the whole story. BTW, construction being dead is not unique to California.

11   eastbay19   @   2012 May 3, 8:33am  

Yes - Mr. Fielding has chosen the more affluent areas, so the thread title is misleading. What if you include Oakland, San Leandro, Hercules, Pinole, and San Pablo? They're part of the East Bay too.

I wonder what the shadow inventory is like in those affluent cities - and how many squatters there are who haven't entered the foreclosure pipeline yet.

Last week I did searches at foreclosureradar.com and Redfin for the city of Oakland, where I'm hoping to buy my first house. I found about 600 active listings and 1,650 houses in some stage of foreclosure, for a ratio of 2.75 to 1.

According to the author of the ochousingnews.com blog, for every loan owner in the 'preforeclosure' stage, there are two others who have defaulted but who have not yet received a notice of default.

So yes, while the market manipulation by the banks and the spring season seem to be driving a 'rally', it sure doesn't seem to be a healthy market, at least not in Oakland. Maybe those more affluent areas were less affected by the bubble.

As for CA population trends, here's another perspective:

http://tinyurl.com/7zhbkq3

12   rooemoore   @   2012 May 3, 8:50am  

Marin is pretty quiet. Perhaps it will pick up soon?

13   rooemoore   @   2012 May 3, 9:01am  

I just spoke with a friend who owns a home in the east bay. He told me that he's received postcards from two realtors in the past week telling him the time is ripe to sell. Should be an interesting summer.

14   PockyClipsNow   @   2012 May 3, 9:03am  

Housing is luxury item like diamonds. NO ONE needs one (SFR that is). Might as well complain about the Debeers diamond monopoly as well as the 'governemnt making prices always go up in RE'.

Only purpose of diamonds is to make jewelers rich, enhance ego/status of buyers. Same with housing.

Anyway I still like complaining.

15   zhanka   @   2012 May 3, 9:11am  

rowemoore says

I just spoke with a friend who owns a home in the east bay. He told me that he's received postcards from two realtors in the past week telling him the time is ripe to sell. Should be an interesting summer.

We receive those postcards regularly, doesn't mean anything. Some realtors are even go door to door :) When we rented a few years ago some realtors knocked asking if we're would like to sell...

16   Philistine   @   2012 May 3, 9:16am  

edvard2 says

you have to look at the type of population that's moving in

Yeah, when I moved to LA 5 years ago, there were usually only about 10 illegal migrant laborers hounding me at the Home Depot parking lot entrance. Now there's at least 15 or more. There's your 1% yearly population increase.

17   zhanka   @   2012 May 3, 9:17am  

APOCALYPSEFUCK is Tony Manero says

Did you?

what do you mean? sell a house that we rent?

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