by thankshousingbubble follow (7)
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Peak Oil a hoax? Zombie needs to eat more brains.
As for the butt pulling Realtor, he's sticking his head in the desert sand
But lo and behold the market turned a corner and perhaps many feel that they'll sure as heck not get "priced out" again.
I know of a couple of young families in the Bay Area who are in that boat and bought earlier this year. That said, I was talking to a friend recently about some of his work colleagues. The highlights included one that was 'well off' but sold his two houses (one primary and one rental) at a loss. He did, though, take his remaining equity and bought a nice place east of the hills. Another had an ARM resetting and was trying a short sale on a million dollar home. Yikes.
http://www.wired.com/science/planetearth/magazine/16-05/ff_peakwater?currentPage=all
Intel is stockpiling water in Arizona. Maybe Robert can get himself an aquifer :).
Seriously, the above article has a good discussion of the two big water projects for Pheonix. It would be silly to write it off as a non-issue.
Jim Kunslter is a hack writer
His "Geography of Nowhere" and "Home from Nowhere" are excellent reading and well worth the time of anyone interested in city planning.
All Kunstler does is bash everything and promote mixed use development and local everything (due to oil will run out). same message forever. He predicted TEOTWAKI back from the y2k scare days. (lots of IT work for that, not so much for peak oil/global warming scare mongering)
Phoenix is one of those places where they ripped off the bandaid quickly (due to non-judicial foreclosures). Extremely painful initially, but why delay the agony? From the WSJ today:
Nearly 94% of Phoenix ZIP Codes and 90% of Denver ZIP Codes saw values rise during the three-month period ending in April, up from 5% and 6% a year ago, respectively.
RobertoAribas,
I don't mind a healthy, intellectual debate on these matters and welcome opposing views, arguments and such. But I agree that the trolls are completely useless and bring nothing but noise to these threads. Glad I blocked them all too.
I'll add some other reasons for the market reversal. There are other threads explaining the tight inventory and low supply. But allow me to posit where I'm seeing the source of the extra demand --
- foreign money coming in after fear of global slowdown or European debt crisis coming to fruition. This is a "flight to safety" in a way. U.S. real estate appears much better priced now, so foreigners are wanting to shovel their money here to escape the uncertainty elsewhere.
- Strong stock market in early 2012 with people unloading liquid assets and now needing to put it somewhere else.
I certainly could afford to buy a house in Santa Clara/Campbell (I have a couple hundred K in cash I need to do something with) but I'm just not sure I want to deal with the rat race (indeed) for the next 30 years to pay it off.
How about a remodel in SC? Cheaper than buying and would make it "your house."
I am soooo with you on the rat race. I am 47 and looking at essentially retiring in the next 3-5 years to a more laid back, "work when I want to" sort of job, doing something that I really enjoy. My career has lost a lot of the fun in the past couple years. Three years ago, I imagined I'd work in this field "forever" because I was having fun.
Global warming and peak oil are hoaxes created to get $ out of suckers and pass agendas/power grabs.
Holy fucking cow. You're gullible.
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