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Who's Who on Patnet?


               
2012 Nov 15, 6:55am   19,386 views  48 comments

by GonzoReal   follow (3)  

echo

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35   ordertaker   @   2012 Nov 16, 10:29am  

Homeowner, Landlord, Realtor, Property Manager, Former Flipper, Former New Home Salesperson

36   T Stone   @   2012 Nov 16, 11:09am  

Real estate Broker and Notary. Renter, I sold in 2004 and the ex got the money when we divorced. I've been commenting about the bubble since 2005 at places like the Housing Bubble Blog, Sonoma Housing Bubble, and the Marin bubble blog as well as calculated risk and Naked capitalism. Patrick.net was the first place I found when I googled "Housing Bubble" way back when.

37   taxee   @   2012 Nov 16, 12:40pm  

Ex owner sold '97, renter, pensioner waiting for the other shoe to drop, the checks to stop, and the turkeys to come home to roost. Then I buy coastal acreage with cash and grow yams.

38   ordertaker   @   2012 Nov 16, 8:28pm  

robertoaribas says

So far, I've made this bubble my biotch!

Lol. I got out unscathed other than being pretty well unemployed for the last six years. Since I'm not schooled in economics, I was lucky to buy and sell at optimal times.

39   coriacci1   @   2012 Nov 16, 11:30pm  

CrazyMan says

Inherited the property tax as well (haha, suckers).

help us out please. divulge. how much do you pay in property tax?

40   CrazyMan   @   2012 Nov 17, 12:04am  

A bit over $800 a year, but the house is in Santa Cruz not in Campbell.

Don't get mad at me, I was too young to vote when prop 13 was passed :)

Seeing as my income tax alone is over 60K a year (no write-offs, single) I'm going to go with "I pay enough".

41   Bap33   @   2012 Nov 17, 3:58am  

hunter gatherer

42   Patrick   @   2012 Nov 17, 4:20am  

robertoaribas says

(-1)^(1/2) 2^3 Pi

OK, sqrt of -1 is i, and 2^3 is 8, and what does Pi have to do with anything?

"I ate pie"?

43   New Renter   @   2012 Nov 17, 9:47am  

Dan8267 says

War says

You forgot the construction biz.

And ducks. There are a couple of ducks here.

Quack!

44   New Renter   @   2012 Nov 17, 9:55am  

turtledove says

In the process of applying to PhD programs in economics. Fingers crossed.

Have you done a cost-to-benefit on that? How are the job prospects for newly minted Ph.D.s in economics vs where you are now?

45   New Renter   @   2012 Nov 17, 9:58am  

Back to the OT:

Former owner, that was burned in the last bubble now I'm a bitter permabearish renter.

46   taxee   @   2012 Nov 17, 10:12am  

New Renter says

How are the job prospects for newly minted Ph.D.s in economics vs where you are now?

Mouth the right propaganda and you'll do just fine.

47   New Renter   @   2012 Nov 17, 12:35pm  

taxee says

New Renter says

How are the job prospects for newly minted Ph.D.s in economics vs where you are now?

Mouth the right propaganda and you'll do just fine.

Shit you don't need a Ph.D. for THAT

48   jsmarket   @   2012 Nov 17, 7:00pm  

We bought in Washington DC in late '95... turned out to be a perfect time as Mayor Marion 'Crackhead' Barry announced soon after buying he was leaving office - prices zoomed overnight. Our $255K house sold for $550K in late 2002.....and we probably didn't put $25,000 in updates in all that while. Net gain.

Moved to NorCal in late 2002. Weren't sure we were staying so we signed 2 year lease. We decided to stay, my business was so-so, so we leased for another 2 years. By 2006, housing prices were madness, so we signed on for another 2 years. By 2008, house prices came down a lot....but, I was too scared to commit scanning the carnage around...so we signed another 2 year lease. In 2010, we seriously looked at homes, but we didn't find anything that was priced reasonably....so we took another 2 year lease.

In mid-2012, we scouted and saw dozens of homes. One we loved back in 2010 was still on the market - at 20% less than in 2010. We have good credit and good income so we got a mortgage commitment from Union Bank and bid 10% less than asking and the owners gave in. It was just good timing - the owners had 2 teenage sons and couldn't afford college without ditching the house for something smaller (they built in 2000 so they had equity in it)

So, I don't know how to characterize myself: I've been a happy homeowner, a quasi-happy renter (except for saving money, it's hard for me to love the concept of renting) and a happy homeowner again.

A patient and lucky bastard might be the best description for me. Visiting Patrick.net every so often rounds out my knowledge level.

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