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75   B.A.C.A.H.   2020 May 6, 9:49am  

alpo says
I bought 11 years ago right after financial crash for $1M

What's your annual property tax bill?
76   AD   2020 May 6, 10:09am  

Bay County, Florida (i.e. Florida panhandle) housing market latest news: https://www.waltonsun.com/news/20200505/bay-county-housing-market-showing-signs-of-rebound-from-covid-19

PANAMA CITY BEACH — Experts are confident the local housing market will soon bounce back from the COVID-19 pandemic.

According to information provided by Debbie Ashbrook, CEO of Central Panhandle Association of Realtors, home sales have steadily declined over the last couple of months. As of Sunday, purchases had dropped by more than 50% compared to 2019.

However, active listings were up by nearly 20%, with 3% more listings also under contract.
77   alpo   2020 May 6, 9:29pm  

ad says
Sell it for $2 million and then move to Arizona, Las Vegas, or New Mexico and buy a nice home for $300,000.

The rest of the approximately $1.7 million can go into a conservative mutual fund like Vanguard Target Retirement Income fund (VTINX).


Unfortunately I am stuck in the rat race here in bay area due to job and child custody issues. But yeah, if my ex-spouse continues to party as much as she does and get's infected with corona virus, then I might just move to Chicago area with the kid.

B.A.C.A.H. says
What's your annual property tax bill?


Somewhere between 12K and 13K.
78   B.A.C.A.H.   2020 May 8, 9:32am  

alpo says

Somewhere between 12K and 13K.


Wow!

You're The Man!
79   Patrick   2020 May 11, 8:30am  

https://www.marketwatch.com/story/vacation-real-estate-markets-are-toast-because-of-the-pandemic-as-airbnb-owners-rush-to-offload-their-homes-redfin-ceo-says-2020-05-11

Vacation real-estate markets are ‘toast’ because of the pandemic as Airbnb owners rush to offload their homes, Redfin CEO says ...

MW: What’s your take on the state of secondary markets and vacation markets right now?

Kelman: Toast. Those are going to be in tough shape. There’s a whole economy that was built around the liquidity there that Airbnb provided. You could get pretty deep into debt and still have somebody pay your mortgage every month because Airbnb and other travel websites were so good at finding someone to rent it out.
80   BayArea   2020 May 11, 8:47am  

I haven’t seen home prices affected by a penny... yet.
81   RC2006   2020 May 13, 2:09pm  

Starting to see a lot of houses go on the market in my area, sign of cracks, seems more than the usual pre-summer sales.
82   B.A.C.A.H.   2020 May 13, 5:29pm  

FBers will all work for home for the rest of the year. And Googlers. And Twitterfolk.

Home can be anywhere. Including more livable, affordable places like Sacramento, or Bangalore.

What is the point then, of paying Bay Area salaries for employees to afford Bay Area market rent or Bay Area house prices?
83   RC2006   2020 May 13, 5:50pm  

B.A.C.A.H. says
FBers will all work for home for the rest of the year. And Googlers. And Twitterfolk.

Home can be anywhere. Including more livable, affordable places like Sacramento, or Bangalore.

What is the point then, of paying Bay Area salaries for employees to afford Bay Area market rent or Bay Area house prices?


I'd be scared if I could telecommute, that means I could easily be outsourced.
84   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2020 May 13, 8:07pm  

Patrick says
Vacation real-estate markets are ‘toast’ because of the pandemic as Airbnb owners rush to offload their homes, Redfin CEO says ...


Mine's fine and I'm still getting tons of reservation requests. Goddamn Hawaii governor has the place shut down. Doesn't matter though because I'm not an over-leveraged asshoe.

Maybe I'll pick up some new ones..
85   HeadSet   2020 May 14, 7:41am  

I'd be scared if I could telecommute, that means I could easily be outsourced.

Interesting. If your main tool at work is a computer, you can remote into that computer from home. Whether you can be outsourced depends on what skills you bring to the table.
86   RWSGFY   2020 May 14, 7:45am  

B.A.C.A.H. says
FBers will all work for home for the rest of the year. And Googlers. And Twitterfolk.


Apple is starting to bring people back to the office starting next week. Allegedly.
87   B.A.C.A.H.   2020 May 14, 8:18am  

covid_shmovid says
Apple is starting to bring people back to the office starting next week. Allegedly.


Apple is a hardware company. Perhaps not the huge army of folks in manufacturing like back in the day. But they still have huge R&D operations scattered around the south bay where they actually build stuff. Not so easy to relocate all that stuff to "working at home offices", wherever home might be (other parts of the US or other parts of the world).

Now Google and FB have "discovered" they can operate their businesses without all those fancy schmancy office buildings in some of the most congested, expensive real estate in the world, including the whole freakin city-within-a-city Google plans for downtown SJ. Ad revenue is not so great in our Incredible Shrinking Economy right now. I've been getting weird ads for weird stuff lately. It's only a matter of time before they connect the dots about paying a premium for Bay Area "talent" who's all "working from home". Hopefully this will take some pressure off the rents and house prices.
88   AD   2020 May 16, 9:40am  

.

DR Horton trying to sell its Hathaway Townhomes in Panama City Beach about 2 miles from beach and a 1 mile to the Saint Andrews Bay.

All the well compensated Google, Facebook, Twitter, etc. employees and contractors can buy at Hathaway Townhomes.



.
89   mell   2020 May 16, 2:22pm  

That's awesome all those drones wfh will reduce traffic substantially
90   Malcolm   2020 May 17, 9:16am  

BayArea says
I haven’t seen home prices affected by a penny... yet.


Here in San Diego County, it's been hitting the higher end homes. Maybe check out Zillow in your area's more expensive parts. The discounts I see are substantial in dollar amounts, but not yet in percentages.
91   BoomAndBustCycle   2020 May 17, 9:55am  

Surburban home prices will be fine. It’s the high-density close to public transit housing that will be crushed. With work at home and home schooling being the future now... everyone will want a giant backyard with a pool to take a break without mingling with society. Our quarantine has been easy... my friends in studio apartments not so much.0
92   REpro   2020 May 17, 8:08pm  

Our quarantine has been easy... my friends in studio apartments not so much.0
Listen to this:
www.youtube.com/embed/M5azNpTwVk8
93   Patrick   2020 May 18, 7:42am  

https://www.zerohedge.com/economics/tidal-wave-delinquent-mortgages-set-surpass-great-recession

According to a new report from UK-based forecasting firm Oxford Economics, 15% of homeowners will fall behind on their monthly mortgage payments in a 'tidal wave' of delinquencies.

Stimulus legislation signed by President Donald Trump allows any borrower with a federally-backed mortgage to request forbearance for up to 12 months, meaning the homeowner can skip or make reduced payments during that time.

Given the risk mortgage companies are facing right now, many lenders have imposed more stringent requirements for loan applicants. “The uncertainty in the mortgage market has contributed to a significant tightening of lending standards that may persist even once a recovery is underway,” Oxford Economics wrote. -MarketWatch


An while the pace of requests for forbearance has slowed in recent weeks - however that could change. "Although the pace of forbearance requests slowed this week, call volume picked up — which could be a sign that more borrowers are calling in to check their options now that May due dates have arrived," said Mortgage Bankers Association chief economist, Mike Fratantoni.

Keep in mind that Oxford Economics' forecast is half of the potential mortgage bloodbath predicted by Moody's chief economics, Mark Zandi, who said that as many as 30% of Americans with home loans - or around 15 million households, may stop paying if the US economy remains closed through the summer or beyond.

We assume that a large percentage of Americans refusing to return to pre-pandemic consumption habits would have similar effects.

"This is an unprecedented event," said Susan Wachter, professor of real estate and finance at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania in comments last month. She also points out another way the current crisis is different from the 2008 GFC: "The great financial crisis happened over a number of years. This is happening in a matter of months - a matter of weeks."

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