by AD ➕follow (1) 💰tip ignore
« First « Previous Comments 2,839 - 2,878 of 5,636 Next » Last » Search these comments
ad,
I’m not a fan of rate buy down unless you believe you could never refinance again due to your financial situation. It’s personal of course.
Again, in my East Coast FL area, the stubborn ass old home owners - and I'm talking 1200 sq ft early-mid 60s spacerace boom houses on 1/5th acre, carport (no garage), a 2 bedroom with the sunroom enclosed (badly), with HVAC often added later and poorly (ie enclosed sunroom only has one small vent, will be 5-10F hotter than the rest of house) - $280-299k.
VERSUS
Brand new DR Horton $281-306k for genuine 3 bedrooms with another 200 sq ft under air (1400-1600) a decent sized master suite with walk-in closets, new everything inc. built in USB ports, brand new and not undersized later added Central HVAC, roof, etc. AND the Builders unlike the homeloaners/inheritance kids are covering closing costs. Granted, they're zero lots, maybe 6000 sq ft total, but they come with 2-car garages.
I still just can't imagine paying north of $2000/month for a 3 bedroom/2 bath house or having to come up with ~$50-60k down.
She could try the most effective way of selling a house, or anything for that matter
......lower the price
If I can work from home, I’m out of here. This explains the exodus of Californians to other states thanks to the pandemic and WFH.
I like rural.
Yeah, I see it the same way. you probable know singles who like to live in the city as well? I have a few single colleagues and also single relatives that don’t want to live anywhere else but the city. I am guessing once they have found a partner and start a family they will move away.
I honestly put it at child abuse level to raise a kid in any major city in America at least.
WookieMan says
I honestly put it at child abuse level to raise a kid in any major city in America at least.
I would agree with this. The best years of my life were in Michigan. My father was a logger and we lived on 10 acres in the middle of almost nowhere. We had a pet racoon and a pet fox even (they do NOT make good pets).
Even leftoid Michigan is nice. At least last time I was in Ann Arbor it was pretty nice. May have changed by now who knows.
Generally pretty shitty maintained as well.
WookieMan says
Generally pretty shitty maintained as well.
It's been 20 years easily, but Ann Arbor looked very well maintained and clean. Foos was great there too, as were the bars. But that's 2 decades ago.
Bay Area is nuts
During errands I'd drive past this gem frequently.
Rubicon says
Bay Area is nuts
During errands I'd drive past this gem frequently.
It wasn't on the market very long when it sold at "peak" last summer.
In a ghetto neighborhood (note bars on windows), one house over from a busy road with one of the worst public high schools in the Bay Area on the other side.
Note the estimated rent versus ownership price (3800 vs 6700).
The privilege of ownership.
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/1785-Hopkins-Dr-San-Jose-CA-95122/19727040_zpid/
The privilege of ownership.
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/1785-Hopkins-Dr-San-Jose-CA-95122/19727040_zpid/
Serious question: what do most of these people do for a living? I can't imagine being a Doctor and live in something like this.
in mind a professional couple makes 250-300k combined there.
What good is it to be a professional power couple if this is all you can afford?
what do most of these people do
Yes, and where do the janitors, waitresses, and other lower wage folks live?
Does anyone have knowledge of why some high end areas have gone bust throughout history in some areas? Lots of reasons I suppose. Interesting to see where the Bay area is in 10, 20 years or so. It would stand to reason if no "staff" can afford to live close enough, the place will change. I'm no Nostradamus though. Maybe the left really do see themselves as the elite. It might explain why all of a sudden they now allow ADUs?
I know both listing agents on this deal so I know at what price and terms I had to offer to get it. Live in the 3/2, and have 3 rentals for just over $2M. It’s right by the hospital so other units could easily convert to travel nurse rentals and collect $3.5-$4k/mo/unit. Why settle for a small SFH on Hopkins? 🤷♂️
Eman says
I know both listing agents on this deal so I know at what price and terms I had to offer to get it. Live in the 3/2, and have 3 rentals for just over $2M. It’s right by the hospital so other units could easily convert to travel nurse rentals and collect $3.5-$4k/mo/unit. Why settle for a small SFH on Hopkins? 🤷♂️
Who in the flying fuck wants to live in a 4 unit? Shared walls? Noise? City? Fuck that. I'd rather have minimum wage income than live like that out in the country. Been there and done that in Chicago. It was awful. Hell it was an 8 unit.
I don't really care about the net. At the end of the day you're living in a shit hole. Even the best of neighborhoods. Again, been there done that. Cities are the absolute worst place to invest currently.
GNL says
Does anyone have knowledge of why some high end areas have gone bust throughout history in some areas? Lots of reasons I suppose. Interesting to see where the Bay area is in 10, 20 years or so. It would stand to reason if no "staff" can afford to live close enough, the place will change. I'm no Nostradamus though. Maybe the left really do see themselves as the elite. It might explain why all of a sudden they now allow ADUs?
Can you share some of these high end areas that went bust? I’m not familiar with them.
Wasn't Detroit a kind of equivalent of Bay Area in the heyday of American car manufacturing?
Is it possible for a place to out price itself? Or does that even make sense?
Rents are cooling in some markets.
Even leftoid Michigan is nice. At least last time I was in Ann Arbor it was pretty nice. May have changed by now who knows.
If I can work from home, I’m out of here. This explains the exodus of Californians to other states thanks to the pandemic and WFH.
Eman says
If I can work from home, I’m out of here. This explains the exodus of Californians to other states thanks to the pandemic and WFH.
People have been leaving in droves for years prior to the Scamdemic. The state has been anti-business since Adobe and Yahoo left. It's been anti-normal for a long time, and the normies got tired of it.
« First « Previous Comments 2,839 - 2,878 of 5,636 Next » Last » Search these comments
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/pimco-kiesel-called-housing-top-160339396.html?source=patrick.net
Bond manager Mark Kiesel sold his California home in 2006, when he presciently predicted the housing bubble would pop. He bought again in 2012, after U.S. prices fell more than 30% and found a floor.
Now, after a record surge in prices, Kiesel says the time to sell is once again at hand.