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Attack of the California Equity Locusts!


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2006 Jun 20, 3:45am   14,280 views  263 comments

by HARM   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

Attack of the equity locusts!

Randy H Says:
June 18th, 2006 at 10:46 pm e

Hi DS & LiLLL

Good to be back. I will say that I am a bit more disillusioned about the housing bubble after touring the deep rural Midwest. I saw people putting 3BR McMansions in rural Indiana on the market for $800K, and not with 50 acres either, just tiny little yards. I talked to old high school friends who think they’ve discovered the golden goose because they’re flipping homes in little towns of 5,000 people making $10K per pop. People are using the same toxic loans as we are in the BA, second mortgages, negative amortization, interest only and all. There are still nice old homes for $150K, but they haven’t been updated since 1940, have 1 bathroom for every 5 bedrooms, and about 20 cubic feet of total closet space. The biggest boom business is flippers moving into these old homes and turning them into faux McMansions with some cheap, creative drywalling and pergo, then trying to sell them for 150% return.

Similar posts from Ben Jones' blog:

Comment by Brandon
2006-06-16 15:07:53

The condo boom has arrived in downtown Boise:

“The development will consist of 19 three-story buildings. Each unit in a building will be allocated two spaces in an underground parking area. The units will range in size from 1,800 to to 2,600 square feet, and will be priced between $700,000 and $1.2 million.”

Yes folks- San Diego condo prices right here in Boise!
We need more housing in downtown Boise, but 700k plus?

Comment by groundhogday
2006-06-16 15:46:47

In Bozeman, MT we have a flush of new downtown condos coming onto the market - the “mill district” which used to be known as the bad part of town. Small 1-2 bedroom condos 800-1100 sq ft are listed for $350k +
All the way up to $660k for a 3/2 1650 sq ft luxury condo or $1 million for a penthouse loft.

Consider that Bozeman is a town of 30-35 k with a handful of restaurants and bars downtown. And the “mill district” is bounded by the railroad tracks, interstate 90, main street traffic and a poor neighborhood with a bunch of very junky bungalows.

In a word: unbelievable.

Have CA specuvestors fled their own (now depreciating) RE market to ply their evil trade in "fly-over country"? Will they do for the Midwest and South what they did for their own state (f@ck over working families and drive prices to absurd heights)? Is there still enough time to warn people in those regions, so they can organize lynch mobs and destroy the flippers before they wreak too much damage on their (still) affordable communities?

Discuss, enjoy...
HARM

#housing

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185   Peter P   2006 Jun 20, 1:37pm  

C+ grade sushi at blowfuckingfish

Did you mean Caa? I may give it a single B, which is still below investment grade.

186   Different Sean   2006 Jun 20, 1:41pm  

wow, this is the fastest growing thread in history - is it a public holiday there?

Randy H Says:
Just for clarity, the flippers, specuvestors and FBs I talked to in my own small, rural midwestern sampling (sadly many were old friends and a few relatives) were entirely LOCALS.

on the topic, to what extent do you think the 'RE investment gurus' are to blame for the specuvestor frenzy, as per the kind of thing at:
http://www.johntreed.com/Reedgururating.html

these guys hold rolling national road shows charging anything from $5K to $15K a course per person -- they go everywhere, because they can always find suckers everywhere willing to stump up that sort of money to learn how to get rich quick. apart from low interest rates and flexible credit, why else would 40% of new loans be for investment? (for as long as it lasts before the crash)

btw, the market seems to be slowing here, and it has done for at least a year now -- properties have dropped in price and stay on the market longer as investors find rents can't cover the mortgage debt (or new owner-occupiers are under water), which in turns deters new investors -- the big question is still about a soft landing vs a 'plateau going to new highs in X years' (realtor's dream) vs a crash. We've obviously done this to death in the past, which is a mild criticism i have of patrick.net -- there's not a lot of structure to the site, so instead of coming up with some fixed conclusions, we just keep repeating the same stuff over and over again in slightly different ways in new threads -- not something cogent and succinct you can take to your local MP for consideration or use as a lobby...

one scenario: with 40% of new mortgages being for investment, if there is no crash or fire sale but a stabilisation of prices and rents, then we've just created a new society of landlords and tenants at about 50:50 ratio -- almost a dual class society, or a new 'wealth apartheid'. and the thing that did it was millions of individual decisions in 'the market' based purely on unenlightened self interest. more people than ever before will still be renting into old age, with no equity, and with major implications for pensions, social security, etc. the govt isn't even tracking this phenomenon at present. so then what happens?

187   FormerAptBroker   2006 Jun 20, 2:06pm  

marinite (our friend from across the bridge at http://marinrealestatebubble.blogspot.com/ ) wrote:

> So you patrick.netters were hoping for a ~45% cut in
> RE prices within a short span of time (a year?)? When
> in the history of RE has that ever happened? Past
> history suggests more like a 6 year span.

In most of Los Angeles most prices dropped ~45% in about 36 months from mid 1990 to mid 1993.

As I posted before watching homes in S. Cal drop in by TENS of thousands per year did not make people happy, but bit did not make people run for the doors like they will when homes in the Bay Area start dropping over a HUNDRED thousand per year.

Most of the single family homes around me in Presidio Heights have gone up in value by $200 to $500K PER YEAR over the past 8 years. There are going to be a lot of long time owners that decide to take the profit and retire as soon as values start going town.

188   FormerAptBroker   2006 Jun 20, 2:07pm  

town should be down

189   tsusiat   2006 Jun 20, 2:08pm  

To BA or not to BA said:

"This whole mess is purely due to buyers. Our lives have been forever affected in an adverse way by these people who are willing to pay anything for anything. No mercy on them."

In response to my post defending realtors and naming sellers, regualtors and bankers as the turds in the system.

The post was kind of sarcastic. Actually, I agree with you, ultimate responsibility rests with the buyers, their minions and posses. However, I'm just getting tired of picking on realtors, they're not much worse sleazeballs then any other sales profession, and really, they are just doing what they can in a market that has been feeding them nicely.

Just thought I'd stir the pot, why not?

190   FormerAptBroker   2006 Jun 20, 2:11pm  

Different Sean Says:

> wow, this is the fastest growing thread in history
> is it a public holiday there?

Threads on BLOGs and e-mail lists usually grow slowly on holidays since most Americans BLOG and e-mail when they are at work getting paid by someone else. I can not figure how all the studies that come out keep showing American productivity increasing since it seems like the people working for me spend hours every day on My Space, BLOGing, Shopping and using Webmail to keep in touch with friends…

191   surfer-x   2006 Jun 20, 2:26pm  

the economy is doing fine today.

Huh? Wow, seems someone put cool aid in the water supply.

Note: Don't drink the cool aid.

Which part of the economy is doing fine today? Housing and construction?

192   StuckInBA   2006 Jun 20, 3:27pm  

I just ran a ZipRealty query on Santa Clara county - reduced listings. It showed me only(!) 200 out of 300 listings. This of course does not count the relistings. So approx 10% (some of which relistings, just a guess) of Santa Clara county homes need to reduce their prices. Granted, some reductions are paltry, most from intially atrocious prices and so on.

But nice trend, don't you agree ?

As can be expected bulk of these are in Gilroy, Morgan Hill and San Jose. The fringe areas are going to be in deep trouble. I could also spot "highly motivated sellers" phrase used in some. Many of the Gilroy/Morgan Hill homes are very new, 2-3 years old.

I am now completely confused. Where is the slow, very slow, very very slow downtrend ? Where is the stickiness ? Don't give me Cupertino/Palo Alto like crap answers. Not even the bearest of bear expected those to go down first.

Am I the only one sensing the implosion ?

193   StuckInBA   2006 Jun 20, 3:31pm  

OK, I will go back to the thread topic.

If California is exporting the bubble, then it will crash faster. It's not just the ARMs that are the wild card. Many Californians bought second homes in other out of state places (Phoenix, Las Vegas, Salt Lake City) - often using their HELOC. Many BA folks bought in Merced, Brentwood, Sacramento.

That it self makes BA less immune than other cycles. I don't know if any one has a handle on the magnitude of this. But let's not rule out the cascading effect.

Cascade !

194   Different Sean   2006 Jun 20, 3:37pm  

FWIW the median income in DC is $90,300

all taxpayers' dollars, given as a 'gift', as per baudrillard. jack abramoff & co. would have raised the average... not to mention the lockheed martin revolving door appointments, etc.

195   Peter P   2006 Jun 20, 3:39pm  

Am I the only one sensing the implosion?

I am seeing it in slow motion. My requirements are more specific (view, vintage, amenities), so "my" inventory is not exploding yet, but it is steadily growing.

196   Joe Schmoe   2006 Jun 20, 3:44pm  

That DC median income statistic sounds mighty high. Much, much too high. Does anyone have a cite for it?

197   KurtS   2006 Jun 20, 3:51pm  

Go out of the Bay Area for a while and then go back to the fucking ant heap. I can think of nothing more vile to me than that entire fucking area. Oh, wait, yes I can, the people who live there.

Uh...LOL. Yeah, people here need to get out and see the world doesn't spin around the exis of entitlement.

198   Different Sean   2006 Jun 20, 4:00pm  

Joe Schmoe Says:
That DC median income statistic sounds mighty high. Much, much too high. Does anyone have a cite for it?

they all sound high. more troll BS, probably. unless you take an exclusive suburb, or the salaries of congressmen and advisers and lobbyists drag the median up... it doesn't say anything about distribution of salaries either, it's only an averaging measure... however, with labourers only getting $10 an hour, walmart employees on $6.25 an hour, etc, it's suspicious. google will probably tell you. avg salry in the US is supposed to be $30 000 something dollars...

199   Different Sean   2006 Jun 20, 4:03pm  

Do 401(k)s invest in the sharemarket in the states?

200   Different Sean   2006 Jun 20, 4:05pm  

AMERICANS do not go in for envy. The gap between rich and poor is bigger than in any other advanced country, but most people are unconcerned. Whereas Europeans fret about the way the economic pie is divided, Americans want to join the rich, not soak them. Eight out of ten, more than anywhere else, believe that though you may start poor, if you work hard, you can make pots of money. It is a central part of the American Dream.

http://www.economist.com/world/displaystory.cfm?story_id=7055911

I thought it was funny a previous poster claimed 'in Europe everyone is pushing to the front and devil take the hindmost' etc, when that is precisely the american way, and has been for a long time, and european social democratic states tend to try to equalise things more, reduce poverty, provide more public goods and welfare, etc.

201   Peter P   2006 Jun 20, 4:22pm  

What made you change your mind finally? I raised the reasons why such a crash wasn’t in the cards many times over the last year and a half, but I couldn’t convince you. What made you realize that the crash indeed wasn’t going to happen?

I do not know exactly. But I am not afraid to adjust my positions.

I think fringe areas will fall hard, as price decompression works itself though the process. That said, even in good areas, SFHs may still see a 10%-15% nominal correction.

On the other hand, rent appears to be on the rise. This will help correcting the price/rent imbalance.

It is not too difficult to own. After the corrections, many condos/townhouses will be more affordable. One should not be obsessed with the ownership of an SFH with a big lot anyway.

I see the housing situation as just one aspect of the bipolarization of asset ownership in the US.

I do not think so. It is rather easy to relocate nowadays. One can always move slightly further (or across state lines) to get the "right" kind of housing.

The bipolarization of wealth is a natural process and the middle class is an unnatural occurence. I am not surprised that it is under pressure. However, I am not too worried about the middle class. So long as there is a will to climb upward, the middle class will persist. However, if the middle class does nothing to improve itself, it will fade away.

You were right that innovation is the key.

202   Peter P   2006 Jun 20, 4:23pm  

How much does the average BAer (or the posters on this blog) spend on eating out?

Our food budget is classified information.

203   Peter P   2006 Jun 20, 4:24pm  

Does it make sense to completely stop eating out, taking vacations etc. in order to save for housing?

Ask yourself what makes you happier.

204   Peter P   2006 Jun 20, 4:45pm  

The gap between rich and poor is bigger than in any other advanced country, but most people are unconcerned.

The gap is not that big. Many public bathrooms in "upscale" places are not even attended. If the gap is big, one would expect such finer details.

The gap between super rich and rich is quite big though. Look at all those Gulfstreams and Learjets.

205   Different Sean   2006 Jun 20, 4:55pm  

The gap is not that big.

well, how big is 'that big' when it's numerically the greatest in the world? wage multiples in the hundreds when in europe it may only be 10 or so? how big do you want it to be?

Many public bathrooms in “upscale” places are not even attended. If the gap is big, one would expect such finer details.

these days, they save money on wages by NOT hiring such people. more money to the bottom line that way. contributes to private affluence and public squalor...

there's no attendants in any bathroom in oz that i've encountered. people would find that a bit creepy...

206   Different Sean   2006 Jun 20, 5:05pm  

heh, never mind that pollies and lobbyists are each filching hundreds of thousands of dollars a year in wages from the public, that there are rich and super-rich classes milking the rest of society like crazy (what would happen if that money was redistributed back down?), extravagant multi-billion defence contracts going to cronies where that sort of level of investment in military capability really isn't necessary, that 'get rich quick or die trying -- and devil take the hindmost' is the new national motto and ethos and conspicuous consumption rules, there's now a new index of social inequality known as the Toilet Attendant Index, which is superior to the normal numerical methods of assessing the distribution of earnings. It has some cross-cultural weaknesses tho, that's it's only major limitation...

207   Peter P   2006 Jun 20, 5:06pm  

these days, they save money on wages by NOT hiring such people. more money to the bottom line that way. contributes to private affluence and public squalor…

But if they are cheap enough, they can add enough value to justified. The point is that lower-level workers are actually quite expensive here. Another measure: percentage of private vehicles that are chauffeur-driven.

DS, I know what you are talking about. However, the more worrisome trend is that the middle-class is completely hypnotized by consumption. If it can pull itself together, it would still be a powerful force.

208   surfer-x   2006 Jun 20, 5:07pm  

The Bay Area has the rest of the country beat. I’ll be sad if I have to leave.

Nothing personal, I just am a bit sick of the gold paved bay area. There are parts that are nice, LaMorinda for one, but come fucking on, San Jose, Milpitas, fuck the entire south bay can really just go fuck itself. There is just so much fucking bullshit about that area, everyone according to many on this site make 3-4X the median income, and for what I see when there the only thing on most BA residents mind is how to push you out of the way so they can get their $19/lb cheese that much quicker.

Again, glad you like it, you can have it. Kids in the BA are you high?

209   Different Sean   2006 Jun 20, 5:14pm  

However, the more worrisome trend is that the middle-class is completely hypnotized by consumption. If it can pull itself together, it would still be a powerful force.

the middle class unfortunately is fatalistic and individualistic, and somewhat brainwashed. the flight of manufacturing has started to hollow out the middle class, also, as many middle middle positions have disappeared, both in middle management and in unionised skilled trades. these days, they are even less of what marx would call 'a class (acting) for itself', rather than a class of itself...

just kidding about the Toilet Attendant Index, altho coupled with the Chauffeur Index, you mighr really be on to something...

210   Different Sean   2006 Jun 20, 7:47pm  

while I think of it, does anyone have an online subscription to The Economist? There's another series of articles on housing affordability from 2003 that I'd like to access that requires a subscription.

anyone? anyone? randy? anyone?

211   Different Sean   2006 Jun 20, 7:53pm  

Looking on craigslist today, I have seen a Mercedes and a trip to Vegas offered to potential buyers.

GREAT OPPURTUNITY [sic] TO OWN HOME WITH NO MONEY DOWN AND NO CLOSING COST PLUS A FREE WEEKEND GETAWAY.

I love the way realtors like to frequently misspell words just to keep people like me on their toes, trying to catch my eye with their deliberate mistakes. It's not as though they're only half-educated or anything. Couldn't get a crappy job in the public service because of your spelling? Become a realtor instead...

212   FormerAptBroker   2006 Jun 20, 10:41pm  

burbed Says:

> Millionaires galore in Bay Area

http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2006/06/21/WEALTH.TMP

> In the Bay Area, nearly 111,600 out of 2.5 million
> households had a net worth of at least $1 million
> or more in 2005, excluding the value of their homes

It looks like they excluded the value of homes AND any investment real estate since the owners of almost every piece of commercial property in the Bay Area are millionaires (not like that is a big deal any more)...

213   DinOR   2006 Jun 20, 11:55pm  

buffpilot,

Couldn't speak directly to the "military issue" but I thought that I'd heard that most states got quite tired of that and forced the DOD to have folks pay their taxes based on their "home of record" meaning where they originally enlisted. In the late 70's/early 80's many guys were claiming Nevada as it was a short hop to set up a P.O box.

214   Randy H   2006 Jun 20, 11:56pm  

FormerAptBroker Says:
June 21st, 2006 at 5:41 am

burbed Says:

- Millionaires galore in Bay Area

http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2006/06/21/WEALTH.TMP

- In the Bay Area, nearly 111,600 out of 2.5 million
- households had a net worth of at least $1 million
- or more in 2005, excluding the value of their homes

It looks like they excluded the value of homes AND any investment real estate since the owners of almost every piece of commercial property in the Bay Area are millionaires (not like that is a big deal any more)…

The problem with the "how many millionaires" question is one of determining accurate net worth. I don't care how many assets one has. Trump has billions in assets. I care about their balance sheet.

It is not possible to get public data about individual or private company net worth because their debt is not openly scrutinizable. Therefore, all data like this relies on self-reporting and statistical guesses based upon verifiable data, which itself is often only available in aggregate.

215   edvard   2006 Jun 20, 11:57pm  

Frify,
I just wanted to step in and say something that I don't think most people from California or NY know or realize. You mentioned that you've worked on both coasts and " visited" the rest of the country. If by visiting, you mean vacationed or drove through another state that isn't on one of the coasts, then you really haven't experienced enough of the country to make an educated assumption about non-coastal states.
The reason I say this is that roughly 90% of the folks I run into who swear that mana from the heavens oozes out of the ground in the BA are more than likely people who have no experience with most of the country, and instead have hop-scotched from one end of the country to another.

NYC and SF do not represent most of the country. NYC is cold, busy, big, and very liberal. SF is Warm, Busy, smaller, and very liberal. Both are filled with people that would rather spend Saturday night watching an experimental movie about nudists or drinking vodka at the all-nite yuppy club.
I always ask these flyover people if they've ever lived in places like Montgomery Alabama, New Orleans, Dallas, Boise, Denver, Scottsadale, or anywhere other than NYC or SF,LA, etc etc. The answer's usually: " Well, I've visited some of those places." That doesn't count.

I grew up in the middle of the country. I've lived on both coasts. The diffrences are indeed physical, but the reason people move to be in an "ideal" area is to be with people they think are going to be like themselves. It isn't neccesarily the place. It's the people that make it nice.

Where I came from was perhaps not as physically dramatic as the BA, even though we did have the Smokey Mountains in our back yard, but the people were in my opinion more beautiful than the people here in SF. My neighbors never-ever say hello to me here. Back home, the neighbors knew when you were heading off to vacation and would feed your cats and set your alarm on the way out. This was normal.
I would never have known this had I simply skipped over the country from one end to another. So as far as your statement about BA having everywhere else beat, perhaps you should just mention that in your mind, it is the best place for you that you have lived in, which sounds like very few.

216   DinOR   2006 Jun 21, 12:05am  

Oh btw, absolutely agree on taking the pains to look almost exclusively at homes that need a little "updating"! Not having the remodeling energy we once had I believe we would probably now pay to have professional contractors with impeccable references do the actual work. We see a lot of mid-60's homes all over the Portland area that really do not need all that much work but sit and sit (even though they're much more reasonably priced) in favor of chitbox McMansions that are usually at least a 100K more for the same sq. ft! You would need to be a major BOZO to burn through 100K in rennovations! And no one says you have to do it in "flipper time". In our area taxes would also be much cheaper, and that's one of the things we really look at. Taxes (unlike mortgage payments) never go away.

217   DinOR   2006 Jun 21, 12:15am  

Randy H,

Um, I think the original ref. to the report citing all of the wealth in the BA was prepared by Merrill Lynch. I've always considered those reports to serve two basic purposes. Firstly they are intended to be flattering to the area for which they are targeting and secondly they are used as a "recruitment tool" for rookie brokers to dangle candy in front of their faces. BNY used to pump out the same basic stuff for various markets. I'm not saying there is NO basis for their claims but consider the source.

218   DinOR   2006 Jun 21, 12:25am  

buffpilot,

The era I was speaking of was in the late 70's and if you had a postal recpt. for a P.O box you could go to the disbursing clerk and after a payday of two you were a NV (or wherever resident). In the end though we were making so little money it wasn't that big a deal. Besides most of my "career" was spent overseas where I was considered the "un-official mayor of Olongapo City". The amount of "stuff" we got away with when compared to a stateside duty station was beyond all reason. By the time I got back to Sandog (San Diego) I was "short" and had little patience for officers and chiefs angling for a seat on the city council. Sorry.

219   edvard   2006 Jun 21, 12:32am  

Buffpilot,
How do people survive of of 50k a year here? Well... I make 50k, and the way you do it is live very cheaply. I drive a 11 year old truck, carpool, only buy used appliances and furniture off Craigslist- most of the time the stuff is free-, rent a house with another housemate( $500 a month) and eat out once, twice a week, buy clothes at the Goodwill. In that way, I save about half of my salary a year. Not much, but enough to hopefully buy something outright in TX in a few years since I'm almost there now.
On the other hand, I get calls all the time from agencies in other states offering me 45-55k for the same job. 50k in TN of TX gets you at least double what it would get you here. Those calls are sometimes very tempting.

220   Michael Holliday   2006 Jun 21, 12:35am  

Willywhopper2 Says:

"...I always ask these flyover people if they’ve ever lived in places like Montgomery Alabama, New Orleans, Dallas, Boise, Denver, Scottsdale, or anywhere other than NYC or SF,LA, etc etc. The answer’s usually: ' Well, I’ve visited some of those places.' That doesn’t count."
_____

Yes, I think living in other places, if you're from the Bay Area, helps to give you a focus on what's good and bad about CA and the other areas you've lived.

Here's my bio (as if anyone actually cares):

1967-'79: San Jose, California (some Golden days)
1979-'80: Arlington, Texas (nice suburb in-between Dallas and Ft. Worth)
very much enjoyed my time there, minibike riding, fishing, Texas Rangers balls games, etc. Big, brick house for modest price. Dad moved for IBM.
1980-'86: San Jose, California (Golden Age)
1986-'89: Ft. Bragg, North Carolina (US Army): did get to see a bunch of Southeast coast states & lived in Florida for 10 weeks while working with the Airforce at Ft. Walton Beach, FL. Big pimpin beach action.
1989-late '98: San Jose, California (bailed to Phoenix as Nasdaq began steep climb.) Helped mom and siblings get adjusted to life in AZ after divorce. HOT AS F-CK but I liked many aspects of it and stayed, besides being priced out of CA.
1998-2001: Phoenix, Arizona
2001-2002: Flagstaff, Arizona: Lived in Flag going to Northern Arizona University to pursue one-year MBA program. Got degree & hauled ass back to Phoenix (called Valley of the Sun).
2002-2006: Phoenix
2006-?: Sick of corporate BS in AZ and living in a "right to work" state with NO worker rights. May head back to BA to become law enforcement officer in a South Bay city. Would be priced out of owning anything but the most ghetto condo for now, but pay not bad with overtime, and pimp pension (getting rarer). May get real estate license to do a few legit deals on the side and watch the shake out of fly by nighters.

Who gives a F-ck about any of this? Hopefully no one.

What's YOUR geographical pedigree?

221   skibum   2006 Jun 21, 12:40am  

RandyH, burbed, FAB,

RE: the question of how many millionaires there are in the BA, again, as it relates to the housing bubble, this question is not very relevant. First, persons with that much net wealth are generally not participating in exotic mortgages in order to afford a home (they may be doing it for the original intent, to allow increased cash flow for other investment strategies). Second, the frenzy of the masses involves price points, income levels, and parts of the BA that they have nothing to do with, other than passing these people and towns on their way to the corner office at Google.

222   edvard   2006 Jun 21, 12:49am  

Michael,
Impressive list! Well.. Ihaven't lived in as many places, but I'm not quite old enough to have had the ability yet, being that I was born in 1976. Let's see..

Knoxville, TN: 1976-1997

Harriman, TN: 1998: This was an absolute NOTHING town. Lots of hicks that drove chevelles 100 MPH down main street at 3AM. That said, it was a beautiful little town with big victorian houses. I considered getting one before I left because they pratically gave them away

Asheville, NC: 1999: Quaint Mountain city. Lots of hippies and old grumbly tobbaco farmers thrown in. Some of the "new" money was coming in from New York and Cali- some of the tech was starting up there.

Boston, MA: 2000: Cold as hell. I was dirt-poor because rent there was asanine. People wern't particulalrly nice either. The spring and fall were very nice, but summers got way over 100 degrees, and winters almost killed you, especially if you had bad heat.

Berkeley, CA: 2000-2003: Crowded, almost cult-ish city with lots of bitchy baby-boomers angry that the 60's were over. When the Iraq war started up, they were as giddy as school children. Yay! the 60's... part 2!

Alameda: current: Love it here. Small town reminds me of home and you can actually walk to town and not get run over or panhandled by crack fiends. Very nice.

Future?: Again, that's the big question most of us are probably trying to figure out.

223   edvard   2006 Jun 21, 12:53am  

Cruiser,
That's freakin hilarious! Actually, being a southern guy, I'm hoping the sentiments I hear from most people remain. Again- the 2 big fears and "awful" things that people not familiar with the region always mention is:
" it gets humid in the summer there... and Mr Evil Evangelical christian man is gonna knock on my door and DEMAND they convert.. or ELSE!
Actually, I've thought about encouraging this kind of mentality. Yes- it's terrible there! Trust me, I'm from the region, and I would NEVER go back, heaven forbid!

224   DinOR   2006 Jun 21, 12:56am  

skibum,

You mean there aren't swarms of well moneyed clients for Merrill Lynch rookies to cold call? Uh huh, thought not! Besides the report goes on to say that part of the appeal of the BA is "unparelleled access to wealth managers"?

Huh?

Most affluent people avoid "wealth managers" like the plague! Seriously. Guys of my "ilk" are viewed as a necessary evil at best. Besides, even nickel dime "players" think they rate a Wall Street firm.

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