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All I said was that any of these negative news will not have any effect on those prime bay area locations.
If prime areas are so immune, how does this property get foreclosed? After all, it is prime location, right? The last owner bought it for $1.7M in 2007. They must be having lots of money, as you mentioned, with double income. What happen so bad that it got foreclosed? One of them lost job and only one income cannot keep up with the mortgage payment?
The housing in these prime locations mentioned are here to stay in that price, will be flat for a while, but not drop in any dramatically way.
I think, as homeowner, that is your best hope - inflation will catch up and give you "price is flat" impression.
Also, don’t forget that all of these high profile economists (Shillers) happen to live in these prime neighborhoods, do you think they want their homes to drop price dramatically?
Very very funny! Actually, you might want to bribe Mr Shillers so that he does not allow price to drop. He is the man!
The Bay Area as we see now is different from what it was 10 years ago.
1.) Not many companies are going public.
2.) Even if companies go public, they don't give shit load of stock options like they use to
So the likelihood of many people becoming rich to afford these houses is very less now. You can maintain these high prices only if this area continues to create enough rich people so that they keep on consuming these over valued assets.
And Don't forget the most important factor- "Public Schools", that is the only thing they differ in.
How different is mission san jose from warm springs or even mil pitas ?? Just different schools. More or less same kind of homes, Same kind of people live there. Now keep in mind Schools are going down, because the whole state is going down as you can see.
There can be other developments also, May be some enterprising person may want to develop a network of private schools which are really affordable and are better than public schools in Mission San Jose/Cupertino and completely decouple the Zip Code and the kind of education your kids receive.
A lot can happen- Bottom line an over priced entity always comes down to realize it's true or sane value.
Can someone tell me home owners from what part of US thinks prices will go down in their neighborhood?
Dramatic? No, probably nothing like east bay, but then the appreciation was not as dramatic.
Still, if you look at the pre-bubble (mid 90's) premium paid for a prime location, and compare it to the post bubble premium paid for a prime location, the prime locations in the bay area look about 20%-30% overpriced. They are much less likely to HAVE TO sell or be foreclosed upon, and more likely to try to hold out for a better market. They will still normalize with respect to the whole region though eventually.
LOL @ the OP, probably underwater and behind on payments.
On a serious note, support your claims with data. All the data I see suggests we still have quite the correction coming, still 20-40% to go. That includes the prime locations, as all the surrounding areas will pull those prices down as well.
Haven't you ever heard the phrase "never say never." I can't tell you how many people told me in the mid 2000s that "house prices in California never go down." How many morons are there? I actually didn't count, but it was at least a few dozen. My response was always "what happened from 1991 to 1997?" There's nothing like living in denial, right?
not in your lifetime.
Housing price trends have been maintained for hundreds of years dude. This isn't just some chartist crap. Its plain old common sense (ie. wages, comps, defaults, etc.).
You're gonna have to show how none of that no longer applies to the ~oh so special~ Bay Area. Which BTW I've seen and it isn't all that special. Nice? Sure. But not near nice enough to justify those prices.
all and I mean all reverts to the mean.... Come on Chip_designer if your name sake reflects anything REAL about you, then you know this, Japan is good comparison to us, not perfect, but a good likely model
all and I mean all reverts to the mean…. Come on Chip_designer if your name sake reflects anything REAL about you, then you know this, Japan is good comparison to us, not perfect, but a good likely model
when all reverts back to the mean, you think prices will be dramatically reduced in those prime bay area locations. When that happens, the US will be in a dramatically very deep trouble, with mass layoffs, depressed stock market, overall moral down, deflationary state of economy, and at that time, by human nature, everyone becomes chicken. Do you rather prefer that to happen?
if you have stable job, 20% downpayment, fico > 740, now is the best time to buy your home in those prime bay area locations.
......deflationary state of economy, and at that time, by human nature, everyone becomes chicken. Do you rather prefer that to happen?
I am constantly amazed by people that confuse predicting that something will happen, with preferring that it will. It's almost a universal among housing bulls.
I don't particularly prefer to die, but I can predict with a fair reliability that I will.
if you have stable job, 20% downpayment, fico > 740, now is the best time to buy your home in those prime bay area locations.
This comes right from used car salesman's manual. Well, actually realtor's manual.
I am not a realtor. I just stating my opinion , maybe I am the only one in this blog who thinks contrarian to all of you. And seems like I am being treated in a bad way, right P2D2?
chip_designer, why do you think tts won’t live 4 or 5 years?
pra comentar isso, vc deve ser burro mesmo.
Wow, I though that was the drift, but Google translate did a remarkable translation:
"to comment on that, you must be stupid yourself."
Not a particularly clever comeback.
robertoaribas says
chip_designer, why do you think tts won’t live 4 or 5 years?
pra comentar isso, vc deve ser burro mesmo.
Wow, I though that was the drift, but Google translate did a remarkable translation:
“to comment on that, you must be stupid yourself.â€
Not a particularly clever comeback.
you just have to find something to amuse yourself!
roberto is my latino friend.
I am not a realtor. I just stating my opinion , maybe I am the only one in this blog who thinks contrarian to all of you. And seems like I am being treated in a bad way, right P2D2?
Neither did I say that you are a realtor. But your sales pitch "if you have stable job, 20% downpayment, fico > 740, now is the best time to buy your home in those prime bay area locations" comes right from realtor's manual.
The chip_designer has serious logic problem.
I am not a realtor. I just stating my opinion , maybe I am the only one in this blog who thinks contrarian to all of you. And seems like I am being treated in a bad way, right P2D2?
Neither did I say that you are a realtor. But your sales pitch “if you have stable job, 20% downpayment, fico > 740, now is the best time to buy your home in those prime bay area locations†comes right from realtor’s manual.
The chip_designer has serious logic problem.
P2D2, you can win with your words. But at the end, it is us, 60% of silicon valley’s scientists and engineers are foreign-born, we are the ones buying in those prime bay area locations. Thank You.
we are the ones buying in those prime bay area locations.
...and you depend upon the Greater Fool Theory to help you sleep at night.
By the way, if you're going to subscribe to the whole contrarian investment meme, I'd suggest a broader set of indicators to flesh out your perspective than the popular sentiment on a housing crash blog.
I'll join in with chip_designer here and say the Fortress is Safe.
By this definition I mean anywhere a GOOG or AAPL employee would want to buy, the PA -> LG axis, plus "middle class" Sunnyvale below (above?) El Camino Real.
The market as I see it is totally screwed up. Anyone who bought prior to ~1997 can just rent the place out and make a killing vs. the tax burden, and Prop 58 will protect this as the OG geezers die off.
I don't know what rents are for SFH, but $40K/yr doesn't sound out of whack, that's implies a $1.3M asset value that is fully inflation-protected.
I certainly screwed myself not buying when I was FOB in 2000. I didn't know what I didn't know back then, I assumed I had to save $100,000 for a 20% down etc. Shoulda just walked into a Countrywide and said, "gimme money!". SISA was a bit rarer, but probably doable. Funny thing is I did darken the door of a Countrywide in late 2001, and they weren't exactly jumping through hoops trying to get my business then.
It strikes me as very interesting and distressing at the same time that Chip's singular headline statement has kicked up so much dust. Believe me, I got fired up. Opinions aside, I wonder if this is a mirror of the seriously growing gap between those that live in the "prime/fortress" neighborhoods and the rest of us, who, let's face it, want to live there too. They are very very nice (and I've traveled our country extensively...the prime/fortress neighborhoods are very very nice).
I grew up in a prime hood, and while getting an advanced degree from a local institution of higher education during the late 1990's, I lived in the home I grew up in. Over a period of a few years, I saw homes all around my childhood home sell. At first, the expected sale price...some where in the mid-700s. Then, word got around that Mr. and Mrs. Soandso just sold for 800k, then 8 months later, people were excitedly talking about the home down the street that sold for 900k--unbelievable at the time. I remember the day my father told me that our next door neighbors sold their home for 930k. They were the original owners of the home that was built in the late 1950's. At that time, I was 30 years old. I distinctly remember saying (and thinking all time), "Where is all the money coming from?" It just seemed too good to be true. With the events of the last few years, the question in my mind is whether, after all these years, it was too good to be true and now people are paying the price. So, to Chip I say this: I think you are being less than objective to think housing prices in the prime hoods won't being coming down.
I think the prices will be coming down. The question is how much? I think it will be one of two outcomes, either a nominal drop (say 5-10%), or a massive drop (50+%). If Chip is right, the drop will be nominal. I am going to put my money on the massive drop. Why? Well, as I think we can see very clearly now, the easy money housing price skyrocket of the last decade was too good to be true. If you sold during the run up, good for you!! My parents sure benefited. However, this has all been a house of cards and it is falling down. Sure, the prime/fortress hoods are taking longer to fall but time is the enemy.
From a "consumerism" point of view, there is nothing different about the prime hoods of Saratoga, Cupertino, Monte Sereno, Palo Alto, Menlo Park, etc. and East Palo Alto and East San Jose. The only marker is available funds, meaning, do you have enough cash available to "buy into" a prime hood? Outside of that, many of us made financial decisions, spent money, and purchased homes, in exactly the same fashion, prime hood or otherwise. Over extending and buying more house than you can afford was not a "poor man's move." In fact, chances are that if you bought into a prime hood over the last 10 years, your leverage is amplified. Fortress owners may have higher incomes, but chances are they live pay check to pay check, just like those in East Palo Alto. The mighty fall too and are starting to fall already.
There is a tremendous amount of downward pressure on prime hood home prices, and they are beginning to crumble. The Willow Glen area is a prime example. Not even four months ago, homes would be priced at 1mill, only to sell between 700-800 (generalization, yes, I understand there are still some homes selling at or above 1mill in Willow Glen--globally though that is not the case anymore). In the last two weeks however, similar Willow Glen homes are being LISTED between 700-800k. This, I believe is only the beginning of the drop. Moreover, I take this as the very first sign that prime hoods are going to take a major step down in price. Willow Glen is on the cusp; so it is not surprising to me that it would be the first to drop.
On another note, take a moment to consider the typical prime hood resident. Baby boomers or foreign born owners in their 60s, 70s, 80s, and even 90s!! Bottom line...old people are the typical prime hood residents. The kicker is that the children of old people have already settled somewhere else; so there is no one to "give" the house to. You wait Chip...the years ahead aren't as rose colored as you think. But hey, if they are, good for you. If not, watch out it will be ruthless.
Are you guys saying the monthly mortgage cost will lower? Because interest rates were hovering around 8% in the mid to late 90's. If you put those interest rates to play with today's prices, it seems like the prices are about the same. I agree with everyone that interest rates must go up though. Then you'd see a lowered price to match a monthly cost that wage earners can sustain. You're not really losing that much out of it. Just take your time with your mortgage payment, and do not pay early. If interest rates do go up after you purchase, and you do have the money to pay it off early, you should invest it elsewhere since interest rates have gone up already. Property tax basis will be lowered by the assessor if it is justified.
But if people can't afford it due to cost (because of high property taxes), then waiting will be the ONLY option.
Some may be wanting high interest rates to refinance at a lower interest rate. But I can't see that opportunity coming any time soon. You may as well buy now and hope for a 3% interest rate in the next year or two. Especially for the ones that think double dip may be coming. Once the prices dip, the interest rates will go to 2 or 3% to prop it back to the same price levels. If you want to play a waiting game against corporations and companies that can live longer than you, then you should do so. But I can't...
Define "prime areas" and "dramatic". Go to Google maps and there is an option to show foreclosure listings. There are enough of them in Crapertino to tell me that they are not immune.
It sounds like someone is in over his head with a mcmansion and is trying to convince himself that prices won't crash.
Define “prime areas†and “dramaticâ€. Go to Google maps and there is an option to show foreclosure listings. There are enough of them in Crapertino to tell me that they are not immune.
Serpentor. I noticed there are many Preforeclosures where the debt owner falls behind in payments just to try to get a loan mod.
On the side note, I know someone that bought a house long ago for $180k, heloc'd 700k out of the home, and attempted a loan mod. He could have paid the mortgage. They auctioned the house off before he was able to complete the loan mod. I guess he may have been suckered by someone he hired to do the loan mod.
I noticed there are many Preforeclosures where the debt owner falls behind in payments just to try to get a loan mod.
Just look at this pre-foreclosure in Palo Alto. I think we should notify those 60% foreign-born "scientists and engineers", so that they can buy this property and save owner and lender from "costly scenario".
LOL Chip_designer. I wonder which chips you design? Frito Lay or Pringles?
You are not contrarian, you are a sheep that still recites the same old tired Realtor's mantras that have been debunked for a while now. go ahead and click on P2D2's link or just go on google maps. I'm guessing that you're still going to be underwater about the time when Justin Beiber songs gets played on the oldies radio stations.
And no one commented on my theory :-( that potential buyers for these properties are decreasing with time:
1.) not many companies are going IPO to create rich people who would be the potential buyers for these properties.
2.) Don't expect someone from Austin, Phoenix to trade their better homes for shacks in crapertino.
3.) Don't expect many move up buyers becuase they themselves are underwater on their present homes.
Agree. Adding to that: with the new accounting rules, public companies are not giving options out like candies anymore. If anything, employees at public companies get RSUs which does not have a huge potential for gain like stock options...
I’m guessing that you’re still going to be underwater about the time when Justin Beiber songs gets played on the oldies radio stations.
ROTFLOL.
I’m dubious they have the votes to raise taxes on the master class, and our fiscal situation getting out of hand while we’re carrying $9T of public debt is not a pretty picture.
Troy, I may be off base here, but I believe all the Bush cuts sunset at the end of the year , so they will just have to muster votes to NOT raise taxes on the middle/lower class. If they can't do that, then everyone gets reset to the old (higher) rates. Quite frankly, I think the Dems have the stronger hand, as they can cite Republicans who block lower taxes for the middle/lower class. As they say, correct me if I'm wrong...
As they say, correct me if I’m wrong…
The mistake here is seeing the Democrats in Congress as uniformly being on the middle class' side here. I fully expect the DINOs to force through a 1yr extension of the whole 2010 package, except perhaps the death tax holiday.
The Senate knows who butters their bread. It's that bottom right circle, and they know if they can push policy to keep the millionaires getting that bigger piece, they themselves will receive a nice chunk of that cash via contributions and sinecures, not to mention the rates they and their friends themselves pay.
I agree with everyone that interest rates must go up though.
This is a dangerous belief to hold, really. The Japan example went the other way.
There are enough of them in Crapertino to tell me that they are not immune.
There is plenty of fraud in the system to be worked out. What matters is the bid side of the market. Who's buying and how much they can pay.
The kicker is that the children of old people have already settled somewhere else; so there is no one to “give†the house to
No need. Prop 58 in all its glory protects the ability to rent out the property, too.
the easy money housing price skyrocket of the last decade was too good to be true
Skyrocket's still burning for AAPL and GOOG.
From a “consumerism†point of view, there is nothing different about the prime hoods of Saratoga, Cupertino, Monte Sereno, Palo Alto, Menlo Park, etc. and East Palo Alto and East San Jose.
Wat?
The ability to take a walk at night safely is a consumer value, as is the classmates of your kids, and the number of minutes required to commute to work.
A point about California schools. A certain "blue ribbon district" cut hours for librarians, health techs, janitors and food workers last year in addition to Furlough Fridays. You may pay extra for a "good school," and your kids will surely associate with kids of similar socio-economic status, but you'll find yourself volunteering to pick up trash and serve Lil Caesar's; relying on the teacher to inject your student with anti-venom for bee stings and going to Border's since the library is closed. Remaining staff is exhausted and scared. The union is a weaselly joke.
This year we find out the District saved so much money that the administrators gave themselves 20% raises. As the budget crisis gets worse, thank heavens the vice principals and superintendents can afford their mortgages, right?
Cautious1,
DO tell which school district that was.
If your description is correct, it appears that school districts "top management" think they are robber-baron CEO-types.
P2D2, you can win with your words. But at the end, it is us, 60% of silicon valley’s scientists and engineers are foreign-born, we are the ones buying in those prime bay area locations. Thank You.
LOL! and what does that say about the rest of us in SV who work in Finance. I can certainly say after working 30 years in SV, engineers have the biggest egos around. Foreign-born ones have even a bigger one. .... Your Welcome!
Opinions aside, I wonder if this is a mirror of the seriously growing gap between those that live in the “prime/fortress†neighborhoods and the rest of us, who, let’s face it, want to live there too. They are very very nice (and I’ve traveled our country extensively…the prime/fortress neighborhoods are very very nice).
The gap is between the recent migrants, past 10 years, to the region with their rose colored glasses and the natives who cant justify these prices.
The kicker is that the children of old people have already settled somewhere else; so there is no one to “give†the house to
No need. Prop 58 in all its glory protects the ability to rent out the property, too.
Yes, I suppose that would be an interesting thought if the prime hoods became populated with a majority of renters. I think it is more likely that the heirs of prime hood homes will sell in an attempt to cash in. The more supply of homes would increase the downward pressure on prices. Think about that...the next twenty years could be interesting for the prime hoods as the old people die off and their children sell the property. Higher inventory with no end in sight????
the easy money housing price skyrocket of the last decade was too good to be true
Skyrocket’s still burning for AAPL and GOOG.
Ahhhh, no. Not like the "webvan" days brother. Guess again.
From a “consumerism†point of view, there is nothing different about the prime hoods of Saratoga, Cupertino, Monte Sereno, Palo Alto, Menlo Park, etc. and East Palo Alto and East San Jose.
Wat?
The ability to take a walk at night safely is a consumer value, as is the classmates of your kids, and the number of minutes required to commute to work.
You missed the point. Consumerism has nothing to do with taking a walk at night. It is a mindset. My point was that those who bought in East San Jose had the same "consumer" mind set as those who bought in any of the prime hoods. The only difference was available cash. Those with a lot of available cash could buy into the prime hoods. The mind set was...price means nothing. Value means nothing. Just pay whatever you have to in buying a home. Take on the debt, it will be all good because home prices will NEVER go down. Everyone drank the kool-aid. Everyone. That was my point. Now we are seeing the consequences, even in the prime hoods.
Opinions aside, I wonder if this is a mirror of the seriously growing gap between those that live in the “prime/fortress†neighborhoods and the rest of us, who, let’s face it, want to live there too. They are very very nice (and I’ve traveled our country extensively…the prime/fortress neighborhoods are very very nice).
The gap is between the recent migrants, past 10 years, to the region with their rose colored glasses and the natives who cant justify these prices.
Agreed. Of course, I can appreciate the desire to keep the rose colored glasses on. Its pretty ugly out there without them, especially if you paid 2 million for a home in one the prime hoods and are coming to realize that your 2million dollar home was only 700k in 1997. Brutal indeed.
hink about that…the next twenty years could be interesting for the prime hoods as the old people die off and their children sell the property. Higher inventory with no end in sight????
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I went to see a home in Mountain View last year, the owner died and his kids were trying to renovate the home and sell it for 900K. while the one of them was working (and was defintely high), there were 2-3 people sitting in the home smoking pot. Their plan was to go settle in Arizona somewhere after selling the home and may be smoke pot everyday with that 900K.
Well I rent a fancy house in the good school district of Saratoga (bully for me). My cost is far lower than if I had chosen to buy. I doubt my landlord is making a dime, but suspect his employer makes up the difference. I am paying however market rate for the rental.
I am fine with the shame of renting. Historically rent and mortgage have been about the same. So if history repeats either my rent will rise or the price of housing will fall, or some combination. I suspect housing prices will fall. In the meantime I save money every month. If rents begin to rise to mortgage like levels I can buy.
Present day recent "owners" have the reverse problem they spend every month far more money than is strictly necessary to live in a similar property. This can only make financial sense if the historic disconnect between rents and mortgages not only continues but becomes more extreme. I wouldn't want to be in this position.
On the other hand the very biggest debtor in the whole wide world is my Uncle Sam, who as luck would have it he also has the ability to print money. There is a chance that he will decide to debase the currency to escape his debts and your old mortgage will cost no more than a cup of coffee at Starbucks.
The house across the street is going into foreclosure, decent house, just too much equity extracted over the years.
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