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October 10, 2007 at 8:00 AM #10557October 10, 2007 at 9:15 AM #87750JWM in SDParticipant
Chirp,,,,chirp…..are you sure you are posting on the right board???
October 10, 2007 at 9:15 AM #87755JWM in SDParticipantChirp,,,,chirp…..are you sure you are posting on the right board???
October 10, 2007 at 9:18 AM #87757Alex_angelParticipantUmmm, you are comparing CV to RSF? You like RSF because of the variety? You can’t even see the majority of those homes from the street since they are all gated and surrounded by bush. I think you may have had one too many bloody marys this morning.
October 10, 2007 at 9:18 AM #87752Alex_angelParticipantUmmm, you are comparing CV to RSF? You like RSF because of the variety? You can’t even see the majority of those homes from the street since they are all gated and surrounded by bush. I think you may have had one too many bloody marys this morning.
October 10, 2007 at 10:17 AM #87780raptorduckParticipantJWM. I posted the info thinking folks here may find it interesting to compare to other markets.
AlexAngel. I have toured 45 homes or so in RSF in the last few months and used to live in CV so I think I can compare them pretty good.
October 10, 2007 at 10:17 AM #87785raptorduckParticipantJWM. I posted the info thinking folks here may find it interesting to compare to other markets.
AlexAngel. I have toured 45 homes or so in RSF in the last few months and used to live in CV so I think I can compare them pretty good.
October 10, 2007 at 10:34 AM #87790Ex-SDParticipantraptorduck: From what I’ve seen in L.A., S.F. and S.D……..the $15+ million segment of the market seems to be immune from the bursting bubble because these people have big F.U. money. I’ve been following the S.F. marketplace and the $1.5 million and below segment is dropping in price and seeing fewer and fewer buyers.
Re. Alex_angel………….He goes through a number of posts with one set of logic (or lack thereof) and another number of posts with an entirely different mindset. He’s either a split/multi personality or a troll. Pay him no attention and he’ll find someone else to aggravate.
October 10, 2007 at 10:34 AM #87795Ex-SDParticipantraptorduck: From what I’ve seen in L.A., S.F. and S.D……..the $15+ million segment of the market seems to be immune from the bursting bubble because these people have big F.U. money. I’ve been following the S.F. marketplace and the $1.5 million and below segment is dropping in price and seeing fewer and fewer buyers.
Re. Alex_angel………….He goes through a number of posts with one set of logic (or lack thereof) and another number of posts with an entirely different mindset. He’s either a split/multi personality or a troll. Pay him no attention and he’ll find someone else to aggravate.
October 10, 2007 at 10:48 AM #87794RockemsockParticipantDo you have price per sq ft? I know that looking at the median can be decieving as well as looking at other factors, days on market, etc.
It’s obviously possible that an area with only 3 months inventory could have good months here and there, but I don’t think you can look at that as being indicative of the broader market conditions. All the fundamentals suggest that things will be going down for a long time…because things are sticky on the way down, so having a surprise month here and there is probably not much of a surprise after all.
Take a look at REO’s this month…they are down from last month in SD county, but I bet that next month we’ll see things back on track to break records. That’s what makes tracking all this data so much fun…every now and then you get a curve ball.
October 10, 2007 at 10:48 AM #87799RockemsockParticipantDo you have price per sq ft? I know that looking at the median can be decieving as well as looking at other factors, days on market, etc.
It’s obviously possible that an area with only 3 months inventory could have good months here and there, but I don’t think you can look at that as being indicative of the broader market conditions. All the fundamentals suggest that things will be going down for a long time…because things are sticky on the way down, so having a surprise month here and there is probably not much of a surprise after all.
Take a look at REO’s this month…they are down from last month in SD county, but I bet that next month we’ll see things back on track to break records. That’s what makes tracking all this data so much fun…every now and then you get a curve ball.
October 10, 2007 at 11:08 AM #87809stockstradrParticipantI visited a home recently in another less “prestigious” town …
San Jose is considered a less prestigious area of the Bay Area, and home prices are DROPPING here, but not yet as dramatically as seen in San Diego.
One data point I have is for condos in North San Jose, once priced at $310k, have fallen to $290k. This info came from co-worker who says he’s been watching the market very closely.
We will continue to rent, and let prices fall. We rent in the Willow Glenn area of San Jose.
October 10, 2007 at 11:08 AM #87804stockstradrParticipantI visited a home recently in another less “prestigious” town …
San Jose is considered a less prestigious area of the Bay Area, and home prices are DROPPING here, but not yet as dramatically as seen in San Diego.
One data point I have is for condos in North San Jose, once priced at $310k, have fallen to $290k. This info came from co-worker who says he’s been watching the market very closely.
We will continue to rent, and let prices fall. We rent in the Willow Glenn area of San Jose.
October 10, 2007 at 11:50 AM #87823raptorduckParticipantrockemsock: I agree with you. I don’t know where the market is going to go up here, I just reported the info for the towns I was looking in. In the two markets I mentioned actually, the under $1.5 million market has remained pretty hot because there are not many houses in that price range and folks wanting to buy an entry level house in those markets to get into the school system pounce on them. In the over $2M market in those areas, there has been consistant slow down until last month. But I still think that higher end market is softer than the under $1.5M market.
When we were looking up here, we saw a house in the nicest part of Los Altos that had an asking of $1.3M. It was not what we were looking for, but we wanted to put in an offer as an investment or flip because the price was unheard of in that area (it was a very small house, on a small lot, but along a golf course). It had just listed a few days earlier and we were told to get an offer in by 2pm that day. We could not, but it had 10 offers and sold for well above asking.
Indeed, the really expensive homes ($10M +) stay on the market forever no matter what and tend to be immune to a downturn.
stockstradr. We are neighbors, at least until I move to RSF. Did you see that house for sale on Dry Creek Road for $3.5 million? Also kind of RSF like. Expensive for this “less prestigious” part of the bay area. The other house I was referring to that was very large, is in Cupertino.
October 10, 2007 at 11:50 AM #87826raptorduckParticipantrockemsock: I agree with you. I don’t know where the market is going to go up here, I just reported the info for the towns I was looking in. In the two markets I mentioned actually, the under $1.5 million market has remained pretty hot because there are not many houses in that price range and folks wanting to buy an entry level house in those markets to get into the school system pounce on them. In the over $2M market in those areas, there has been consistant slow down until last month. But I still think that higher end market is softer than the under $1.5M market.
When we were looking up here, we saw a house in the nicest part of Los Altos that had an asking of $1.3M. It was not what we were looking for, but we wanted to put in an offer as an investment or flip because the price was unheard of in that area (it was a very small house, on a small lot, but along a golf course). It had just listed a few days earlier and we were told to get an offer in by 2pm that day. We could not, but it had 10 offers and sold for well above asking.
Indeed, the really expensive homes ($10M +) stay on the market forever no matter what and tend to be immune to a downturn.
stockstradr. We are neighbors, at least until I move to RSF. Did you see that house for sale on Dry Creek Road for $3.5 million? Also kind of RSF like. Expensive for this “less prestigious” part of the bay area. The other house I was referring to that was very large, is in Cupertino.
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