Home › Forums › Closed Forums › Properties or Areas › How about steeplechase area?
- This topic has 180 replies, 5 voices, and was last updated 13 years, 9 months ago by lepetitangel.
-
AuthorPosts
-
February 20, 2011 at 3:22 PM #669883February 20, 2011 at 4:21 PM #668762CoronitaParticipant
[quote=lepetitangel]It seems like price has not dropped that much for steeplechase. Do u think they will continue to hold their value or do u see them drop another 5-10%? Also does it make sense the ones with the canyon views hold values much better than the ones w/o the views? We are interested in the area but want to know if this is still one of the “overvalued” area of SD.
Thanks![/quote]There was a $799k short sale there I think…
February 20, 2011 at 4:21 PM #668824CoronitaParticipant[quote=lepetitangel]It seems like price has not dropped that much for steeplechase. Do u think they will continue to hold their value or do u see them drop another 5-10%? Also does it make sense the ones with the canyon views hold values much better than the ones w/o the views? We are interested in the area but want to know if this is still one of the “overvalued” area of SD.
Thanks![/quote]There was a $799k short sale there I think…
February 20, 2011 at 4:21 PM #669431CoronitaParticipant[quote=lepetitangel]It seems like price has not dropped that much for steeplechase. Do u think they will continue to hold their value or do u see them drop another 5-10%? Also does it make sense the ones with the canyon views hold values much better than the ones w/o the views? We are interested in the area but want to know if this is still one of the “overvalued” area of SD.
Thanks![/quote]There was a $799k short sale there I think…
February 20, 2011 at 4:21 PM #669570CoronitaParticipant[quote=lepetitangel]It seems like price has not dropped that much for steeplechase. Do u think they will continue to hold their value or do u see them drop another 5-10%? Also does it make sense the ones with the canyon views hold values much better than the ones w/o the views? We are interested in the area but want to know if this is still one of the “overvalued” area of SD.
Thanks![/quote]There was a $799k short sale there I think…
February 20, 2011 at 4:21 PM #669913CoronitaParticipant[quote=lepetitangel]It seems like price has not dropped that much for steeplechase. Do u think they will continue to hold their value or do u see them drop another 5-10%? Also does it make sense the ones with the canyon views hold values much better than the ones w/o the views? We are interested in the area but want to know if this is still one of the “overvalued” area of SD.
Thanks![/quote]There was a $799k short sale there I think…
February 20, 2011 at 4:37 PM #668772zkParticipantI wrote (only about a quarter jokingly) in a previous post (in May – http://piggington.com/i_finally_bought_a_house_in_carmel_valley_prices_there_will_now?page=1 )that, now that I’d bought a house, I thought that prices would head down. Here were my reasons then:
—————————————————-
1. Shadow inventory
2. Unemployment
3. Limited supply of Asians willing to pay anything for good schools (like my wife).
4. Interest rates almost have to go up from here.
5. End of tax rebates (Fed recently, CA soon).
6. Fall/Winter
7-9. A few more I can’t think of right this second.
10. MAINLY, because, after 5 years of waiting for CV prices to fall, I gave up and bought.
I’d have actually preferred to wait, but this lot was so fantastic and unique, I didn’t want to pass it up.
—————————————————
I gave up guessing how much the government will do and how much effect it will have. I’m a little less bearish on CV now than I was then. Prices seem to be holding pretty steady so far. But that doesn’t necessarily mean they’ll continue to hold. So, I don’t know. But if they do continue to decline, I think it will probably be slowly and not by much. I waited five freaking years and they dropped very little in that time.It’s a tough call. I mean, if you knew for sure they’d drop a total of 8% over the next three years, that’d probably be worth it. You’d save $70,000 or $80,000. But that’s probably the max it would drop. It might not drop at all. Then you’ve waited for nothing. If they go up (unlikely but possible), now you’re probably angry.
At the time (in May), if it weren’t for that one house that we wanted, I’d have waited. Now, with prices holding almost steady for yet another year, I’m not so confident that they’ll continue down. In my opinion, CV is still one of the “overvalued” areas of San Diego. But that doesn’t necessarily mean that prices will come down.
February 20, 2011 at 4:37 PM #668834zkParticipantI wrote (only about a quarter jokingly) in a previous post (in May – http://piggington.com/i_finally_bought_a_house_in_carmel_valley_prices_there_will_now?page=1 )that, now that I’d bought a house, I thought that prices would head down. Here were my reasons then:
—————————————————-
1. Shadow inventory
2. Unemployment
3. Limited supply of Asians willing to pay anything for good schools (like my wife).
4. Interest rates almost have to go up from here.
5. End of tax rebates (Fed recently, CA soon).
6. Fall/Winter
7-9. A few more I can’t think of right this second.
10. MAINLY, because, after 5 years of waiting for CV prices to fall, I gave up and bought.
I’d have actually preferred to wait, but this lot was so fantastic and unique, I didn’t want to pass it up.
—————————————————
I gave up guessing how much the government will do and how much effect it will have. I’m a little less bearish on CV now than I was then. Prices seem to be holding pretty steady so far. But that doesn’t necessarily mean they’ll continue to hold. So, I don’t know. But if they do continue to decline, I think it will probably be slowly and not by much. I waited five freaking years and they dropped very little in that time.It’s a tough call. I mean, if you knew for sure they’d drop a total of 8% over the next three years, that’d probably be worth it. You’d save $70,000 or $80,000. But that’s probably the max it would drop. It might not drop at all. Then you’ve waited for nothing. If they go up (unlikely but possible), now you’re probably angry.
At the time (in May), if it weren’t for that one house that we wanted, I’d have waited. Now, with prices holding almost steady for yet another year, I’m not so confident that they’ll continue down. In my opinion, CV is still one of the “overvalued” areas of San Diego. But that doesn’t necessarily mean that prices will come down.
February 20, 2011 at 4:37 PM #669441zkParticipantI wrote (only about a quarter jokingly) in a previous post (in May – http://piggington.com/i_finally_bought_a_house_in_carmel_valley_prices_there_will_now?page=1 )that, now that I’d bought a house, I thought that prices would head down. Here were my reasons then:
—————————————————-
1. Shadow inventory
2. Unemployment
3. Limited supply of Asians willing to pay anything for good schools (like my wife).
4. Interest rates almost have to go up from here.
5. End of tax rebates (Fed recently, CA soon).
6. Fall/Winter
7-9. A few more I can’t think of right this second.
10. MAINLY, because, after 5 years of waiting for CV prices to fall, I gave up and bought.
I’d have actually preferred to wait, but this lot was so fantastic and unique, I didn’t want to pass it up.
—————————————————
I gave up guessing how much the government will do and how much effect it will have. I’m a little less bearish on CV now than I was then. Prices seem to be holding pretty steady so far. But that doesn’t necessarily mean they’ll continue to hold. So, I don’t know. But if they do continue to decline, I think it will probably be slowly and not by much. I waited five freaking years and they dropped very little in that time.It’s a tough call. I mean, if you knew for sure they’d drop a total of 8% over the next three years, that’d probably be worth it. You’d save $70,000 or $80,000. But that’s probably the max it would drop. It might not drop at all. Then you’ve waited for nothing. If they go up (unlikely but possible), now you’re probably angry.
At the time (in May), if it weren’t for that one house that we wanted, I’d have waited. Now, with prices holding almost steady for yet another year, I’m not so confident that they’ll continue down. In my opinion, CV is still one of the “overvalued” areas of San Diego. But that doesn’t necessarily mean that prices will come down.
February 20, 2011 at 4:37 PM #669580zkParticipantI wrote (only about a quarter jokingly) in a previous post (in May – http://piggington.com/i_finally_bought_a_house_in_carmel_valley_prices_there_will_now?page=1 )that, now that I’d bought a house, I thought that prices would head down. Here were my reasons then:
—————————————————-
1. Shadow inventory
2. Unemployment
3. Limited supply of Asians willing to pay anything for good schools (like my wife).
4. Interest rates almost have to go up from here.
5. End of tax rebates (Fed recently, CA soon).
6. Fall/Winter
7-9. A few more I can’t think of right this second.
10. MAINLY, because, after 5 years of waiting for CV prices to fall, I gave up and bought.
I’d have actually preferred to wait, but this lot was so fantastic and unique, I didn’t want to pass it up.
—————————————————
I gave up guessing how much the government will do and how much effect it will have. I’m a little less bearish on CV now than I was then. Prices seem to be holding pretty steady so far. But that doesn’t necessarily mean they’ll continue to hold. So, I don’t know. But if they do continue to decline, I think it will probably be slowly and not by much. I waited five freaking years and they dropped very little in that time.It’s a tough call. I mean, if you knew for sure they’d drop a total of 8% over the next three years, that’d probably be worth it. You’d save $70,000 or $80,000. But that’s probably the max it would drop. It might not drop at all. Then you’ve waited for nothing. If they go up (unlikely but possible), now you’re probably angry.
At the time (in May), if it weren’t for that one house that we wanted, I’d have waited. Now, with prices holding almost steady for yet another year, I’m not so confident that they’ll continue down. In my opinion, CV is still one of the “overvalued” areas of San Diego. But that doesn’t necessarily mean that prices will come down.
February 20, 2011 at 4:37 PM #669923zkParticipantI wrote (only about a quarter jokingly) in a previous post (in May – http://piggington.com/i_finally_bought_a_house_in_carmel_valley_prices_there_will_now?page=1 )that, now that I’d bought a house, I thought that prices would head down. Here were my reasons then:
—————————————————-
1. Shadow inventory
2. Unemployment
3. Limited supply of Asians willing to pay anything for good schools (like my wife).
4. Interest rates almost have to go up from here.
5. End of tax rebates (Fed recently, CA soon).
6. Fall/Winter
7-9. A few more I can’t think of right this second.
10. MAINLY, because, after 5 years of waiting for CV prices to fall, I gave up and bought.
I’d have actually preferred to wait, but this lot was so fantastic and unique, I didn’t want to pass it up.
—————————————————
I gave up guessing how much the government will do and how much effect it will have. I’m a little less bearish on CV now than I was then. Prices seem to be holding pretty steady so far. But that doesn’t necessarily mean they’ll continue to hold. So, I don’t know. But if they do continue to decline, I think it will probably be slowly and not by much. I waited five freaking years and they dropped very little in that time.It’s a tough call. I mean, if you knew for sure they’d drop a total of 8% over the next three years, that’d probably be worth it. You’d save $70,000 or $80,000. But that’s probably the max it would drop. It might not drop at all. Then you’ve waited for nothing. If they go up (unlikely but possible), now you’re probably angry.
At the time (in May), if it weren’t for that one house that we wanted, I’d have waited. Now, with prices holding almost steady for yet another year, I’m not so confident that they’ll continue down. In my opinion, CV is still one of the “overvalued” areas of San Diego. But that doesn’t necessarily mean that prices will come down.
February 20, 2011 at 4:44 PM #668792zkParticipanthttp://piggington.com/mortgages_look_to_be_headed_for_drastic_changes
For the last 5 years, it seems like every week an article like this would come out. Not on mortgages, specifically, but on something that would have a drastic effect on the housing market. Every time I’d read something like this, I’d think, “here it comes!” But, for Carmel Valley, anyway, it just never happened.
Of course, that doesn’t mean it won’t now.
February 20, 2011 at 4:44 PM #668854zkParticipanthttp://piggington.com/mortgages_look_to_be_headed_for_drastic_changes
For the last 5 years, it seems like every week an article like this would come out. Not on mortgages, specifically, but on something that would have a drastic effect on the housing market. Every time I’d read something like this, I’d think, “here it comes!” But, for Carmel Valley, anyway, it just never happened.
Of course, that doesn’t mean it won’t now.
February 20, 2011 at 4:44 PM #669461zkParticipanthttp://piggington.com/mortgages_look_to_be_headed_for_drastic_changes
For the last 5 years, it seems like every week an article like this would come out. Not on mortgages, specifically, but on something that would have a drastic effect on the housing market. Every time I’d read something like this, I’d think, “here it comes!” But, for Carmel Valley, anyway, it just never happened.
Of course, that doesn’t mean it won’t now.
February 20, 2011 at 4:44 PM #669600zkParticipanthttp://piggington.com/mortgages_look_to_be_headed_for_drastic_changes
For the last 5 years, it seems like every week an article like this would come out. Not on mortgages, specifically, but on something that would have a drastic effect on the housing market. Every time I’d read something like this, I’d think, “here it comes!” But, for Carmel Valley, anyway, it just never happened.
Of course, that doesn’t mean it won’t now.
-
AuthorPosts
- The forum ‘Properties or Areas’ is closed to new topics and replies.