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November 28, 2007 at 12:42 PM #104644November 28, 2007 at 12:55 PM #104508EugeneParticipant
This is one of those neighborhoods you see on zillow that in 2002 shows 189k then ends up at 722k currently with the zestimate.
I can’t think of any neighborhood in 700k+ range now that sold for less than 300k in 2002.
November 28, 2007 at 12:55 PM #104600EugeneParticipantThis is one of those neighborhoods you see on zillow that in 2002 shows 189k then ends up at 722k currently with the zestimate.
I can’t think of any neighborhood in 700k+ range now that sold for less than 300k in 2002.
November 28, 2007 at 12:55 PM #104607EugeneParticipantThis is one of those neighborhoods you see on zillow that in 2002 shows 189k then ends up at 722k currently with the zestimate.
I can’t think of any neighborhood in 700k+ range now that sold for less than 300k in 2002.
November 28, 2007 at 12:55 PM #104633EugeneParticipantThis is one of those neighborhoods you see on zillow that in 2002 shows 189k then ends up at 722k currently with the zestimate.
I can’t think of any neighborhood in 700k+ range now that sold for less than 300k in 2002.
November 28, 2007 at 12:55 PM #104653EugeneParticipantThis is one of those neighborhoods you see on zillow that in 2002 shows 189k then ends up at 722k currently with the zestimate.
I can’t think of any neighborhood in 700k+ range now that sold for less than 300k in 2002.
November 28, 2007 at 1:06 PM #104521kewpParticipantConsider housing bust + big recession + massive unemployment + overhang of inventory + tighter credit. I’ll suggest ’99 era prices are not out of the question.
What I think the moderates here and in the media are missing is the interconnectedness of the housing bubble and the general economy. Yeah, we will have a soft landing if there is a housing crash with zero spill-over. Somehow I don’t think that will be the case.
Consider, for example, all the layoffs in the financial and construction sectors (which are just getting started). Who is going to hire them?
November 28, 2007 at 1:06 PM #104610kewpParticipantConsider housing bust + big recession + massive unemployment + overhang of inventory + tighter credit. I’ll suggest ’99 era prices are not out of the question.
What I think the moderates here and in the media are missing is the interconnectedness of the housing bubble and the general economy. Yeah, we will have a soft landing if there is a housing crash with zero spill-over. Somehow I don’t think that will be the case.
Consider, for example, all the layoffs in the financial and construction sectors (which are just getting started). Who is going to hire them?
November 28, 2007 at 1:06 PM #104617kewpParticipantConsider housing bust + big recession + massive unemployment + overhang of inventory + tighter credit. I’ll suggest ’99 era prices are not out of the question.
What I think the moderates here and in the media are missing is the interconnectedness of the housing bubble and the general economy. Yeah, we will have a soft landing if there is a housing crash with zero spill-over. Somehow I don’t think that will be the case.
Consider, for example, all the layoffs in the financial and construction sectors (which are just getting started). Who is going to hire them?
November 28, 2007 at 1:06 PM #104642kewpParticipantConsider housing bust + big recession + massive unemployment + overhang of inventory + tighter credit. I’ll suggest ’99 era prices are not out of the question.
What I think the moderates here and in the media are missing is the interconnectedness of the housing bubble and the general economy. Yeah, we will have a soft landing if there is a housing crash with zero spill-over. Somehow I don’t think that will be the case.
Consider, for example, all the layoffs in the financial and construction sectors (which are just getting started). Who is going to hire them?
November 28, 2007 at 1:06 PM #104664kewpParticipantConsider housing bust + big recession + massive unemployment + overhang of inventory + tighter credit. I’ll suggest ’99 era prices are not out of the question.
What I think the moderates here and in the media are missing is the interconnectedness of the housing bubble and the general economy. Yeah, we will have a soft landing if there is a housing crash with zero spill-over. Somehow I don’t think that will be the case.
Consider, for example, all the layoffs in the financial and construction sectors (which are just getting started). Who is going to hire them?
November 28, 2007 at 1:11 PM #104516Ex-SDParticipantSan Diego Median Income (family of four): $64,900
Now that sanity has returned to the lending business for home mortgages, housing prices will eventually drop to where median income translates to median house prices. It’s that way in most parts of the country and I think it will happen in SoCal. I’m not trying to gore anyone’s ox but to me, it’s just common sense. Buyers have to be able to get a loan to buy a home and to do that, they must qualify by meeting income, debt and credit history requirements to buy a home that equates to their income. The only thing that threw this fundamental out the window and allowed prices to escalate into crazydoom was the lowering of borrowing criterion to anyone who could fog a mirror, claim that they made $150k+ per year and sign their “X” where it said “buyer”. It was absolute lunacy and now that it’s gone bye-bye, there are too many homes on the market and the inventory will continue to grow until median income equates to median price.
(Alex Angel. are you paying attention?)p.s…….There are a bunch of homes in the Sacramento area (geographically much closer to SoCal than Florida) that are REO’s and that were built within the last four years. They are being offered at 50% less than they sold for when new which has driven the property values down the tube. If it can happen in Sacramento, Ft. Lauderdale, Miami, Fort Myers and Tampa. not to mention Baltimore and the Inland Empire of Los Angeles…………..it can happen in San Diego.
November 28, 2007 at 1:11 PM #104605Ex-SDParticipantSan Diego Median Income (family of four): $64,900
Now that sanity has returned to the lending business for home mortgages, housing prices will eventually drop to where median income translates to median house prices. It’s that way in most parts of the country and I think it will happen in SoCal. I’m not trying to gore anyone’s ox but to me, it’s just common sense. Buyers have to be able to get a loan to buy a home and to do that, they must qualify by meeting income, debt and credit history requirements to buy a home that equates to their income. The only thing that threw this fundamental out the window and allowed prices to escalate into crazydoom was the lowering of borrowing criterion to anyone who could fog a mirror, claim that they made $150k+ per year and sign their “X” where it said “buyer”. It was absolute lunacy and now that it’s gone bye-bye, there are too many homes on the market and the inventory will continue to grow until median income equates to median price.
(Alex Angel. are you paying attention?)p.s…….There are a bunch of homes in the Sacramento area (geographically much closer to SoCal than Florida) that are REO’s and that were built within the last four years. They are being offered at 50% less than they sold for when new which has driven the property values down the tube. If it can happen in Sacramento, Ft. Lauderdale, Miami, Fort Myers and Tampa. not to mention Baltimore and the Inland Empire of Los Angeles…………..it can happen in San Diego.
November 28, 2007 at 1:11 PM #104612Ex-SDParticipantSan Diego Median Income (family of four): $64,900
Now that sanity has returned to the lending business for home mortgages, housing prices will eventually drop to where median income translates to median house prices. It’s that way in most parts of the country and I think it will happen in SoCal. I’m not trying to gore anyone’s ox but to me, it’s just common sense. Buyers have to be able to get a loan to buy a home and to do that, they must qualify by meeting income, debt and credit history requirements to buy a home that equates to their income. The only thing that threw this fundamental out the window and allowed prices to escalate into crazydoom was the lowering of borrowing criterion to anyone who could fog a mirror, claim that they made $150k+ per year and sign their “X” where it said “buyer”. It was absolute lunacy and now that it’s gone bye-bye, there are too many homes on the market and the inventory will continue to grow until median income equates to median price.
(Alex Angel. are you paying attention?)p.s…….There are a bunch of homes in the Sacramento area (geographically much closer to SoCal than Florida) that are REO’s and that were built within the last four years. They are being offered at 50% less than they sold for when new which has driven the property values down the tube. If it can happen in Sacramento, Ft. Lauderdale, Miami, Fort Myers and Tampa. not to mention Baltimore and the Inland Empire of Los Angeles…………..it can happen in San Diego.
November 28, 2007 at 1:11 PM #104637Ex-SDParticipantSan Diego Median Income (family of four): $64,900
Now that sanity has returned to the lending business for home mortgages, housing prices will eventually drop to where median income translates to median house prices. It’s that way in most parts of the country and I think it will happen in SoCal. I’m not trying to gore anyone’s ox but to me, it’s just common sense. Buyers have to be able to get a loan to buy a home and to do that, they must qualify by meeting income, debt and credit history requirements to buy a home that equates to their income. The only thing that threw this fundamental out the window and allowed prices to escalate into crazydoom was the lowering of borrowing criterion to anyone who could fog a mirror, claim that they made $150k+ per year and sign their “X” where it said “buyer”. It was absolute lunacy and now that it’s gone bye-bye, there are too many homes on the market and the inventory will continue to grow until median income equates to median price.
(Alex Angel. are you paying attention?)p.s…….There are a bunch of homes in the Sacramento area (geographically much closer to SoCal than Florida) that are REO’s and that were built within the last four years. They are being offered at 50% less than they sold for when new which has driven the property values down the tube. If it can happen in Sacramento, Ft. Lauderdale, Miami, Fort Myers and Tampa. not to mention Baltimore and the Inland Empire of Los Angeles…………..it can happen in San Diego.
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