- This topic has 145 replies, 18 voices, and was last updated 16 years, 5 months ago by (former)FormerSanDiegan.
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December 18, 2007 at 3:04 PM #120222December 18, 2007 at 3:38 PM #120038sdrealtorParticipant
It should be.
December 18, 2007 at 3:38 PM #120174sdrealtorParticipantIt should be.
December 18, 2007 at 3:38 PM #120205sdrealtorParticipantIt should be.
December 18, 2007 at 3:38 PM #120252sdrealtorParticipantIt should be.
December 18, 2007 at 3:38 PM #120271sdrealtorParticipantIt should be.
December 18, 2007 at 4:06 PM #120049sd galParticipantWhoever wrote below watches too much Beavis and Butt-head.
>>>The housing price boom was simply a matter of the nation discovering how great san diego is. And it all got started way back when we hosted the first superbowl. After that people began to pour into this city, creating a housing shortage. MTV filmed spring break here. More and more national attention was here. Housing prices will never drop 50%, people still want to live in this city…so there will always be a market for houses.
December 18, 2007 at 4:06 PM #120184sd galParticipantWhoever wrote below watches too much Beavis and Butt-head.
>>>The housing price boom was simply a matter of the nation discovering how great san diego is. And it all got started way back when we hosted the first superbowl. After that people began to pour into this city, creating a housing shortage. MTV filmed spring break here. More and more national attention was here. Housing prices will never drop 50%, people still want to live in this city…so there will always be a market for houses.
December 18, 2007 at 4:06 PM #120215sd galParticipantWhoever wrote below watches too much Beavis and Butt-head.
>>>The housing price boom was simply a matter of the nation discovering how great san diego is. And it all got started way back when we hosted the first superbowl. After that people began to pour into this city, creating a housing shortage. MTV filmed spring break here. More and more national attention was here. Housing prices will never drop 50%, people still want to live in this city…so there will always be a market for houses.
December 18, 2007 at 4:06 PM #120263sd galParticipantWhoever wrote below watches too much Beavis and Butt-head.
>>>The housing price boom was simply a matter of the nation discovering how great san diego is. And it all got started way back when we hosted the first superbowl. After that people began to pour into this city, creating a housing shortage. MTV filmed spring break here. More and more national attention was here. Housing prices will never drop 50%, people still want to live in this city…so there will always be a market for houses.
December 18, 2007 at 4:06 PM #120284sd galParticipantWhoever wrote below watches too much Beavis and Butt-head.
>>>The housing price boom was simply a matter of the nation discovering how great san diego is. And it all got started way back when we hosted the first superbowl. After that people began to pour into this city, creating a housing shortage. MTV filmed spring break here. More and more national attention was here. Housing prices will never drop 50%, people still want to live in this city…so there will always be a market for houses.
December 18, 2007 at 5:10 PM #120084BugsParticipantI saw that comment earlier today. I came this close to posting a retort to that one. Then there was the moron who was telling people that if they only bought AAA rated properties they’d be okay and that his 2003 purchased AAA property hadn’t lost anything yet. Talk about clueless. What’s he going to tell people next year when the pricing skips the 2003 levels and goes straight to 2002 levels?
There really are people who think the weather (and the Superbowl) will support this price structure all by itself.
BTW, I got to use the term “e-balling” (a phrase I learnt here) in conversation last week. I was teaching a CE course for appraisers on Saturday and was ranting about some of the trash-talking bulls who pontificate on the comments boards at signonsandiego.com. As it turns out, that phrase was too hip for the room – I had to explain it.
December 18, 2007 at 5:10 PM #120218BugsParticipantI saw that comment earlier today. I came this close to posting a retort to that one. Then there was the moron who was telling people that if they only bought AAA rated properties they’d be okay and that his 2003 purchased AAA property hadn’t lost anything yet. Talk about clueless. What’s he going to tell people next year when the pricing skips the 2003 levels and goes straight to 2002 levels?
There really are people who think the weather (and the Superbowl) will support this price structure all by itself.
BTW, I got to use the term “e-balling” (a phrase I learnt here) in conversation last week. I was teaching a CE course for appraisers on Saturday and was ranting about some of the trash-talking bulls who pontificate on the comments boards at signonsandiego.com. As it turns out, that phrase was too hip for the room – I had to explain it.
December 18, 2007 at 5:10 PM #120250BugsParticipantI saw that comment earlier today. I came this close to posting a retort to that one. Then there was the moron who was telling people that if they only bought AAA rated properties they’d be okay and that his 2003 purchased AAA property hadn’t lost anything yet. Talk about clueless. What’s he going to tell people next year when the pricing skips the 2003 levels and goes straight to 2002 levels?
There really are people who think the weather (and the Superbowl) will support this price structure all by itself.
BTW, I got to use the term “e-balling” (a phrase I learnt here) in conversation last week. I was teaching a CE course for appraisers on Saturday and was ranting about some of the trash-talking bulls who pontificate on the comments boards at signonsandiego.com. As it turns out, that phrase was too hip for the room – I had to explain it.
December 18, 2007 at 5:10 PM #120295BugsParticipantI saw that comment earlier today. I came this close to posting a retort to that one. Then there was the moron who was telling people that if they only bought AAA rated properties they’d be okay and that his 2003 purchased AAA property hadn’t lost anything yet. Talk about clueless. What’s he going to tell people next year when the pricing skips the 2003 levels and goes straight to 2002 levels?
There really are people who think the weather (and the Superbowl) will support this price structure all by itself.
BTW, I got to use the term “e-balling” (a phrase I learnt here) in conversation last week. I was teaching a CE course for appraisers on Saturday and was ranting about some of the trash-talking bulls who pontificate on the comments boards at signonsandiego.com. As it turns out, that phrase was too hip for the room – I had to explain it.
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