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June 2, 2010 at 9:57 AM #558454June 2, 2010 at 9:57 AM #558555ScarlettParticipant
We’ve been renting for 3 years now, but we haven’t looked actively until now. Only recently we started to think again about buying. but the prices haven’t dropped as much as we wanted. I surely hope for another leg down.
Our requirements are more modest than yours, even 3 bdr. would do, if spacious (>1800 sf). We’d be even ok with a townhome, but in CV or Torrey highlands they are mostly over 500K (the spacious ones), plus MRs plus HOAs – extra 400$/mo to fork. Haven’t been very actively, just internet and driving around for open houses, to get a feel. We even explored other ‘hoods, but usually the commute is the killer.
We’ll probably start looking at 4S (the lower MRs) too.
Good luck with your home search, MANmom.
SD Realtor, do you have any insight about what is going to happen with PQ? Are we going to see finally more inventory this year ( my impression was that is has been trickling for the last 2 years, but maybe I am wrong)? Is it more prone for a downturn?
June 2, 2010 at 9:57 AM #559048ScarlettParticipantWe’ve been renting for 3 years now, but we haven’t looked actively until now. Only recently we started to think again about buying. but the prices haven’t dropped as much as we wanted. I surely hope for another leg down.
Our requirements are more modest than yours, even 3 bdr. would do, if spacious (>1800 sf). We’d be even ok with a townhome, but in CV or Torrey highlands they are mostly over 500K (the spacious ones), plus MRs plus HOAs – extra 400$/mo to fork. Haven’t been very actively, just internet and driving around for open houses, to get a feel. We even explored other ‘hoods, but usually the commute is the killer.
We’ll probably start looking at 4S (the lower MRs) too.
Good luck with your home search, MANmom.
SD Realtor, do you have any insight about what is going to happen with PQ? Are we going to see finally more inventory this year ( my impression was that is has been trickling for the last 2 years, but maybe I am wrong)? Is it more prone for a downturn?
June 2, 2010 at 9:57 AM #559150ScarlettParticipantWe’ve been renting for 3 years now, but we haven’t looked actively until now. Only recently we started to think again about buying. but the prices haven’t dropped as much as we wanted. I surely hope for another leg down.
Our requirements are more modest than yours, even 3 bdr. would do, if spacious (>1800 sf). We’d be even ok with a townhome, but in CV or Torrey highlands they are mostly over 500K (the spacious ones), plus MRs plus HOAs – extra 400$/mo to fork. Haven’t been very actively, just internet and driving around for open houses, to get a feel. We even explored other ‘hoods, but usually the commute is the killer.
We’ll probably start looking at 4S (the lower MRs) too.
Good luck with your home search, MANmom.
SD Realtor, do you have any insight about what is going to happen with PQ? Are we going to see finally more inventory this year ( my impression was that is has been trickling for the last 2 years, but maybe I am wrong)? Is it more prone for a downturn?
June 2, 2010 at 9:57 AM #559434ScarlettParticipantWe’ve been renting for 3 years now, but we haven’t looked actively until now. Only recently we started to think again about buying. but the prices haven’t dropped as much as we wanted. I surely hope for another leg down.
Our requirements are more modest than yours, even 3 bdr. would do, if spacious (>1800 sf). We’d be even ok with a townhome, but in CV or Torrey highlands they are mostly over 500K (the spacious ones), plus MRs plus HOAs – extra 400$/mo to fork. Haven’t been very actively, just internet and driving around for open houses, to get a feel. We even explored other ‘hoods, but usually the commute is the killer.
We’ll probably start looking at 4S (the lower MRs) too.
Good luck with your home search, MANmom.
SD Realtor, do you have any insight about what is going to happen with PQ? Are we going to see finally more inventory this year ( my impression was that is has been trickling for the last 2 years, but maybe I am wrong)? Is it more prone for a downturn?
June 2, 2010 at 1:51 PM #558686SD RealtorParticipantScarlett PQ is super tough right now. Not much inventory there at all and what is there is either overpriced or has alot of noise from I56. My outlook on PQ, (and the I15 corridor as well as CV) and I guess most of the desireable areas in San Diego, is that we will not see any dramatic reductions for quite awhile. We may bump up some or down some and we will see fluctations in terms of price REDUCTIONS for overpriced inventory, however that is needed for sellers who overpriced to begin with. I have pretty much thrown in the towel on both the foreclosure tsunami and the unemployment tsunami. Employment has improved and I don’t see a dramatic change when a bunch of census workers get dumped. Engineering employment is doing much better as are other white collar jobs. I think that in the future, a few years out when interest rates rise dramatically then real estate will depreciate substantially. Other then that the war was fought and the consumer/taxpayer lost. The government and the deadbeats/fiscally irresponsible/those gaming the system won. So looking back we can track a nice post by FSD back in late 08 that actually caught the bottom for many of the markets we track.
So again, I do not see another major leg down but for overpriced stuff it will come down. For instance the home at 8279 Bryn Glen Way has been a short sale for a month now. I know the listing agent and it is no surprise that the home went to foreclosure today. It was listed at 629-669k and went at the steps today for 526.5k. So what will it sell for? Hard to say, it is the 1799 sf plan at Monet in Del Sur.
Anyways that just illustrates that even the trustee sale deals are not deals right now. Hopefully we will see some more inventory trickle out this summer. If I were a buyer I would be pretty pissed at the loan mod programs.
June 2, 2010 at 1:51 PM #558786SD RealtorParticipantScarlett PQ is super tough right now. Not much inventory there at all and what is there is either overpriced or has alot of noise from I56. My outlook on PQ, (and the I15 corridor as well as CV) and I guess most of the desireable areas in San Diego, is that we will not see any dramatic reductions for quite awhile. We may bump up some or down some and we will see fluctations in terms of price REDUCTIONS for overpriced inventory, however that is needed for sellers who overpriced to begin with. I have pretty much thrown in the towel on both the foreclosure tsunami and the unemployment tsunami. Employment has improved and I don’t see a dramatic change when a bunch of census workers get dumped. Engineering employment is doing much better as are other white collar jobs. I think that in the future, a few years out when interest rates rise dramatically then real estate will depreciate substantially. Other then that the war was fought and the consumer/taxpayer lost. The government and the deadbeats/fiscally irresponsible/those gaming the system won. So looking back we can track a nice post by FSD back in late 08 that actually caught the bottom for many of the markets we track.
So again, I do not see another major leg down but for overpriced stuff it will come down. For instance the home at 8279 Bryn Glen Way has been a short sale for a month now. I know the listing agent and it is no surprise that the home went to foreclosure today. It was listed at 629-669k and went at the steps today for 526.5k. So what will it sell for? Hard to say, it is the 1799 sf plan at Monet in Del Sur.
Anyways that just illustrates that even the trustee sale deals are not deals right now. Hopefully we will see some more inventory trickle out this summer. If I were a buyer I would be pretty pissed at the loan mod programs.
June 2, 2010 at 1:51 PM #559282SD RealtorParticipantScarlett PQ is super tough right now. Not much inventory there at all and what is there is either overpriced or has alot of noise from I56. My outlook on PQ, (and the I15 corridor as well as CV) and I guess most of the desireable areas in San Diego, is that we will not see any dramatic reductions for quite awhile. We may bump up some or down some and we will see fluctations in terms of price REDUCTIONS for overpriced inventory, however that is needed for sellers who overpriced to begin with. I have pretty much thrown in the towel on both the foreclosure tsunami and the unemployment tsunami. Employment has improved and I don’t see a dramatic change when a bunch of census workers get dumped. Engineering employment is doing much better as are other white collar jobs. I think that in the future, a few years out when interest rates rise dramatically then real estate will depreciate substantially. Other then that the war was fought and the consumer/taxpayer lost. The government and the deadbeats/fiscally irresponsible/those gaming the system won. So looking back we can track a nice post by FSD back in late 08 that actually caught the bottom for many of the markets we track.
So again, I do not see another major leg down but for overpriced stuff it will come down. For instance the home at 8279 Bryn Glen Way has been a short sale for a month now. I know the listing agent and it is no surprise that the home went to foreclosure today. It was listed at 629-669k and went at the steps today for 526.5k. So what will it sell for? Hard to say, it is the 1799 sf plan at Monet in Del Sur.
Anyways that just illustrates that even the trustee sale deals are not deals right now. Hopefully we will see some more inventory trickle out this summer. If I were a buyer I would be pretty pissed at the loan mod programs.
June 2, 2010 at 1:51 PM #559385SD RealtorParticipantScarlett PQ is super tough right now. Not much inventory there at all and what is there is either overpriced or has alot of noise from I56. My outlook on PQ, (and the I15 corridor as well as CV) and I guess most of the desireable areas in San Diego, is that we will not see any dramatic reductions for quite awhile. We may bump up some or down some and we will see fluctations in terms of price REDUCTIONS for overpriced inventory, however that is needed for sellers who overpriced to begin with. I have pretty much thrown in the towel on both the foreclosure tsunami and the unemployment tsunami. Employment has improved and I don’t see a dramatic change when a bunch of census workers get dumped. Engineering employment is doing much better as are other white collar jobs. I think that in the future, a few years out when interest rates rise dramatically then real estate will depreciate substantially. Other then that the war was fought and the consumer/taxpayer lost. The government and the deadbeats/fiscally irresponsible/those gaming the system won. So looking back we can track a nice post by FSD back in late 08 that actually caught the bottom for many of the markets we track.
So again, I do not see another major leg down but for overpriced stuff it will come down. For instance the home at 8279 Bryn Glen Way has been a short sale for a month now. I know the listing agent and it is no surprise that the home went to foreclosure today. It was listed at 629-669k and went at the steps today for 526.5k. So what will it sell for? Hard to say, it is the 1799 sf plan at Monet in Del Sur.
Anyways that just illustrates that even the trustee sale deals are not deals right now. Hopefully we will see some more inventory trickle out this summer. If I were a buyer I would be pretty pissed at the loan mod programs.
June 2, 2010 at 1:51 PM #559669SD RealtorParticipantScarlett PQ is super tough right now. Not much inventory there at all and what is there is either overpriced or has alot of noise from I56. My outlook on PQ, (and the I15 corridor as well as CV) and I guess most of the desireable areas in San Diego, is that we will not see any dramatic reductions for quite awhile. We may bump up some or down some and we will see fluctations in terms of price REDUCTIONS for overpriced inventory, however that is needed for sellers who overpriced to begin with. I have pretty much thrown in the towel on both the foreclosure tsunami and the unemployment tsunami. Employment has improved and I don’t see a dramatic change when a bunch of census workers get dumped. Engineering employment is doing much better as are other white collar jobs. I think that in the future, a few years out when interest rates rise dramatically then real estate will depreciate substantially. Other then that the war was fought and the consumer/taxpayer lost. The government and the deadbeats/fiscally irresponsible/those gaming the system won. So looking back we can track a nice post by FSD back in late 08 that actually caught the bottom for many of the markets we track.
So again, I do not see another major leg down but for overpriced stuff it will come down. For instance the home at 8279 Bryn Glen Way has been a short sale for a month now. I know the listing agent and it is no surprise that the home went to foreclosure today. It was listed at 629-669k and went at the steps today for 526.5k. So what will it sell for? Hard to say, it is the 1799 sf plan at Monet in Del Sur.
Anyways that just illustrates that even the trustee sale deals are not deals right now. Hopefully we will see some more inventory trickle out this summer. If I were a buyer I would be pretty pissed at the loan mod programs.
June 2, 2010 at 3:52 PM #558833ScarlettParticipantThanks, SD R.
We also have thrown in the towel and are thinking of buying again actually.
I feel we are throwing money away on rent – since our rent is roughly equivalent of a P&I payment(but we live closer to work), now for a number of years.
Fact is, by now we’d have been 1/4 of the way in a 30 yr mortgage if we wouldn’t have rented; and the end of the 30 yr we’d own free and clear and retire in that house and live for free (or sell it to live somewhere else with that money). We have rented, and we may continue for the next 20 years, and what we would have to show for it? no house where we can retire. That’s what I think when I am looking at buying as an “investment” – for retirement, basically.
June 2, 2010 at 3:52 PM #558934ScarlettParticipantThanks, SD R.
We also have thrown in the towel and are thinking of buying again actually.
I feel we are throwing money away on rent – since our rent is roughly equivalent of a P&I payment(but we live closer to work), now for a number of years.
Fact is, by now we’d have been 1/4 of the way in a 30 yr mortgage if we wouldn’t have rented; and the end of the 30 yr we’d own free and clear and retire in that house and live for free (or sell it to live somewhere else with that money). We have rented, and we may continue for the next 20 years, and what we would have to show for it? no house where we can retire. That’s what I think when I am looking at buying as an “investment” – for retirement, basically.
June 2, 2010 at 3:52 PM #559432ScarlettParticipantThanks, SD R.
We also have thrown in the towel and are thinking of buying again actually.
I feel we are throwing money away on rent – since our rent is roughly equivalent of a P&I payment(but we live closer to work), now for a number of years.
Fact is, by now we’d have been 1/4 of the way in a 30 yr mortgage if we wouldn’t have rented; and the end of the 30 yr we’d own free and clear and retire in that house and live for free (or sell it to live somewhere else with that money). We have rented, and we may continue for the next 20 years, and what we would have to show for it? no house where we can retire. That’s what I think when I am looking at buying as an “investment” – for retirement, basically.
June 2, 2010 at 3:52 PM #559535ScarlettParticipantThanks, SD R.
We also have thrown in the towel and are thinking of buying again actually.
I feel we are throwing money away on rent – since our rent is roughly equivalent of a P&I payment(but we live closer to work), now for a number of years.
Fact is, by now we’d have been 1/4 of the way in a 30 yr mortgage if we wouldn’t have rented; and the end of the 30 yr we’d own free and clear and retire in that house and live for free (or sell it to live somewhere else with that money). We have rented, and we may continue for the next 20 years, and what we would have to show for it? no house where we can retire. That’s what I think when I am looking at buying as an “investment” – for retirement, basically.
June 2, 2010 at 3:52 PM #559817ScarlettParticipantThanks, SD R.
We also have thrown in the towel and are thinking of buying again actually.
I feel we are throwing money away on rent – since our rent is roughly equivalent of a P&I payment(but we live closer to work), now for a number of years.
Fact is, by now we’d have been 1/4 of the way in a 30 yr mortgage if we wouldn’t have rented; and the end of the 30 yr we’d own free and clear and retire in that house and live for free (or sell it to live somewhere else with that money). We have rented, and we may continue for the next 20 years, and what we would have to show for it? no house where we can retire. That’s what I think when I am looking at buying as an “investment” – for retirement, basically.
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