Home › Forums › Housing › San Diego Home Sales about to be revised downward BIGTIME (89% to 6.5% increase in May)
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July 2, 2009 at 1:36 PM #424897July 2, 2009 at 1:38 PM #424161capemanParticipant
My 2 cents since I started this thread is that with the Case-Shillers for April being almost neutral Mo-to-mo I have to cede that SDR may be right on the short term pricing/demand.
I do have a term for those people who are doing the buying and they are what we call “Knife catchers” for the intermediate to long term. It is what it is though and you have to accept the tape/trend for short term if next months numbers show real neutrality or price growth.
July 2, 2009 at 1:38 PM #424392capemanParticipantMy 2 cents since I started this thread is that with the Case-Shillers for April being almost neutral Mo-to-mo I have to cede that SDR may be right on the short term pricing/demand.
I do have a term for those people who are doing the buying and they are what we call “Knife catchers” for the intermediate to long term. It is what it is though and you have to accept the tape/trend for short term if next months numbers show real neutrality or price growth.
July 2, 2009 at 1:38 PM #424675capemanParticipantMy 2 cents since I started this thread is that with the Case-Shillers for April being almost neutral Mo-to-mo I have to cede that SDR may be right on the short term pricing/demand.
I do have a term for those people who are doing the buying and they are what we call “Knife catchers” for the intermediate to long term. It is what it is though and you have to accept the tape/trend for short term if next months numbers show real neutrality or price growth.
July 2, 2009 at 1:38 PM #424744capemanParticipantMy 2 cents since I started this thread is that with the Case-Shillers for April being almost neutral Mo-to-mo I have to cede that SDR may be right on the short term pricing/demand.
I do have a term for those people who are doing the buying and they are what we call “Knife catchers” for the intermediate to long term. It is what it is though and you have to accept the tape/trend for short term if next months numbers show real neutrality or price growth.
July 2, 2009 at 1:38 PM #424908capemanParticipantMy 2 cents since I started this thread is that with the Case-Shillers for April being almost neutral Mo-to-mo I have to cede that SDR may be right on the short term pricing/demand.
I do have a term for those people who are doing the buying and they are what we call “Knife catchers” for the intermediate to long term. It is what it is though and you have to accept the tape/trend for short term if next months numbers show real neutrality or price growth.
July 2, 2009 at 1:46 PM #424171sdrealtorParticipantI have a term for them also and it is what I call “home owners”. Imagine that?
July 2, 2009 at 1:46 PM #424402sdrealtorParticipantI have a term for them also and it is what I call “home owners”. Imagine that?
July 2, 2009 at 1:46 PM #424685sdrealtorParticipantI have a term for them also and it is what I call “home owners”. Imagine that?
July 2, 2009 at 1:46 PM #424754sdrealtorParticipantI have a term for them also and it is what I call “home owners”. Imagine that?
July 2, 2009 at 1:46 PM #424917sdrealtorParticipantI have a term for them also and it is what I call “home owners”. Imagine that?
July 2, 2009 at 1:53 PM #424181AnonymousGuestWhat I don’t understand is if there are so many people with wads of cash and high income, why is the non-conforming market dead?
If you got cash, why settle for some POS? Let’s face it, any detached house in a good neighborhood for under 500K is still a POS.
July 2, 2009 at 1:53 PM #424412AnonymousGuestWhat I don’t understand is if there are so many people with wads of cash and high income, why is the non-conforming market dead?
If you got cash, why settle for some POS? Let’s face it, any detached house in a good neighborhood for under 500K is still a POS.
July 2, 2009 at 1:53 PM #424695AnonymousGuestWhat I don’t understand is if there are so many people with wads of cash and high income, why is the non-conforming market dead?
If you got cash, why settle for some POS? Let’s face it, any detached house in a good neighborhood for under 500K is still a POS.
July 2, 2009 at 1:53 PM #424764AnonymousGuestWhat I don’t understand is if there are so many people with wads of cash and high income, why is the non-conforming market dead?
If you got cash, why settle for some POS? Let’s face it, any detached house in a good neighborhood for under 500K is still a POS.
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