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October 16, 2007 at 1:39 PM #89444October 16, 2007 at 1:39 PM #89433vizcayaParticipant
I agree with asianautica. My limit on a home was based on getting the biggest nicest home in a very good area. My income allowed for a $300K mortage(30yr fixed). I had the 20% for a downpayment. So I searched for homes in the 400K-420k range. Early 2007, I found that the only homes available were 1200sq ft homes for $400k in these nicer areas. I almost bought at this time. Now homes in this area are averaging $430K for homes 2200-2500sqft. I shop acording to what my price range is.
October 16, 2007 at 1:57 PM #89439betting on fallParticipantIf you look closer at the San Diego numbers at the U-T link, you’ll see that for “South County” the median dropped 20% and total sales dropped 50%.
That is already a housing crash and I don’t see anything stopping it from falling more.
October 16, 2007 at 1:57 PM #89449betting on fallParticipantIf you look closer at the San Diego numbers at the U-T link, you’ll see that for “South County” the median dropped 20% and total sales dropped 50%.
That is already a housing crash and I don’t see anything stopping it from falling more.
October 16, 2007 at 4:01 PM #89482Ex-SDParticipantThe general public, at large, are like dinosaurs. When you kick them in the butt, they will turn their head and say, “what happened”(?) a year later. It’s just now starting to sink in the brains of many people that if they wait, they will get a much lower price for a home in CA. All of the news media has finally homed in on this story and people are turning their heads and saying, “so that’s what’s happening” in the real estate market. There will always be “knife catchers” who are impulsive buyers and will continue to buy over the next few years but the number of people who can qualify for a loan in CA has shrunk dramatically and out of that pool, more are getting educated and starting to realize that they no longer have to pay too much or compete with other people to buy a home. For me, this whole thing is fascinating to watch.
October 16, 2007 at 4:01 PM #89491Ex-SDParticipantThe general public, at large, are like dinosaurs. When you kick them in the butt, they will turn their head and say, “what happened”(?) a year later. It’s just now starting to sink in the brains of many people that if they wait, they will get a much lower price for a home in CA. All of the news media has finally homed in on this story and people are turning their heads and saying, “so that’s what’s happening” in the real estate market. There will always be “knife catchers” who are impulsive buyers and will continue to buy over the next few years but the number of people who can qualify for a loan in CA has shrunk dramatically and out of that pool, more are getting educated and starting to realize that they no longer have to pay too much or compete with other people to buy a home. For me, this whole thing is fascinating to watch.
October 16, 2007 at 5:12 PM #895004runnerParticipantmedian won’t be dropping very much because people like me don’t decrease their price range,
A year ago, you could finance 5-6 times your income by avoiding having to document it. As standards tighten up, borrowers will presumably be limited to 3 times their income.
In other words, people will have to decrease their price range whether they want to or not…
October 16, 2007 at 5:12 PM #895094runnerParticipantmedian won’t be dropping very much because people like me don’t decrease their price range,
A year ago, you could finance 5-6 times your income by avoiding having to document it. As standards tighten up, borrowers will presumably be limited to 3 times their income.
In other words, people will have to decrease their price range whether they want to or not…
October 16, 2007 at 5:52 PM #89502larrylujackParticipantA year ago, you could finance 5-6 times your income by avoiding having to document it. As standards tighten up, borrowers will presumably be limited to 3 times their income.
That may be true for those with less than stellar credit, but for full doc with good to excellent credit, loans from lenders are plentiful at 4-6X annual salary if you dare.
October 16, 2007 at 5:52 PM #89511larrylujackParticipantA year ago, you could finance 5-6 times your income by avoiding having to document it. As standards tighten up, borrowers will presumably be limited to 3 times their income.
That may be true for those with less than stellar credit, but for full doc with good to excellent credit, loans from lenders are plentiful at 4-6X annual salary if you dare.
October 16, 2007 at 7:45 PM #89508mixxalotParticipant200k homes ever in San Diego?
I am waiting for homes to drop or at least large condos to drop to the 200k price level. Will this ever happen?
October 16, 2007 at 7:45 PM #89517mixxalotParticipant200k homes ever in San Diego?
I am waiting for homes to drop or at least large condos to drop to the 200k price level. Will this ever happen?
October 16, 2007 at 11:45 PM #89529little ladyParticipantI don’t know about that but I have noticed a significant shift in the pricing in my neck of the woods. Where as just a couple of months ago I’d say more than 50% of the housing stock in my area was list above 450k. Now over 100 of 173 are listed under 440k….. and the less houses on the market the more keep coming in that price range…….hmmmmm..something is brewing…..
October 16, 2007 at 11:45 PM #89536little ladyParticipantI don’t know about that but I have noticed a significant shift in the pricing in my neck of the woods. Where as just a couple of months ago I’d say more than 50% of the housing stock in my area was list above 450k. Now over 100 of 173 are listed under 440k….. and the less houses on the market the more keep coming in that price range…….hmmmmm..something is brewing…..
October 16, 2007 at 11:49 PM #89531SD RealtorParticipantMixx I believe that it could very well happen… Obviously it will happen in the less desireable neighborhoods and spread. IMO the only thing that will provide a floor to the price drops will be when they pencil out as rentals.
SD Realtor
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