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November 17, 2008 at 10:38 PM #306778November 17, 2008 at 10:39 PM #306329zkParticipant
[quote=sdrealtor]it is going to be a very good Spring for real estate. Sales will be strong and pricing may even creep up a little in some markets. [/quote]
When spring comes and most areas drop in price but in some markets the prices “may” creep up “a little,” I wouldn’t count that as a “very good spring for real estate.” In fact, when the (traditionally) best time of year for real estate involves generally falling prices, I’d say it’s a pretty bad spring for real estate. I think what you meant to say was that you think it will be a very good spring for real estate agents.
November 17, 2008 at 10:39 PM #306696zkParticipant[quote=sdrealtor]it is going to be a very good Spring for real estate. Sales will be strong and pricing may even creep up a little in some markets. [/quote]
When spring comes and most areas drop in price but in some markets the prices “may” creep up “a little,” I wouldn’t count that as a “very good spring for real estate.” In fact, when the (traditionally) best time of year for real estate involves generally falling prices, I’d say it’s a pretty bad spring for real estate. I think what you meant to say was that you think it will be a very good spring for real estate agents.
November 17, 2008 at 10:39 PM #306710zkParticipant[quote=sdrealtor]it is going to be a very good Spring for real estate. Sales will be strong and pricing may even creep up a little in some markets. [/quote]
When spring comes and most areas drop in price but in some markets the prices “may” creep up “a little,” I wouldn’t count that as a “very good spring for real estate.” In fact, when the (traditionally) best time of year for real estate involves generally falling prices, I’d say it’s a pretty bad spring for real estate. I think what you meant to say was that you think it will be a very good spring for real estate agents.
November 17, 2008 at 10:39 PM #306728zkParticipant[quote=sdrealtor]it is going to be a very good Spring for real estate. Sales will be strong and pricing may even creep up a little in some markets. [/quote]
When spring comes and most areas drop in price but in some markets the prices “may” creep up “a little,” I wouldn’t count that as a “very good spring for real estate.” In fact, when the (traditionally) best time of year for real estate involves generally falling prices, I’d say it’s a pretty bad spring for real estate. I think what you meant to say was that you think it will be a very good spring for real estate agents.
November 17, 2008 at 10:39 PM #306788zkParticipant[quote=sdrealtor]it is going to be a very good Spring for real estate. Sales will be strong and pricing may even creep up a little in some markets. [/quote]
When spring comes and most areas drop in price but in some markets the prices “may” creep up “a little,” I wouldn’t count that as a “very good spring for real estate.” In fact, when the (traditionally) best time of year for real estate involves generally falling prices, I’d say it’s a pretty bad spring for real estate. I think what you meant to say was that you think it will be a very good spring for real estate agents.
November 17, 2008 at 10:48 PM #306343peterbParticipantzk, you’re getting it. For the middle man, it’s all about the transactions. Not the investment or the risk. Just bring the volume. Why do you think NAR spends so much time and money blowing sunshine up the media’s skirt? The bottom is just about it…etc…and the lower it gets, the more people buy into it.
November 17, 2008 at 10:48 PM #306711peterbParticipantzk, you’re getting it. For the middle man, it’s all about the transactions. Not the investment or the risk. Just bring the volume. Why do you think NAR spends so much time and money blowing sunshine up the media’s skirt? The bottom is just about it…etc…and the lower it gets, the more people buy into it.
November 17, 2008 at 10:48 PM #306725peterbParticipantzk, you’re getting it. For the middle man, it’s all about the transactions. Not the investment or the risk. Just bring the volume. Why do you think NAR spends so much time and money blowing sunshine up the media’s skirt? The bottom is just about it…etc…and the lower it gets, the more people buy into it.
November 17, 2008 at 10:48 PM #306743peterbParticipantzk, you’re getting it. For the middle man, it’s all about the transactions. Not the investment or the risk. Just bring the volume. Why do you think NAR spends so much time and money blowing sunshine up the media’s skirt? The bottom is just about it…etc…and the lower it gets, the more people buy into it.
November 17, 2008 at 10:48 PM #306804peterbParticipantzk, you’re getting it. For the middle man, it’s all about the transactions. Not the investment or the risk. Just bring the volume. Why do you think NAR spends so much time and money blowing sunshine up the media’s skirt? The bottom is just about it…etc…and the lower it gets, the more people buy into it.
November 17, 2008 at 10:53 PM #306358capemanParticipantSD-Your experience and argument make a lot of sense for demand and pricing to put upward pressure on the market. The chances of that outweighing what is going to be the biggest downward economic pressure in 80 years is likely to make any rally short-lived if even noticed. There are monstrous layoffs due in all sectors in the next 6-9 months and Qualcomm could be leading the charge locally very quickly.
Is there anyway to track your observational data over time? It’s qualitative from just one person but over time I think it will help us get a better picture on the local markets. Buying interest is not something that anyone other than those like yourself in the business can really track.
November 17, 2008 at 10:53 PM #306726capemanParticipantSD-Your experience and argument make a lot of sense for demand and pricing to put upward pressure on the market. The chances of that outweighing what is going to be the biggest downward economic pressure in 80 years is likely to make any rally short-lived if even noticed. There are monstrous layoffs due in all sectors in the next 6-9 months and Qualcomm could be leading the charge locally very quickly.
Is there anyway to track your observational data over time? It’s qualitative from just one person but over time I think it will help us get a better picture on the local markets. Buying interest is not something that anyone other than those like yourself in the business can really track.
November 17, 2008 at 10:53 PM #306740capemanParticipantSD-Your experience and argument make a lot of sense for demand and pricing to put upward pressure on the market. The chances of that outweighing what is going to be the biggest downward economic pressure in 80 years is likely to make any rally short-lived if even noticed. There are monstrous layoffs due in all sectors in the next 6-9 months and Qualcomm could be leading the charge locally very quickly.
Is there anyway to track your observational data over time? It’s qualitative from just one person but over time I think it will help us get a better picture on the local markets. Buying interest is not something that anyone other than those like yourself in the business can really track.
November 17, 2008 at 10:53 PM #306758capemanParticipantSD-Your experience and argument make a lot of sense for demand and pricing to put upward pressure on the market. The chances of that outweighing what is going to be the biggest downward economic pressure in 80 years is likely to make any rally short-lived if even noticed. There are monstrous layoffs due in all sectors in the next 6-9 months and Qualcomm could be leading the charge locally very quickly.
Is there anyway to track your observational data over time? It’s qualitative from just one person but over time I think it will help us get a better picture on the local markets. Buying interest is not something that anyone other than those like yourself in the business can really track.
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