- This topic has 125 replies, 14 voices, and was last updated 16 years, 2 months ago by MadeInTaiwan.
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October 3, 2008 at 11:50 PM #281015October 4, 2008 at 8:10 AM #280762pedroconParticipant
If you think that ‘vibe’ is going to keep prices up, youre not discussing this correctly. Thats bubble talk. Bubble talk is no longer applicable and may not be for a generation. With credit getting more difficult to acquire, stagnant income, and enormous inventory. Real prices will have to come down by 50% at least. If we get %10 unemployment in the next few months expect the bottom to drop out. Conversely, nominal values may stay stable if the fed and treasury raising (printing) more money than we have ever witnessed.
I love you Encinitas, but youre overpriced.
October 4, 2008 at 8:10 AM #281038pedroconParticipantIf you think that ‘vibe’ is going to keep prices up, youre not discussing this correctly. Thats bubble talk. Bubble talk is no longer applicable and may not be for a generation. With credit getting more difficult to acquire, stagnant income, and enormous inventory. Real prices will have to come down by 50% at least. If we get %10 unemployment in the next few months expect the bottom to drop out. Conversely, nominal values may stay stable if the fed and treasury raising (printing) more money than we have ever witnessed.
I love you Encinitas, but youre overpriced.
October 4, 2008 at 8:10 AM #281043pedroconParticipantIf you think that ‘vibe’ is going to keep prices up, youre not discussing this correctly. Thats bubble talk. Bubble talk is no longer applicable and may not be for a generation. With credit getting more difficult to acquire, stagnant income, and enormous inventory. Real prices will have to come down by 50% at least. If we get %10 unemployment in the next few months expect the bottom to drop out. Conversely, nominal values may stay stable if the fed and treasury raising (printing) more money than we have ever witnessed.
I love you Encinitas, but youre overpriced.
October 4, 2008 at 8:10 AM #281086pedroconParticipantIf you think that ‘vibe’ is going to keep prices up, youre not discussing this correctly. Thats bubble talk. Bubble talk is no longer applicable and may not be for a generation. With credit getting more difficult to acquire, stagnant income, and enormous inventory. Real prices will have to come down by 50% at least. If we get %10 unemployment in the next few months expect the bottom to drop out. Conversely, nominal values may stay stable if the fed and treasury raising (printing) more money than we have ever witnessed.
I love you Encinitas, but youre overpriced.
October 4, 2008 at 8:10 AM #281096pedroconParticipantIf you think that ‘vibe’ is going to keep prices up, youre not discussing this correctly. Thats bubble talk. Bubble talk is no longer applicable and may not be for a generation. With credit getting more difficult to acquire, stagnant income, and enormous inventory. Real prices will have to come down by 50% at least. If we get %10 unemployment in the next few months expect the bottom to drop out. Conversely, nominal values may stay stable if the fed and treasury raising (printing) more money than we have ever witnessed.
I love you Encinitas, but youre overpriced.
October 4, 2008 at 8:34 AM #280767sdrealtorParticipantYou miss the point. I never said it wasnt overpriced just expensive. Whatever price level we reach, Encinitas will remain relatively expensive as compared to other areas for the reasons outlined above.
BTW, does anyone have an active nightlife after 40 with a couple kids at home?
October 4, 2008 at 8:34 AM #281042sdrealtorParticipantYou miss the point. I never said it wasnt overpriced just expensive. Whatever price level we reach, Encinitas will remain relatively expensive as compared to other areas for the reasons outlined above.
BTW, does anyone have an active nightlife after 40 with a couple kids at home?
October 4, 2008 at 8:34 AM #281048sdrealtorParticipantYou miss the point. I never said it wasnt overpriced just expensive. Whatever price level we reach, Encinitas will remain relatively expensive as compared to other areas for the reasons outlined above.
BTW, does anyone have an active nightlife after 40 with a couple kids at home?
October 4, 2008 at 8:34 AM #281091sdrealtorParticipantYou miss the point. I never said it wasnt overpriced just expensive. Whatever price level we reach, Encinitas will remain relatively expensive as compared to other areas for the reasons outlined above.
BTW, does anyone have an active nightlife after 40 with a couple kids at home?
October 4, 2008 at 8:34 AM #281101sdrealtorParticipantYou miss the point. I never said it wasnt overpriced just expensive. Whatever price level we reach, Encinitas will remain relatively expensive as compared to other areas for the reasons outlined above.
BTW, does anyone have an active nightlife after 40 with a couple kids at home?
October 4, 2008 at 9:55 AM #280809TheBreezeParticipantVibe? LOL. Spoken like a true realtor. The only vibe I felt when I drove through Encinitas was ‘Pleasantville’.
October 4, 2008 at 9:55 AM #281082TheBreezeParticipantVibe? LOL. Spoken like a true realtor. The only vibe I felt when I drove through Encinitas was ‘Pleasantville’.
October 4, 2008 at 9:55 AM #281088TheBreezeParticipantVibe? LOL. Spoken like a true realtor. The only vibe I felt when I drove through Encinitas was ‘Pleasantville’.
October 4, 2008 at 9:55 AM #281131TheBreezeParticipantVibe? LOL. Spoken like a true realtor. The only vibe I felt when I drove through Encinitas was ‘Pleasantville’.
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