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highpacificParticipant
AP article with SCHIP facts
highpacificParticipantAP article with SCHIP facts
highpacificParticipantAP article with SCHIP facts
highpacificParticipantAP article with SCHIP facts
highpacificParticipantNothing special in this prediction:
“Sales will be strong and pricing may even creep up a little in some markets.” -sdrealtor
Remember, sales nearly always creep up in the Spring and prices nearly always show a bump in the Spring “in some markets”. LOL
But seriously very impressed that you, sdrealtor, were brave enough to risk your neck. Hope you are right but fear we will all be disappointed.
Unemployment is skyrocketing and will be 8%+ in 2009. High-end wage earners are losing jobs. Some anecdotal evidence here: I am trying to fill a software engineering position (six figure). Recieved 5 resumes this week. All of them from Carlsbad and Oceanside. Biotech mostly.
I believe there won’t be enough people with 20%+ down payment money out there, a.k.a. pent up demand, to outweigh the economically troubled this Spring.
Is there any way to actually measure “pent up demand”? Are we left with just anecdote?
hp
highpacificParticipantNothing special in this prediction:
“Sales will be strong and pricing may even creep up a little in some markets.” -sdrealtor
Remember, sales nearly always creep up in the Spring and prices nearly always show a bump in the Spring “in some markets”. LOL
But seriously very impressed that you, sdrealtor, were brave enough to risk your neck. Hope you are right but fear we will all be disappointed.
Unemployment is skyrocketing and will be 8%+ in 2009. High-end wage earners are losing jobs. Some anecdotal evidence here: I am trying to fill a software engineering position (six figure). Recieved 5 resumes this week. All of them from Carlsbad and Oceanside. Biotech mostly.
I believe there won’t be enough people with 20%+ down payment money out there, a.k.a. pent up demand, to outweigh the economically troubled this Spring.
Is there any way to actually measure “pent up demand”? Are we left with just anecdote?
hp
highpacificParticipantNothing special in this prediction:
“Sales will be strong and pricing may even creep up a little in some markets.” -sdrealtor
Remember, sales nearly always creep up in the Spring and prices nearly always show a bump in the Spring “in some markets”. LOL
But seriously very impressed that you, sdrealtor, were brave enough to risk your neck. Hope you are right but fear we will all be disappointed.
Unemployment is skyrocketing and will be 8%+ in 2009. High-end wage earners are losing jobs. Some anecdotal evidence here: I am trying to fill a software engineering position (six figure). Recieved 5 resumes this week. All of them from Carlsbad and Oceanside. Biotech mostly.
I believe there won’t be enough people with 20%+ down payment money out there, a.k.a. pent up demand, to outweigh the economically troubled this Spring.
Is there any way to actually measure “pent up demand”? Are we left with just anecdote?
hp
highpacificParticipantNothing special in this prediction:
“Sales will be strong and pricing may even creep up a little in some markets.” -sdrealtor
Remember, sales nearly always creep up in the Spring and prices nearly always show a bump in the Spring “in some markets”. LOL
But seriously very impressed that you, sdrealtor, were brave enough to risk your neck. Hope you are right but fear we will all be disappointed.
Unemployment is skyrocketing and will be 8%+ in 2009. High-end wage earners are losing jobs. Some anecdotal evidence here: I am trying to fill a software engineering position (six figure). Recieved 5 resumes this week. All of them from Carlsbad and Oceanside. Biotech mostly.
I believe there won’t be enough people with 20%+ down payment money out there, a.k.a. pent up demand, to outweigh the economically troubled this Spring.
Is there any way to actually measure “pent up demand”? Are we left with just anecdote?
hp
highpacificParticipantNothing special in this prediction:
“Sales will be strong and pricing may even creep up a little in some markets.” -sdrealtor
Remember, sales nearly always creep up in the Spring and prices nearly always show a bump in the Spring “in some markets”. LOL
But seriously very impressed that you, sdrealtor, were brave enough to risk your neck. Hope you are right but fear we will all be disappointed.
Unemployment is skyrocketing and will be 8%+ in 2009. High-end wage earners are losing jobs. Some anecdotal evidence here: I am trying to fill a software engineering position (six figure). Recieved 5 resumes this week. All of them from Carlsbad and Oceanside. Biotech mostly.
I believe there won’t be enough people with 20%+ down payment money out there, a.k.a. pent up demand, to outweigh the economically troubled this Spring.
Is there any way to actually measure “pent up demand”? Are we left with just anecdote?
hp
highpacificParticipantMore Evidence
“There is no change in the previously reported negative outlook for the local economy through the first half of 2009. What is needed to turn the economy around both locally and nationally is stability in the housing market. Falling prices and a jump in foreclosures have hurt both the labor market and the financial markets and institutions. The recent increase in home resales is a positive sign, but a bottom in the housing market in not likely to be reached until the latter part of 2009, and home prices are not expected to increase until 2010 at the earliest.”
-Professor Alan GinhighpacificParticipantMore Evidence
“There is no change in the previously reported negative outlook for the local economy through the first half of 2009. What is needed to turn the economy around both locally and nationally is stability in the housing market. Falling prices and a jump in foreclosures have hurt both the labor market and the financial markets and institutions. The recent increase in home resales is a positive sign, but a bottom in the housing market in not likely to be reached until the latter part of 2009, and home prices are not expected to increase until 2010 at the earliest.”
-Professor Alan GinhighpacificParticipantMore Evidence
“There is no change in the previously reported negative outlook for the local economy through the first half of 2009. What is needed to turn the economy around both locally and nationally is stability in the housing market. Falling prices and a jump in foreclosures have hurt both the labor market and the financial markets and institutions. The recent increase in home resales is a positive sign, but a bottom in the housing market in not likely to be reached until the latter part of 2009, and home prices are not expected to increase until 2010 at the earliest.”
-Professor Alan GinhighpacificParticipantMore Evidence
“There is no change in the previously reported negative outlook for the local economy through the first half of 2009. What is needed to turn the economy around both locally and nationally is stability in the housing market. Falling prices and a jump in foreclosures have hurt both the labor market and the financial markets and institutions. The recent increase in home resales is a positive sign, but a bottom in the housing market in not likely to be reached until the latter part of 2009, and home prices are not expected to increase until 2010 at the earliest.”
-Professor Alan GinhighpacificParticipantMore Evidence
“There is no change in the previously reported negative outlook for the local economy through the first half of 2009. What is needed to turn the economy around both locally and nationally is stability in the housing market. Falling prices and a jump in foreclosures have hurt both the labor market and the financial markets and institutions. The recent increase in home resales is a positive sign, but a bottom in the housing market in not likely to be reached until the latter part of 2009, and home prices are not expected to increase until 2010 at the earliest.”
-Professor Alan Gin -
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