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jmrrobbie1Participant
For those really diving into the do-it-yourself investment pool … try Bernsteins website and click on the submenu “Efficent Solutions” and work thru a few of the Mean Variance Optimization and Monte Carlo Simulations programs… for the rest – pay an investment advisor (again, maybe Rich) to do this for you.
J
jmrrobbie1ParticipantFor those really diving into the do-it-yourself investment pool … try Bernsteins website and click on the submenu “Efficent Solutions” and work thru a few of the Mean Variance Optimization and Monte Carlo Simulations programs… for the rest – pay an investment advisor (again, maybe Rich) to do this for you.
J
jmrrobbie1ParticipantI would strongly echo “privatebankers” remark about staying the course and not trying to find the “best-latest-possible-better” investment vehicle … if you have a well constructed portfolio put together from research & a strong foundation of educated investment principles then no need to panic at every new downturn of the market… even big ones as the one looming on the near horizon. Hoping for hints/insight on a blog forum is one thing but to base your financial future on this is not the wisest investment course… even though Piggs has numerous & experienced brainpowered investors.
Try doing a little (actually – a lot) of research on your own or hire an independent advisor to guide you (maybe Rich). One of the best investment reading/research list is found on William Bernstein’s site … at http://www.efficientfrontier.com/. You can get as in-depth here as one cares to dive and if you are like other Piggs where data rules … then no one brings investment data like Bernstein – although the time to read through these may be more than most care to suffer as well as trying some of the math simulations… but well worth what you will get out of it.
J
jmrrobbie1ParticipantI would strongly echo “privatebankers” remark about staying the course and not trying to find the “best-latest-possible-better” investment vehicle … if you have a well constructed portfolio put together from research & a strong foundation of educated investment principles then no need to panic at every new downturn of the market… even big ones as the one looming on the near horizon. Hoping for hints/insight on a blog forum is one thing but to base your financial future on this is not the wisest investment course… even though Piggs has numerous & experienced brainpowered investors.
Try doing a little (actually – a lot) of research on your own or hire an independent advisor to guide you (maybe Rich). One of the best investment reading/research list is found on William Bernstein’s site … at http://www.efficientfrontier.com/. You can get as in-depth here as one cares to dive and if you are like other Piggs where data rules … then no one brings investment data like Bernstein – although the time to read through these may be more than most care to suffer as well as trying some of the math simulations… but well worth what you will get out of it.
J
jmrrobbie1ParticipantI would strongly echo “privatebankers” remark about staying the course and not trying to find the “best-latest-possible-better” investment vehicle … if you have a well constructed portfolio put together from research & a strong foundation of educated investment principles then no need to panic at every new downturn of the market… even big ones as the one looming on the near horizon. Hoping for hints/insight on a blog forum is one thing but to base your financial future on this is not the wisest investment course… even though Piggs has numerous & experienced brainpowered investors.
Try doing a little (actually – a lot) of research on your own or hire an independent advisor to guide you (maybe Rich). One of the best investment reading/research list is found on William Bernstein’s site … at http://www.efficientfrontier.com/. You can get as in-depth here as one cares to dive and if you are like other Piggs where data rules … then no one brings investment data like Bernstein – although the time to read through these may be more than most care to suffer as well as trying some of the math simulations… but well worth what you will get out of it.
J
jmrrobbie1ParticipantI would strongly echo “privatebankers” remark about staying the course and not trying to find the “best-latest-possible-better” investment vehicle … if you have a well constructed portfolio put together from research & a strong foundation of educated investment principles then no need to panic at every new downturn of the market… even big ones as the one looming on the near horizon. Hoping for hints/insight on a blog forum is one thing but to base your financial future on this is not the wisest investment course… even though Piggs has numerous & experienced brainpowered investors.
Try doing a little (actually – a lot) of research on your own or hire an independent advisor to guide you (maybe Rich). One of the best investment reading/research list is found on William Bernstein’s site … at http://www.efficientfrontier.com/. You can get as in-depth here as one cares to dive and if you are like other Piggs where data rules … then no one brings investment data like Bernstein – although the time to read through these may be more than most care to suffer as well as trying some of the math simulations… but well worth what you will get out of it.
J
jmrrobbie1ParticipantI would strongly echo “privatebankers” remark about staying the course and not trying to find the “best-latest-possible-better” investment vehicle … if you have a well constructed portfolio put together from research & a strong foundation of educated investment principles then no need to panic at every new downturn of the market… even big ones as the one looming on the near horizon. Hoping for hints/insight on a blog forum is one thing but to base your financial future on this is not the wisest investment course… even though Piggs has numerous & experienced brainpowered investors.
Try doing a little (actually – a lot) of research on your own or hire an independent advisor to guide you (maybe Rich). One of the best investment reading/research list is found on William Bernstein’s site … at http://www.efficientfrontier.com/. You can get as in-depth here as one cares to dive and if you are like other Piggs where data rules … then no one brings investment data like Bernstein – although the time to read through these may be more than most care to suffer as well as trying some of the math simulations… but well worth what you will get out of it.
J
jmrrobbie1ParticipantZk – Could not find the specific house you mentioned (do you have a MLS) but did a quick search on RedFin in this area. To compare to the one you listed I plugged in 1.2 – 1.7 M with 4000+ sq ft … not that I would buy this type of home or in this area, just wanted to get a feel for the thought line on this thread. I am looking at putting down roots in N. San Diego myself and it is obvious than the whole region is in for a monumental blunt reset that has never been witnessed before in real estate.
Many are looking thru the lens of clouded perception. The S Calf housing market today represents the most overpriced and inflated prices ever in the history of a U.S. housing market. We are not talking of a small enclave of homes on a hillside overlooking the ocean in Newport Beach or a unique neighborhood in Santa Barbara but the collective living situation of millions of S Calf families. The CV region of San Diego is the perfect example … how many “sane” individuals would actually purchase one of these homes listed today…even 6-9 months from now? Whatever you want to call it; a premium $ for a location, sunshine tax, the Calf lifestyle – these days are behind us … a market economy always comes back to a “realistic” baseline –unfortunately, it has not even started for the larger portion of SD.
This region will bear the blunt of a market economy coming back to reality and it will take years to recover. I am certain some positive markers will be forthcoming during the crash with individuals jumping on the bandwagon – this still will not take away from the basic core fact that real-estate here is “overpriced” and has a long way to go reset to a price level that equates to what one is actually paying money for. .. a house, a home, a neighborhood, a way of life….
I do not think the popcorn has even been put into the oil yet.
jmrrobbie1ParticipantZk – Could not find the specific house you mentioned (do you have a MLS) but did a quick search on RedFin in this area. To compare to the one you listed I plugged in 1.2 – 1.7 M with 4000+ sq ft … not that I would buy this type of home or in this area, just wanted to get a feel for the thought line on this thread. I am looking at putting down roots in N. San Diego myself and it is obvious than the whole region is in for a monumental blunt reset that has never been witnessed before in real estate.
Many are looking thru the lens of clouded perception. The S Calf housing market today represents the most overpriced and inflated prices ever in the history of a U.S. housing market. We are not talking of a small enclave of homes on a hillside overlooking the ocean in Newport Beach or a unique neighborhood in Santa Barbara but the collective living situation of millions of S Calf families. The CV region of San Diego is the perfect example … how many “sane” individuals would actually purchase one of these homes listed today…even 6-9 months from now? Whatever you want to call it; a premium $ for a location, sunshine tax, the Calf lifestyle – these days are behind us … a market economy always comes back to a “realistic” baseline –unfortunately, it has not even started for the larger portion of SD.
This region will bear the blunt of a market economy coming back to reality and it will take years to recover. I am certain some positive markers will be forthcoming during the crash with individuals jumping on the bandwagon – this still will not take away from the basic core fact that real-estate here is “overpriced” and has a long way to go reset to a price level that equates to what one is actually paying money for. .. a house, a home, a neighborhood, a way of life….
I do not think the popcorn has even been put into the oil yet.
jmrrobbie1ParticipantZk – Could not find the specific house you mentioned (do you have a MLS) but did a quick search on RedFin in this area. To compare to the one you listed I plugged in 1.2 – 1.7 M with 4000+ sq ft … not that I would buy this type of home or in this area, just wanted to get a feel for the thought line on this thread. I am looking at putting down roots in N. San Diego myself and it is obvious than the whole region is in for a monumental blunt reset that has never been witnessed before in real estate.
Many are looking thru the lens of clouded perception. The S Calf housing market today represents the most overpriced and inflated prices ever in the history of a U.S. housing market. We are not talking of a small enclave of homes on a hillside overlooking the ocean in Newport Beach or a unique neighborhood in Santa Barbara but the collective living situation of millions of S Calf families. The CV region of San Diego is the perfect example … how many “sane” individuals would actually purchase one of these homes listed today…even 6-9 months from now? Whatever you want to call it; a premium $ for a location, sunshine tax, the Calf lifestyle – these days are behind us … a market economy always comes back to a “realistic” baseline –unfortunately, it has not even started for the larger portion of SD.
This region will bear the blunt of a market economy coming back to reality and it will take years to recover. I am certain some positive markers will be forthcoming during the crash with individuals jumping on the bandwagon – this still will not take away from the basic core fact that real-estate here is “overpriced” and has a long way to go reset to a price level that equates to what one is actually paying money for. .. a house, a home, a neighborhood, a way of life….
I do not think the popcorn has even been put into the oil yet.
jmrrobbie1ParticipantZk – Could not find the specific house you mentioned (do you have a MLS) but did a quick search on RedFin in this area. To compare to the one you listed I plugged in 1.2 – 1.7 M with 4000+ sq ft … not that I would buy this type of home or in this area, just wanted to get a feel for the thought line on this thread. I am looking at putting down roots in N. San Diego myself and it is obvious than the whole region is in for a monumental blunt reset that has never been witnessed before in real estate.
Many are looking thru the lens of clouded perception. The S Calf housing market today represents the most overpriced and inflated prices ever in the history of a U.S. housing market. We are not talking of a small enclave of homes on a hillside overlooking the ocean in Newport Beach or a unique neighborhood in Santa Barbara but the collective living situation of millions of S Calf families. The CV region of San Diego is the perfect example … how many “sane” individuals would actually purchase one of these homes listed today…even 6-9 months from now? Whatever you want to call it; a premium $ for a location, sunshine tax, the Calf lifestyle – these days are behind us … a market economy always comes back to a “realistic” baseline –unfortunately, it has not even started for the larger portion of SD.
This region will bear the blunt of a market economy coming back to reality and it will take years to recover. I am certain some positive markers will be forthcoming during the crash with individuals jumping on the bandwagon – this still will not take away from the basic core fact that real-estate here is “overpriced” and has a long way to go reset to a price level that equates to what one is actually paying money for. .. a house, a home, a neighborhood, a way of life….
I do not think the popcorn has even been put into the oil yet.
jmrrobbie1ParticipantZk – Could not find the specific house you mentioned (do you have a MLS) but did a quick search on RedFin in this area. To compare to the one you listed I plugged in 1.2 – 1.7 M with 4000+ sq ft … not that I would buy this type of home or in this area, just wanted to get a feel for the thought line on this thread. I am looking at putting down roots in N. San Diego myself and it is obvious than the whole region is in for a monumental blunt reset that has never been witnessed before in real estate.
Many are looking thru the lens of clouded perception. The S Calf housing market today represents the most overpriced and inflated prices ever in the history of a U.S. housing market. We are not talking of a small enclave of homes on a hillside overlooking the ocean in Newport Beach or a unique neighborhood in Santa Barbara but the collective living situation of millions of S Calf families. The CV region of San Diego is the perfect example … how many “sane” individuals would actually purchase one of these homes listed today…even 6-9 months from now? Whatever you want to call it; a premium $ for a location, sunshine tax, the Calf lifestyle – these days are behind us … a market economy always comes back to a “realistic” baseline –unfortunately, it has not even started for the larger portion of SD.
This region will bear the blunt of a market economy coming back to reality and it will take years to recover. I am certain some positive markers will be forthcoming during the crash with individuals jumping on the bandwagon – this still will not take away from the basic core fact that real-estate here is “overpriced” and has a long way to go reset to a price level that equates to what one is actually paying money for. .. a house, a home, a neighborhood, a way of life….
I do not think the popcorn has even been put into the oil yet.
jmrrobbie1ParticipantCheck the “Morgan Hill & Morgan Valley Stats” thread, especially the last few replies – as there is some great insight on these areas including La Cresta & De Luz… one of the areas I am looking at too is above Bear Creek (West & South). Much more rural with lots starting at 5A. and up – but also mostly dirt roads.
jmrrobbie1ParticipantCheck the “Morgan Hill & Morgan Valley Stats” thread, especially the last few replies – as there is some great insight on these areas including La Cresta & De Luz… one of the areas I am looking at too is above Bear Creek (West & South). Much more rural with lots starting at 5A. and up – but also mostly dirt roads.
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