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Ren
ParticipantDepends on location – different areas rise and fall at different times than others.
I would guess that Murrieta is at or near its bottom, Temecula is close behind, followed by Escondido and east county in fall/winter of 2010, 4S, Scripps Ranch and San Elijo Hills in 2011, and the coast in 2012.
Disclaimer: Those are purely my semi-educated guesses and may be wildly inaccurate.
Ren
ParticipantDepends on location – different areas rise and fall at different times than others.
I would guess that Murrieta is at or near its bottom, Temecula is close behind, followed by Escondido and east county in fall/winter of 2010, 4S, Scripps Ranch and San Elijo Hills in 2011, and the coast in 2012.
Disclaimer: Those are purely my semi-educated guesses and may be wildly inaccurate.
Ren
ParticipantDepends on location – different areas rise and fall at different times than others.
I would guess that Murrieta is at or near its bottom, Temecula is close behind, followed by Escondido and east county in fall/winter of 2010, 4S, Scripps Ranch and San Elijo Hills in 2011, and the coast in 2012.
Disclaimer: Those are purely my semi-educated guesses and may be wildly inaccurate.
Ren
ParticipantDepends on location – different areas rise and fall at different times than others.
I would guess that Murrieta is at or near its bottom, Temecula is close behind, followed by Escondido and east county in fall/winter of 2010, 4S, Scripps Ranch and San Elijo Hills in 2011, and the coast in 2012.
Disclaimer: Those are purely my semi-educated guesses and may be wildly inaccurate.
Ren
ParticipantAny way you look at it, $90-100/sq ft in Temecula is a good deal for a residence. $80/sq ft is a steal and great for a rental.
There are a ton of investment properties in T/M that have enough positive cash flow to weather even a big drop in rents.
The time to buy is when the numbers make sense, not when your co-workers have decided their mortgage is too high.
Ren
ParticipantAny way you look at it, $90-100/sq ft in Temecula is a good deal for a residence. $80/sq ft is a steal and great for a rental.
There are a ton of investment properties in T/M that have enough positive cash flow to weather even a big drop in rents.
The time to buy is when the numbers make sense, not when your co-workers have decided their mortgage is too high.
Ren
ParticipantAny way you look at it, $90-100/sq ft in Temecula is a good deal for a residence. $80/sq ft is a steal and great for a rental.
There are a ton of investment properties in T/M that have enough positive cash flow to weather even a big drop in rents.
The time to buy is when the numbers make sense, not when your co-workers have decided their mortgage is too high.
Ren
ParticipantAny way you look at it, $90-100/sq ft in Temecula is a good deal for a residence. $80/sq ft is a steal and great for a rental.
There are a ton of investment properties in T/M that have enough positive cash flow to weather even a big drop in rents.
The time to buy is when the numbers make sense, not when your co-workers have decided their mortgage is too high.
Ren
ParticipantAny way you look at it, $90-100/sq ft in Temecula is a good deal for a residence. $80/sq ft is a steal and great for a rental.
There are a ton of investment properties in T/M that have enough positive cash flow to weather even a big drop in rents.
The time to buy is when the numbers make sense, not when your co-workers have decided their mortgage is too high.
Ren
ParticipantThis is something my wife and I are considering, but not until this fall. We’d buy something in Temecula for $175-250k-ish, rental-friendly (4-bdr, newer, low hoa, low maintenance yard), then rent it out and move to the coast when prices are more reasonable there. The numbers make a lot of sense.
Ren
ParticipantThis is something my wife and I are considering, but not until this fall. We’d buy something in Temecula for $175-250k-ish, rental-friendly (4-bdr, newer, low hoa, low maintenance yard), then rent it out and move to the coast when prices are more reasonable there. The numbers make a lot of sense.
Ren
ParticipantThis is something my wife and I are considering, but not until this fall. We’d buy something in Temecula for $175-250k-ish, rental-friendly (4-bdr, newer, low hoa, low maintenance yard), then rent it out and move to the coast when prices are more reasonable there. The numbers make a lot of sense.
Ren
ParticipantThis is something my wife and I are considering, but not until this fall. We’d buy something in Temecula for $175-250k-ish, rental-friendly (4-bdr, newer, low hoa, low maintenance yard), then rent it out and move to the coast when prices are more reasonable there. The numbers make a lot of sense.
Ren
ParticipantThis is something my wife and I are considering, but not until this fall. We’d buy something in Temecula for $175-250k-ish, rental-friendly (4-bdr, newer, low hoa, low maintenance yard), then rent it out and move to the coast when prices are more reasonable there. The numbers make a lot of sense.
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