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SD Realtor
ParticipantIf anyone wants stats all they have to do is ask and we will post!
SD Realtor
ParticipantIf anyone wants stats all they have to do is ask and we will post!
SD Realtor
ParticipantIf anyone wants stats all they have to do is ask and we will post!
SD Realtor
ParticipantYou dont want to live on either Ironwood or Tribuna. During early and late rush hours when Pomerado is stacked up Ironwood and Tribuna make a nice little alternative. You can get from Scripps Ranch Blvd all the way up to Semillon using Ironwood, Tribuna, and Avenida Magnifica. That said it is not a horrible street to live on but no I would not live on that street and for sure not for that price. Maybe for the 450k. Yeah it was flipped in July for 450k. They probably pumped a little coin into it and are now selling it.
SD Realtor
ParticipantYou dont want to live on either Ironwood or Tribuna. During early and late rush hours when Pomerado is stacked up Ironwood and Tribuna make a nice little alternative. You can get from Scripps Ranch Blvd all the way up to Semillon using Ironwood, Tribuna, and Avenida Magnifica. That said it is not a horrible street to live on but no I would not live on that street and for sure not for that price. Maybe for the 450k. Yeah it was flipped in July for 450k. They probably pumped a little coin into it and are now selling it.
SD Realtor
ParticipantYou dont want to live on either Ironwood or Tribuna. During early and late rush hours when Pomerado is stacked up Ironwood and Tribuna make a nice little alternative. You can get from Scripps Ranch Blvd all the way up to Semillon using Ironwood, Tribuna, and Avenida Magnifica. That said it is not a horrible street to live on but no I would not live on that street and for sure not for that price. Maybe for the 450k. Yeah it was flipped in July for 450k. They probably pumped a little coin into it and are now selling it.
SD Realtor
ParticipantYou dont want to live on either Ironwood or Tribuna. During early and late rush hours when Pomerado is stacked up Ironwood and Tribuna make a nice little alternative. You can get from Scripps Ranch Blvd all the way up to Semillon using Ironwood, Tribuna, and Avenida Magnifica. That said it is not a horrible street to live on but no I would not live on that street and for sure not for that price. Maybe for the 450k. Yeah it was flipped in July for 450k. They probably pumped a little coin into it and are now selling it.
SD Realtor
ParticipantYou dont want to live on either Ironwood or Tribuna. During early and late rush hours when Pomerado is stacked up Ironwood and Tribuna make a nice little alternative. You can get from Scripps Ranch Blvd all the way up to Semillon using Ironwood, Tribuna, and Avenida Magnifica. That said it is not a horrible street to live on but no I would not live on that street and for sure not for that price. Maybe for the 450k. Yeah it was flipped in July for 450k. They probably pumped a little coin into it and are now selling it.
SD Realtor
ParticipantLets just hope things do not bounce in the spring transplant. What we have right now is a pretty large move in prices over the last 18 months coupled with a squeeze on inventory and massive subsidy in the form of credits. Now we are seeing an adjustment caused by the removal of the subsidy and pricing that simply is to high once again given a much warier buyer pool. Unfortunately I expect continued inventory manipulation or perhaps an ugly return of the subsidy in the form of some housing credit. Hopefully not.
What we did have and I have posted about it are many sellers who felt the hope of a premium once more try to sell at an unrealistic price and now they are forced to reprice as they simply missed the boat of the 2009 and early 2010. We will see how long this continues but it is zip code dependent as well.
SD Realtor
ParticipantLets just hope things do not bounce in the spring transplant. What we have right now is a pretty large move in prices over the last 18 months coupled with a squeeze on inventory and massive subsidy in the form of credits. Now we are seeing an adjustment caused by the removal of the subsidy and pricing that simply is to high once again given a much warier buyer pool. Unfortunately I expect continued inventory manipulation or perhaps an ugly return of the subsidy in the form of some housing credit. Hopefully not.
What we did have and I have posted about it are many sellers who felt the hope of a premium once more try to sell at an unrealistic price and now they are forced to reprice as they simply missed the boat of the 2009 and early 2010. We will see how long this continues but it is zip code dependent as well.
SD Realtor
ParticipantLets just hope things do not bounce in the spring transplant. What we have right now is a pretty large move in prices over the last 18 months coupled with a squeeze on inventory and massive subsidy in the form of credits. Now we are seeing an adjustment caused by the removal of the subsidy and pricing that simply is to high once again given a much warier buyer pool. Unfortunately I expect continued inventory manipulation or perhaps an ugly return of the subsidy in the form of some housing credit. Hopefully not.
What we did have and I have posted about it are many sellers who felt the hope of a premium once more try to sell at an unrealistic price and now they are forced to reprice as they simply missed the boat of the 2009 and early 2010. We will see how long this continues but it is zip code dependent as well.
SD Realtor
ParticipantLets just hope things do not bounce in the spring transplant. What we have right now is a pretty large move in prices over the last 18 months coupled with a squeeze on inventory and massive subsidy in the form of credits. Now we are seeing an adjustment caused by the removal of the subsidy and pricing that simply is to high once again given a much warier buyer pool. Unfortunately I expect continued inventory manipulation or perhaps an ugly return of the subsidy in the form of some housing credit. Hopefully not.
What we did have and I have posted about it are many sellers who felt the hope of a premium once more try to sell at an unrealistic price and now they are forced to reprice as they simply missed the boat of the 2009 and early 2010. We will see how long this continues but it is zip code dependent as well.
SD Realtor
ParticipantLets just hope things do not bounce in the spring transplant. What we have right now is a pretty large move in prices over the last 18 months coupled with a squeeze on inventory and massive subsidy in the form of credits. Now we are seeing an adjustment caused by the removal of the subsidy and pricing that simply is to high once again given a much warier buyer pool. Unfortunately I expect continued inventory manipulation or perhaps an ugly return of the subsidy in the form of some housing credit. Hopefully not.
What we did have and I have posted about it are many sellers who felt the hope of a premium once more try to sell at an unrealistic price and now they are forced to reprice as they simply missed the boat of the 2009 and early 2010. We will see how long this continues but it is zip code dependent as well.
September 12, 2010 at 5:40 PM in reply to: NYT article: Housing Woes Bring a New Cry: Let the Market Fall #604074SD Realtor
ParticipantWell Sandra I do not necessarly disagree with you but please confront reality with your wish list. Corporations were moving offshore as of 20 years ago so this is not a new phenomenah. The bottom line is as you said, most Americans are all overpaid and they are overpaid because of our cost of living. Corporate profits are the bottom line so essentially there is nothing wrong with the corporations doing what they are doing. Essentially it will lower the standard of living for the average American as well it should. However the costs of living are not going down nor will they. The result will be more Americans living a lower standard of living and more Americans relying on some sort of welfare in one form or another.
My post was to point out that having nice new railways from airports and finding busy work for Americans clearly is not the answer. The systemic issues are such that measures such as those are nothing but more waste at this time. Furthermore while the reasons you pointed out may indeed be the fundamental issue that drives the bottom line of the corporate ledger, the tax environment as it is clearly does not help. Indeed since things are so clearly overpriced, one would reason it may be more incumbent on the govt structure to INCENTIVIZE corps to stay via compensation of some sort.
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