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SD Realtor
ParticipantJames Wenn that is my point exactly, that it is all relative.
John Alt I agree with you but I think maybe it is a case of a differing perspective of what we read. Both you and I read the same words sdrealtor wrote but I don’t interpret them as claiming some sort immunity for the coast. I think sdrealtor has never said that and in fact pointed out losses in the coastal areas. To me the information was more anecdotal in the sense that it made an attempt to point out the demand for the area being present in light of the higher cost of living there. That this particular portion of San Diego used to be a relatively cheaper place to live but that now it is no longer that way and will most likely NOT return to being that way. Not that it will not depreciate, but that what it was 10-15 years ago (a cheaper alternative) will no longer ever be.
Anyways maybe I read it wrong.
SD Realtor
ParticipantJames Wenn that is my point exactly, that it is all relative.
John Alt I agree with you but I think maybe it is a case of a differing perspective of what we read. Both you and I read the same words sdrealtor wrote but I don’t interpret them as claiming some sort immunity for the coast. I think sdrealtor has never said that and in fact pointed out losses in the coastal areas. To me the information was more anecdotal in the sense that it made an attempt to point out the demand for the area being present in light of the higher cost of living there. That this particular portion of San Diego used to be a relatively cheaper place to live but that now it is no longer that way and will most likely NOT return to being that way. Not that it will not depreciate, but that what it was 10-15 years ago (a cheaper alternative) will no longer ever be.
Anyways maybe I read it wrong.
SD Realtor
ParticipantJames Wenn that is my point exactly, that it is all relative.
John Alt I agree with you but I think maybe it is a case of a differing perspective of what we read. Both you and I read the same words sdrealtor wrote but I don’t interpret them as claiming some sort immunity for the coast. I think sdrealtor has never said that and in fact pointed out losses in the coastal areas. To me the information was more anecdotal in the sense that it made an attempt to point out the demand for the area being present in light of the higher cost of living there. That this particular portion of San Diego used to be a relatively cheaper place to live but that now it is no longer that way and will most likely NOT return to being that way. Not that it will not depreciate, but that what it was 10-15 years ago (a cheaper alternative) will no longer ever be.
Anyways maybe I read it wrong.
SD Realtor
Participant“I’m still not buying it. Realtors who sell in higher priced areas will see more than their share of people with a lot of money. But as a percentage of the total poplulation it’s a very small number of people.”
Trauma centers see a lot of traumas. That doesn’t make a trauma that common.”
JohnAlt you don’t have to buy anything. Your own statement confirms what I said. San Diego as a whole simply is an expensive place to live. It costs more here and it will always cost more here. Conversely more people will be priced out of housing. In fact because of the climate more people will indeed spend more. It may not be important to you but it is to them. They will live coastal and those that don’t wanna spend that money will live inland or in condos.
That is the point of the entire post to begin with. There is only a finite coastal space. Those that want it pay. Those that hope for it to go down to their own level of affordability may get lucky but probably will not.
SD Realtor
Participant“I’m still not buying it. Realtors who sell in higher priced areas will see more than their share of people with a lot of money. But as a percentage of the total poplulation it’s a very small number of people.”
Trauma centers see a lot of traumas. That doesn’t make a trauma that common.”
JohnAlt you don’t have to buy anything. Your own statement confirms what I said. San Diego as a whole simply is an expensive place to live. It costs more here and it will always cost more here. Conversely more people will be priced out of housing. In fact because of the climate more people will indeed spend more. It may not be important to you but it is to them. They will live coastal and those that don’t wanna spend that money will live inland or in condos.
That is the point of the entire post to begin with. There is only a finite coastal space. Those that want it pay. Those that hope for it to go down to their own level of affordability may get lucky but probably will not.
SD Realtor
Participant“I’m still not buying it. Realtors who sell in higher priced areas will see more than their share of people with a lot of money. But as a percentage of the total poplulation it’s a very small number of people.”
Trauma centers see a lot of traumas. That doesn’t make a trauma that common.”
JohnAlt you don’t have to buy anything. Your own statement confirms what I said. San Diego as a whole simply is an expensive place to live. It costs more here and it will always cost more here. Conversely more people will be priced out of housing. In fact because of the climate more people will indeed spend more. It may not be important to you but it is to them. They will live coastal and those that don’t wanna spend that money will live inland or in condos.
That is the point of the entire post to begin with. There is only a finite coastal space. Those that want it pay. Those that hope for it to go down to their own level of affordability may get lucky but probably will not.
SD Realtor
Participant“I’m still not buying it. Realtors who sell in higher priced areas will see more than their share of people with a lot of money. But as a percentage of the total poplulation it’s a very small number of people.”
Trauma centers see a lot of traumas. That doesn’t make a trauma that common.”
JohnAlt you don’t have to buy anything. Your own statement confirms what I said. San Diego as a whole simply is an expensive place to live. It costs more here and it will always cost more here. Conversely more people will be priced out of housing. In fact because of the climate more people will indeed spend more. It may not be important to you but it is to them. They will live coastal and those that don’t wanna spend that money will live inland or in condos.
That is the point of the entire post to begin with. There is only a finite coastal space. Those that want it pay. Those that hope for it to go down to their own level of affordability may get lucky but probably will not.
SD Realtor
Participant“I’m still not buying it. Realtors who sell in higher priced areas will see more than their share of people with a lot of money. But as a percentage of the total poplulation it’s a very small number of people.”
Trauma centers see a lot of traumas. That doesn’t make a trauma that common.”
JohnAlt you don’t have to buy anything. Your own statement confirms what I said. San Diego as a whole simply is an expensive place to live. It costs more here and it will always cost more here. Conversely more people will be priced out of housing. In fact because of the climate more people will indeed spend more. It may not be important to you but it is to them. They will live coastal and those that don’t wanna spend that money will live inland or in condos.
That is the point of the entire post to begin with. There is only a finite coastal space. Those that want it pay. Those that hope for it to go down to their own level of affordability may get lucky but probably will not.
SD Realtor
ParticipantGenerally seasoning takes about 6 months for a cashout refi. Check with your lender first as they all have different criteria. Also no I don’t see rates running away. That is the only thing keeping the faux economy afloat right now.
SD Realtor
ParticipantGenerally seasoning takes about 6 months for a cashout refi. Check with your lender first as they all have different criteria. Also no I don’t see rates running away. That is the only thing keeping the faux economy afloat right now.
SD Realtor
ParticipantGenerally seasoning takes about 6 months for a cashout refi. Check with your lender first as they all have different criteria. Also no I don’t see rates running away. That is the only thing keeping the faux economy afloat right now.
SD Realtor
ParticipantGenerally seasoning takes about 6 months for a cashout refi. Check with your lender first as they all have different criteria. Also no I don’t see rates running away. That is the only thing keeping the faux economy afloat right now.
SD Realtor
ParticipantGenerally seasoning takes about 6 months for a cashout refi. Check with your lender first as they all have different criteria. Also no I don’t see rates running away. That is the only thing keeping the faux economy afloat right now.
SD Realtor
ParticipantWell if that happened it did not happen at the county courthouse or the el cajon courthouse. It could have happened somewhere else. If it did then fidelity and priority missed it and that is rare but I guess not unheard of.
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