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September 16, 2008 at 9:40 AM in reply to: How’s everyone feeling these days about the economy? #271189
sdrealtor
ParticipantCoop,
Optimistic people will always think next year will be better. In 2009 they’ll expect things to turn around in 2010. It will never change.Also we are almost 4 years into the correction not 2 years. Things changed in 2004 and even though fruad kept some things together after mid 2004 we were done on the way up then.
sdrealtor
ParticipantCoop,
Optimistic people will always think next year will be better. In 2009 they’ll expect things to turn around in 2010. It will never change.Also we are almost 4 years into the correction not 2 years. Things changed in 2004 and even though fruad kept some things together after mid 2004 we were done on the way up then.
sdrealtor
ParticipantCoop,
Optimistic people will always think next year will be better. In 2009 they’ll expect things to turn around in 2010. It will never change.Also we are almost 4 years into the correction not 2 years. Things changed in 2004 and even though fruad kept some things together after mid 2004 we were done on the way up then.
sdrealtor
ParticipantCoop,
Optimistic people will always think next year will be better. In 2009 they’ll expect things to turn around in 2010. It will never change.Also we are almost 4 years into the correction not 2 years. Things changed in 2004 and even though fruad kept some things together after mid 2004 we were done on the way up then.
sdrealtor
ParticipantCoop,
Optimistic people will always think next year will be better. In 2009 they’ll expect things to turn around in 2010. It will never change.Also we are almost 4 years into the correction not 2 years. Things changed in 2004 and even though fruad kept some things together after mid 2004 we were done on the way up then.
sdrealtor
ParticipantLA R,
the activity spiek I’ve seen has been resales. I cant even say whether they are actually buying but they are out there en force at a time of year when they usually arent.I agree that the make up of high wage earners was similar in 2000 though the trend seems to grow by the year as more boomers/mobile workers move here for lifestyle. I would bet that the number is dramatically higher now than in the early 90’s whne we werent so mobile.
I dont think either of us SDR’s is trying to say it will create a floor. What is does is spread the pain. It makes some sellers more optimistic, buys some more time, doesnt help others, increases affordability for some buyers, gives some buyers more confidence and doesnt impact others. Its all over the board but the end result is more slow bleeding.
sdrealtor
ParticipantLA R,
the activity spiek I’ve seen has been resales. I cant even say whether they are actually buying but they are out there en force at a time of year when they usually arent.I agree that the make up of high wage earners was similar in 2000 though the trend seems to grow by the year as more boomers/mobile workers move here for lifestyle. I would bet that the number is dramatically higher now than in the early 90’s whne we werent so mobile.
I dont think either of us SDR’s is trying to say it will create a floor. What is does is spread the pain. It makes some sellers more optimistic, buys some more time, doesnt help others, increases affordability for some buyers, gives some buyers more confidence and doesnt impact others. Its all over the board but the end result is more slow bleeding.
sdrealtor
ParticipantLA R,
the activity spiek I’ve seen has been resales. I cant even say whether they are actually buying but they are out there en force at a time of year when they usually arent.I agree that the make up of high wage earners was similar in 2000 though the trend seems to grow by the year as more boomers/mobile workers move here for lifestyle. I would bet that the number is dramatically higher now than in the early 90’s whne we werent so mobile.
I dont think either of us SDR’s is trying to say it will create a floor. What is does is spread the pain. It makes some sellers more optimistic, buys some more time, doesnt help others, increases affordability for some buyers, gives some buyers more confidence and doesnt impact others. Its all over the board but the end result is more slow bleeding.
sdrealtor
ParticipantLA R,
the activity spiek I’ve seen has been resales. I cant even say whether they are actually buying but they are out there en force at a time of year when they usually arent.I agree that the make up of high wage earners was similar in 2000 though the trend seems to grow by the year as more boomers/mobile workers move here for lifestyle. I would bet that the number is dramatically higher now than in the early 90’s whne we werent so mobile.
I dont think either of us SDR’s is trying to say it will create a floor. What is does is spread the pain. It makes some sellers more optimistic, buys some more time, doesnt help others, increases affordability for some buyers, gives some buyers more confidence and doesnt impact others. Its all over the board but the end result is more slow bleeding.
sdrealtor
ParticipantLA R,
the activity spiek I’ve seen has been resales. I cant even say whether they are actually buying but they are out there en force at a time of year when they usually arent.I agree that the make up of high wage earners was similar in 2000 though the trend seems to grow by the year as more boomers/mobile workers move here for lifestyle. I would bet that the number is dramatically higher now than in the early 90’s whne we werent so mobile.
I dont think either of us SDR’s is trying to say it will create a floor. What is does is spread the pain. It makes some sellers more optimistic, buys some more time, doesnt help others, increases affordability for some buyers, gives some buyers more confidence and doesnt impact others. Its all over the board but the end result is more slow bleeding.
sdrealtor
ParticipantWhat else can the gubmint do? I think we just saw more this morning.
As for the high earners in San Diego, they dont typically work for large local employers. SD has never been home to major corps like other large metros are. This makes it a more piecemeal process for high wage earners to succumb.
sdrealtor
ParticipantWhat else can the gubmint do? I think we just saw more this morning.
As for the high earners in San Diego, they dont typically work for large local employers. SD has never been home to major corps like other large metros are. This makes it a more piecemeal process for high wage earners to succumb.
sdrealtor
ParticipantWhat else can the gubmint do? I think we just saw more this morning.
As for the high earners in San Diego, they dont typically work for large local employers. SD has never been home to major corps like other large metros are. This makes it a more piecemeal process for high wage earners to succumb.
sdrealtor
ParticipantWhat else can the gubmint do? I think we just saw more this morning.
As for the high earners in San Diego, they dont typically work for large local employers. SD has never been home to major corps like other large metros are. This makes it a more piecemeal process for high wage earners to succumb.
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