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sdrealtor
ParticipantFarbet
The website said prices are expected to start in the 600’s.sdr
sdrealtor
ParticipantFarbet
The website said prices are expected to start in the 600’s.sdr
sdrealtor
ParticipantFarbet
The website said prices are expected to start in the 600’s.sdr
sdrealtor
ParticipantFarbet
The website said prices are expected to start in the 600’s.sdr
sdrealtor
ParticipantDidnt say prices will rise, I said they will strengthen as demand returns meaning that prices wont continuing dropping steeply through Spring.
Plenty of Relo people will buy. They always do.
sdrealtor
ParticipantDidnt say prices will rise, I said they will strengthen as demand returns meaning that prices wont continuing dropping steeply through Spring.
Plenty of Relo people will buy. They always do.
sdrealtor
ParticipantDidnt say prices will rise, I said they will strengthen as demand returns meaning that prices wont continuing dropping steeply through Spring.
Plenty of Relo people will buy. They always do.
sdrealtor
ParticipantDidnt say prices will rise, I said they will strengthen as demand returns meaning that prices wont continuing dropping steeply through Spring.
Plenty of Relo people will buy. They always do.
sdrealtor
ParticipantDidnt say prices will rise, I said they will strengthen as demand returns meaning that prices wont continuing dropping steeply through Spring.
Plenty of Relo people will buy. They always do.
sdrealtor
Participantblackbox,
One problem with the median income logic is that the median income household does not generally purchase the median priced home. They never have except for during this bubble.This is a rough example but you should et my point. Typically (of course there are exceptions), the bottom half of households (incomewise) do not buy homes. The upper half does. So effectively it is the 75th percentile that is buying the median priced home. Furthermore, in a high cost such as SoCal most of the buyers are generally skewed toward higher incomes more than in a more affordable area. The credit bubble put median and below income households in homes they never should have been in. With lending standards restored, median incomes household will once again only dream of owning median priced homes.
I hope you dont plan on being one of them.
sdrealtor
Participantblackbox,
One problem with the median income logic is that the median income household does not generally purchase the median priced home. They never have except for during this bubble.This is a rough example but you should et my point. Typically (of course there are exceptions), the bottom half of households (incomewise) do not buy homes. The upper half does. So effectively it is the 75th percentile that is buying the median priced home. Furthermore, in a high cost such as SoCal most of the buyers are generally skewed toward higher incomes more than in a more affordable area. The credit bubble put median and below income households in homes they never should have been in. With lending standards restored, median incomes household will once again only dream of owning median priced homes.
I hope you dont plan on being one of them.
sdrealtor
Participantblackbox,
One problem with the median income logic is that the median income household does not generally purchase the median priced home. They never have except for during this bubble.This is a rough example but you should et my point. Typically (of course there are exceptions), the bottom half of households (incomewise) do not buy homes. The upper half does. So effectively it is the 75th percentile that is buying the median priced home. Furthermore, in a high cost such as SoCal most of the buyers are generally skewed toward higher incomes more than in a more affordable area. The credit bubble put median and below income households in homes they never should have been in. With lending standards restored, median incomes household will once again only dream of owning median priced homes.
I hope you dont plan on being one of them.
sdrealtor
Participantblackbox,
One problem with the median income logic is that the median income household does not generally purchase the median priced home. They never have except for during this bubble.This is a rough example but you should et my point. Typically (of course there are exceptions), the bottom half of households (incomewise) do not buy homes. The upper half does. So effectively it is the 75th percentile that is buying the median priced home. Furthermore, in a high cost such as SoCal most of the buyers are generally skewed toward higher incomes more than in a more affordable area. The credit bubble put median and below income households in homes they never should have been in. With lending standards restored, median incomes household will once again only dream of owning median priced homes.
I hope you dont plan on being one of them.
sdrealtor
Participantblackbox,
One problem with the median income logic is that the median income household does not generally purchase the median priced home. They never have except for during this bubble.This is a rough example but you should et my point. Typically (of course there are exceptions), the bottom half of households (incomewise) do not buy homes. The upper half does. So effectively it is the 75th percentile that is buying the median priced home. Furthermore, in a high cost such as SoCal most of the buyers are generally skewed toward higher incomes more than in a more affordable area. The credit bubble put median and below income households in homes they never should have been in. With lending standards restored, median incomes household will once again only dream of owning median priced homes.
I hope you dont plan on being one of them.
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