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February 16, 2010 at 1:44 PM in reply to: Shall we buy or never in San Diego or wait for more depreciation? #513584February 16, 2010 at 1:44 PM in reply to: Shall we buy or never in San Diego or wait for more depreciation? #513731werewolf34Participant
You’re basically making an inflation bet. Do some research and see what you believe about inflation and hard assets (RE being one).
You can be priced out of a neighborhood / city over time (SF in the 2000s). If you’re sure you want to come back to SD / CA at some point, look for an asset (smaller house) which pencils better than that McMansion with the Mello Roos. That way you’re not stuck for as much out of pocket each month between now and then.
Every lever in govt has been thrown to prop up housing prices. You may see declines but I dont think they will be large enough for housing to ‘make sense’
February 16, 2010 at 1:44 PM in reply to: Shall we buy or never in San Diego or wait for more depreciation? #514154werewolf34ParticipantYou’re basically making an inflation bet. Do some research and see what you believe about inflation and hard assets (RE being one).
You can be priced out of a neighborhood / city over time (SF in the 2000s). If you’re sure you want to come back to SD / CA at some point, look for an asset (smaller house) which pencils better than that McMansion with the Mello Roos. That way you’re not stuck for as much out of pocket each month between now and then.
Every lever in govt has been thrown to prop up housing prices. You may see declines but I dont think they will be large enough for housing to ‘make sense’
February 16, 2010 at 1:44 PM in reply to: Shall we buy or never in San Diego or wait for more depreciation? #514247werewolf34ParticipantYou’re basically making an inflation bet. Do some research and see what you believe about inflation and hard assets (RE being one).
You can be priced out of a neighborhood / city over time (SF in the 2000s). If you’re sure you want to come back to SD / CA at some point, look for an asset (smaller house) which pencils better than that McMansion with the Mello Roos. That way you’re not stuck for as much out of pocket each month between now and then.
Every lever in govt has been thrown to prop up housing prices. You may see declines but I dont think they will be large enough for housing to ‘make sense’
February 16, 2010 at 1:44 PM in reply to: Shall we buy or never in San Diego or wait for more depreciation? #514500werewolf34ParticipantYou’re basically making an inflation bet. Do some research and see what you believe about inflation and hard assets (RE being one).
You can be priced out of a neighborhood / city over time (SF in the 2000s). If you’re sure you want to come back to SD / CA at some point, look for an asset (smaller house) which pencils better than that McMansion with the Mello Roos. That way you’re not stuck for as much out of pocket each month between now and then.
Every lever in govt has been thrown to prop up housing prices. You may see declines but I dont think they will be large enough for housing to ‘make sense’
werewolf34ParticipantBack off
Once your money hits the escrow acct, your leverage is gone
Yell / motivate your agent. His only interest is to see the deal close as quickly as possible. If you threaten to walk, then he credibly motivate to give a sheet.
werewolf34ParticipantBack off
Once your money hits the escrow acct, your leverage is gone
Yell / motivate your agent. His only interest is to see the deal close as quickly as possible. If you threaten to walk, then he credibly motivate to give a sheet.
werewolf34ParticipantBack off
Once your money hits the escrow acct, your leverage is gone
Yell / motivate your agent. His only interest is to see the deal close as quickly as possible. If you threaten to walk, then he credibly motivate to give a sheet.
werewolf34ParticipantBack off
Once your money hits the escrow acct, your leverage is gone
Yell / motivate your agent. His only interest is to see the deal close as quickly as possible. If you threaten to walk, then he credibly motivate to give a sheet.
werewolf34ParticipantBack off
Once your money hits the escrow acct, your leverage is gone
Yell / motivate your agent. His only interest is to see the deal close as quickly as possible. If you threaten to walk, then he credibly motivate to give a sheet.
werewolf34ParticipantYou honestly think you took a random sample of 100 teenagers in SD now vs 10 yrs ago, that the NOW sample has anywhere near the same mechanical ability and know-how (car repair, home repair, electricals)?
I don’t.
Also ‘choosing not to’ isn’t a choice. We work longer days now (most of us in the private sector) and cars are more advanced so I don’t think it’s a choice.
werewolf34ParticipantYou honestly think you took a random sample of 100 teenagers in SD now vs 10 yrs ago, that the NOW sample has anywhere near the same mechanical ability and know-how (car repair, home repair, electricals)?
I don’t.
Also ‘choosing not to’ isn’t a choice. We work longer days now (most of us in the private sector) and cars are more advanced so I don’t think it’s a choice.
werewolf34ParticipantYou honestly think you took a random sample of 100 teenagers in SD now vs 10 yrs ago, that the NOW sample has anywhere near the same mechanical ability and know-how (car repair, home repair, electricals)?
I don’t.
Also ‘choosing not to’ isn’t a choice. We work longer days now (most of us in the private sector) and cars are more advanced so I don’t think it’s a choice.
werewolf34ParticipantYou honestly think you took a random sample of 100 teenagers in SD now vs 10 yrs ago, that the NOW sample has anywhere near the same mechanical ability and know-how (car repair, home repair, electricals)?
I don’t.
Also ‘choosing not to’ isn’t a choice. We work longer days now (most of us in the private sector) and cars are more advanced so I don’t think it’s a choice.
werewolf34ParticipantYou honestly think you took a random sample of 100 teenagers in SD now vs 10 yrs ago, that the NOW sample has anywhere near the same mechanical ability and know-how (car repair, home repair, electricals)?
I don’t.
Also ‘choosing not to’ isn’t a choice. We work longer days now (most of us in the private sector) and cars are more advanced so I don’t think it’s a choice.
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