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gzz
gzz
6 months ago

Seeing real payments slightly above the 2006 bubble peak is a little concerning at first. However, real per capita GDP has increased by almost exactly 20% since then, and local real wages probably even more than this 20%.

https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/A939RX0Q048SBEA

gzz
gzz
6 months ago

My new small town midwestern house I am really enjoying, 195k for 2700sf 5/3, in good shape but very outdated and no garage. It would easily rent for 2000 a month, maybe 2400. The purchase market is tight but not as bad as SD since prices are so much lower so high rates are less of an issue. But the rental market is much, much tighter. It’s just shocking to see a rural county of 40k surrounded by 10k counties have rents similar to San Diego circa 2005, e.g. $1100 for small renovated one-bedrooms, $1700 for 1300sf townhouses with attached garage or older 3/2 homes. The bottom of the market are 600sf jr one bedroom apartments for about 900, and they are snapped up within 2 days.

perkrp1
perkrp1
6 months ago

I’ve also enjoyed your data and insights on the San Diego housing market. I just published this short article on LinkedIn with some of my thoughts, which I thought your readers may enjoy.

John S.
6 months ago

Very nice graph of the correlation between the monthly changes in inventory and monthly changes in prices, Rich!

Bewildered
5 months ago

Looks like interest rates are finally causing price drops.

There were 2,101 home sales last month, according to CoreLogic data released Tuesday, the lowest ever recorded for a September in records dating to 1988. It wasn’t just low for September — usually a big sales month — but the eighth-lowest sales month ever recorded with a 20 percent drop from August.

This is from https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/business/story/2023-10-31/san-diego-home-sales-nose-dive-median-price-drops

Chris
Chris
5 months ago

Anyone notice wages are still rapidly increasing?

I am a laboratory technician in a hospital.

I just got a raise up to $65.34 per hour up from $60.57 per hour.

That is a 7.3% increase for 2023

The previous year my salary increased from $54.90 per hour up to $60.54

A 9.3% increase in 2022

My wages have definitely been going up faster than inflation as a healthcare worker.

That has to have some effect on the San Diego market when middle class healthcare workers are making $200,000 a year with overtime.

an
an
5 months ago
Reply to  Chris

Seems like a repeat of the late 70s, but not to the same extent. i.e. Wage inflation will keep RE nominal prices high or rising.