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Housing Bubble? Only 11% of people in LA can afford a median-priced home.
Check out this chart:
http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/5...600/CARHAI.jpg I'm glad to see the tide turning in CA. It's definately becoming a buyer's market. What are you guys seeing in your neighborhoods? More for-sale signs, more price reduction signs? Only 8% can afford in San Diego... that's where I'm planning to move to late this year... burst, baby, burst! This is my favorite blog for housing bubble info in case you are also interested in this craziness: http://thehousingbubble2.blogspot.com/ marc |
in my 'hood' a small 3+2 with a tiny yard, no pool, goes for close to 1 mil
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Man, people live up in Barstow and commute down to LA. Hell, in Silicon Valley I've heard people commute from Merced.
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What hood are you in? Near LA? |
Real estate prices are still out of control and inflating in NY state :Oh crap They are selling 1000SF shacks for $250k and up... it's ridiculous.
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Housing costs are ubelievable. |
move to the midwest. in dearborn michigan, you can live in a mansion in a really nice area for 1 mil
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It's just a matter of time when communities of people hit the carrying capacity of their area and are forced to relocate or die. Granted, carrying capacity of a human environment has different variables than that of a natural ecosystem, but I think they all share some commonalities that relate to balance / destruction.
Fuck. Apologies for this post. |
Sounds like i'll be buying a home in the moutains of WV
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I investigated buying a condo in Vegas for investment purposes last year (2 bids were rejected).
I am likely to go that route again if things do not change. We want to buy something, but honestly, the prices are out of hand and we can't afford a lot of what we want. Some condos in places like Fullerton are decently priced, but damn, it is ridiculous. |
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Yes, please do. Best idea I have heard yet. :thumbsup Dearborn: 37°F Feels Like 29°F My home: 61°F Feels Like 61°F People crack me up with their comments that the bubble will burst. Maybe where you live, but not here, and I am fine with it. |
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I haven't looked recently, but I will be more sweeping (Phoenix, wherever to get out of this market I am in). I know people are still making money turning them in Vegas. I noticed in The Valley (California) last night that for sale signs are springing up. Hopefully things change. |
The housing where I live won't burst - mostly because it's been on a slow but steady climb up. The babyboomer retirees in ATL don't want to move to FL so they are building up here. When I bought my house 5 years ago the average selling price in my subdivision was $150K. They started building $200K houses right after I moved in and they are running about $300K now. These houses are a LOT bigger than mine but I could easily get $80+90K more than what I paid for mine if I sold it now. No, it's not the massive amount I'd get after 5 years in CA but I know the market is steady here and the longer I stay, the higher the prices go. And I'ver been here long enough so I won't pay CG taxes.
My girlfriend who has more money than God is wanting to get into the house flipping business. She and I are going to take a RE class together and go in 25/75 on the homes. RE has always facinated me :) |
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Housing is out of hand, middle class folks with million dollar homes.
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i know a lot of lenders and mortgage brokers in Seattle area (which is also far from being a cheap housing market) - they all have the same stories about CA people selling their homes and coming up here and snatching up nice places for cash and still having several hundred thousand or more left over.
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I can not even imagine the situation that would cause me to leave the warmth and sunshine of SoCal for the rain and gloom of Seattle. There has to be more to the story. Maybe they are opening umbrella franchises. |
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:2 cents: |
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:321GFY to California Real Estate |
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This is another really good blog that I follow. It shows how the inventory levels of homes on the market keeps climbing, climbing, climbing... we are headed for a serious bust by this summer as inventories reach record levels in the bubbliest areas of the country. And interest rates will keep climbing. Can you say "FORECLOSURE"?
Look at Phoenix, phew!!! Over 30k listings! http://bubbletracking.blogspot.com/ marc |
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it keeps the riff-raff out A big :thumbsup to CA real estate |
Foreclosure is a beautiful word for investors :)
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You guys have it easy. We are used to paying $1000 per square FOOT!
A 1 bedroom 700sq ft condo is gonna cost you $720,000. No garage, no backyard no friggin trees, just 3 rooms and a shitter. Maybe you get a doorman but if you do you can expect to pay an average of $1,500 per month in matenance and taxes on top of that initial $720k. So, ya still think you got it bad? |
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marc |
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Considering that renting costs half as much as buying, I'm wondering when investors are going to tire of losing so much money. Many are counting on appreciation only to make profit. Thats ok I guess if you don't mind sticking in thousands upon thousands of dollars every year for many years. Not for me. I'll wait for the market to drop or I'll simply never buy, doesn't matter to me any.
Spending $3k on a monthly mortgage when I can rent the same place for $1,500 just doesn't make sense. The "pride" of "owning" my house? Pff... I'll stick my money elsewhere and enjoy life instead of struggling every month to pay off my mortgage and boast to my friends "I own my house!" Uh, no buddy... you don't. |
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That's a very good explanation for something I didn't understand... I've always lived in suburbia. I agree, I enjoy the thrill of the city and it does make you feel alive. But I prefer visiting the city. I can always leave when I want to. It seems like living in NYC would get a little chaotic at times. It seems you would constantly need a "break" and head upstate or something to detox. I don't know... just seems a little suffocating to me. But it's all what you're used to I guess. marc |
I'm in Silicon Valley and need it to burst big in order for me to be able to buy a house. I hope you are right Marc.
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I lived in both in LA and NY for 7 years until 2003. Kind of a work related bicoastal thing. LA is beautiful but the people in the business cetered areas suck. Hollywood, Beverly Hills, etc. If you are married and you don't go out much LA is a great place to live. It's relaxing but you have access to some of the best things the USA has to offer if you need it. But... if you are the type that likes to go out a lot, have a good time and enjoy the nightlife like I do the plasticity of the people wears on you. I am kind of fond of the coastal areas from Santa Monica to the Palisades though. Less attitude. Even Encino to Pasadena is OK in my book.
--- New York isn't what people think it is. Sure, Manhattan is truly congested. But that's part of the charm. Millions of people packed in a small area all gunning to do the best they can on their chosen path. There's a lot of electricity in the air. You can feel it when you step off the plane. If you aren't scared by it you pick up on it because the energy is contagious. Fine dining, bars restaurants attractions 24/7. Whatever your pleasure, it's in NY waiting for you. We have the best restaurants and a lot of them. ALL OVER. How can you beat that? Some towns are excited by having an Olive Garden, we have the restaurant that the owner of the Olive Garden eats in when he wants Italian! But what I mean when I say NY isn't what people think it is when they look at the city is that the congestion stops at the water. You have beautiful residential neighborhoods so if you want to slow it down a bit when you go home you can. Less than 10 Miles out of the city you have homes with acres of space. 20 miles out you have ranches and farms. A friend of mine that works on 57th st just saw a Bear in his backyard at his ranch house in New Jersey 20 minutes outside the city! New York can give you whatever you want. I prefer being in the city part of it but that may change in the future. When it does I don't have to leave town to get a little quiet, I can just go across the river and drive 10 minutes north south east or west. Hell, I can even get an Atlantic ocean beachfront view 10 minutes away from midtown manhattan. Where I live now I have a view of the Hudson River looking in the direction of the Statue of Liberty. http://mcoulterfineart.com/family/im...try_pk_adj.jpg There's a beautiful park (Battery Park) close to me and a waterfront esplanade that stretches 5-9 miles. http://www.downtownny.com/images/img..._Esplanade.jpg I even have a marina in my backyard! http://www.painetworks.com/photos/hy/hy1986.JPG You'd never expect that would you? And guess what, I live basically right in the heart of Wall Street. When you think of Wall Street you think of a congested hustle and bustle filled New York City. But see, it's not what you thought it was right? Even Brooklyn and the Bronx would shock you with all the beautiful park filled spaces and historical architecture they have. The Brooklyn bridge and the view from Brooklyn overlooking the NY skyline is something you have to see once before you die. http://www.nationalgeographic.com/tr...1001nycity.jpg If all of that didn't sell you on the appeal of NY hopefully one of these days we'll have another real webmaster gathering in NY. I'd love to show some of you folks the NY you don't hear about. I'd love to show you a good time and change your opinion. Here's a site of one of the high rise developers in my neighborhood. Look at the site and it will give you an idea of the area and the housing. |
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Overall, Michigan is losing people while gaining houses. That doesn't bode well for most residential real estate investment. With certain exceptions, of course...but I don't think a Dearborn mansion is one of them. |
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I was wondering, why do you care what is happening in CA? Your location says Detroit. Last I heard, that is in MI. |
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and what kind of house do you live in? id rather have a winter, a big house, and 10 motorcycles than one shitty overpriced house and just 1 motorcycle. |
Fuck that, I'll take Baddog's 1 motorcycle, beautiful weather & beautiful women plus the pacific coast highway over a big house, cold weather and not much else.
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Criticizing where someone else lives is rather silly. It's like telling someone their favorite color is wrong.
Most people live where they want to, or near good schools, close to their work, etc. I know people who have said where I live is their version of Hell but I want to live even further out and NYC is a great place to visit but there is NO WAY I would ever live there :) It all depends on what YOU want. |
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