Berkeley CSUA MOTD:Entry 42939
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2025/04/04 [General] UID:1000 Activity:popular
4/4     

2006/5/4-7 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:42939 Activity:nil
5/4     http://money.cnn.com/2006/05/03/news/economy/realestateguide_3_fortune
        "As painful as it will be for many people, the looming correction
        may turn out to be welcome news for house-hungry Americans. Young
        couples now priced out of the market will once again be able to
        buy a ranch or colonial without forking over half their income
        for mortgage payments. Growing families will be able to trade up
        for more living space without raiding the kids' college funds."
        Thank God for the housing crash. Fuck you all existing homeowners.
                -bitter young guy who is disillusioned that wealth is
                 created by those who happened to be at the right place at
                 the right time. In another word luck plays a bigger role
                 than anything else
                 \- without arguing what has the "biggest" role,
                    in addition to luck, wealthy people have
                    more control over their fates and circumstances
                    which means 1. the can lobby to change some of
                    the rules of the game 2. the can adapt better
                    to the exiting rules of the game. take an
                    investment banker who can structure his income
                    to reduce taxes, incorporate himself etc.
                 \_ Isn't most wealth inherited?
2025/04/04 [General] UID:1000 Activity:popular
4/4     

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2013/8/1-10/28 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:54722 Activity:nil
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2013/7/31-9/16 [Reference/RealEstate, Finance/Investment] UID:54720 Activity:nil
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2013/3/11-4/16 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:54622 Activity:nil
3/10    I'm trying to help my parents, in their mortgage there's an
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2013/2/19-3/26 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:54610 Activity:nil
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	...
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money.cnn.com/2006/05/03/news/economy/realestateguide_3_fortune -> money.cnn.com/2006/05/03/news/economy/realestateguide_3_fortune/
Shawn Tully, FORTUNE senior writer May 4, 2006: 12:43 PM EDT NEW YORK (FORTUNE) - The most troubled sector of the housing market, the one that will fall first and fastest, is the condominium market. Typically cheaper than houses and easier to buy, sell or rent out, condos are catnip for investors. "I estimate that 80 percent of the sales in Miami went to investors at the peak of the market," says Lewis Goodkin, a consultant to condo developers. The problem is that investors tend to bolt when trouble looms. These markets are already showing the signs of distress that will soon spread to the rest of the bubble zone. As interest rates rise, more homes are becoming unaffordable. Developers are offering discounts and incentives, and buyers are biding their time. The downward spiral will make the former boomtowns Dead Zones. These cities also saw prices soar, but so far their overheated markets are still strong. They present a mixed picture: Chicago and Seattle are in only moderate danger, while LA, New York, Oakland, and San Francisco are headed for a steep fall. To make matters worse, builders keep pouring new units onto the market. These cities between the coasts completely escaped bubblemania. Their housing prices have been rising at 3% to 7% a year, far below the double-digit gains in the hot markets. The reason: Land is cheap and plentiful, and investors are relatively rare, so the supply of new housing has kept pace with the demand even where job growth is strong, as it is now in Texas. See the cities) SAN DIEGO Since opening in October, The Point 92103, a 48-unit condo, had sold a meager two apartments. The developers cut the list price on a one bedroom from $349,000 to as low as $299,900 and lured outside brokers with rich 5% commissions. SUBURBAN WASHINGTON, DC Brookfield Homes told Lisa Hufford that a six-bedroom colonial would cost $788,000. She started bargaining and got Brookfield to drop the price by $30,000, pay $5,000 toward her closing costs, and throw in a $14,500 finished basement. See more markets in trouble Gary Bahadur, 32, who owns a computer networking company in Los Angeles, bought six condos in California over the past few years. "I'm getting out of California because it's topped out," he says, "The prices are so high that investors can no longer buy a condo and rent it to cover the mortgage." Yet even as speculators flee, developers keep throwing up condos at a breakneck pace, in part because if they have already bought the land and poured the foundation, they have no choice but to finish the project. In the Miami area 25,000 new units are under construction, and another 25,000 are approved. Yet the Miami market absorbed only 10,500 new condos in the past decade. She paid $335,000 for a two-bedroom condo when she moved to Miami in 2004. Now she wants to start her own consulting business in Europe. In November she put her unit on the market for $485,000, the price that apartments in her building had sold for a few months earlier. She's now dropped her price to $415,000, and she still hasn't had an offer. Holding the unit and renting it out doesn't appeal to her. "My belief is that prices will drop even more," she says. Builders are in a bind When two-bedroom condos get discounted from $350,000 to $300,000, developers in the neighborhood drop their prices on $400,000 starter homes. At first they hold the line on base prices by offering incentives, from free pools to flat-screen TVs. Then, as unsold units collect, they move merchandise with huge discounts. Builders also pitch in when potential customers are having trouble unloading their current home. A typical example is the help Pedro Kritselis is getting. He had to sell his house to afford to buy a new one in Bristow, Va. But the market is so soft that he couldn't get the price he needed, so he told the builder he'd have to walk away. To keep the sale, the developer shaved $25,000 from the price of the new house. That enabled Kritselis to sell his house for $25,000 less and still afford the new home. One northern Virginia realtor is doing good business assisting homebuyers who need to sell a house to buy a new one. Ashley Leigh, among the region's most successful independent brokers, offers the following deal: If he can't sell the old house in 120 days, he'll buy it himself at a fixed price. Leigh is trumpeting the guarantee in an ad that appears on area billboards and grocery carts at the local Safeway. When they get customers who want to buy but need a minimum price for their existing house, the builders call Leigh. In return, he typically gets a 3 percent commission from the developer on the new sale and an exclusive listing on the old house that gives him a minimum of 3 percent on that sale. So far he has granted over 100 guarantees and been forced to buy ten houses himself. Even when he sells them at a small loss, he still makes money overall. "I have the cushion of the commission on both ends," he says. "On houses priced $600,000 or more, I make the guarantee less than today's market price, because I'm pretty sure prices will be lower when I sell." the new, lower prices will be set by those who have to bail out. They include not just investors but also owners who stretched their finances to buy a house. A typical three-year ARM will go from 36 percent to 56 percent, forcing a borrower with a $500,000 mortgage to pay an extra $800 a month in interest. Since early 2005, delinquency rates have jumped almost 14 percent, to 25 percent for prime mortgage loans. "That will add to the already huge supply on the market." As painful as it will be for many people, the looming correction may turn out to be welcome news for house-hungry Americans. Young couples now priced out of the market will once again be able to buy a ranch or colonial without forking over half their income for mortgage payments. Growing families will be able to trade up for more living space without raiding the kids' college funds. Lauris Lambergs and his wife, Ginta, want to move from a condo in South Boston to a single family home. But until recently they were appalled at the exorbitant prices. Suddenly the power is shifting to the shoppers, and the Lambergs love it. "Up until last summer, going back five years, it was a ridiculous seller's market," says Lauris. "When we go to open houses, we're the only ones all day!" It's the bright side of our gloomy outlook: The bargains are coming. Additional reporting by Matthew Boyle, Nadira A Hira, Julie Schlosser, Christopher Tkaczyk and Jia Lynn Yang.