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11/23 |
2006/2/6-7 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:41720 Activity:moderate 90%like:41694 |
2/3 Amazing view, simply amazing: http://tinyurl.com/bdz5o (forbes.com) \_ No backyard. \_ These are all like living in a hotel. I don't see the allure, except for perhaps the one in NYC where there are no real alternatives nearby. \_ yes you're absolutely right. Every single person on this planet prefers living in the suburb that's nice and big and quiet and have huge backyards. People who think otherwise are dim-wits, like the ones who live in the city. \_ I never said that. I said that it's like living in a hotel. The city is fine, but paying $15 million to live in a hotel isn't my cup of tea. Most of those cities (except NYC) have pretty nice housing available, so why live in a hotel except for the view? \_ some people prefer the view over other things. Somehow you seem to think that people like what you like. In case no one ever pointed this out to you, you seem pretty narrow minded and above all, dim-witted. \_ I'm just expressing an opinion. Why do you have a problem with that? You seem like the narrow-minded one. \_ It's..."different". We have a penthouse in Santiago that looks over the city (no, not anywhere even near any of these places, but a nice duplex that we got a good price on during our stay here.) It's furnished and has maid service, but it's not like a hotel at all. I'm used to both houses in the countryside and city, as well as apartments, and it's just something you get used to. And frankly, if I had the kind of wealth that let me blow $15 million on a place that I really really liked, why not? -John \_ Anyone blowing lots of money on condos, apartments, and such either has no financial sense, or is just stupid. If I had so much money I'd invest in a nice single family home where I have a lot of space and freedom, where I have a nice garage to do garage/repair work, a nice yard with dogs (you can't have pets in the city), and a nice driveway where I can wash my car. When you live in the city, you have no privacy and you have no freedom. -pp and I maintain that the city life is for stupid people \_ I guess arguing with someone as open-minded as yourself is going to be rewarding, but then again, it's nice that you are so clear about your preference in housing choices. This sounds vaguely like the bitter people you see scoffing at the guy having a great time in his Ferrari (who doesn't realize they're there.) And by the way, we're getting a dog, my building has a nice clean car wash space, I have no neighbors peering over my fence, and a whole city's worth of space. But your choice, more for me. -John \_ You must be a young yippie who loves to drink latte and capuccino and likes to wear nice designer clothes. Above all else you probably never exerienced marriage and have no kids. The city is big enough for single men like you but one day you will mature and your perception will change, drastically. My word of advice to you-- be prepared. You're still young, and stupid. -pp \_ how come with all that space in the suburbs, 60% of Americans are classified as obese? as obese and overweight? \_ Because a huge number of them live in tightly packed cities and don't have enough space to "stretch their legs"? \_ How come obesity is especially prevalent in the midwest and less common in bigger cities like NY, Boston, etc.? \_ Because 43.74% of all statistics are made up on the spot, except on the motd where that number rises to a statistically confirmed 86.263%. Are you done making shit up yet? \_ This is common knowledge. You need to read more, or be You the to read more, or be more observant. check out indiana, michigan, wisconsin, illinois, ohio. compare with new york, massachusetts. midwest == fat. ok south even fatter: http://tinyurl.com/3rfta \_ Now go find statistics that say *who* is fat. It is poor people due to shitty fast food diets. You need to understand your statistics not merely blindly quote them. Stat 2. http://www.thedenverchannel.com/health/2269064/detail.html \_ If you have enough money, you can have all the space you need, even in the city. -40 year old, married with kids living in The City and loving it \_ Alright I've been trolled enough. All I have to say is that you're old and still stupid -pp \_ Exactly, which is why I don't really like these glorified hotel rooms. The exception (as I said before) is NYC, where apparently $70 million still won't get you anything but a (huge) apartment. \_ Are houses (and penthouses) more affordable in Santiago? Are we talking about Chile or Dominican Republic Santiago, Panama Santiago, Minnesota Santiago USA, Spain Santiago Compost, Cuba Santiago, or Argentina Santiago del Estero? \_ Pedant! :) Yes, Chile, and they're vastly more affordable than in the US. -John \_ I used to work at a company that occupied the whole penthouse of the Great Western Building on Shattuck. Not much view, though. \_ Gee, that's what ... a short bldg in the middle of Berkeley? |
2006/2/3-6 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:41694 Activity:moderate 90%like:41720 |
2/3 Amazing view, simply amazing: http://www.forbes.com/feeds/2006/02/02/cx_sc_0203homeslide_7.html?thisSpeed=6000 \_ No backyard. \_ These are all like living in a hotel. I don't see the allure, except for perhaps the one in NYC where there are no real alternatives nearby. \_ yes you're absolutely right. Every single person on this planet prefers living in the suburb that's nice and big and quiet and have huge backyards. People who think otherwise are dim-wits, like the ones who live in the city. \_ I never said that. I said that it's like living in a hotel. The city is fine, but paying $15 million to live in a hotel isn't my cup of tea. Most of those cities (except NYC) have pretty nice housing available, so why live in a hotel except for the view? \_ some people prefer the view over other things. Somehow you seem to think that people like what you like. In case no one ever pointed this out to you, you seem pretty narrow minded and above all, dim-witted. \_ It's..."different". We have a penthouse in Santiago that looks over the city (no, not anywhere even near any of these places, but a nice duplex that we got a good price on during our stay here.) It's furnished and has maid service, but it's not like a hotel at all. I'm used to both houses in the countryside and city, as well as apartments, and it's just something you get used to. And frankly, if I had the kind of wealth that let me blow $15 million on a place that I really really liked, why not? -John \_ Anyone blowing lots of money on condos, apartments, and such either has no financial sense, or is just stupid. If I had so much money I'd invest in a nice single family home where I have a lot of space and freedom, where I have a nice garage to do garage/repair work, a nice yard with dogs (you can't have pets in the city), and a nice driveway where I can wash my car. When you live in the city, you have no privacy and you have no freedom. -pp and I maintain that the city life is for stupid people \_ I guess arguing with someone as open-minded as yourself is going to be rewarding, but then again, it's nice that you are so clear about your preference in housing choices. This sounds vaguely like the bitter people you see scoffing at the guy having a great time in his Ferrari (who doesn't realize they're there.) And by the way, we're getting a dog, my building has a nice clean car wash space, I have no neighbors peering over my fence, and a whole city's worth of space. But your choice, more for me. -John \_ Are houses (and penthouses) more affordable in Santiago? Are we talking about Chile or Dominican Republic Santiago, Panama Santiago, Minnesota Santiago USA, Spain Santiago Compost, Cuba Santiago, or Argentina Santiago del Estero? \_ Pedant! :) Yes, Chile, and they're vastly more affordable than in the US. -John \_ I used to work at a company that occupied the whole penthouse of the Great Western Building on Shattuck. Not much view, though. \_ Gee, that's what ... a short bldg in the middle of Berkeley? |
11/23 |
2006/1/24 [Computer/Domains, Reference/RealEstate] UID:41493 Activity:high |
1/24 Fight eminent domain? Seize a judge's house http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4639374.stm -John \_ Yeah, threatening judges with retribution based on their decisions, no matter what form it takes, seems like an excellent long term plan to guarantee the impartiality of the judiciary. |
2006/1/20-22 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:41458 Activity:low |
1/20 That's funny. Money being pulled out of real estate naturally gravitates to the stock market. After blue chip weakness, where does money go? Oil futures. And, let me predict: defense co.'s continue to outperform. \_ Euros maybe? Commodities, of course. Foreign real estate. \_ Gold. Always a good commodity when war is coming. \_ Copper. \_ goes to EMRG \_ wow, 16% drop in GOOG over 3 days |
2006/1/13-17 [Reference/RealEstate, Reference/Tax] UID:41370 Activity:high |
1/13 You think Bay Area housing prices skyrocketed? Check this out. http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060113/ap_on_re_us/everglades_holdout $60K -> $4.95M in 30yrs. \_ Synopsis of this article: Many dumb asses bought useless FL swamp lands during the 1960's land scam, and got paid millions of dollars 4-5 decades later. My interpretation: The land/real-estate market is dumb ass dummy-safe. If you hold it long enough, and in this case 2/3 of your lifetime, you'll still come out ahead. So go ahead and buy your first home or 5th income property regardless of the bubble, you'll still do well 4-5 decades later. \_ Why is it a surprise that land might have tremendous value *50 YEARS* after purchase? You seem pretty bitter that these people had the foresight to give themselves a nice retirement package starting *50 YEARS* ago. Why are you so upset that other people have done well in life? Nothing is stopping you from putting some money down on cheap land today and *maybe* retiring well on it in *50 YEARS*. \_ "...I will never be able to freely do what I wanted to do." With $4.95M? I'd think he could afford a big place somewhere just as rural. \_ He was apparently forced off his land. I see a problem with that. \_ Go bother Jeb http://web.naplesnews.com/03/10/naples/e39080a.htm "Bush said Thursday that it looked as if negotiations with Hardy would not succeed and that the state would have to pursue eminent domain against him, something Bush said he doesn't like to do. He said Hardy would be 'well-compensated.'" (Oct 17, 2003) Hardy sure wants to: http://www.jessehardy.com "So, you can do the math, people, 160 acres at $50,000 per acre, equals $8 million dollars - a far cry from the 'staggering' $4.95 million I 'shrewdly' negotiated!" ... along with his lawyers: "My negotiator, Will Smith, let me get ripped off, just like my attorney, Charlie Forman. I would do anything to get my land back, even if I didn't have anything else left." \_ I'm happy to bother Jeb. Why does that matter? \_ 70 year old with a 9 year old son.. This guy sounds like a trip.. \_ just telling you who's to blame in this case. \_ This is horseshit, Jeb or not. There is a reason for the existence of eminent domain, and the fact that it's been abused crazily by corrupt politicians and property developers doesn't mean it's always bad. Ask yourself: qui bono? The guy got $5 million for a piece of swamp he acquired for 60k--that's a lot of money. -John \_ It doesn't matter what he got for it or what he paid for it. We still like to pretend in this country that we have property rights. \_ Not after Kelo. \_ Well yeah, like I said: "pretend". \_ So when someone lubes you up and reams you, it's just haggling over remuneration? \_ Re. property rights: if you don't pay property tax, your property is taken away from you. So that sort of scotches that argument. Re. reaming: you \_ Scotches what? In no manner does the concept of property taxes scotch an anti-ED point. [erased my own long rant]. In short, what the hell are you talking about? don't seem to be getting the fundamental difference between taking away land for someone else's profit (a la New London) and taking away land that was initially probably developed at least shadily, \_ Probably? All land in this country was initially stolen from the natives. By your logic it is therefore ok to ream all current land owners just because. like much of the Everglades, and returning it to the commons. And yes, I know there's a huge grey area. -John \_ There's no grey area. Land taken from an owner for anything more than strictly defined public use (such as needing a \_ I hope you realize that after Kelo pretty much anything the gov says is a public use is a public use, including taking away your home and giving it somebody wealthier b/c they will pay more property taxes. school, firehouse, etc) without first making all reasonable efforts to use other land and not *fully* compensating the victim for their loss is theft by government. There are way too many ED cases where the ED isn't for a real public use and the compensation figures are calculated falsely (such as after prices in the area drop by 80% after they announce an ED) that it is impossible to defend ED and it's advocates without associating one's self with some of the scummiest people in local government. This isn't Europe. We've always been allowed to actually *own* our property here. \_ Nice dig, there. The money allocated to him was not calculated falsely, as property prices could would not drop in the conventional sense if the property was not being commercially allocated. You may have noted the bit about it being returned to its natural state. That said, of course there is a grey area and it is huge. I agree fully that ED is vastly over- and too often misused. But do you seriously believe that communities as such could make _any_ economic progress if they had no way at all of occasionally expropriating resources? And no, before you hint at it again, I do not believe in some socialist utopian idea of land as a public good, but as a limited resource to be handled judiciously. And let's face it, the guy _did_ get $5 million for a swamp. -John \_ Ah, so the lube is okay if the price is high enough. Thanks for sharing. If the government can take land not for public use, then private property doesn't exist. Period. \_ Parks are for public use. -tom \_ Not state park and "preserves." Too often they're off limits for people. ED is reasonable for roads and ... well pretty much nothing else. So let's take this ad absurdum--if I build a house on a pristine _/ natural resource under some sort of homesteading "nobody's using it, come 'n git it" initiative, and the land is later found to be the last remaining preserve of the rare spotted mud iguana whose secretions cure cancer, and my presence is killing off the last few, then the gub'mint takes my land, fences off the area and doesn't let anyone in, you would oppose this, right (like I said, ad absurdum)? Also, I'll freely admit that maybe I'm dense, but I fail to see the difference in the big-picture between this and the gub'mint taking your land if you don't pay property taxes. In both cases, the land isn't really yours unconditionally as such. -John \_ I'm not the op or anyone who responded to your post. I just want to say that all this talk is further proof that the concept of ownership (I give you XX trinkets so that you will give me YY acres of land) makes people greedy and do really evil things. The land is precious, and an individual has very limited scope in what he/she can do to fully use the land for greater goods. Given that most common people have been proven to be selfish & stupid in the entire history mankind, it should have been the case from the beginning that the land is not monopolized by individuals. Land belongs to the common habitats of the land. \_ Is this a troll? Are you really actually advocating some form of socialism or just looking for enraged responses? \_ What? You haven't learned to pick up on the subtle article-abuse we have all come to know and love of Chicom troll? Get with it. Nevermind. I re-read the post, and I believe it to be an imposter. \_ I didn't see the expected ChiComTroll grammar at all. I'm sure it is someone else but still a troll. \_ I'm not the above poster you're responding to. With that in mind: Cancer: it doesn't matter how you came about the land as long as it is legally yours today. ED'ing cancer cure land: first, it is necessary to keep the frogs on that land to harvest them directly for a cancer cure? If so, we're screwed anyway since there won't be enough of $rare_animal_or_plant_X to matter. If someone wants to "steal" all the frogs off the land, I don't have an issue with that. We're assuming the rare plant/animal is secondary to the normal land use pattern for the owner. If the owner was actually raising and farming these things for a cancer cure then I've got a problem with stealing his frogs. Property taxes: this is what all land owners pay in exchange for the State (be it local, state or federal) to support and protect the owner and their land claim so they don't have to raise their own private army to defend their stake. The resource being paid for with PT is protective physical and legal enforcement of the land ownership claim. The State usually uses that cash to do things like provide water, roads, schools, etc, but it doesn't have to. Once the PT are paid, the State does what they want with the money. By not paying your PT you are not paying the State what they need to protect your land claim. Since the State is effectively forced to defend all land claims, you can't opt out of your property taxes. Back to the core idea: I don't think the vast majority of people have a problem with the concept of ED. I don't. The problem is that local governments have been very seriously abusing it for years and in the last 15-20 years the abuses have skyrocketed both in number and severity well past the point of thinking of ED as anything more than theft. Far far far too many cases all over the country go like this: 1) Business Developer buys a few beers and kicks a few bucks at a local mayor or board. 2) Locals find some nice water front land inhabited for the previous $MANY_DECADES by honest, hard working tax paying, working class folks and retirees and announces ED on the whole area calling it a "blighted area". 3) ED announcement naturally causes huge drop in housing prices in the area. 4) Locals use new lower comp figures as pay out number to determine worth of remaining houses and small businesses. 5) Citizens get pennies on the dollar and evicted. 6) Locals hand over the land to the Business Developer we saw back in #1 who builds yacht club, fancy hotels and condos. 7) Locals and Business Developer claim victory for The Community and "Yay! ED makes everyone a winner!" except for those Community Members we decided weren't adding enough to the tax base and were kinda lower class anyway and couldn't afford a yacht club membership, screw them. Welcome to ED in the current era. Oh yeah, we might have built a school or small park in there somewhere, too. The alternative to the above is less common but has happened here and there is they steal some dumb bastard's land, don't do a thing with it and then sell it on the public market 20 years later after real estate sky rockets. Not even a token park is built. Just pure raw flat out theft under color of authority. \_ Well, I think we agree that (a) this is theft, and (b) ED has been massively abused and is a slippery slide in itself. I do however still think that this particular case falls under the few "legit" uses of ED--both due to the intended use of the land ("for the public good" in the greater sense) and the amount paid. -John \_ I believe in this case he ended up in some sort of negotiated settlement that he felt was forced upon him under threat of ED. Negotiating under the gun isn't much of a negotiation and he probably could've gotten more which I think is what his gripe is. Anyway, at least we agree on the major points which is the part I was here for. |
2006/1/11-13 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:41347 Activity:nil |
1/11 http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-chinabubble8jan08,0,7585034.story?coll=la-home-headlines&track=morenews At least 30% to 40% of homes sold were bought by speculators. Wow that's a lot of wealthy people around the world. \_ Well, one 35-year-old speculator bought her two apartments for $110K and $170K, and the article says many homes are $70K or less. Rich for China/Taiwan/HK, I guess. |
2006/1/11-13 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:41341 Activity:low |
1/11 http://anotherfuckedborrower.blogspot.com In case bitter housing guy hasn't seen this --oj \_ Wow, there's some interesting stuff in there. Refi junkies indeed. \_ "This is the part that I have 100% no-doubt-in-my-mind will happen in this country. People will take zero responsibility for their actions, and look to grab a lawyer to 'save' them from the 'investment' they were 'cheated' on." \_ 100% no-down loans aren't a problem. The down is so high today that having 20% sitting around and then plunking it into a house just isn't a wise financial move anymore. Going underwater isn't a problem either if we're talking about people using the home for their primary living space. It could drop to whatever and as long as they can still make the monthly payment it doesn't matter. A house is not like a stock option. Being 'underwater' doesn't mean it has no value or you're financially ruined. The ARMs aren't a a problem either. All it means is they got a loan that can go up a fairly large amount in a fairly short period of time *IF* they don't refi before then to a longer term locked in rate. The difference in the monthly between their ARM and a 30 year is not going to be so much that a lot of people will be unable to pay the difference and lose their home. The problem here is the interest only buyers. No one knows how many of them there are but their monthly is going to skyrocket when they refi from ARM to a 30 (or whatever more typical) year loan and the difference is going to be so large that these people might be unable to pay it or even be allowed to refi into a 30 year at all if the lender sees they can't pay it. The interest-only buyers are the ones going to get hurt if anyone does. Never forget that a house is a very different investment than a stock or a stock option and different rules apply. The only thing that will truly hurt all these home buyers as well as the very few 20% down/30 year home buyers and everyone else in the country is massive jobs losses from a deep recession. As long as people have the same job they had when they bought the house and could theoretically make their monthlies, they will be able to continue to do so. However, if we reach the point that massive job losses are causing massive home buyer wipe outs we have far far far worse problems on a global economic scale than anything going on in the housing market. |
2006/1/10 [Reference/RealEstate, Finance/Investment] UID:41316 Activity:nil |
1/8 Dear mature home owners, maybe I'm young and stupid, but I want to know some of the justifications for your irrational needs. What exactly is the purpose of a formal dining room? My mom has \_ Some of us have a lot of cocktail & dinner parties. -John a 4500 sq ft house and the formal dining room has been used twice in an entire decade. Secondly, what is the purpose of having a separate living room used for meeting guests and a family room? My mom's living room is rarely used and is there mostly for looks-- her guests usually go directly to the family room since it has a nice TV and is closer to the kitchen. Lastly, what exactly is the purpose of a large backyard with lots of grass when it is often used less than once a month? \_ I can tell you that my sister spent about $60,000 on her fancy front yard with gazeebo, statue, malibu lights, waterfountain, and other things. One time I went to her backyard and found moldy, deformed boxes which were once malibu light boxes where the workers left them a few months ago. I asked her about them and she said she hadn't noticed them. The only time she'd go to the backyard was when she had guests, so she could show off her fancy McBackyard. Oh and by the way she has a 4 bedroom McMansion and the only people living in it is... her. Suburbia is a total waste of land and resources, but as you already know, people are stupid. \_ Geez man, she lives in a 4500sq ft house. Of course there's a lot of wasted space. You could comfortably house 3 families in that much space. As the above poster says, it's all just conspicuous consumption. -jrleek \_ A formal dining room is useful if you throw a lot of dinner parties or have old-fashioned sit down dinners as a family. Otherwise it's just for show. \_ It's also good if you have big multiplayer board games. \_ Or have poker games with lots of people. \_ I always thought the formal dining is there so you can sell your house to people who want a formal dining room. Me, I converted mine into an office, and it works great. I'll deconvert back into a dining room when I sell. The backyard is there for your kids. In fact, a friend is moving specifically for a larger backyard so his kids can have more play room. The larger yard is also great for more buffer space between you and your neighbors. \_ These are artifacts of older housing concepts. Formal dining rooms just used to be the room you ate in, before the invention of the breakfast nook. Living rooms were styled after parlors and located in the front of the house to avoid tramping through a cluttered house, while family rooms were invented for the "back of the house". The more informal family and social life became and the less people entertained, the less need for these distictions. Large backyards were important because of a lack of green space (parks), to allow for entertaining, and to boost the ego. Land is still land. \_ It is simple: having nice things and lots of space gives people a warm n fuzzy feeling. There is nothing irrational about it. If you stepped back from the class warfare language and pre-judgement of those with a life style you can't afford, you'd soon realise that "living" in a 650 square foot apartment isn't living. You look at something you might never be able to afford and call it irrational. People who have it can't imagine how you could stand to live in a rat hole apartment. High density housing sucks to live in and going skiing a few times a year or having a nice park nearby doesn't make up for it. \_ I could afford to live in a large house in the suburbs or a smaller condo in the city and I chose the city. I could even afford a larger place in San Francisco if I wanted it, but I don't. Not even's concept of self worth is tied up in their over consumption. I prefer high density housing and so do many people. Get off your high horse. \_ I think the person on the high horse is the OP. I like having a FDR and a large back yard. I go out in the yard every single day, because I like to garden. When I entertain, I either entertain outside or in my FDR and living room. The family room is upstairs and is sort of a 'junk room' I don't invite guests to. In short, just because a few people are putzes with more space than they use doesn't mean everyone choosing a house over high-density living is. I think 4500 square feet is excessive, but then I couldn't afford that if I took out 3 mortgages. \_ I never said anything about self worth. Don't project. It is entirely about personal space and comfort for those who have. I'm glad you have chosen to pay more to get less in the city. That is a wise investment. Actually, most of the people in high density housing are the poor. I wouldn't really call being poor a "choice" they made. \_ Tell all the people living in South Beach, Telegraph Hill, Nob Hill and Russian Hill that they are poor. In most of the world the most desirable places to live are in the city center, where density allows for all the advantages of urban living. And is your "that is a wise investment" line intended to be sarcasm? It is hard to tell over ascii whether you are being serious or not. \_ Well, the pp said "most of the people in high density housing are the poor". IOW, we're counting heads here. So, in SF, are there more people in expensive areas like Nob Hill or in poor areas like the Tenderloin? Are there more expensive neighborhoods or poor neighboorhoods? Are there more rich people or poor people? They can pack a lot of people into projects, and it'll take a large area of luxe apts and such to balance the head count. - !pp \_ Rich people live in spacious penthouses in the middle of the city, not shitty ratholes. Then they fly out to the Hamptons or Aspen or whatever on the weekends to unwind. While Manhattan is expensive, the *average* apartment in Manhattan is a dump - unless you are rich, of course. \_ I grew up in a big city where 95% of the people lived in apartments, so I am used to it Living in a big house would be nice but living beyond my needs seems wasteful. I finally bought a townhouse just so I can host my church fellowship gatherings at my place. Other friends have bigger houses, but they are out of the way, whereas my place is centrally located so everyone can come without travelling too far. - yet another poster \_ You could afford more if you weren't tithing your 10% \_ sure. I had not been tithing a full pre-tax 10% before last year. Then I decided to start doing it early last year after quite a bit of struggling, and within 2 months, my stocks did so well that the capital gains would be enough to cover 3 full years of tithing. Just goes to show how small we are and how great God is. We tithe because we should, not because God would bless us because of it, but in regard to tithing, Bible does says: "Test me in this, and see if I will not throw open the floodgates of heaven and pour out so much blessing that you will not have room enough for it." Malachi 3:8-12 http://tinyurl.com/bz5d4 Note that I am not saying that Christians have to offer 10% pre-tax. It's not a matter of following a rule, or of judging people based on that. It's a matter of your heart and love of the Lord, and love of your brothers and sisters and fellow men. \_ I think you are a false Mormon. Jesus quite clearly teaches in the Bible that your faith in God has nothing to do with your material wealth. Unless the book of Moroni has a few extra chapters not being shared with the class. \_ I am not a Mormon. \_ So, you came into extra money and didn't tithe on that? naughty boy. \_ Like I said, it's not a matter of following rules. For capital gains, for me, since it's for generating an income post-retirement, I will just continue tithing that income when I retire, and leave 10% of what I have when I die. \_ Why don't you tithe it to me next year, and cut out the wasteful middlemen? \_ You are funny, but I don't think you have a need for it. \_ Ever checked out the LDS Church balance sheets? I can assure you I need it a lot more than it does. I'd even share it with some other sodans. \_ they make those public? \_ I was glib... estimated assets are... large. ($tens of billions) \_ if you want some, just join their church. \_ My church is a small Lutheran church. \_ You started tithing and your stocks went up. Do you actually think those are related? Just think of how many people God would be hurting if he made _your_ stocks go up to reward you. \_ Why would my stocks going up necessarily hurt anyone. The stock that went up most is doing vaccine and antibodies production research for diseases like flu, ebola, malaria, west nile, rabies, etc. \_ I don't think that the presence of a dining room in most homes is that controversial. I, for one, strongly believe that meals should be normally consumed in the company of your relatives at a dining table and not in the living room or in the bedroom in front of TV. In many homes, the dining room is just an extension of either the kitchen or the living room which is fine. However, having separate family and living rooms seems to be less common (and less useful) indeed. |
2006/1/8-10 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:41293 Activity:nil |
1/8 Has anyone else found that over the years, the doors in their house don't open or close easily anymore? It seems like maybe the house has gotten slightly warped, maybe because the ground it's on has shifted slightly, or something. What do you do about something like that? \_ new houses settle over time, makign doors not fit their jams as well and such. It just happens. In my case, we adjusted the doors that were having problems. \_ you might want to have your house checked out, especially if it's an older house for foundation or other structural problems. if your house is "sagging" and if it will get worse over time, you might want to have the problem fixed. u \_ Wood expands and contracts with moisture, too. I plane down the high spots on the doors and make sure the hinges are screwed in tightly. \_ http://www.homedepot.com -> KNOW HOW -> Doors -> Freeing a Sticking Door. |
2006/1/6-9 [Politics/Domestic/California, Reference/RealEstate] UID:41277 Activity:high |
1/6 http://www.nytimes.com/2005/12/29/realestate/29afford.html Buying a home now is still easier than it was in the 80s \_ "in almost every place outside of New York, Washington, Miami and along the coast in California. ... places like New York and Los Angeles ... families buying their first home often must spend more than half of their income on mortgage payments, far more than they once did" \_ This could be read to mean exactly the opposite of what the article said. Even ignoring that, you left out the next sentence, "But the places that have become less affordable over the last generation account for only a quarter of the country's population." Considering the concentration of population in NY and CA, it's likely only a tiny number (<< 1/4) of municipalities have become less affordable. \_ It only means the exact opposite in places like NY, Washington, Miami, and coastal California. \_ It's your choice where you want to live and how much you are willing to spend on real estate. Fortunately, the number of places with more affordable housing is growing. \_ Enjoy your life in Nebraska. \_ I imagine that's the difference between us. I feel no superiority over people who would find Nebraska right for them. It sounds like you do. \_ I imagine that's the difference between us. You're a snob and I'm not. \_ Be grateful. Having all the people with that personality want to buy houses in the same small group of cities gets them out of your way. I could name several really wonderful cities which still have affordable houseing, but I won't, because I want to keep the speculator-parasites from even hearing the names. \_ have fun in boonyville. It's not hard to find out which cities will continue to boom regardless of existing population. I'll give you a hint-- where there are damn jews and orientals there will always be irrational housing boom. \_ *laugh* Hi Wannabe-Racist Housing Troll! And that's "damned" not "damn". Also, if you're going for the racist thing there are plenty of hard core racial slurs you could have used instead of "damn jews and orientals". That was pretty weak. You get a "D-". --Troll Rating Advisory Board \_ I imagine I have actually live in Nebraska \_ As far as "orientals" are concerned, there are plenty of busts following booms. Just check out HK, Spore, Tokyo, etc. \_ I imagine I have actually lived in Nebraska and you have not. Enjoy the 20 below zero weather with endless winds blowing off the prarie while I enjoy my sunny days in the 60s in January. \_ Yeah, but harder than it was during the 90s. At the end of the 80s home prices took a big drop. They will soon again. |
2006/1/6-9 [Reference/RealEstate, Politics/Domestic/California] UID:41275 Activity:nil |
1/6 http://www.inman.com/blogger/2006_01_01_bradinman_archive.aspx Go to "No thanks banks, I'll pay cash." Apparently 1/3 of the homes over 1 million dollars are paid by cash. \_ Why is this surprising? \_ The 1/3 number came from a 2003 Coldwell Banker survey of 200 of its agents. It's probably not all that scientific. Of the 15-ish people I know in $million+ houses (it's not hard in the Bay Area), everyone financed. Of course, that's not that scientific either. its agents. It's probably not all that scientific. |
2006/1/6-9 [Reference/RealEstate, Finance/Investment] UID:41271 Activity:low |
1/6 We survived the great bear market of 2000-2002. Congratulations. \_ and by the skin of our teeth. Bears are scary! \_ What do you mean by survived? My previous company went under in 2001. \_ though you suffered, you are still here, healthy, and earning a decent income (I hope). \_ nope, took a pay cut to find a job in 2002. Gonna change jobs soon though. \_ Prepare for the great housing collapse of 2006-8. \_ I already have lawnchairs and a case of beer, if that's what you mean. I intend to bask in shadenfreude. you mean. I intend to bask in schadenfreude. \_ didn't they say they were going to stop increasing interest rates soon? \_ Greenspam has been making noise about 1 more increase and then seeing what happens. In other news, the housing bust is here. In the last quarter the rate of increase in the price of housing crashed down to 6%. \_ Greenspan retired. And, uh, the rate of increase slowing to 6% annually isn't exactly a bust. -tom \_ Uh, the rate of increase slowing to 6% annually isn't exactly a bust. -tom \_ Sarcasm detectors... ACTIVATE! |
2006/1/5-10 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:41237 Activity:very high |
1/5 Dear mature home owners, maybe I'm young and stupid, but I want to know some of the justifications for your irrational needs. What exactly is the purpose of a formal dining room? My mom has a 4500 sq ft house and the formal dining room has been used twice in an entire decade. Secondly, what is the purpose of having a separate living room used for meeting guests and a family room? My mom's living room is rarely used and is there mostly for looks-- her guests usually go directly to the family room since it has a nice TV and is closer to the kitchen. Lastly, what exactly is the purpose of a large backyard with lots of grass when it is often used less than once a month? \_ Hello, I guess I'm an immature home owner because I have not yet expanded into all of my space. However, I plan on using the "formal" living room as an office. The "formal" dining room will be a dining room, 'cause my kitchen table can't accommodate more than 4, nor could the kitchen. I'm growing fruit trees and vegetables in my back yard. Said deciduous trees also shade the house in summer and allow sun through in winter. Other uses for the spare space could include workout room, etc. --PM \_ What you consider an irrational need, other people consider a nice thing to have. You are too stuck on absolute utilitarian necessity and the rhetoric of class warfare. People were not meant to be crammed into tiny psychosis inducing apartments. Wanting a large living space, nice things, and a generally attractive living environment is supremely rational. \_ I can tell you that my sister spent about $60,000 on her fancy front yard with gazeebo, statue, malibu lights, waterfountain, and other things. One time I went to her backyard and found moldy, deformed boxes which were once malibu light boxes where the workers left them a few months ago. I asked her about them and she said she hadn't noticed them. The only time she'd go to the backyard was when she had guests, so she could show off her fancy McBackyard. Oh and by the way she has a 4 bedroom McMansion and the only people living in it is... her. Suburbia is a total waste of land and resources, but as you already know, people are stupid. \_ Geez man, she lives in a 4500sq ft house. Of course there's a lot of wasted space. You could comfortably house 3 families in that much space. As the above poster says, it's all just conspicuous consumption. -jrleek \_ A formal dining room is useful if you throw a lot of dinner parties or have old-fashioned sit down dinners as a family. Otherwise it's just for show. \_ It's also good if you have big multiplayer board games. \_ Or have poker games with lots of people. \_ I always thought the formal dining is there so you can sell your house to people who want a formal dining room. Me, I converted mine into an office, and it works great. I'll deconvert back into a dining room when I sell. The backyard is there for your kids. In fact, a friend is moving specifically for a larger backyard so his kids can have more play room. The larger yard is also great for more buffer space between you and your neighbors. \_ These are artifacts of older housing concepts. Formal dining rooms just used to be the room you ate in, before the invention of the breakfast nook. Living rooms were styled after parlors and located in the front of the house to avoid tramping through a cluttered house, while family rooms were invented for the "back of the house". The more informal family and social life became and the less people entertained, the less need for these distictions. Large backyards were important because of a lack of green space (parks), to allow for entertaining, and to boost the ego. Land is still land. \_ It is simple: having nice things and lots of space gives people a warm n fuzzy feeling. There is nothing irrational about it. If you stepped back from the class warfare language and pre-judgement of those with a life style you can't afford, you'd soon realise that "living" in a 650 square foot apartment isn't living. You look at something you might never be able to afford and call it irrational. People who have it can't imagine how you could stand to live in a rat hole apartment. High density housing sucks to live in and going skiing a few times a year or having a nice park nearby doesn't make up for it. \_ I could afford to live in a large house in the suburbs or a smaller condo in the city and I chose the city. I could even afford a larger place in San Francisco if I wanted it, but I don't. Not even's concept of self worth is tied up in their over consumption. I prefer high density housing and so do many people. Get off your high horse. \_ I think the person on the high horse is the OP. I like having a FDR and a large back yard. I go out in the yard every single day, because I like to garden. When I entertain, I either entertain outside or in my FDR and living room. The family room is upstairs and is sort of a 'junk room' I don't invite guests to. In short, just because a few people are putzes with more space than they use doesn't mean everyone choosing a house over high-density living is. I think 4500 square feet is excessive, but then I couldn't afford that if I took out 3 mortgages. \_ I never said anything about self worth. Don't project. It is entirely about personal space and comfort for those who have. I'm glad you have chosen to pay more to get less in the city. That is a wise investment. Actually, most of the people in high density housing are the poor. I wouldn't really call being poor a "choice" they made. \_ Tell all the people living in South Beach, Telegraph Hill, Nob Hill and Russian Hill that they are poor. In most of the world the most desirable places to live are in the city center, where density allows for all the advantages of urban living. And is your "that is a wise investment" line intended to be sarcasm? It is hard to tell over ascii whether you are being serious or not. \_ Well, the pp said "most of the people in high density housing are the poor". IOW, we're counting heads here. So, in SF, are there more people in expensive areas like Nob Hill or in poor areas like the Tenderloin? Are there more expensive neighborhoods or poor neighboorhoods? Are there more rich people or poor people? They can pack a lot of people into projects, and it'll take a large area of luxe apts and such to balance the head count. - !pp Perhaps as a global world-wide statement "most of of the people in high density housing are poor" is true, but it is not true in San Francisco or even the Bar Area. \_ Rich people live in spacious penthouses in the middle of the city, not shitty ratholes. Then they fly out to the Hamptons or Aspen or whatever on the weekends to unwind. While Manhattan is expensive, the *average* apartment in Manhattan is a dump - unless you are rich, of course. \_ I grew up in a big city where 95% of the people lived in apartments, so I am used to it Living in a big house would be nice but living beyond my needs seems wasteful. I finally bought a townhouse just so I can host my church fellowship gatherings at my place. Other friends have bigger houses, but they are out of the way, whereas my place is centrally located so everyone can come without travelling too far. - yet another poster \_ You could afford more if you weren't tithing your 10% \_ sure. I had not been tithing a full pre-tax 10% before last year. Then I decided to start doing it early last year after quite a bit of struggling, and within 2 months, my stocks did so well that the capital gains would be enough to cover 3 full years of tithing. Just goes to show how small we are and how great God is. We tithe because we should, not because God would bless us because of it, but in regard to tithing, Bible does says: "Test me in this, and see if I will not throw open the floodgates of heaven and pour out so much blessing that you will not have room enough for it." Malachi 3:8-12 http://tinyurl.com/bz5d4 Note that I am not saying that Christians have to offer 10% pre-tax. It's not a matter of following a rule, or of judging people based on that. It's a matter of your heart and love of the Lord, and love of your brothers and sisters and fellow men. \_ I think you are a false Mormon. Jesus quite clearly teaches in the Bible that your faith in God has nothing to do with your material wealth. Unless the book of Moroni has a few extra chapters not being shared with the class. \_ I am not a Mormon. \_ So, you came into extra money and didn't tithe on that? naughty boy. \_ Like I said, it's not a matter of following rules. For capital gains, for me, since it's for generating an income post-retirement, I will just continue tithing that income when I retire, and leave 10% of what I have when I die. \_ Why don't you tithe it to me next year, and cut out the wasteful middlemen? \_ You are funny, but I don't think you have a need for it. \_ Ever checked out the LDS Church balance sheets? I can assure you I need it a lot more than it does. I'd even share it with some other sodans. \_ they make those public? \_ I was glib... estimated assets are... large. ($tens of billions) \_ if you want some, just join their church. \_ My church is a small Lutheran church. \_ You started tithing and your stocks went up. Do you actually think those are related? Just think of how many people God would be hurting if he made _your_ stocks go up to reward you. \_ Why would my stocks going up necessarily hurt anyone. The stock that went up most is doing vaccine and antibodies production research for diseases like flu, ebola, malaria, west nile, rabies, etc. vaccine production research for diseases like flu, ebola, malaria, west nile, etc. \_ I don't think that the presence of a dining room in most homes is that controversial. I, for one, strongly believe that meals should be normally consumed in the company of your relatives, if possible, at a dining table and not in the living room or in the bedroom in front of TV. In many homes, the dining room is just an extension of either the kitchen or the living room which is fine. However, having separate family and living rooms seems to be less common is that controversial. I, for one, strongly believe that meals should be normally consumed in the company of your relatives at a dining table and not in the living room or in the bedroom in front of TV. In many homes, the dining room is just an extension of either the kitchen or the living room which is fine. However, having separate family and living rooms seems to be less common (and less useful) indeed. |
2006/1/1-4 [Reference/RealEstate, Recreation/House] UID:41189 Activity:nil |
12/1 I just bought a 2-year old condo unit. What's the best way to clean, seal, and polish flat marbles to semi-glossy in the kitchen and bathroom (which by the way has a little bit of pee stains)? Also the granite in the shower-room could use a bit of work too. I went to Home Depot but it's a bit confusing given that they have hundreds of solutions to use. Any advice would be greatly appreciated. Thanks and Happy New Year! \_ ObHousingBubbleTalk |
2005/12/30-2006/1/4 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:41179 Activity:nil |
12/30 I live in an apartment. My unit's electrical meter covers both my unit and the unit above; the electrical bill is in my landlord's name, but I've been paying it. Is this legal? I'm in Oakland. Suggestions on who to contact about this? \_ wow thats messed up. You could stop paying it -- if its in your landlord's name, they're responsible. But I dont think theyd feel the pain of you not having any power... \_ They might feel the pain when he stops paying rent. If the apartment doesn't meet basic living conditions (running water, heat, electricity, etc) you don't have to pay the rent for it. The landlord isn't providing a suitable residence. By the way, I would suggest you talk to the landlord about the bill because that would be much easier than going through the "not paying it" process. \- it is my understanding that if anything outside your living space is on you meter ... even the light in the hallway ... this must be disclosed to you. i am not sure what your remedy options would be at this point. i believe oakland has some kind of rent board but it might be easier to ask the berkeley rent people and just say you live in berkeley. let us know how this goes. --psb \_ Turns out the relevant section of the California Civil Code is 1940.9: link:csua.org/u/egh It makes for fascinating reading; the gist is since our rental agreement specifies that I have to cover the gas for upstairs and doesn't mention the electricity, I may be able to sue for the payments I made, and I certainly am not liable for all of the electricity. We'll bring this up with him first thing next week. Thanks. --erikred \_ Whatever you do, do not stop paying the electric bill. As far as PG&E is concerned, since you live at the location and are the beneficiary of power, it is your responsibility. If you stop paying, they will just start accruing a balance, possibly shut off the power (which then requires a deposit for restoration). The California PUC supports this practice. What does your lease/rental agreement say about who is responsible for the power? You probably have recourse against your landlord. -dans |
2005/12/23-28 [Reference/RealEstate, Finance/Investment] UID:41130 Activity:nil |
12/22 http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/051223/economy.html?.v=10 median price in oct: 234800 median price in nov: 225200 "However, sales fell in all other areas, led by a 22.1 percent drop in the West, the biggest decline in this region since February 1995." \_ How is this going to affect the interest rate? \_ Finally. I've been watining for this to come for a long time. Now maybe I can afford something close to work. It's about time, damnit. -bitter home buyer, 32 years old \_ How do you figure? Rates are going up so your monthly will be the same (roughly) on the same house even if the buy price is lower. If you're a home owner now, your house will sell for less also. If you're bitter because you're a renter, then you don't even have th eold house to help offset the cost of the new. This is sum zero for you, guy. The prices and #s sold are slipping because rates are going up. I feel bad for you but this isn't going to help you at all unless you're a high cash buyer. If you had that kind of cash you'd own now. \_ Another 85% and my house will be back where I bought it. \_ And with a higher interest rate. |
2005/12/21-22 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:41111 Activity:nil |
12/21 What's the difference between a real estate agent and a realtor? Thx. \_ Main Entry: Re·al·tor Pronunciation: 'rE(-&)l-t&r, -"tor, ÷'rE-l&-t&r also rE-'al-t&r Function: collective mark -- used for a real estate agent who is a member of the National Association of Realtors |
2005/12/15-16 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:41025 Activity:kinda low |
12/14 http://www.ziprealty.com/buy_a_home/logged_in/national_housing.jsp?src=zn This says in the 80s, mortgage interest was 13%. If we have 13% today, there'd be a great depression. What the heck happened between the 80s and now? \_ Nothing happened, the monthly payment just balanced. BTW, my parents rate was 18% on their house in the 80's, it depended on other things as well (income, credit, etc). Fact is, the interest rate is meaningless because the monthly payment will always reflect the market rate. If the interest is high, the prices of houses will be low (parent's place was $38k), if the rate is low, the place will be high ($600k equivalent house now). Simple economics, people will base the price of house on monthly payments, not on interest rate or real price of the house. The key is to get in when there is a swing in either one. BTW, provide the ID & PW to the site next time, bugmenot doesn't work on that site. \_ Carter got kicked out of office. \_ No, Nixon got kicked out of office. Carter lost an election. Not the same thing. Ask GHWB. \_ If you want to get that anal, Nixon didn't get kicked out of office either, he resigned. Nobody in U.S. presidential history has ever been technically kicked out of office, although Johnson and Clinton did get impeached. |
2005/12/13-15 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:40988 Activity:low |
12/13 For an average priced house in the Bay Area paid with 20% down, how much more monthly payments is it per quarter point hike in the interest rate? I did a quick preliminary check on yahoo's mortgage calculator and it's only about $50/month/quarter point. That's not a lot. \_ Think about how excited you'd be to save $50/month on, say, your gas/power bill. \_ and that's just for a quarter point (0.25%) \_ The op's point is that even with 1 point increase, or $200/month extra, it's not really going to affect people. Heck, in the Bay Area I pay $80 for gardeners, +$200 for premium cable/phone/DSL, $105 for Cingular family plan, $500 eating out, and another $500 for movies, skiing, road trip, gas, whatever. How is $200 extra/month going to affect the economy where I'm at? \_ Not everything is about you and your ilk. Are you stupid or just dumb? \_ Let's say rates go up to 8%. That's $400/month and there goes your eating out or your car payment or whatever. Even if it's $100/month it will "affect people". \_ Do you own an average house? \_ Are you one of those contributing to the negative savings rate of the nation? |
2005/12/13-15 [Reference/RealEstate, Academia/Berkeley/CSUA, Academia/Berkeley/CSUA/Troll] UID:40987 Activity:nil |
12/13 Ya'll are boring. Enough with the housing talk. Where's the juicy topics? And I don't mean political flames... \_ Be patient my little cricket. One of the politburo newbies like amckee will do something stupid and comical. \_ my GF insists on getting brazillians even though I'm not that into it. what should i do |
2005/12/12-14 [Reference/RealEstate, Politics/Domestic/SocialSecurity] UID:40981 Activity:high |
12/12 dim, do you advocate living a lot farther to buy a single family home instead of a condo that is a lot closer? \_ Tough question. In general, I like the lifestyle a SFR affords. However, I'd rather have a condo in SF than commute in from Sacramento every day. There are advantages to both. All else equal, you are better off with a SFR in most cases. For investment purposes, small buildings and duplex/triplex situations are better than either. --dim \_ Condos are better when you're young and you don't have time to mow the lawn, adjust the sprinkler, rake leafs, clean up the garage (which your wife thinks is an unlimited storage space), plant new flower beds, add manure [or chemical fertilizer], take out weeds, kill gophers, spray pesticides, etc. In addition, when you're older and move up to a SFR that real men live in, you can rent out your condo without worrying about the condition of the condo as your home owner's association should take care of things for you. Lastly, home owner's association dues (HOA) is completely tax deductable as expense so it's all good. \_ Jesus, what is wrong with you people? You do realize that you can hire a gardener to do most/all of that crap, yes? It's really actually rather common and can work really well at a fairly modest price. You can find these 'gardeners' in the yellow pages. \_ If I ever want to do any of that shit on your list other than killing gophers, I hope someone has the mercy to kill me. \- spoken like a young rebellious liberal. One day, you will grow up and assimilate, and you'll love to do all of the above. Grow up, get a job, buy a suburbian house, buy a minivan or SUV, and have kids. Family values, that's the American way. Like I said, you'll have to do all of the above sooner or later. Can I kill you now? God Bless. \_ God Bless? God Bless what? What exactly is it that god is supposed to be blessing here? Do you really believe in god, or are you just being 'clever'? \_ Yes, but at least he galloped. When did you? \_ blah! both options suck. why buy when you can rent worry free. i'm happy renting my place, i feel perfectly fine playing PS2, Xbox and having cool LAN parties. what is it with you old farts. grow down man -young troll, will try harder \_ SFR have greater demands and lower supply. Old SFR and orchids and warehouses are constantly being torn down for \_ That's gotta be the smallest condo ever! more condo developments. SFR are disappearing while condos are being built all the time. So, it's not hard to see why one is better than the other. If you spend just a little bit of time in traffic, your overall gain in the long run is much higher. SFR rules. \_ I'd actually argue that condos are better for older people. Young people have a lot more energy for all of the above. \_ Are HOA dues really tax deductible? googling says otherwise, can anyone say definitively? \_ If you are renting the place out, you can deduct the HOA dues from the amount you collect in rent. You cannot deduct the HOA dues on your primary residence. \_ Good to know -potential future landlord \_ Live simply, and spend your extra time doing charity work, instead of mowing the lawn. \_ helping thyself is the best charity work. -libertarian \- how do you, mr libertarian, define charity? do you define it as "helping yourself" or that just falls under your defn? --psb \_ I think you have been had. Libertarians LOVE \_ I think you have been had. Libertarians like charity. Charity makes one feel good about oneself and helps another who may well be gratefull. It is and helps another who may well be grateful. It is Govmnt handouts, which are coerced from one person (how many here feel good when paying their taxes?) and given to another as entitelments, (which are less likely to make one feel gratefuly) less likely to make one feel grateful) Please note, that I am *not* arguing personally against social welfare. I am simply stating the libertarian POV to illustrate that it is more likely that the above is (mis)characterizing a "libertarian" not actually speaking as one. -crebbs \- i dont think i've been had. i think you are being defensive. saying "chess is my favorite sport" may make sense if sport to you is at essence about competition but may not make sense if must involve something physical. is non-competititive mountain climbing a sport? similarly, i am trying to figure out what this fellow considers the "essence" of charity. shopping on amazon makes me feel good and helps amazon stockholders. that isnt charity. i do know a bit about libertarianism and contractarian philosophy. i am asking a narrow question to the PP. not making a statement about social welfare in the large. --psb \- on i see ... from below it looks like the "-libertarian" fellow is just mocking libertarianism. it's hard to tell the mocking from those who are in earnest ... privatize from those who are in earnest ... privatatize fire depts! --psb \_ right, my point was just that he is mocking As for the "Fire Depts" comment. All groups have their irrational fringe elements. It happens that 3rd party groups, being ipso facto out of the mainstream, tend to be more defined by their extremists. That being said there is a huge difference between someone Characterizing Libs as radicals, and some idiot(s) who (regularly) MIS-Characterize them as mean/cruel/hateful/dimwitted/selfish hedonistic bastards (not to say that there are none who are) -crebbs \- my criticisms of libertarians is not a philosophical criticism of libertarianism. i think most libertarians actually dont care about the philosophy they just like what it says. this isnt a perfect analogy but it's like the difference between a raiders supporter because they are co- located in oakland and somebody to endorses the raider image/lifestyle/values and would stick with them even if moved to Dallas. i do have separate criticisms of the lib. philosophy but i also think the it is a compelling framework that can force opposing views to answer some tough questions (as i have said before some liberals become defensive when confronted with "dont you feel people know what is best for themselves" ... when it is phrased as "do you think poor people are stupid" and feel obligated to backpedal rather than say "yes, there are a bunch of cases where people dont make good decisions" either for structural reasons [info costs] or "weak will"). the Randroids are pretty much the Stalinists of the Libertarians. are you related to the Krebs cycle people? them as evil/hateful/dimwitted/selfish bastards (not to say that there are none who are) -crebbs are you invovled with the crebbs cycle? |
2005/12/11-14 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:40962 Activity:moderate |
12/11 Housing Bubble pops in Northern Virginia: http://csua.org/u/e9a \_ Watch foreclosure rates over the next few years as all those ARMs are pushed up by the fed's prime rate increases... \_ Ah, finally, someone posts something that makes sense re: real estate bubbles. Certainly, whatever is going on in another state has little if anything to do with pricing here. Location, location, location! \_ Yes, I think Chicago's housing market will hold up much better than Bay Area's. \_ Interest rates will affect everywhere and will affect the places where people borrow a lot of money relative to income the most. \_ Of course as interest rates rise, there will be fewer buyers, price rises will slow, housing will take longer to sell, etc. No one disputes that. That is a natural part of the housing cycle. However, rates slowly rising is not going to magically burst the bubble and bring prices down to where a 24 y/o new college grad can afford one on their first job like a few people here are praying to happen. Those people are just screwed if they want a house before 30 without getting lucky or having two good incomes. \_ I worry that the exotic financing schemes (interest only, reverse amort., and even simple ARMs) being peddled to people who can't financially handle the repercussions of rising rates and stagnant prices, especially combined with stricter bankruptcy laws, are ingredients of a dangerous economic storm. Can you set my mind at ease? Also, as the feasability of ownership is pushed further and further into retirement years (buying at 35, mortgage done at 65), what will that do to the overall economic state of "frothy" areas? Not to mention the burden of financing retirement when you've worked so hard to build that equity, but had little or nothing left to save. \_ This is very similar to what's going on in Livermore, CA. \_ And in Boston: http://csua.org/u/e9c \_ Ooh, the median price dropped 5%. \_ Their super hot market sold houses in 20 days? Houses here now sell in a week instead of a weekend. My God! At this rate, we'll be at their 20 day super hot mark in 6 months! The sky is falling! \_ I did notice this. Houses took 20 days to sell? That's about the norm for California (well, maybe 30 days) in an average market. Houses here were selling in, like you said, a weekend. However, I have noticed a lot of houses on the market in my area and they are selling much more slowly. It's probably because the prices are so damn high. The woman across the street is selling for $100K more than she paid for the same house last year. Also, someone is trying to sell a house for $1M in VA an hour from DC and they wonder why it won't sell very fast? Heck, prices aren't that high in CA once you get 50-60 miles from the urban centers. I think the frenzy in places like CA has people in other areas losing their minds. After all, real estate doesn't appreciate like that in other parts of the country very often, if ever. A house in Northern Virginia could be bought for $160K just 10 years ago, when houses in CA were already $300K+. I don't think houses in many of the hottest markets (e.g. Miami and Las Vegas) will hold their value when this runup stops - certainly not as well as CA will. CA is a bit of a unique situation. However, it certainly is not immune and I think prices will fall here, too. They will just rebound faster. In some other places the market may never rebound. \_ Prices may pull back a bit and some speculators are going to get burned but the sky is not going to fall. Normal single income people still won't be able to get into a first house without a miracle, a lot of saving, or getting a second good income into the equation. \_ How about Modesto and Gilroy? \_ What about them? \_ yea, sun and cisco stayed hot for a little bit longer than the rest too during the internet bubble pop. \_ You give two divergent examples which undermine your point. Sun is a company which fundamentally lost its way, not to mention lost a lot of money; its stock would have tanked no matter what happened with the rest of the market. Cisco is a fundamentally sound company that still has profits. CSCO is still as high as it was at the end of 1998, and double what it was at the beginning of 1998. If you bought in February 2000, and had a < 5 year time horizon, you got screwed, but even then you probably still will be OK in the long run. -tom \_ yes, cisco is in a much better position than sun, but growth and margins have both fallen, and I am not sure if these will improve anytime soon. what do you think? are you still holding your ge stocks? \_ I still own CSCO and have no intention of selling. In fact, at current levels I am probably going to add to my holdings. I haven't owned GE in 10+ years. -tom \_ what does the stock market have to do with anything? everyone needs a place to live. few people need a router and even fewer need a solaris box. \_ what do you mean? how many of the products you use daily were made by companies in the stock market? \_ dotcoms? almost none. sun? nothing not easily replaced if they vanished. cisco? same story. my house? brrrr sure is cold outside! \_ yea, I am sure your land line, cell phone service, internet connection just magically works. \_ I had a land line before the dotcoms. I also had net. \_ Yes because if you lost your house you would live on the street. There are no available domiciles left. And the ones we have were made by the high men of old; their art has been lost. \_ yea, everyone needs toilet paper, that's why they should sell for $10 a roll. \_ You mean I could live with you? Gosh, thanks! \_ yea, but the japanese are weird, that's why their housing price slipped for 14 straight years and is now 40% below the peak in 1991. \_ I think that housing prices will fall, but what people seem to miss is that if they fall 40% over the next 14 years most of us are still ahead. The same is true of the stock market. If you always buy at the tops then you are very unlucky indeed. \_ If they fall 40% I'm going to buy 4 or 5 of them. I don't care what the paper value of my house is. It isn't important since I'm not selling. Too bad for me I didn't buy a few houses 5-6 years ago. \_ If they fall 40% they probably won't be any more affordable than they are now unless you are planning to buy them cash. Rising rates will make the mortgage payments about the same for most people. I don't understand the advantage to buying a house for 50% off if you have to pay 50% more interest for it. Yes, eventually you can refinance. Why not just buy now then? You are either going to wait out a fall in rates or wait out a rise in prices. Funny how the two are linked like that. I think it's better to get the low rate, because prices will take care of themselves over the long term. \_ A lower price and higher rate means that I have some upside if the prices rise so I can sell and take some profit or buy more. A lower rate at a higher price means I'm a landlord for life. \_ I guess it depends on if you plan to keep the property or sell it. Most people I know who made millions in real estate kept it a decently long amount of time (i.e. were landlords) and only sold if they saw a better (income-generating) opportunity or found themselves needing cash for another reason (e.g. medical). \_ Of course. I didn't say I was flipping. Over time, real estate and everything else goes up (mostly). Since the idea is to grow a real estate empire and destroy Trump, buying low and selling high is better than buying high and renting the same properties forever. I see no reason for buying high at any realistic interest rate. \_ The people I know who own millions in real estate are still buying quality. It's the same as with stocks. Low or high, the key is to buy quality and keep buying. The cycles of the market become irrelevant over time. A woman I know casually lost more in a quarter of investing than I make in 2 years. She keeps buying, though. Why? She's been buying for the last 40 years is why. Same with her real estate. Sure, some times are more ideal than others, but in general you play the game or you don't. It doesn't pay to sit out (time the market). You might lose some battles, but you will win the war. Your ideal situation (falling prices) may never materialize. What if prices fall 10%? Is that the bottom? 50%? What if you buy at 50% off and they fall to 75%? You're still hurt. --dim \_ In stocks, the woman is doing dollar cost averaging (investing at fixed intervals). In buying a house, most people only have one or two houses, so the point of entry is important. \_ If you only have one house you aren't an investor, so don't worry about it. The person above is talking about starting a real estate empire. Real estate investors buy low and buy high. The typical homeowner shouldn't care. He's buying a place to live. \_ If he is talking about big investors, his generalization to stocks is even less true. Warren Buffet buys low and hold and hold. He doesn't buy high. Dollar cost averaging applies to small investors who aren't confident in what they are doing. As for real estate, I know people who own millions worth, and I also know they will laugh at you if you think buying high is good. \_ The motd is the only place you'll get financial "advice" telling you that buying high is good. \_ Buying high is good as long as you can sell higher. \_ Buffett is buying all the time. He didn't stop when the market got high. He just had to work harder to find value. In any market there is something worth buying. That's why I say 'buy quality'. Buying low is better than high. No one is disputing that. Investors don't time the market. They look for the right stocks/properties to buy. Many would've told you the real estate market was at a top a few years ago and yet it wasn't. When you buy a quality stock/property you come out ahead no matter the prevailing market at the time you bought it. If your friend the investor is out of the market now then when will he reenter? It's easy to miss entry/exit points. It's better to just keep buying - high or low. Your implication that DCA is for people who don't know any better is ridiculous. People DCA because the alternative it to put your money in a CD. It's better to buy equities with it whatever the market conditions. \_ CD is the alternative? huh? There are so many things you can do like long term bonds, short term bonds, municipal bonds, foreign bonds, REIT, option hedges, shorting, utilities, TIPS, commodities, infrastructure, foreign stocks, emerging market stocks, etc. No, it is not "better to buy equities whatever the market conditions". \_ foreign stocks are equities, you know. \_ Lots of research (and experience) proves you wrong. You might shuffle your mix, but if you stop buying equities altogether at some point then you are an idiot. |
2005/12/11-14 [Reference/RealEstate, Consumer/TV] UID:40961 Activity:nil |
12/11 When life imitates TV: http://csua.org/u/e9b \_ What a crappy article. Despite what the headline says, the cop died, not either of the suspects. \_ Misleading intentionally? |
2005/12/9-11 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:40929 Activity:high |
12/8 Housing bubble? Yes yes yes! http://money.cnn.com/2005/12/08/news/economy/housing_bubble_jobs \_ You know, I really do honestly feel bad for the younger people here who weren't able to buy a house years ago and now just can't but posting articles that say housing is going to fall back to more normal levels of price growth and screaming "bubble! bubble!" is not going to make housing prices drop. The article you posted but didn't read did make me wonder how many of the 800,000 construction jobs are legally held, though, and what increase, if any, we'll see in unemployment claims as housing goes slowly from "way too hot" to "normal expected growth rates". \_ I don't have generous Asian parents so I've been trying to save enough money for a decent down payment. BTW I graduated almost a decade ago. But no matter what, it seems like the price of homes in the past 5 years keep outpacing the rate at which I can save up. I'm at an age where I really want a home *now* but it's impossible. Almost everyone older than me say that I should buy a home. But it's so easy for them to say that when they bought their homes several years ago when the prices aligned with income and savings. Now it's all out of wack. Had I been older and saved up, of course I'd buy a home. Life is arbitrary and random, and this whole home buying deal is even more arbitrary and makes life seem so meaningless. Do I feel bitter? Of course I do. And I'm not the only person who feel this way. \_ My theory is that this is the result of all the tax cuts. With wealth so much easier to generate, the people with money can easily generate and keep more after taxes. Couple that with $250k tax free profit (if you're single), meant lots of people could speculate on less desireable locations, like Modesto or Gilroy. \_ The tax cuts were trivial as a percentage of income for people in upper brackets. Going from 70 to 50 was a big cut. Going from 50 to 39 was a big cut. No recent tax cuts were of any note. \_ Yes, life is unfair. I have no easy answer for you. Have you looked in other parts of the country? \_ That is, in fact, the easy answer. Some people in the Bay area don't seem to have any conception of how out of whack prices are there, even compared to other "expensive" regions back east and in the Northwest. I live about 70 miles from nyc, and I know people who are paying mortgages on decent homes with a grad student stipend. That would be harder now than it was three years ago, but still doable. I'd say housing where I live, where everyone is complaining about prices is roughly a factor of ten cheaper than the Bay area. Is the Bay a factor of 10 more desirable? Not to me. \_ Your problem is that you are not financially savvy. Saving up for a downpayment is silly. I used to think like you. I was trying to save $50K to put down on a (then) $200K house. However, interest rates got so low and lenders got so lax that I didn't have to save that much in the end. I bought my house for $10K out of pocket. Sure, I didn't have much equity then, but I sure do now. I think you are too tentative. You could've had a house by now and now it's too late (for this real estate cycle). I bought my house when I made $40K/year less than I do now and so did many of my friends. It was difficult to make the payment. If you are expecting to magically "save up" to buy a house stress-free and also buy (say) all of the gadgets you do right now then you will never make it. If you graduated 10 years ago then you missed your chance. I feel badly for the kids who graduated 2 years ago, but that's not you. \_ I graduated two days ago. Can I feel bitter? -!pp \_ Sure, but your situation isn't so bad. When you are ready to buy in 3-7 years housing will probably be more affordable. I'd like to add that if I was saving that $50K I'd probably have it about now, 5 years later, and it wouldn't do me any good. Even making $40K more I probably couldn't buy my own house and my mortgage payment (after interest deductions) is less than many 'housing bubble whiners' are paying for rent. Your first house is always a stretch to buy, but to me it's been totally worth it. Even if it hadn't more than doubled in value, but merely stayed flat it would've been a great buy. Heck, I think I'd be happy even if the value had fallen somewhat. Home ownership is that important to me. Maybe it is less important to others. If it is important to you and you can afford it then do it, whatever will happen to the market. \_ I graduated in 1993 and my Asian parents are not generous to me at all. Yet I managed to buy a house in 2000 while putting my sister thru Cal (paying out of state tuition) and then supporting my parents with $1k/mo (non-tax-deductible). And no I didn't make big bucks from dot-com stock options. I think it's just a matter of what fancy car you drive, how often you eat out, and how many vacation trips you go in a year. \_ Don't feel too bad. In the Bay Area these days it takes two incomes to make a housing payment. You will probably be able to afford a starter home when you have a spouse. \_ Just rent for now, and be flexible with your home buying plan. Don't listen to the stupid advice asking you to put money saved for a housing downpayment in a CD. There are lots of ways to invest and make money. Take the stock market for instance. I've been getting 30% annual return the last 3 years. That will double your money fast, and unlike a house, it's liquid. And the S&P500 aggregate PE ratio is lower now than when it was in 2002, unlike the ridiculous price/rent ratios of homes in the Bay Area. money fast, and unlike a house, it's liquid, so unlike money fast. Also, it's liquid, so unlike a house, you are not stuck in a single type of investment. And the S&P500 aggregate PE ratio is lower now than when it was in 2002, unlike the ridiculous price/rent ratios of homes in the Bay Area. Now some will claim that stocks are risky, but the housing market is just as risky, especially now. And check out Japan, Hong Kong, Singapore, etc. over the last 15 years and you will see how badly home prices can fall. how badly home prices can fall. - homeowner \_ A first home is not an investment. Don't treat it like one or think of it like one. |
2005/12/1-4 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:40799 Activity:kinda low |
12/1 Based on national average, what is the closing cost of a $500K house, and how much is it usually in California? How about in your case? \_ Trying to buy your frat house? The closing cost have two parts. \_ Trying to buy your first house? The closing cost have two parts. The "point" part depends on your loan amount, and the "other fees" part doesn't. A rough guess is 1 point (1% of your loan amount) plus $2000. \_ Depends on if you are in a buyer pay or seller pay county. Alameda is buyer pay, santa clara is seller pay for example. I payed $8000 in closing costs on my house I bought in alameda county. House was $540K. In a seller pay you will prolly pay about $2000. \_ What the hell are you talking about re: buyer/seller pay?! You negotiate whatever you want to negotiate. I was supposed to pay the costs when I bought, but I asked the seller if he would pay and he did. By the way, I think $8K is ridiculous unless you paid points on your mortgage. \_ Yes, you negotiate whatever you want, but the poster above is talking about the common convention such that each party understands how much actual money a nominated selling price translates to. Anyway, would it be better if you negotiated for a lower selling price but you paid the commission instead? For example, if you bought your house for $530k and the seller paid $30k commission, you'd be paying property tax on $530k assessed value. Whereas if you bought your house for $500k and you paid $30k commissioin, you'd be paying property tax on only $500k assessed value. \_ Good idea. --someone else \_ Yes, but in one case you can borrow the money and in the other you need cold, hard cash. \_ False. In both cases the $30k in question can be part of your loan, if you want. \_ You will have a hard time finding a bank to roll $30K of closing costs into your loan. They will do it if the costs are small, though. Remember, your mortgage is secured by your property. They don't like to give out $30K unsecured. This is the same as if you asked for money for repairs on the property or even to finance down payment money. These are not really allowed, although loan agents can sometimes do them. The higher the $$$ amount, the more scrutiny and the less likely you will be able to do it. I've been told that usually up to about $5K isn't a problem. \_ Oh, I stand corrected. Thx. --- PP |
2005/11/28-30 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:40757 Activity:low |
11/25 http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20051128/ap_on_bi_ge/economy Sales of Existing Homes Drop in October. Swami the Magnificent was right afterall! All the greedy investors will now suffer. Suffer they shall, muhahahahahaha. -bitter priced-out guy \_ "The decline in sales pushed the number of unsold homes to 2.87 million, the highest level in more than 19 years." Anyone happen to have access to a graph or table of this data for NoCal/SoCal/the U.S.? \_ "Home sales hit new record - Yahoo! News" http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20051129/bs_nm/economy_dc |
2005/11/22-23 [Reference/History/WW2/Germany, Reference/RealEstate, Politics/Foreign/Europe] UID:40688 Activity:nil |
11/21 http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20051122/od_nm/germany_drunk_dc A German man drank too much, wet his bed and set fire to his apartment while trying to dry his bedding. Sieg Heil german john! |
2005/11/22-23 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:40685 Activity:low |
11/21 http://tinyurl.com/8vozk Good introduction on how to flip houses. Please don't delete this lafe. Flipping is not illegal nor is it unethical. \_ Yeah, it's just playing a game of musical chairs hoping you won't be the one with no chair. Of course, it could lead to a housing panic which would leave many with no chair. \_ Not if there are enough people buying out the houses to live in them. It is not the same situation as the stock market bubble. The tech stocks had no value to investors unless they went up since they didn't do dividends. Houses have a real world use and thus real world value. It is only a question of buying at a number now such that the product can be resold later when the real world value has gone up minus the costs of the transaction and maintenance. Some people win this bet, a lot lose. It could be any essential product with real world use such as energy/fuel, clothing, food, water, etc. Housing happens to be the big ticket item among life's essentials so that's where the games get played. \_ big difference here is in the tech stock bubble, there was no cost (aside from lost capital) from holding onto them in a falling market. Real estate has taxes, maintenance fees, and such. Plus its almost always financed, so you have borrowing costs as well. If there's no profit incentive any more, the speculators are going to want to dump them. And fast! |
2005/11/21-23 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:40684 Activity:nil |
11/21 On the scale of global averages, which one is a worse investment, a condo or a loft? I know that single family homes have much higher demands and limited supplies, hence making them much better investments. However, I'm curious to know whether condos or lofts are better. \_ There is no global answer to this question. Do you mean on a scale of Bay Area averages? After all, Italy has wildly different real estate laws. I ran a few searches on mls and the condo prices seem to fluctuate in lock step with loft prices (small data set, do not trust this answer for investment purposes). Were I you, I'd look at more important things like location, noise, layout and so on. That what the people you resell to will look at. \_ Single family homes do not make better investments over time. Who told you they did? SFH tend to do better at the beginning of a housing boom, condos at the end. The maint cost of a condo is going to be lower, that is why big investors prefer multi-unit buildings. |
2005/11/20-22 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:40661 Activity:nil |
11/20 Suppose your property drops X percent but you're still paying the old property tax rate. Can you get your property reassessed to get a lower rate? What would it entail? Thanks. \_ Talk to someone at the county level. Usually there's someone with the title of "Assessor" with an associated staff and office. \_ Yes, you can. You file a petition. |
2005/11/18-19 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:40640 Activity:nil |
11/18 http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,175927,00.html It is buyer's market now! Good news for first home buyers and investors alike. Good news for everyone! |
2005/11/14 [Reference/RealEstate, Reference/Tax] UID:40577 Activity:nil |
11/14 My Alameda County property tax statement reads "Secured Property Tax Statement. What's the difference between Secured and Unsecured? Thanks. |
2005/11/11-14 [Reference/RealEstate, Finance/Shopping] UID:40553 Activity:nil |
11/11 Are mega apt complex->condo conversion units particularly bad to buy as homes or investments, even if you plan to own them for a while? I'm asking because single family homes are out of my price range. \_ Not particularly bad, but not as good as SFRs. Find a SFR, even if it means a city you don't like as well. \_ What if the city with the cheapest affordable SFR is over an hour drive away? What if the city where the condo is has a lot of amenities, like walkable markets, close to the beach, etc? \_ Why do you think you can't afford the SFRs if those are the amenities? Why do you think you *can* afford the condo? |
2005/11/11-13 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:40547 Activity:high |
11/11 http://csua.org/u/dzn (Washington Post) Oops, a couple bought a townhouse under construction for $796K in May, but equivalent places are now selling for $699K, and their house isn't even done yet! \_ Here's the full context strongly implying the eager beavers did no research: "Lynn Edmonds and his wife, Sebnem, could barely wait to sign on the dotted line back in May when they committed themselves to pay $796,000 for a three-floor townhouse under construction in Alexandria's Cameron Station. But since May, the sales prices for the development have fallen -- and units like the one the Edmonds bought are now being sold for $699,900. The Edmonds are facing the prospect of a $100,000 loss in value before they even walk through the front door." "Lynn Edmonds and his wife, Sebnem, could barely wait to sign on the dotted line back in May when they committed themselves to pay $796,000 for a three-floor townhouse under construction in Alexandria's Cameron Station. But since May, the sales prices for the development have fallen -- and units like the one the Edmonds bought are now being sold for $699,900. The Edmonds are facing the prospect of a $100,000 loss in value before they even walk through the front door." [ reformatted - formatd ] Even though their on paper value has dropped, they apparently plan to live in it so the important thing is the interest rate they're paying, what would their costs be to live somewhere else for the additional time they didn't have this house to be in the same area, and what will the final selling price be years from now when they eventually do leave that house? Being overly concerned about a single number without context is like saying you're a google ipo millionaire based on your unsold options. Anything can happen between now and the sale date. \_ "... Sandra Cabral, a real estate agent with Re/Max Pros ... 'Within two or three years, there's going to be a whole lot of foreclosures, because with all of the interest-only loans ...'" \_ Axiom 1: people are stupid. \_ ouch! that's a fast way to throw 100k down the drain. well, maybe they got a consolation prize in a lower interest rate. \_ For reference: $796k @ 5.25% for 30 years: $4,395.54/month, total principle + interest paid over life of the loan: $1,582,394.93 $699k @ 6.5% for 30 years: $4,418.16/month, total P+I: $1,590,535.97 \_ For reference: - average length of time americans stay at a home: 5 years For reference: - 30 year fixed interest rate: current rate - lowest rate in last 2 years: 0.9% For reference: - The additional $20k downpayment if put in the stock market and assuming a return of 8% per year, in 30 years, would earn: $200,000 assuming a return of 8% per year, in 30 years, would earn: $200k For reference: assuming a return of 8% per year, in 30 years, would earn: $200k - Did you forget mortgage interest tax deduction? \_ between ~ June 1 and today, the difference is 0.8% don't need to go back 2 years not as big as the 6.5 - 5.25 = 1.25% that other guy posted \_ that's pretty interesting! \_ 8%/yr for 30 years? Really. Now if you had stuck $20k in the stock market, say, 2 years ago... How would that 8% be looking? \_ S&P500 was 1060 two years ago, and 1235 now, almost exactly 8% per year. \_ None of these numbers take into account their current cost of living somewhere else for 8-9 months if they had bought now instead of in spring. Are they in a house? Probably not or they'd be less desperate. So what's their rent cost/ month? Either way we just don't have enough info to know if they got hosed or not. The average person may stay in a house 5 years but these people may stay 30. And does that 5 year ownership number include all the speculator flips which would drag the number down by some other unknown number? Basically, it looks like a scare article intro. The people who are going to get hurt are those who paid $X in the past and are now forced for some personal reason to sell now at $X - $Y. Everyone else can sit tight. Anyway, I wouldn't mind a huge housing crash. I'd snap up a few houses if prices dropped enough and rent em out for a few years until prices recovered again but I fear they'll never drop enough to fall back into my investment price range. |
2005/11/8-9 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:40483 Activity:nil |
11/7 Dear housing bust expert Swami the Magnificent, my wife and I really really want to get a house soon. What is the best time for buyers? end of December? mid January? \_ Uhm, did you read your own links? The builder they quote in the second link says he expects housing prices to go up slower. Going up slower is not the same as dropping. I understand the desperate desire to own a home but don't fool yourself by selectively reading articles. That's no way to invest or buy. \_ http://tinyurl.com/dpd3j (yahoo news) http://tinyurl.com/acxh2 (yahoo news) Housing market crash crash crash. May hard working homeowners stay and keep their abode. May greedy flippers burn in hell cuz they're brash. May new buyers find renewed hope for finding a home. \_ I'm not STM, but from a co-worker who is currently trying to sell a house, the slow times are when closing dates fall on the holidays (Thanksgiving, Christmas) since no one wants to do a big move around those dates. He de-listed his house and will try again early next year. \_ Have your friend sell to this guy! \_ Mind living in Phoenix? \_ Yes, November and December are slow times. This can be good in terms of price, but bad in terms of selection. I bought my house in November and there wasn't much on the market. When houses started to list in earnest again (spring) the prices were a lot higher. So, now is a good time. \_ I'm not sure about that. With less inventory, everybody goes looking at the same few places. That's what I saw when I was looking a while back. The inventory was down but there were still tons of people looking. I don't know if maybe there are less buyers now though. \_ Fewer buyers and fewer sellers. The market is more quiet. In the spring it will pick up again. Prices then are usually higher than now, despite the increased supply. It's less a factor in CA, but many houses don't show well in winter. It's like buying your car on a rainy day. Factor in holidays and this is a better time to buy than, say, April. \_ Be aware of the proposed new tax law which caps mortgage interest deduction at 420k. If this gets passed, it will most definitely affect housing price. \_ Another way to screw the blue states, since obviously anyone with a 420K house is superrich. |
2005/11/3-4 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:40419 Activity:low |
11/3 In Arkansas, we kill our deer with our bare hands! http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20051102/ap_on_fe_st/deerly_departed \_ Great URL \- tresspassers will be eaten \_ A guy was recently killed by a deer. They can inflict some damage. However, why this guy didn't shoosh it out of the house is anyone's guess. \_ Mynd you, m00se bites kan be pretti nasti. \_ Heh. I just rewatched that this week. Heh heh. \_ Is the guy a pro wrestler or something? |
2005/11/2-4 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:40405 Activity:nil |
11/1 http://www.usatoday.com/money/economy/housing/2005-11-01-real-estate-usat_x.htm Housing cooling off, prices drop, inventory grows. If you own a few investment properties using ARM, now is the time to sell!!! \_ All Hail Swami The Magnificent! |
2005/11/1-4 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:40390 Activity:low |
11/1 Hello I'm a newbie shopping for a condo. I've been doing research lately and saw this 400 unit complex I like. According to Google's cache, in August they only have 50 units left. Looking at their current web site however, they still say they only have 50 units left. I called them up, and sure enough, 50. What's going on? \_ we're not psychic. why don't you call them up again and ask? \_ Ok I just called them up. They said 1/2 of the units are "reserved" so they can't sell them. Whatever that means. \_ that means that they adjust the reserve over time such that there are always <= 50 units left \_ uh, how about you ask followup questions until you're not confused anymore? i mean ask the condo people, not the motd. \_ Maybe op is afraid of condo folks thinking op is stupid. Here at the motd, we assume it. \_ I'm the op. Yes, after making a few stupid calls the condo people started to realize how stupid and desperate I seemed and raised the prices by about 20K for a 500K condo. This is exactly why I don't want to keep calling them, because it shows how badly I want their place. \_ maybe they're lying to you ...? \_ They haven't sold any more since then? They have, but some others fell out of escrow? What does it matter? \_ Housing market has cooled. Mostly people see it has topped out and are all selling so there is a huge amount of inventory on the market. Total sales are still going up but since so many houses are on the market prices are coming down a bit. Very very good time to buy. \_ Time to buy has passed. I wouldn't buy now. \_ (Pulling number out of hat): Let's say you're currently eyeing a $700k house in the bay area. What price would it have to drop to before you'd buy it? Assume you like the house, it is a good location for you, etc. Only price is the issue. \_ Why is this an issue? I just need to exercise 1/2 of my GOOG options and I can buy it cash next week. \_ In that case, exercise all of your GOOG options, and diversify. Heck, you could easily retire if you moved someplace cheaper. \_ That's all you got from your options?? That's pretty chincey. \_ Do I already own a house? Is this for investment? \_ Your call. What $# is the right price for you? With all these people saying the numbers are too high, there must be some lower number at which they don't feel that. I'm just curious what that number is. \_ If I already own a house I will buy cheaper than if I don't. I'd say maybe $400K for an investment and $500K or more if I don't own a house already. I do think the price can (but will not necessarily) retreat all the way to $400K. The time to buy is when prices start to rise again after they've fallen for a while (at least 3-4 years). The number is less important than the direction of the market, which is clearly down now. Cycles are about 7-10 years, so I'd reanalyze the market again in maybe 5 years. However, if I am renting right now then I may buy as soon as I can reasonably afford to make a 30 year fixed mortgage on the place. \_ thanks. that's what i was looking for. \_ I think even more important than price is the interest rate and terms of the loan. Even if the price comes down, it could become unaffordable quickly if the interest rate jumps up or the amount of down payment is increased. Back in '02, every 1/10th % increase meant $200 more per month for a $400k loan. \_ Ok, pick any reasonable rate you want. How much would you offer and feel ok? \_ The depends on income does it not? If I'm making $2M/year then I buy that $700K house now. If I'm making $80K/year I wait. \_ He's asking what you personally would pay now. \_ That's useless information, because my situation isn't yours or his. *Someone* would pay $2M for it and *someone* wouldn't pay over $100K. \_ then apply your personal situation. the on going topic has been about housing being over priced. fine. so all im asking is what do you consider "not over priced". it isnt that hard. sheesh. nevermind then. \_ It's not that it is overpriced, but that we seem to be near a top. It will some day be worth even more than it is now, but that doesn't mean the time to buy is now with interest rates rising and sales cooling. |
2005/11/1-3 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:40375 Activity:nil |
11/1 Hi, I'm really new at real estate so please forgive me if this is stupid. I know that agents on both sides (seller/buyer) typically take about 3% of commissions, totally 6%. Does that mean that if I buy a house that is worth X, I have to spend an extra 0.06X? On the other hand, if I buy a completely new place where I don't have a seller, do I still pay the other 3%? \_ The seller pays the commission, not the buyer. And when you sell the commision is negotiable. Lately commissions have been closer to 4% because houses sell so easily. Although the market is entering a downturn now so that will change. |
2005/10/31-11/2 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:40367 Activity:nil |
10/31 http://www.realestateabc.com/insights/doomandgloom.htm Housing will not bubble! We're still looking much better than the 70s. So go ahead and buy your house. BTW this site has a lot of cool statistics and graphs. \_ In the 70s, inflation is really high, and I suspect there's a corresponding rise in wages. These days inflation has been low until recently, and wage growth is slow. \_ In the 70s, inflation is really high, and there's a corresponding rise in wages. These days inflation has been low until recently, and wage growth is slow. |
2005/10/31-11/1 [Recreation/Dating, Reference/RealEstate] UID:40349 Activity:low |
10/31 A while ago I went to take a look at a condo development. I answered a survey and an agent took me around. Then I asked the agent if it is possible to bring in another agent (such as my friend) in order to save a few commission fees. She said it is possible, but that I'd have to bring an agent during the FIRST visit. Is she bullshitting or is this a standard thing? \_ Are you the same person with the "The condo agent *LIED!* to me!" story? The seller can make up any rule they want as long as they don't violate some civil rights laws and similar things. They can say they give a $15K discount to anyone who wears green and yellow spotted sneakers when they FIRST visit and can even change the colors at their whim. They're a seller. They set the selling rules. You're in a negotiating situation. Bring your friend if you want. They then have the choice of selling or not selling to you at that or any other price with or without your friend involved. There are no 'standard things' in the way you seem to think. \_ ok cool, thanks. I'm pretty new at this so I have no idea what the 'rules' are. I guess there are really none. Your response is very helpful. Thanks. \_ Oh, there are rules. However, they all happen once you agree to them by signing something. If you didn't sign anything you are free to do/say whatever. That goes for both parties. \_ And make sure you wear green & yellow when you first go into any place to get the funky sneaker discount! \_ Ask your friend, the AGENT. \- FYI: nolo press has a book called "how to buy a house in CA" |
2005/10/28-31 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:40302 Activity:nil |
10/29 http://biz.yahoo.com/rb/051027/economy_housing.html Sales tumbled 11.8 percent in the West. It's finally happening! \_ Hehe, way to misquote and take out of context! Go-Go Renter Troll! I'm going to desperately cling to my home and hope prices don't plunge 50% causing my profit to slim down to a mere $100k. Oh, wait. I live here. It doesn't matter what the on-paper value is. And hmm, the article only talks about new homes. OTOH, good news for you is the "medium home sales price fell 5.7% to $215,700". I'm going to run out and buy a few of those... in Idaho. You would have scored 2 motd troll points, except you put the silly "sky is falling" editorial in there, but you'll get partial credit: .75 troll points in your column. How's the rent thing working out? \_ don't worry. jim cramer says fed is going to raise rates until housing bubble pops! 3rd quarter economic growth is good. inflation is through the roof. this means fed can and will raise and raise and raise. jim cramer is always right! yippee! you will have negative equity soon! bwahahahaha! - disgruntled home owner \_ Hi renter troll. Inflation is hardly "through the roof". You'd have to go back to Jimmy Carter times to see that. Homeowners don't care what their on paper value is. Only speculators. I'm taking away .5 troll points for the inflation comment. You're down to .25 troll points. \_ For consumer products, no, but for assets, yes, they are very much through the roof! Even for consumer stuff, 5.7% ain't mellow. \_ If you don't plan on selling right away and you're a homeowner, inflation is a good thing. You get paid more, stuff costs more, so that's a no-op. But hey! Your property tax and mortgage don't rise to match. You win! \_ In fact, real estate prices tend to track inflation in the long run. \_ Supposedly. But I think the inflation for houses has already happened. The other things are only now slowly catching up. |
2005/10/24-25 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:40242 Activity:nil |
10/24 King of real estate getting out of real estate, his reasons are interesting: http://tinyurl.com/7zeh9 \_ Seems like the usual reasons to me. His "deflation scenario" is a little more detailed that most, but it's generally the same. \_ I don't think construction material costs going up is a big secret, but this article is mostly focused on the high end buyers, not little people looking for a house. If you already own your place and plan to live in it, you win. If you can/must wait 2 years, you might win. If you're buying casinos or ball parks for hundreds of millions, you should listen to this guy. |
2005/10/22-24 [Science/GlobalWarming, Reference/RealEstate] UID:40224 Activity:nil |
10/21 http://www.leaderu.com/orgs/probe/docs/disillus.html Housing disillusion. You can skip the last paragraph on Jesus Christ \_ Uh, this article was written in 1991, and turned out to be completely wrong. -tom \_ What is the point of posting this article, unless it is to show that gloom and doomers are always with us? |
2005/10/21-24 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:40215 Activity:nil |
10/21 http://tinyurl.com/4ghvb 16% of the houses in Vegas are bought as investments, followed by 15% Sac, and 13% Phoenix. Please don't cuss or delete this lafe. \_ I see no reason find your post at all offensive. -lafe \_ I see no reason to find your post at all offensive. -lafe \_ Who is lafe? \_ It says bay area construction permits are down -25% 99-04. I wonder if that's offset by more condo building. |
2005/10/21-22 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:40207 Activity:kinda low |
10/20 Two weeks ago my family and I went to check out a condo development. I took notes, did some research in the past 2 weeks and finally decided to call the exact same condo agent that helped me out to see if a particular unit is still available. It is still available, but to my surprise, she gave me a higher quote (by $15,000). I asked her if the price changed, and she said no, price for condos didn't change for the past 2 weeks. She claimed that she was just reading the prices off of her spreadsheet. However, my family members and I specifically remember the original price, so either she made a mistake two weeks ago, or she's fucking with us. I'm pretty sure she's fucking around. Has anyone experienced something like this, or know someone who has experienced something like this? \_ Realtors are crooks. Just buy from the builder directly. \_ I'm assuming op was talking to the builder realtor already. Go to the builder instead. \_ Whether or not she's lying isn't important. They raised prices and have the right to do so. You were just one of dozens of people who came through that day and they're under no obligation to hold a price for you from 2 weeks earlier. You now have the option of trying to negotiate it down, biting the bullet and paying up, or going elsewhere. \_ I have no problem with them raising the price. I have a problem when they lie to me with a straight face that the price didn't change when in fact they changed. I am not going back to that place, though it won't change anything anyways because they have hundreds of buyers waiting for condo units. Too bad. It's the only development with a tiny view of the ocean. \_ Welcome to the adult world. People lie! *gasp* And realty people lie even when they don't benefit from it *GASP*! If you want the thing, go make an offer, if you don't, skip it. But not making an offer because some salaried bottom end sales rep *gasp* *lied* to you with a straight face makes no sense. You had nothing in writing. You hadn't put money down to hold that price. Maybe she just didn't remember. She may work in 5 different offices selling 30 different models. And hey, maybe *you* are the one who didn't remember after doing all that house hunting. Just go buy the damned thing since you obviously want it so badly and are already emotionally attached. \_ He can even offer $15K less if he wants to. The price is whatever the seller is willing to accept. By the way, is this the difference between $50K and $65K or $950K and $965K? If it's the Bay Area, I assume the $15K won't even change the payment much. |
2005/10/19-21 [Reference/RealEstate, Finance/Investment] UID:40188 Activity:nil |
10/19 Housing boom/bust links from swami the magnificent: http://tinyurl.com/cv3mt (thestreet.com) http://www.patrick.net http://tinyurl.com/bl5rm (finance.yahoo.com on stock prices) |
2005/10/10-11 [Finance/Banking, Reference/RealEstate] UID:40034 Activity:moderate |
10/10 Has anyone bought or know someone who has bought a condo in a high-rise building in a super busy city for primary residence? I'm talking about any mega high-rise condo, like the ones in Houston, NYC, Vancouver, etc? Single family homes are either unaffordable, or are simply too far so I'm thinking about alternatives. I do have enough cash for 20-25% down and it's silly to keep in my savings account. What is the condo experience like and is it worth paying the exorbitant HOA fee which is usually 2-3X of single family homes for the same value? \_ houston? aren't single family houses in houston like $150K? |
2005/10/9 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:40028 Activity:high |
10/7 While doing apartment hunting, I decided to have some fun and checked out a few waterfront 1bdrm and studio rentals. Most of them range from $2500/month to $6000/month!! For me, paying $1200/month rent is a waste of money. Who the heck would rent something for that price when you can just buy something, perhaps a bit farther and at least have complete ownership? In another word, who fits in the insane profile of wasting $6000/month on a frigging rental property? \_ Someone I know recently sold her small, squalid, old apartment overlooking Central park for about 2.5 million dollars. What do you think is a reasonable rent for a 2.5 million dollar aprtment? If a homeowner pays about 1000/mo for their 100,000 dollar home, wouldn't it make sense for the rent to be 25,000 on the 2.5 million dollar place? Looked at in that light, 6000/mo is cheap. \_ I don't know how it is in SF, but in a lot of European cities (and from what I've seen, in NYC) it's either wealthy single (for the small places) yuppies who can afford it -- traders, executives, etc., wealthier people who want a nice city apartment because their big villa is somewhere inconvenient for commuting, or, more significantly, expats on a company housing allowance. A friend of mine is blowing $4500/mo. of his company's cash on a NY upper east side 1-bedroom. Why? Because he can. Like many luxury goods, of course it's completely absurd if you have limited resources like most of us, and better things to spend them on. -John \_ The answer is: because those rents are probably a really good deal right now. $2500/month is probably 1/2 of what you'd pay in interest + tax + maintenance - tax deductions. Now, note that I didn't include principal. So really, if the non-investment portion of purchase is higher than the rent, you're losing money buying vs. renting. In a few years the balance will shift and it'll be about even, or a better deal to buy. |
2005/10/6-7 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:39997 Activity:nil |
10/5 Imagine living in NYC with all the conveniences without the pollution, dirt, crowds, and expensive housing. Imagine a city that is well connected via mass transit and is completely walkable. Housing is scalable and thus affordable, and work place is nearby. School and daycare are within walking distance. Shopping and retail stores are only 10 minutes away. Imagine no more. New Songdo City is here: http://www.metropolismag.com/cda/story.php?artid=1192 http://www.new-songdocity.co.kr \_ I don't follow you on the "scalable and thus affordable" bit. Assuming this venture succeeds, and this becomes a very desireable place to live where people can find very high paying jobs, why wouldn't the cost of housing in the convenient locations spiral upwards just like in other successful cities? I guess it might be a chance to see what a downtown housing market looks like without rent control or rent subsidies, but there are probably other cities like than by now anyway. upwards just like in other successful cities? \_ Where will I park my Hummer? \_ Will I have to forsake busty, blonde, blue-eyed women in favor of slanty-eyed chicks with small tits? \_ Pardon? \_ Considering you obviously cannot get either, I don't see how it matters. \_ "For everything else, there is MasterCharge..." \_ is it in the range of North Korea's artilery? \_ It's within range of their nukes. \_ It's within range of their nuclear catapualt. \_ Nucular |
2005/10/4-6 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:39977 Activity:nil |
10/4 http://www.nytimes.com/2005/10/04/realestate/04reals.html Housing bubble bursting in New York. \_ OTOH, one of my buddies just lost a bidding war on a Rockridge house. \_ I walked around and checked out the other units in my townhouse complex this weekend. The 2 bedroom units are listing for about 10K less this week than last week. Housing definitley cooled off and possibly in a down turn. \_ One townhouse in my development just went for $100K over asking price, which was already way over what they were going for last year. But there are very few units up sale. \_ I've seen people getting really bad advice and offering way too much for homes when they are the sole bidder. Last year it was normal to get 10-15 offers on a house. These days you get one maybe two so best to see how many offers were sent for that townhouse... |
2005/9/27-29 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:39884 Activity:low |
9/27 http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/050927/economy.html?.v=6 New home sales declined by 9.9% in September, more than twice what analysts were expecting. \_ HOUSING WILL KEEP GOING UP!!!!!11! NEW ECONOMY!!!! LALALALALALAAL \_ wow, bitter paying your rent lately? \_ When my house is paid off in 15 years or so it will be worth the price of one (1) single family residence. That's always a lot of money in every economy. Whether it goes up or not is sort of irrelevant, because I can still live here. The sooner you buy the sooner you will pay it off. When I bought I thought prices were high, but now I've paid enough principal that I can actually sell for a 'loss' and still have made money over renting. I guess some people don't get it. \_ The sooner you buy your first home, the sooner you can buy your second home, so on and so forth, and this goes on until 99% of the land in/within 10 mile metropolitan is gone and 1/2 of the homes are investment homes that make landowners happy. This is truely an American dream! Everyone, buy your home now! \_ 15 years is a long time. How do I pay off my house in 5 years? \_ Pay more each month. \_ Move to Podunk. \_ http://www.condoflip.com \_ ***************** \_ The same article says "Even with the slowdown, the median sales price rose 2.5 percent from July's level to $220,300." |
2005/9/26-28 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:39871 Activity:low |
9/26 "Defying expectations, sales of previously owned homes rose in August to the second-highest level on record with home prices rising at the fastest pace in 26 years." Go housing go! http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050926/ap_on_bi_ge/economy \_ it costs $5000 per month to own a $1 million house, but only $2400 per month to rent. Do you think the economy will become very hot soon so people can increase the rent? http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/25/realestate/25cov.html?pagewanted=1 \_ $5000 per month buys you about a $700K house with nothing down for 30 year fixed at ~5.6%. \_ No it won't, you doofus, you forgot the land tax. At around $1 million the land tax becomes significant. The mortgage you can pay off, the land tax is forever. \_ I was counting property tax, dude. The payment for the mortgage alone is $4000/month. \_ The economy will be very hot for the owner of the $1 million house, when it becomes a $2 million house. \_ that will just make me even happier living in a $2 million house for $2400 per month while the owner is paying $10000 per month. yea, some owners bought it while its cheaper, but I will find the owner who just recently bought and rent from him. that will make me feel good! \_ It's the dawn of the age of the NEW ECONOMY!!! Aquarius!!! \_ Do not misunderestimate the staying power of the Age of Pisces! Us Pisceans are not done yet! We shall sock you with one last tidal wave of natural disasters, financial disasters, wars, plagues, and famines, and acts of mass terrorisms, and lots of WMDs! Just watch! \_ Aquarius! \_ Aquarius? \_ Aquar-ee-us! \_ My theory is that as long as house prices keep growing at the current clip homeowners will keep rents low because they are making so much money just by property appreciation. I don't know what will happen if the housing market stalls/crashes. \_ You have a good heart, and believe people have good hearts too. But market theory says otherwise. \_ still waiting for our social-communist commentator lafe to say something about the evils of being an efficient capitalist by owning too much and controlling other people's lives... |
2005/9/25-26 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:39863 Activity:nil |
9/24 Why buy when you can rent? http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2005/09/25/INGAUERPKR1.DTL \_ The author will not laugh at the buyers anymore when his 3 bedroom house in Berkeley soars to over 1 million dollar by next year. |
2005/9/21-23 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:39798 Activity:nil |
9/21 Robert Kiosaki of "Rich Dad, Poor Dad", a financial guru and a motivator of investment clubs that teach and guide people on making money fast, including flipping houses and condos, is now saying that real-estate is the thing of the past. \_ The next big thing: Live Organ Donation ... \_ "beanie babies" are next big thing.. especialy the retired ones \_ I have many of those after my then-gf made me eat Happy Meals for lunch for several weeks. \_ you have "teenie beanies".. not the real thing.. \_ Damm, and I ate all those Happy Meals. \_ It could be worse. You could still be eating your ex. |
2005/9/18-19 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:39741 Activity:nil |
9/17 Think bay area home prices are scary? Try Carmel, four bedroom, three story house, asking price, $5,000,000. \_ "This is America, damn it. Reagan is President and Clint Eastwood has his own police force!" |
2005/9/16-18 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:39712 Activity:low |
9/16 Speculators rushing in as the water recedes http://csua.org/u/deq (LA Times) "Messages from those wanting to buy houses -- whether intact or flooded -- and commercial properties are outrunning those who want to sell by a factor of 20" \_ This makes me proud to be an American. \_ I hope eminent domain to create parks kicks in. \_ more likeley eminent domain as a form of urban renewal to clean out the trashed poor neighborhoods and replace them with rich high-tax-paying ones. \_ Pfizer employees need homes! |
2005/9/16-17 [Reference/RealEstate, Finance/Investment] UID:39709 Activity:moderate |
9/15 Uh oh. Consumer confidence at 13 year low. http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20050916/bs_nm/economy_consumers_dc \_ And the housing boom continues. It is dawn of the NEW MARKET and housing will continue to boom forever! \_ seconded. housing is the most essential and limited asset you can buy in the US, hence the boom! Peak median price should reach 30 * median annual income, that's how long most people have mortgages anyway. \_ it's a good time to buy second homes too. since even if it doesn't appreciate, you can always rent it out. \_ where are you finding the renter to cover that mortgage? rents aren't that high so if it doesn't appreciate, you lose. \_ I believe the ppp (to whom you replied) was kidding. Were you kidding, ppp? \_ :-) \_ Because people don't need to eat and can afford to put 100% of their income into a mortgage? \_ if you watch your pennies, food can be a very small % of your income. You should see my Chinese parents! \_ All I ate the first year after I bought my first house were free company meals and instant noodle. My monthly food cost was < $10. \- did you become a puffy supergiant? \_ I ended up consuming fewer calories than I would otherwise, though those calories are of undeniably lower quality. \_ How big is people's monthly food budget generally? \_ Housing will only boom till eternity in Prop-13 places. |
2005/9/14-15 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:39672 Activity:nil |
9/14 http://money.cnn.com/2005/09/13/real_estate/buying_selling/real_estate_fall_trends/index.htm?cnn=yes Housing market going right back up, picking off where Katrina started |
2005/9/11-13 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:39625 Activity:low |
9/10 http://money.cnn.com/2005/08/30/pf/city_county_rankings San Jose #1 as the Richest American city with a pop of +250K Here is my question. How the hell do you survive with an income of $71,765? You can't even buy 1/2 of a house in San Jose with that type of income. $71,765 is the median, so clearly someone's making less than that. I don't understand how people survive in SJ. It's crowded and it's a total dump. Housing is ridiculously expensive and single women there are incredibly few and ugly. \_ http://wealth.mongabay.com/tables/100_income_zip_codes-20000.html \_ you know, houses weren't always that expensive. \- there are plenty of people who are say retired school teachers in san jose who live in a ~$1m house they paid <$50k for in 1970s and some of them bought extra real estate and some point and now own a $3million apt bldg ... and they live modestly too and done have any kids left to send through college. they have very different income:wealth ratios compared to the +$200k income yuppie couple still paying off law school loans who take $5k vacations and drink $40 wines every night. \_ And the school teachers live comfortably and own lots of ^school teachers^school teachers who got here in the late 60s land, and truly understands the term "money working for you", all thanks to this thing called ***Proposition-13***. Look, inflation is above 2%, housing inflation is well above 2%, and if your tax incr is just 2% then it's a sure thing that most smart and entrepreneurial people would want to buy land, lots and lots of land. \_ Sure, real estate is a good investment - mostly because if you rent it out it is 'free'. That combined with leverage can make a lot of money. However, in terms of returns, real estate historically has returned at about the level of inflation. Stocks do much better historically. \_ rents are no where near the mortgage costs in the SF area and many other cities. if rent could cover a mortgage then no one would claim we're in a bubble. that people will pay for something that they're not living in and cant be rented out to recoup the rent costs means they can only recover if the sale price goes up and then sell. then those people having to do the same, etc. of course if the buyer is going to live in the house and can cover it thats fine but that isnt the topic here. \_ Most landlords are covering the mortgage with rent. The last 4 years are an anomaly. \_ how did oakland become #11? all the engineers who can't afford sj? \_ Looking at the chart, I sense the numbers are totally meaningless. By limiting it to cities with populations of over 250,000 people they are excluding rich enclaves. On the other hand, most large cities are so diverse that they'll never make the list. Witness the absence of LA, Chicago, and NYC, which are probably the wealthiest cities in the country. When NYC (or even Santa Barbara) does not make the list and Riverside does you know your stat is not too useful. The county numbers are even more useless, since counties are often even more diverse. I was driving through Santa Barbara once with friend from out of state. As we went through a Latino area they said "I thought Santa Barbara was expensive". I said "It is! Lots of these little houses are worth $650K or more". Easterners especially equate expensive with 'white upper class with the exclusion of blacks and Latinos'. So there forms this structure whereby they have wealthy white cities/counties and poor minority cities/counties, with the glaring examples of the ubercities like NYC. That's what these figures reflect more than anything, IMO. In CA, to the extent glaring counterexamples of the ubercities like NYC. That's what these figures reflect more than anything, IMO. In CA, to the extent that phenomenon exists, it is restricted to the elites who move into cities like Tiburon and not to middle class slobs making \_ I strongly agree with you that these numbers are meaningless. Mostly, I think they reflect the difference in definition of "city" of the east vs. the west. Many eastern counties are smaller in square miles than many western cities. Hell, I think the entire state of CT is smaller than san diego. Thus to even look at the numbers and conclude that easterners live farther from downtown is simply wrong. There are 169 towns in ct, probably most of which have real downtowns. \_ Yes, this is true, too. The cities there are constructed differently. A good example is DC. Wealthy people live in places like Bethesda (not only different city and county but different state) and less affluent people live in their own suburbs. It's a sort of gerrymandering whereby rich people isolate themselves from the poor. It happens in the West (e.g. Beverly Hills) but it is much less common here. Cities like Santa Monica have $4 million houses a few blocks from the homeless shelter. \_ There are 4 million dollar homes a few blocks from homeless shelters on the east coast also. They just define towns differently, so that place a few blocks away is a different town a lot of time. \- ObPiedmont \_ Tiburon is relatively impoverished, as these things go. Belevedere just next door is quite a bit richer. And those Marin towns aren't even in the same league as the big three on the Peninsula. \_ I just chose a town at random. It could have been Beverly Hills or Atherton or even Orinda. Point is the same, which is that not a lot of $70K income earners are buying there. only $70K per year. Further, are Anaheim, Oakland, and San Jose considered wealthy cities?! I'd say they are not perceived to be compared to their neighbors. It's probably that 250K cutoff driving that. |
2005/9/7 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:39554 Activity:nil |
9/7 With uncertainty over the return of evacuees to NOLA and indeed NOLA's future in general, would the better real estate bet be on places like Baton Rouge or Houston, where most displaced NOLA residents will end up? \_ in neighborhoods where the poor flood in, prices will plummet, white flight, etc. \_ baton rouge looks good: http://csua.org/u/dal (latimes.com) \_ In the short term, the huge population inflow from NOLA, flush with flood insurance money, should drive up real estate prices. Is growth around Baton Rouge naturally bounded by geography? In any case, it will be a few years before private real estate development catches up and public infrastructure may take even longer. |
2005/9/5-7 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:39507 Activity:nil |
9/5 How is Katrina going to affect the housing market? I'd like to hear opinions from both sides. Thanks. \_ Just a wild guess, but I think you can probably get something in underwater New Orleas pretty cheap now. \_ Answer unclear. Try again later. \_ Sometime last week, houses and office space in Baton Rogue were being snatched up by speculators. |
2005/9/2-4 [Transportation/Airplane, Reference/RealEstate] UID:39467 Activity:nil |
9/2 Hey, this is pretty cool: http://neworleans.craigslist.org/hhh \_ Uh, yeah, but some of these people don't even have enough money in their bank accounts to fly to Stepford, Connecticut. \- there is an interesting mix of impressive and creepy stuff in there. at least one person says he'll let a hurricane victim have his southwest free tix to get there. geeze, there are real estate ads there? |
2005/9/2-3 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:39461 Activity:nil |
9/2 http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20050902/od_nm/germany_spiders_dc German lady eradicated spiders by burning her whole house down. \- it was the only way to be sure. |
2005/9/1-2 [Recreation/Food, Reference/RealEstate] UID:39406 Activity:kinda low |
9/1 I am in the south bay, and yesterday out of no where I discovered lots and lots of aunts in the bathroom. I am usually very careful about leaving food outside, and the trail of the aunts (from bathroom - living room fireplace) does not appear to show that they were after my food. What the hell were they after? Were they just moving? I sprayed and killed most of them, which probably numbered in the thousands.. I've not had a single aunt problem for the past 2 years I've lived here. What would cause such a sudden outburst of aunts? \_ They are probably after water, not food. \_ They are probably after money, not food. \_ has it been hotter than usual lately? http://www.mindfully.org/Pesticide/Pesticides-Wont-Stop-em.htm \_ I've been having exactly this problem for the past three months. I had the same problem the same time last year. I've been wondering why the same brand of bait that used to work a few years ago doesn't work now. It must be this new Argentine ant species. One thing I notice is that some ants crawl much faster than others. Is it the Argentine ant vs. the native species? years ago doesn't work now. It must be this new Bolivian ant species. One thing I notice is that Bolivian ants march faster than others. Is it the Bolivian ant vs. the native species? I live in north Fremont. \_ I've noticed a lot of ants in my bathroom the past several months as well. They go away for few weeks after I put those ant bait/traps, but come right back. I don't have problems with ants in other parts of my Oakland apartment. ants in other parts of my Oakland apartment. I live in E. Fremont. \_ Its not like the ants in CA bite or anything, what are you so concerned about? \_ They crawl up my legs and arms. My in-law got a few on her face a few nights ago while sleeping. \_ They crawl up my legs and arms. My in-law got her face chewed off a few nights ago while sleeping. We are Taiwanese. |
2005/8/29-30 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:39331 Activity:high |
8/29 "If you paid your mortgage off, it means you probably did not manage your funds efficiently over the year." -David Lereah (chief economist, National Assocn of Realtors) "If you own your own home free and clear, people will often refer to you as a fool. All that money sitting there, doing nothing." -Anthony Hsieh (chief executive, LendingTree Loans) http://csua.org/u/d6q (LA Times) \_ Indeed, I suppose it's better to pay interest and have the possibility of losing your home if you ever lost your job by being unable to pay off the debt than the alternative. Unless you plan to utilize the debt in some sort of constructive method, taking out a loan for a loan's sake (especially with the rather wonky instruments utilized today) isn't necessarily smart. \_ Actually, it's better to have money for your monthly payment than to have spent it all paying off the house. Also, carrying a mortgage has tax benefits, and someone noted investments below too. \_ You don't spend it ALL paying off the mortgage. Like an investment, you can spend a small portion of what you earn toward the mortgage, paying off principles. The tax advantage you get by paying mortgage cancels out the tax you pay on investments, so paying off your 30 year 6% mortgage is like making a guaranteed 6% investment (for 30 years). If you are sure your money will earn more than that, then by all means put it to good use. If it's just sitting at your band account earning 1% or doing nothing useful (ie, you already have enough emergency reserves), then you are wasting your money. Unfortunately the majority of people waste their money this way. \_ I read that too. If the economy gets totally fucked at least you'll still have your house to live in ... If your goal in life is maximum consumption with no safety net, then the advice in that article is very good. \_ Queue Prop 13 argument. Without it you might not have a house to live in even if it's paid for. \_ I agree with Mr. Lereah and Mr. Hsieh. Mortgage interest after tax savings for a 30 year fixed is like 4%. It's not hard to beat that with some smart investing. I've been getting like 35% return per year the last 3 years. Mortgage interest is ridiculously low, and you get the rate for 30 years, then add a big tax break .. it's a no brainer. Of course, paying off your mortgage is a safe (guaranteed) return, so if you are 35% return per year the last 3 years. Of course, paying off your mortgage is a safe and guaranteed return, so if you are close to retirement ... \_ What investment options have better return than 4% and carry low risk these days? I only made the required mortgage payment for the first year or two, thinking that I would invest the extra money somewhere and get better returns. After a while I changed my mind and started making extra payments towards the principal instead. I'm 34 and have a wife and a kid. \_ You choose wisely! \_ also, guy was saying: doing better than losing 4% per year due to mortgage interest \_ I bonds are paying 4.8% currently. Granted your earnings will be taxed, but your mortgage interest rate stays the same for 30 years, and it won't surprise me at all if one year down the road, you'll be getting say 5.5% from two years down the road, you'll be getting say 6% from I bonds, and pocketing the spread. The bigger question, however, is why you are so risk averse. At 34, I presume you are far from retirement and your kid far from college. you need to grow your money to prepare for those. (note that I bonds interest earnings are exempt from state and local income taxes, and if used to finance education, may be exempt from federal taxes too.) \_ I am 32 and I think there's some benefit to having a mortgage and keeping cash. I know a woman with millions in cash who still has an $800,000 mortgage on her $2M house. Why drop $1.2M for something that is costing only $4K/month? On the other hand, I am paying on her $2M house. Why drop $800K more for something that is costing only $4K/month? On the other hand, I am paying extra on my mortgage because I want it paid in 15-20 years instead of 30. It would be great to be 50 and have no mortgage. Not only would retirement be better, but those 15 years before then could be great (e.g. travel) without that big monthly expense. So I see myself as a compromise. My mortgage (principal) is one investment I make, but not close to my only one. \_ yes, but if (granted, a big if) you invest well, you would have plenty of liquid asset on hand, that you could use to pay off your mortgage anytime you want. that's my goal and strategy. \_ Of course, which is why I say it's not my only investment. However, by cutting years off of my mortgage and saving lots of money in interest I am doing myself a favor. I invest more OUTSIDE of my mortgage. People putting every available extra dollar towards their house are misguided, I think. I knew a girl who was a performance artist/exotic dancer. When she retired (at a young age by necessity) she had saved $500K cash. She bought a $500K house with it. I am not sure that's the wisest use of money. I personally would have taken a small mortgage out on the place and kept some cash for something else. Same ideas at work. \_ You are not the target of Messrs. Lereah and Hsieh ire. People who have paid off their houses are their objects of scorn. The concept is that these people should risk some small percentage of their home equity for a chance to make more than the rate of a home equity loan. Since you do not actually own your house or are close to paying it off, you can and should ignore their taunts. \_ Actually, anyone with equity is the target. That equity could be working for you, right? \_ If you reread the quotes, they are referring directly to people who have finished off paying their mortgages. The article itself implies more the "any equity" crowd. \_ But, really, what's the difference if I owe $20K or nothing on a, say, $300K house? \_ Not much. The better question is $100K vs. $20K. Of course, it's your house. How much you want to risk is up to you. \_ I'm just saying the 'finished paying off their mortgages' distinction seems unnecessary. Anyone with equity is the target. \_ Their word choice is VERY telling. They are aiming to get those people with a high amount of equity, not those who are just 5-10 years into their 30 year mortgage. I'd guess they are looking at older, lower risk homeowners as their target audience. \_ If you're 5-10 years into your mortgage in the Bay Area, you have an enormous amount of equity. -tom \_ You need to think of the difference in terms of years. ie, 50k now = 10 years of mortgage free living. Whether it's something you want, it's up to you. \_ Where does the $50K number come from? \_ translation: there are not enough naive individual investors to take risks and shelter our instititutional investment models to provide steady revenue for our capital investors who are not willing to take those high-risk investments themselves. \_ real translation: we need more idiots to buy houses they can't afford, and more idiots to refinance their loans to extract the equity to spend on new cars. \- why do you hate idio^D^D^D^DAmericans? \_ yea, naive american investors should learn from the japanese and put all their money in 0% savings accounts - real safe! \_ you should fix that backspace key \_ The ^D's were meant to be a joke. Welcome to the net. \_ Real Sodans use "^H". |
2005/8/28-29 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:39313 Activity:nil |
8/28 http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,167141,00.html Can you identify a housing bubble? Fox the Magnificent says the bubble will not be a local phenomenon, it'll be national. Also there will be a RECESSION. \_ better to overestimate the damage than underestimate it \_ It will necessarily be national, because interest rates are driving it. However, a house in Missouri which is $150K and falls to $125K isn't too big of a deal. The places that will feel it most are where the gains have been the largest and prices are the highest. |
2005/8/25-26 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:39277 Activity:nil |
8/25 <Ahhh, nothing like multiple housing related flamewars on the motd.> \_ It's called the housing flamewar boom. It'll bubble soon. \_ THERE IS NO BUBBLE!!! THE NUMBER OF HOUSING FLAMES WILL INCREASE FOREVER!!!!1!!! I CAN'T HEAR YOU!!!! LALALALALALALAA!!!!! |
2005/8/25-26 [Reference/RealEstate, Reference/Tax] UID:39276 Activity:nil |
8/25 How much is california property tax like? ballpark figure? here in the chicago suburba, my property tax is about 1.2% of the price of my house. \_ 1% per year, based on the assessed value of your house. The house is re-assessed when it's sold or there's new construction. \_ how is "new construction" defined? Anything with a contractor/ building permit? (new windows? update bathroom?) Or more major things (build an addition?) Seems like this would be a major disincentive to do repairs/updates? \_ Minor stuff doesn't count. I dunno what the cutoff is though. Not minor remodeling. \_ Yes, minor remodeling counts. However, you are only assessed the added value of the construction. That is, if you add a $50K den to your house then you pay property tax on $50K. If your previous assessment was $100K it is now $150K. It doesn't cause the entire house to be reassessed. Otherwise, the assessed value changes +/- 2% per year depending on inflation. E.g., my parents' house owned for ~ 15 years is taxed at $375K even though it's worth $800K right now. If they decided to gift it to me for $0, I'd have to pay 1% of $800K per year. \_ I've always wondered how it worked with inherited property - some articles I have seen seemed to imply that if it was not a sale, it would still have the original cost basis. Anyone have any experience with inherited houses and the resulting property tax? \_ Yeah it retains the cost basis. \_ Your parent's house is from 15 years ago and it only went from 375k to 800k? Something's not quite right here. 15 years ago 375k would by you a lot! I for sure would've bought one in Palo Alto for that price ;) \_ it's next to a freeway ... the 10 freeway and you're doing your math wrong. it's taxed at $375K today, but new it was purchased for ... $150-200K? I forget. \_ 15 years ago was the top of the last real estate bubble. Houses have about doubled off of that high (after subsequently falling for a few years) so it's totally feasible. My neighbor bought her house in 1989 for $280K. It's worth probably $600K. In the interim it fell in value all the way to maybe $220K and was only worth $300K again in 2001. So it doubled in 4 years, but fell before that. \_ 1% + regional additions. Albany, for example, is 1.25% I believe. \_ Alameda county base is 1.1%, Berkeley adds 0.6%, so in Berkeley you pay 1.7%. |
2005/8/25-26 [Reference/RealEstate, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:39265 Activity:nil |
8/25 Is property tax painful because the housing price / rent ratio is so out of whack? It's like, for the property tax one is paying, one may as well go rent. \_ If you are not taking property tax into account when buying a house, you don't deserve to own. \_ Yes, which is why Prop 13 is so valuable. If you take it into account and then 3 years later it rises 50% because the market goes nuts you can be screwed. It is not a good solution to sell or to take out a loan to pay for the tax, in spite of what Tom says. Prop 13 actually allows one to budget because it limits the rise of property tax to a reasonable level (1%/year). known level (1%/year). \_ do you think artificially low property tax has artificially jacked up real estate prices? \_ Heh, that's pretty funny. "artificially low property tax". You do know that all taxes are arbitrary, right? -emarkp \_ Well, if property tax is raised then prices will fall, sure. Does that sound like a good idea to you? Transfer more wealth from the people to the government, right? It's here to help us. \_ Not to mention that if the rate rises and the values then fall the government still collects the same amount of $$$ except the homeowner is assed out of his equity. \_ How about a scheme that keeps track of additional property tax owed and then charging the seller that amount when the property is sold? \_ too fucking complicated. \_ What do you call the IRS? |
2005/8/19-22 [Reference/RealEstate, Computer/Companies/Google] UID:39175 Activity:low |
8/18 http://tinyurl.com/alu76 How rich are Googlers? Now you find out. \_ Crap! If you can afford a $12 million dollar home, RETIRE! \_ I don't know a lot of really rich people, but in my observation truly retiring is always a bad idea. Changing careers later in life is one thing, but ending all productivity is a great way to have your health go downhill and die young(70's instead of 90's) and bitter, even if you have enough money. I'm just basing this on observations of older family members who've kept working in some capacity forever vs. those who truly became retired. I'm never going to totally retire, even if I have enough money to never work again. \_ I basically agree. I don't really think 30 year-ld googlers are going to retire in the "sit around and watch TV all day way," anyway. But there's all kinds of things I'd like to do/work on other than showinging up here 8-5 everyday. I would at least ditch the bay area. -op \_ I basically agree. I don't really think 30 year-ld googlers are going to retire in the "sit around and watch TV all day way," anyway. But there's all kinds of things I'd like to do/work on other than showinging up here 8-5 everyday. I would at least ditch the bay area. -op \_ I know a woman with a few million in cash and many millions more in real estate. Even though she made the money doing other things (real estate, businesses) she's also a psychologist. She continues to run her practice on a small scale (accepts no new patients) even though it only makes her $60-70K per year. Why bother? I've never asked her, but I'm sure she does it because she enjoys it. If the GOOG guy enjoys his job then that's all that matters. \_ No, a good capitalist keeps working until he owns everyone else, like Gates, Rocketfeller, Walton, and Lay. Capitalism is what makes our nation so great! Haven't you learned anything in grade school? \_ I find it hard to believe that you'd compare someone like a Rockefeller, who at least believed in a work ethic and just about gave away most of his fortune to a Ken Lay. -John \_ I have an acquaintance who owns his own business. Last year he bought a house in Beverly Hills for $4 million in cash. He owns many cars, including a Cayenne S and a Bentley. Another acquaintance of ours asked him why he bothered to keep working at this point when he and his family are set for life. His reply: "I don't want to have to drive a BMW 5 series, which is what I'd be limited to if I stopped working." So there you have it. \_ Huh, I'd be interested in talking to him about diminishing returns. What's the real difference between a BMW and a Bently? Why is it worth 10 hours of every day? \_ It's an example. What he is saying is that he'd live a good life, but not his current lifestyle. \_ No duh. The law of diminishing returns extends to pretty much all areas as well. \_ Sure, but who is to say what when returns are not worth it? Is it when you own your own home? Whether it is worth it or not is an individual decision. You might be happy with a 5 series. This guy is not. You don't think it's worth it. He does. Lots of people could get by with less, but they want more. Right? Are you going to decide for them when enough is enough? \_ Did you take too much meth this morning or something? I said I'd like to ask him about his motives, and what he thinks; I did not say I wanted to tell him what to do. \_ I didn't read the question "Why is it worth 10 hours of every day?" as an honest question, but as criticism. If it was an honest question I apologize. \_ No, it was quite an honest question. I'm surprised more people don't ask it. \_ I've had the privilege of test driving a $150k sports car and of receiving an upgrade to a stupid $$$ hotel room (no clue why) and being invited to try some really expensive delicacies, stuff which I can't-but-would-like-to afford. Even if there's no intrinsic motivation to work, there are some pretty definite material benefits that I imagine I could really get used to. -John \_ I think owning your business is different. The business becomes your baby, and you can't just let it die. My girlfriend's mom runs a business and makes a few million a year, but she works like crazy (15 hour days, 1 day of rest per month). My gf is more tired when she goes home for vacation cause she has to help her mom and follow her schedule. \_ The grape is very sour to me. :-( |
2005/8/18-19 [Reference/Law/Court, Reference/RealEstate] UID:39172 Activity:low |
8/18 A refrigerator box under the bridge: The Kelo Seven prepares for the worst http://fairfieldweekly.com/gbase/News/content?oid=oid:119000 \_ It's not chutzpah, but it's a definite case of sore winners. |
2005/8/18-20 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:39163 Activity:low |
8/18 Does anyone live in Vancouver? What is it like working and living there? How easy is it to get a citizenship? What about buying properties, what is it like buying a cheap affordable condo (you can get a 2 bedroom for only $300,000 CAD) in W Vancouver? \_ Vancouver is historically a very expensive city with very expensive real estate. Be careful of any bargains you find. They may not be in a good area. \_ Parts of W. Vancouver are pretty much in the sticks. The city is gorgeous with a lot of great bars and restaurants, nice geography all around (I think they have some rule that no building built downtown can block anyone's view of the mountains or something like that) and beautiful women. I hear it gets real cold though. -John \_ In terms of weather, Vancouver is considered the Hawaii/CA of Canada. \_ Why do you hate Canada? -John \_ It rains a lot. |
2005/8/9-11 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:39075 Activity:nil |
8/9 Housing market collapses in San Diego: http://www.thespoof.com/news/spoof.cfm?headline=s8i8827 \_ The spoof isn't that funny IMO. Real article: http://csua.org/u/czc |
2005/8/2-4 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:38934 Activity:nil |
8/2 Save CBGB's! http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050802/ap_en_mu/music_cbgb_eviction |
2005/8/1-3 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:38917 Activity:kinda low |
8/1 Fuck you. go speculate on real estate somewhere else. \_ To repost the original question... "Tell me if this is legal and feasible. We all know about the housing boom and possible bubble. The bubble hasn't happened yet, but if it happens, it'll burn a lot of individual investors. Since it's a risky business, how about starting a corporation that borrows money from banks and from individual investors to buy up huge amount of properties, and maybe even buy sections of big cities? They can make huge profits by renting out properties or flipping them to other individual investors? If things go sour, the corporation shares the risks so no one gets burned badly, and worst case comes they can always declare bankruptcy. Is this legal? Possible? Can corporations buy blocks of land or buy cities and make huge profits since they have no competitors?" \_ Why not just sell crack, you worthless fuck? \_ You seem to have a lot of anger. What's wrong? \_ I've had to move three times in three years because of places that were bought out by real estate speculators who drove all the tenants out. In one case, a place I moved out of three years ago is still vacant because the soulless motherfucking cunt ass shits who bought the place are simply sitting on it, presumably to sell later. I know, I should have just bought a place like everyone else, blah blah blah. Well, I'm sorry I commited the crime of wanting to get an education and delaying my entry into the workforce at the time whenn all the bloodsuckers decided to fuck low income renters with their little speculative shitfest. \_ I'm sorry you hate the spirit of capitalism that makes United States the best country in the world. If you \_ We lived in my grandfather's basement until he asked us to leave. She couldn't find an apartment. She had some savings and used them to buy a cheap house so we'd have a roof. She didn't "owned her own successful business", she took over my grandmother's failed business and made it work again with 16-20 hour days when said grandmother died and my father divorced her and she had to move back to the US. She made it, I made it, and I know people whose family had far more than we ever did who got financial aid. Enough of a sob story for you? Who are you to ask? -JOhn hate America so much, you should get the fuck out of my country and move to Commie Europe. !williamc \_ Go fuck yourself. I couldn't get a financial need scholarship because my mom bought a cheap house with all of her savings so we'd have a roof over our heads while she spent 20 years resuscitating a failed business (successfully) that she'd taken over, only to have it triple in value. You're not a capitalist investor, you're a third-rate opportunistic tick. -John \_ Your mom owned her own successful business plus her house was paid for, yet you still felt entitled to financial aid? Who are you calling a tick??? \_ We lived in my grandfather's basement until he asked us to leave. She couldn't find an apartment. She had some savings and used them to buy a cheap house so we'd have a roof. She didn't "owned her own successful business", she took over my grandmother's failed business and made it work again with 16-20 hour days when said grandmother died and my father divorced her and she had to move back to the US. She made it, I made it, and I know people whose family had far more than we ever did who got financial aid. Enough of a sob story for you? Who are you to ask? -JOhn you? Who are you to ask? -John \_ Reading comprehension 101, padawan. "Cheap house" + "failed business" = "no $". "Cheap house" + "resuscitating a failed business" + "real estate speculators" = "expensive house" + "no $" + "people with far more but who didn't grow up not believing in debt getting financial aid". Enough of a sob story? I'm calling you a tick, assuming you're the op. -John \_ This is the anger one feels when having to spend $600K for some crap place that's still kind of far from work. \_ ObIGotIntoTheMarketInTimeGloating. \_ People are unlikely to change their investment habits and it's a waste of energy to get angry, so how you get your ass in an investment club and start investing? If you don't have enough capital, there are lots of time-shared flipping clubs you can join these days. You can buy 1/4 of a house with 4 other members and flip the house for 1/4 of the profit (minus club fees), I've made a lot of money in the past 2 years this way, and now have enough to flip a few houses of my own. If I can do it, SO CAN YOU! Don't wait! Do it while the market is still hot. All indications show that sales of homes rose AGAIN in June. Despite liberal naysayers yapping about the bubble, the Bush economy is really working and things are looking really good. http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/8758416 http://lin.kz/?mbl19 \_ Erhehehahahahahahahahahahahahahhahahahahah Didn't any of you LIVE through the late '90s? \_ To answer the original poster, it seems this is done with corporate space. E.g., Arden Realty owns a whole bunch of class A office bldgs in SoCal. Big real estate companies owning lots of single-family homes is not as natural, since home buyers get a big tax break that frequently goes into the hundreds of thousands of dollars if they live in the house for two years, and if you're the big company, you don't get \_ Could you go into detail on this? I'm not quite at the point of buying a house yet (esp. in this market), but considering it. I wasn't aware that the savings were in the hundreds of thousands? \_ http://biz.yahoo.com/brn/050726/16039.html?.v=1 \_ http://lin.kz/?40lym \_ http://biz.yahoo.com/brn/050726/16039.html?.v=1 the tax break, so you're not as competitive. Persons or small/mid-size companies owning lots of apartment bldgs is more common. \_ True, rental real estate does not get the 250K/500K tax free treatment of residental real estate. However, you do get to roll one rental unit over to the next rental unit and put off paying taxes on your profits. I've always assumed that there are not companies owning and renting out many residential units because the business doesn't scale well. And of course being a new landlord today is just awful for cash flow. \_ so let's come back to the original question. Can rental (apartment) companies as well as land-owning companies merge to form a single land owning mega corporation? Can companies own and run their own cities? Will the CEOs be like kings and the people who rent or \- like Disney? pay exorbitant city fees and association fees be like... peasants? \_ isn't that what a REIT is? \_ Yes. Also, look up Irvine Land Trust. \_ There are also lots of real estate investor's groups doing this. Someone forms a LLC and each investor puts up $x . Usually it is for office buildings and the like, but investors have been doing this for residences on a large scale in places like Arizona, Florida, and Las Vegas. \_ I never understood this spectre of corporate feudalism that people are so afraid of. The government is a much more dangerous entity as far as sliding back into feudalism is concerned. -- ilyas \_ Insofar as govt. is given broad central powers, sure. But in terms of actual legal implementation of serfdom in the US, look no further than Walmart. \_ You load sixteen tons and what do you get? Another day older and deeper in debt. Saint Peter don't you call me, 'cause I can't go.... I owe my soul to the Company store. -Kentucky folk song I owe my soul to the Company store. -West Virginia folk song \_ http://www.ernieford.com/Sixteen%20Tons.htm \_ http://lin.kz/?fmdj3 \_ http://www.ernieford.com/Sixteen%20Tons.htm \_ It is important to remember in discussions with ilyas that he is a tax payer supported grad student. \_ This is a similar red herring to saying tom holub or psb is a college dropout. -- ilyas \_ I don't remember either of them espousing an extremist ideology that equates dropping out of school with evil. If they had, it would certainly be relevant. What if you found out one of our local religious conservatives worked at an abortion clinic? Would that be a red herring? \_ ilyas reminds me of those old shredded wheat commercials. "The whole grain libertarian in me says 'FUCK POOR PEOPLE! POWER TO THE CORPORATION!', while the frosted side of me in the real world loves the fact that MEN WITH GUNS are forcing poor slobs like meyers AT GUNPOINT to pay for my quality education!" -meyers |
2005/7/14-15 [Reference/RealEstate, Finance/CC, Recreation/Dating] UID:38617 Activity:low |
7/14 http://sportsbybrooks.com/Denise1.html - more Denise! \_ so what? fake tits and a vacant stare? there's no shortage of that in Hollywood. \_ Here's a more interesting pic: http://sportsbybrooks.com/events.html \_ Hot chicks sorted by ... \_ Is there some significance to this particular cheesecake? \_ Looks like a chick I met in a Reno stripclub who came to visit me in the Bay Area, but this was before the boob job. |
2005/7/12-13 [Politics/Domestic/California, Reference/RealEstate] UID:38550 Activity:low |
7/11 Top cities to live in the US. Northern Cal towns got mentioned a few times. Go Bay Area!!! Northern Cal >>> Southern Cal. We are the best! Go Mill Valley, Saratoga, Aptos, Benecia, and Petaluma. Proof that California >>> Rest of the US!!! http://money.cnn.com/best/bplive/top100_1.html \_ I regard any list with Chino Hills on it with the utmost suspicion. As someone who lived in LA and SF, though, I think San Diego is the best place in CA. Nice weather, lots of single women, good quality of life, close to LA but not in it. Somewhere like La Jolla would rock. \_ Dude...they have COMPTON on that list!!! \_ I don't see it. What number? \_ Coronado is indeed BEAUTIFUL, but if the median household income is $72000 and the average home price is over 1 million dollars... then something's really screwy here. \_ Naperville, IL has a median household income of $96,000 and average home price of $311,000. Compare that to California where it is not unusual that average home prices are 10X the household income. Based on unaffordability, I failed to see why they even bother to put in CA cities. I guess it makes sense if you bought houses in the 80s or inherited land. \_ Wait until you see how big that house in Illinois is, too. It's probably 3x the size of the average house here. However, it is in Illinois. I wouldn't move there if you paid my mortgage for me. \_ nah, Naperville is not that cheap. $300K will likely get you a nice 1800 sq ft townhouse, but that's about it. A suburb of chicago, it's a pretty nice city, but not comparable to the bay area in terms weather, outdoors activities, places to go within 4 hours drive, and cosmopolitan demographics. activities, places to go, and cosmopolitan demographics. \_ 5 bedrooms, 2 baths $374K. 3/2 $239K. $500K gets you a 3000+ square foot house. \_ yes, that sounds about right. How much is a decent 1800 sq ft townhouse in the Bay Area (say Fremont) these days? \_ $500-700k \_ Sister's 2/2 in Walnut Creek is $595K. I saw a 3/1 1600 square foot SFR in Naperville for $200K. \_ but the SFR is likely old and crappy. \_ Sure, just like it would be here in CA but cost 3x as much. \_ don't worry, the price/rent ratio between naperville and bay area will eventually start converging, one way or another. A $200K townhouse in naperville rents for about $1300. \_ Yeah, but it will probably be home prices going up in Illinois. You still make more money over the long run by buying, even in California. There is a global savings glut right now, driving down yields, forcing investors into things like rental property. |
2005/7/12-13 [Finance/Investment, Reference/RealEstate] UID:38549 Activity:low |
7/11 http://money.cnn.com/best/bplive/topten/earners.html Saratoga has the 7th highest median income in the US, trailing behind Great Falls VA, Darient CT, New Canaan CT, Wilton CT, and others. What the heck do people do in VA and CT that make them rich? \_ Pretty shocking that these are ahead of places like Beverly Hills. Anyway, the CT people work in NYC. The VA people rip off the government. \_ The residents of places like Beverly Hills and Brentwood probably don't have high incomes but instead high net worth. \_ Brentwood is not a city. BH's median income was $91K (2000). What you say is true, but you don't buy a $2M house by making $91K. The "slums of Beverly Hills" must drive down the median. \_ Also, many SoCal places (e.g. Manhattan Beach and Laguna Beach) have had a huge run-up in the last few years. Long time residents might not have the income of people who might be buying in now. \_ I went to Maggiano's once and overheard 3 real estate agents talking about how hot the market is, and one of them said his dream house is to buy this condo in Santa Monica, 1100 sq ft, is really close to 3rd Street and overlooks the beach. It starts at 1.5 million dollars. Then he said he sold one of them last week, and the other agent said "Jesus! What kind of people buy these places?" and he replied "Oh, she works for the Judge Judy production." \_ Only for cities with population over 14000, thus eliminating the truly posh towns. \_ The amusing list is the top 10 priciest homes. http://money.cnn.com/best/bplive/topten/homes.html \_ What's so amusing about it? If you have money, anywhere is a good place to live. \_ It's amusing that 9 of 10 are in CA. \_ It'll more amusing when they go down by 20% of their value in 3 years. \_ Drat, so in 3 years I'll only be up 115% since I bought my house? \_ :-) \_ I piss in your general direction. \_ Actually, no. Some places are awful to live in, especially if you have money. |
2005/7/7-8 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:38452 Activity:nil |
7/6 Australian housing bubble. http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/05/realestate/05aussie.html |
2005/7/5-6 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:38418 Activity:kinda low |
7/5 The Randy Cunningham story just keeps getting better. Turns out a guy trying to get a request in to the white house for a pardon bought Cunningham's old yacht (the one he lived on before moving onto Mitchell Wade's yacht). Cunningham bought the yacht from another congressman in '97 for $200k. He sold it to the pardon- seeker for $600k, who put $100K in repairs into it, and was set to sell it back to Cunningham until the shenanigans with Cunningham's real estate deals came out in the press. This guy's filthy. \_ Who the fuck is Randy Cunniingham and why should I care? -dans \_ Who the fuck is Randy Cunniingham and why should I care? \_ The guy who authored the flag protection amendment in the house, sits on the appropriations committee and has taken what amounts to very large bribes in a number of real estate deals. \_ Any time negative info comes up about a politician, ask yourself, is it something you would have brought up and spread about anyway if you'd known about it (and been right to do so) or is it irrelevant, and only being used to smear someone in connection with an unrelated issue they're involved with? If it's the latter, you are displaying an incredible paucity of political creativity and good sense. -John \_ Regardless of who the guy is, this is typical smear. His name pops up in conjunction with some unrelated political stuff, and out come the trolls digging up anything even remotely compromising. Sad. Don't you have any good arguments against his flag shit? -John \_ Actually, I had no idea he sponsored any flag amendment. I heard about the story because "corruption among pols" is a newsworthy item. Also, because it deals with Cal. real-estate. Originally the story broke that he sold his SD house to the owner of some engineering firm for $1.6m. The guy turns around next month and puts the house on the market, and it doesn't sell until a year later for $900k. Ha. In this market? Turns out, shortly after he purchased the house, the engineering firm receives it's first multi- million dollar gov't military contract in years. And it's been rolling in gov't contracts ever since. -nivra \_ It was something like 3 days later that the house was back on the market. the FBI recently raided both MZM's (the contractor involved) and Cunningham's offices and home. It's a funny, sad, dirty story, and definitely worth watching, John. Bringing up the flag burning amendment was just a point of reference for the guy, not any commentary on it. --scotsman \_ Here's a helpful chart describing some of the goodies so far: http://csua.org/u/cm5 (swingstateproject.com) |
2005/6/30 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:38379 Activity:nil |
6/30 dear motd this is really eating me out and i cant keep it a secret anymore. im a student and i rent a room in a suburb with mostly working class people who are gone during the day. lately i've noticed something really strange with my neighbor with whom i've met a few times. she's a really attractive and flirty housewife. anyhow like most people her husband is gone most of the day. everyday at around 3pm this mailman rings her door bell and they usually talk for a while but for the last two weeks he takes a package to her house GOES INTO THE HOUSE for 10-20 minutes then comes back WITH THE PACKAGE!!! i dont really want to know whats going on and its really none of my business but i feel guilty for keeping this a secret. i mean what if something really goes on? should i keep quiet for status quo... ignorance is bliss, or should i be honest and tell someone about it in which case i may be responsible for destroying lives? whats the best thing to do? \_ Stay out of it. You have no idea what's going on. Maybe they are friends. You have evidence of nothing. I say make a move on the housewife yourself. It's the only way to be sure! \_ Seconded. \_ Blackmail her for sex or money. \_ Use your electronic skills to videotape her and the mailman. \_ procure a mailman uniform and sub for the day |
2005/6/24-26 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:38292 Activity:nil |
6/24 Hello, I'd like to join the craze and flip houses for huge profits. However, I don't have enough capital or expertise to do this. Does anyone know if there are companies out there that manage time-shared house flipping? For example, if 10 people buy a house and flip it, each person gets 1/10 of the profit (minus commission)? \_ Post your home address, and I'll volunteer to come over and beat the shit out of you. \_ Yeah, there's definitely no real estate bubble. Sheesh. \_ I'd be interested in starting a company like this. Professional Flipping Management Corporation. We take in a lot of cash and try to flip a house or two, and even if the market goes bad, we can still get by with management fees that we charge. It's a win-win situation for whoever starts this company. \_ Yeah, it's a win-win as long as none of the victims from whatever neigborhood you end up ruining don't come knocking at your door with a tire iron. \_ Is there such a thing as real estate mutual fund? \_ Perhaps you're interested in REIT's ? \_ sadly enough, http://condoflip.com (from http://sfgate.com/columnists/lloyd \_ dude, I put that on the motd yesterday |
2005/6/24-27 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:38291 Activity:low |
6/24 Thoughts on Duke Cunningham? selling one house to a company with business in front of him for $700k more than market value. Buying another house from another campaign contributor under fraud investigation for $2-3million below market value. And the real estate "agent" and "appraisor" who had never sold a house before and managed both sales just happened to be a big contributor as well. It's breathtaking. \_ Why do you hate successful investors? \_ Yeah, successful investors who live for free on their military contractor friend's yacht. Why you gotta be a hater! contractor friend's yacht. Why do you have to hate! \_ Look! Over there! A missing blonde chick in Aruba! \_ If it is not covered by Fox News, it didn't happen. |
2005/6/24-25 [Reference/RealEstate, Science/Electric] UID:38281 Activity:kinda low |
6/24 Maybe house contractors will be outsourced to robots in the future: http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn4764 \_ old. There was a Discover mag. article about this 6 mo. back. \_ So? It's still interesting. Go stick your head in a pig. -!op |
2005/6/23-25 [Reference/RealEstate, Finance/Investment] UID:38264 Activity:nil |
6/23 Even Warren Buffet is talking housing bubble these days: http://csua.org/u/cho \_ Assuming the housing bubble is a form of momentum investing, how much talk of a potential bubble burst do you think it will take to trigger the burst? \_ I don't know, but I do know quite a few people in Livermore trying to get out of the market and finding it harder to sell... \_ "...certainly at the high end, people who buy houses today may have some periods when they regret it." That is extremely mild for a comment from Buffett. -tom |
2005/6/23-25 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:38261 Activity:nil |
6/23 The Irvine Corporation buy a lot of land, enough to build cities. They build houses, LOTS of houses, and control when and how much to build, depending on supply and demand. Take Irvine, CA as their first success story. They still have a lot of land, but they choose to withhold land as to keep the value of the homes. They also charge an exorbitant amount of Home Owner's Association Fee, in which new home owners (since 2004+) have to pay $300-$500 a month. They use that money to buy more land, and expand their operation. While some argue that they're monopolizing land, you can't deny that Irvine communities are also one of the prettiest, cleanest and safest communities in the U.S., and many say that you really get what you pay for. So what do you guys think about their business practices? It seems to me that land isn't really controlled by the state or individuals, but corporations. \_ Yes, Irvine is nice looking and clean, but it's like a fascist community. My uncle can't put up a satellite dish visible from the street because he'll get penalized. Exterior house paintings, modifications to windows, all have to go through approvals. You can't use aluminum foil in the front window... you'll get 3 warning letters and finally a fine. Front curtain colors must be "tasteful" and blend in with the community. There's a 9PM curfew for kids. You can't park on the street unless your garage and your driveway are all taken up. You can't use your garage for storage other than a vehicle (supposedly this will reduce fire hazard). They audit too, to make sure you follow their rules. \_ This says it all, "You can't use aluminum foil in the front window". I stopped reading at that point. \_ They say living in Irvine feels like linving in Singapore. \_ I find Irvine sterile and bland. It is certainly clean and safe but I don't think it is very pretty. But I prefer cities. \_ I owned a home here, sold it, and currently am renting here. Irvine's just as pretty, clean, and safe as nearby communities. The housing price jumps as you cross the zip code primarily due to the school system and (relative to north/eastern communities) closer proximity to the ocean. Re: HOA's. I don't know about post-2004. I purchased in 2002, stayed on the HOA board, and we didn't pay ongoing tithe to the Irvine Co. Re: HOA ccr & community: It's part of the price of moving into Irvine communities. Some ppl love the bland, uniform appeal Irvine suburban life allows. Easy access to strip mall #179, with all the conveniences you need for modern suburban living. Along with this is HOA governance of outside aspects of your home, and how it looks. You want external character? Don't move here. I'm glad I sold despite the creature comforts. Re: Evils of the Irvine Co. Certainly all the charges that are normally levied against large, wealthy corporations are levied against them. They rake in profits to be sure, but iirc, they're privately-owned so no transparency. I've heard the counter-charge that they're wasting precious undeveloped land, and that the only land left undeveloped is unsuitable for residential/commercial development despite the fact that their brochures and advertisements trumpet how "environmental" the company is for setting aside "green space." I have no opinion re: public v. corp. control of land. FWIW, Irvine co. should thank their lucky stars for the UC nearby even while I'm sure they curse the land that the UC owns and doesn't develop as IC would wish. Unfortunately, IC still controls too much land, and Irvine can't develop any of the character of typical large university towns. -nivra \_ What the OP misses is that the Irvine Corp. owns the land because it was a ranch. The same is true of the land owned by the Hearst Corp., Sierra Pacific, Weyerhauser, or Tejon Ranch. They didn't go out and buy land to resell later. |
2005/6/16-18 [Politics/Domestic, Reference/RealEstate] UID:38163 Activity:nil |
6/16 If Tom Delay has nothing to hide, why has he effectively shut down the House Ethics Committee? \_ Because Accountability means never having to say you're sorry. |
2005/6/8 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:38033 Activity:nil |
6/8 Houses too expensive? Now you can buy condos converted from hotel rooms. For only $700,000 you can a 1100 sq room! Get them while they're still hot and affordable with 0% down! http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/8075717 |
2005/6/7 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:37999 Activity:nil |
6/6 Historical Evidence of US Home Price Booms and Busts, 1978-2003: http://www.fdic.gov/bank/analytical/fyi/2005/021005fyi_table1.pdf \_ Those who bought homes before 1998 will live like lords over the peons who failed to buy. Anyone who has not purchased a home yet is doomed to live forever in bondage, and their children and children's children too. |
2005/6/6-7 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:37986 Activity:moderate |
6/6 Swami the Magnificent is going to revise his estimate of when the housing bubble will start to pop, from Q4 2005 to Q1 2006. \_ Is salami saying NoCal, SoCal, or national, and what does "start to" mean? E.g., I could say the housing bubble has already started to pop with what's already happened in Vegas. \_ What is the definition of a pop? How much do prices have to go down, in what time frame, for it to be considered a pop? \_ Speaking of Salami: http://www.sputnik7.com/vod/index.jsp?section=music&key=pdsf \_ You mean the speculators cashing out? \_ What already happened in Las Vegas? You mean record home price appreciation? http://www.ktvu.com/news/4562424/detail.html \_ http://csua.org/u/c9m (sfgate.com) "When you lose money in real estate, you really feel it," said Igor Doncov, a software engineer in Half Moon Bay who bought two new houses in Las Vegas early in 2004 but sold them at a loss after his builder, Pulte Homes, cut prices on its new models by $180,000. "I thought I couldn't lose," he said in a telephone interview. "But it turned into a total disaster." ... By December, it was clear the peak of the frenzy had passed. Residential building permits that month were 34 percent below the previous December's, as measured by the Center for Business and Economic Research, which Schwer directs. And 15 percent fewer people were moving to Las Vegas -- some undoubtedly spooked by the region's steep jump in home prices. Pulte officials would not comment on the price reductions. In the wake of Pulte's move, other builders also cut prices but made no formal announcements. said Igor Doncov, a software engineer in Half Moon Bay. http://csua.org/u/c9o (reviewjournal.com) King paid $498,000 for the house, which he bought as an investment. The same model now lists for $382,990 ... But a major increase in the number of resale homes on the market -- currently about 16,000, up from February's 1,400 ... [I take this as lots of people in Vegas saying "Vegas is a shithole place to live. What? Home prices are going through the roof? Take my house -- buh-bye!] \_ Thank God. Literally. The Chinese proverb that greedy people should and are punished, is coming true. Maybe I should thank Confucious instead of God. \_ Did you read the entire article? It gives examples of other people making money during the same time period and has quotes from people saying the market is still healthy. Appreciation rates slowing down does not equal a bubble popping. Home prices actually going down might. \_ Yes, I read the entire article. Please note that the criterion is "start to pop", which is a very low bar indeed, especially in the context of saying "A-ha! The Swami is right!" I am still waiting for the Swami to explain what "start to pop" means anyway. One could also argue that all red-hot-Vegas-real-estate news is intended to bury bubble news, to keep the good times rolling for those already in, but that's just speculation. \_ I just did, below. \_ Nationwide, quarter to quarter decline in home prices continuing for an extended period. \_ Can you say "extended period" means two quarters? (6 months) Can you say "Nationwide" means all the hot housing markets, or all the hot housing markets excluding 1-3 of them? \_ Nationwide means national average. Extended is deliberately left undefinited because I have no idea how long it will go down. Even the Magnificent Swami has his limits. Certainly more than two quarters. \_ no one sells their house in February; that's a seasonal variation \_ Nice job deleting my rebuttal. Have fun arguing with yourself. \_ Mmmm... I want dry salami... |
2005/5/30-6/1 [Reference/RealEstate, Reference/Tax] UID:37887 Activity:high |
5/30 dear motd probate lawyer, an elderly woman who lived in an expensive house dies, leaving two surviving sons, brother X and brother Y. After her death it turns out that several years before, brother X got her to sign over the deed to the house to his name in exchange for some money that was worth less than 10% of the value of the house. no one else in the family knew about this and everyone assumed she still owned the house at the time of her death. People suspect that coercion or trickery was involved but there is no proof. The brothers don't get along but the mother had a good relationship with both and there is no possibility that it was her intent to "cut off" brother Y from owning his share of the house. Does brother Y have any legal recourse? -clueless about legal stuff \_ this is pretty sad. I assume you're Y. You can take X to the court of course, but you have no evidence of coercion, and basically, you have no case. You might be tempted to talk to lawyers and many will take up your weak case without telling you what your real chances are, since they just want to take your money (trust me, many lawyers will tell you what YOU want to hear and take you for a ride). Trust me, my grandpa left several estates back in my country and my dad, who thought he was close to his dad, only got 20 acres of tea farm while my old uncle (the oldest son, who never talks to my grandpa), got EVERYTHING. But this is in Asia and the oldest son always gets everything, and there's nothing you can do. Anyways, let's examine your case. If you really had a good relationship with your mom, and if she's not senile or stupid to be tricked, then she would surely have consulted with you in regard to the transfer of deed. The fact that she didn't tell anyone, is an indication that 1) she really favored X for whatever reason, like being the oldest son, etc and 2) she didn't want to hurt your feelings. If this is the case maybe it's time to reflect back and see that perhaps, perhaps you weren't as close to her as you originally thought. And if she was indeed coerced, then I'd just take this as an expensive lesson in life, because seriously, your case is just weak. It's a cold world out there and it's all about survival of the fittest, and it's clear to me that X is the one who's more fit, you're weak. I'm sorry, I wish you luck. \_ Sorry but you're totally clueless. This isn't "the old country" where you come from. Judges here 'tend' to apply common sense to cases when allowed to by law. See below for a much more useful answer as it applies in the US. In short, the cheated son should consult a few lawyers, compare notes, and decide from there. This sort of thing is very common unfortunately and can be invalidated by a judge quite easily if they choose to do so. From the OP's description there was clear intent to defraud the mother and other heirs. \_ I'm not a lawyer yet, but some things I think you need to find out about are: (1) Was the contract between mom and X for the sale of the home in writing? - If not, mom's estate may be able to void the the contract b/c the statute of frauds. (2) How educated was mom in relation to X and was mom in decent health, &c. when the contract was made? - If mom wasn't very well educated or was sick, &c. it might be possible to void the contract b/c of a lack of capacity/unconscionability since the price was so low (by itself the low price probably is not sufficient to void the contract, and I'm guessing that you won't be able to find evidence of coercion/duress). (3) Did X record his deed? - If so, it will hard to invalidate the transfer from mom to X. (4) Did mom live in the home (or rent it out and keep the rent) after she "sold" it to X? - If so, mom's estate can argue that the deed to X is ineffective b/c mom did not have an intent to convey the property to X. (5) If mom lived in the house or rented it out, (i) did she do w/ X's possession and (ii) how long did she do it? - Mom's estate might have a claim of adverse possession. Notes/Assumptions: (a) I'm guessing that mom didn't have a will or her will didn't cover the house or what to do w/ unidentified property interests. (b) The deed from mom the X didn't impose any conditions on X that X might have violated thus forfeiting his claims. (c) There might be a statute of limitations problem w/ (1) and and (2) if the sale happened a long time ago. (d) Unless Y is the executor/receiver of mom's estate, I don't think that Y can sue X directly for (1) and (2), however Y probably can sue for (4) and (5) directly think that Y can sue X directly for (1) and (2). \_ Anyone with an interest can sue. \_ My contracts class was a mess but I'm pretty sure that for a 3d party, like Y, to sue on a contract theory (#1 and #2) they will need to show that there were an assignee or a 3d party beneficiary. It doesn't look like mom assigned her rights under the contract to Y, so Y would have to argue that he was a 3d party beneficiary under the contract to Y, so Y would probably have to argue that he was a 3d party beneficiary (possible, but hard) of the contract in order to sue on his own, which is why I said that Y probably can't sue X directly. \_ This isn't a contracts issue. It is fraud and probate. It is also defrauding the IRS since I'm sure the son who stole the house didn't pay taxes on his instant 10x profit on the difference between what he 'paid' and the fair market value of the house. \_ This isn't a contracts issue. It is fraud and probate. It is also defrauding the IRS since I'm sure the son who stole the house didn't pay taxes on his instant 10x profit on the difference between what he 'paid' and the fair market value of the house. \_ AFAIK, there are multiple issues here. (1) Y wants to rescind the contract for sale between mom and X which means Y needs standing under a contract theory. If fraud was involved in the formation of the contract for the sale of the home, then the contract is generally voidable by the parties. I don't think there are enough facts to show fraud, misrepresentation, &c.; incapacity and unconsionability are probably better theories. theory. (2) There may or may not be a probate issue separate from the contract issue - did mom actually transfer an interest to X and did mom get and interest via adv possession? (3) There may not be a tax fraud issue if 10% of fmv is close to the state assessed value of the house. (e) I think that Y can sue directly for (4) and (5) b/c mom would have retained a property interest that (assuming the will did not deal with explictly) may have passed in part to Y. BTW, is this for real? It sounds more like an exam question. \_ Yes, this is a real case, and yes, it's pretty sad. I'm not Y (though I can see why people might assume that) but he's someone I care about and I appreciate the advice so far. I guess the first reply mirrors the kind of worry I have about lawyers pressing for a case when there's no case there, which would waste a lot of money, and more importantly, cause a lot of unnecessary stress. Then again, i don't see this as weak versus strong (and there is no "survival" involved). what's "strong" about cheating an old woman? but of course I'm biased. The mom did live in the house until she died. Apparently after selling the house she told a friend of hers it was one of her "biggest regrets". The rest of the questions I don't have answers for right now. -op an old woman? (I know, I'm biased). The mom did live in the house until she died without paying rent. Apparently after selling the house she told a friend of hers it was one of her "biggest regrets". The rest of the questions I don't have answers for right now. -op \_ If mom lived in the home rent free, it would strengthen #4, but it might cause you a problem with adv possession (esp if mom knew she had sold it). If you answer #1 or #2 as yes, then you might have a case and should probably see a real lawyer and see what they think. If the plan is to sell the home, you might be able to get the lawyer to take the case on contingency that Y wins and gets an interest. \- It seems to be the strongest thing to focus on is the sham sale, given that it was not anywhere near market value. Otherwise that would be a way to get around tax laws. I think you may be able to attack that way. If you hire your kid to mow the lawn so he is eleiglbe for your "corporate education program" where you pay for his college and then you claim that as a business expense, something fishy is probably going on. etc. \- It seems to be the strongest thing to focus on is the sham sale, given that it was not anywhere near market value. Otherwise that would be a way to get around tax laws. I think you may be able to attack that way. If you hire your kid to mow the lawn so he is eleiglbe for your "corporate education program" where you pay for his college and then you claim that as a business expense, something fishy is probably going on. etc. \_ The "sham" sale may not be the best thing to focus on: (1) The fact that the sale price was 10% of fmv is inconclusive b/c family members often sell land to each other at below fmv in order to keep the property tax low (in sj there are homes the city values at $200K for property tax but fmv ~ $1.2e6, a sale at $200K would be ~ 17% of fmv but still legit) \_ My understanding is that property values are re-assessed whenever a property changes ownership, so it doesn't matter if the sale price was x% of fair market value. (2) Unless there is conclusive proof for the sale, X can claim that the money he gave his mom was a gift and that she made a separate gift of the home. \_ BZZZT! Gifts are limited to $11k per person without getting nailed by the IRS. \_ Even if X had to pay the tax it is probably on the assessed value (in CA generally less than the fmv) so claiming it is a gift maybe pretty good for X. \_ There is a large exemption called the unified tax credit which everyone uses when gifting houses. (3) Y may not have standing to sue under the contract. Best thing OP can do is to get more info and then go see a real lawyer. \- yes, i understand this happens, i understand the law and tax enforcement people dont spend a lot of resources rooting this out, but i image it is not legal ... just like a business is supposed to be in the business of making money if it is to be treated as such for tax reasons. \_ I am aware of a situation where a 'family friend' bought a house from an old widow for quite a bit less than it was worth. Someone involved in the process (attorney, realtor, or accountant - I have forgotten) noticed the unusually low sale price. The transaction was rescinded by a court after they found the woman mentally incompetent. The house went on the market with the stipulation that the 'family friend' could not bid on it for something like 30 days. It ended up selling for $70K over asking, which was like double what the 'friend' had offered. He was not the winning bidder. This happened in CA. |
2005/5/27-31 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:37867 Activity:nil |
5/27 Here is something to do for fun. Guess how much the following Santa Monica property sells for, and what can you say about West Los Angeles housing vs. Bay Area housing: http://hhlldevelopment.com/126Pacific.html \_ I'm guessing $1.5-2 mil, and if you didn't already know, LA housing prices have been insane for the last few years. One bedrooms in that area can go for $2k/month. My friend lives a few blocks up the beach from there, and he pays $2700/month for an ocean view. -rollee \_ I am guessing around $1.4M, or $1k/sq ft. -ausman \_ Historically, LA housing prices have always been higher than the Bay Area. I think this is still true if you compare like properties to each other. \_ ausmas and rollee are good. I called and it's in the "mid millions". I thought LA is cheaper than SF, I guessed wrong. \_ The median in LA is a lot cheaper, but you wouldn't want to live in a median-priced neighborhood. There is more cheap housing in bad areas. In nice areas the real estate tends to cost more in LA. |
2005/5/22-23 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:37797 Activity:low 80%like:37788 |
5/20 If I want a little basement for my house (to put wife, or hot surfers to keep them cool), is it possible to do so? How much does it cost and what are some complications to it? Thanks. \_ Most houses in California (at least recent ones) are built on a slap of concrete. They dig, fill with concrete, then build on top of that slap. It'd be impractical to try to put a basement there. slab of concrete. They dig, fill with concrete, then build on top of that slab. It'd be impractical to try to put a basement there. \_ You haven't seen how those lowered one-car garage on Ellsworth gets flooded to street level during heavy rain. |
2005/5/20-21 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:37788 Activity:kinda low 80%like:37797 |
5/20 If I want a little basement for my house (to put wine, or hot servers to keep them cool), is it possible to do so? How much does it cost and what are some complications to it? Thanks. \_ Most houses in California (at least recent ones) are built on a slap of concrete. They dig, fill with concrete, then build on top of that slap. It'd be impractical to try to put a basement there. \_ Where do you put your hot wife? |
2005/5/14-17 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:37676 Activity:nil |
5/13 Looking for a free web site that shows you a listing of houses sold in the neighborhood with price/date/location, thanks. \_ Yahoo! Real Estate. Also, possibly your county assessor, depending on what your county is. \_ http://sfgate.com publishes a list of bay area homes sold with city, address, price \_ http://sfgate.com/homesales if youre looking at Bay Area. \_ Thanks. Looks like there's no end to housing bubble. I will just wait a few more years and see what happens. \_ http://csua.org/u/c3e What bubble? |
2005/5/9-11 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:37578 Activity:nil |
5/9 Do you use a subwoofer in your apartment or condo complex? \_ I had one, but my downstairs neighbors complained, so I disconnected it. \_ did they knock on your door or leave a message on your door? \_ How in hell is THAT supposed to matter? \_ curious \_ Well, actually they told my roommate who was a good friend of theirs and him deliver the message. of theirs and let him deliver the message. \_ ANNOYING. \_ You have neighbors who have a subwoofer? \_ Is it the subwoofer that's annoying, or is it your female neighbor's moaning while masturbating with the subwoofer that's annoying? |
2005/4/22-23 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:37311 Activity:kinda low |
4/22 Housing bubble! Arrghhh! http://www.economist.com/agenda/displayStory.cfm?story_id=3886356 "n IMF study on asset bubbles estimates that 40% of housing booms are followed by housing busts, which last for an average of four years and see an average decline of roughly 30% in home values." \_ This is tangent but the article point-of-view pisses me off. It states that recent loan arrangements allow "more marginal" homebuyers to take out loans. As opposed to maybe prices increasing faster than any realistic notion of valuations? It's as if the problem lies with how poor the people are who are buying the houses rather than how expensive the houses have become relative to people's incomes. This is a banker's view of the world, I suppose. Oh, and, yes, this is just me being bitter, of course. -- ulysses \_ Who or what do you blame for current housing prices? \_ I support violent vigilante action against real estate speculators. I'm pretty sure if the severed head of the last parasitic fuck who bought land in my neighborhood just for profit were on a spear at the major intersection it would deter further speculation pretty fast. deter further speculation pretty fast. -- !ulysses \_ I blame you. \_ Just as anecdotal evidence, I live in Livermore. Before I arrived rents were through the roof. A friend of mine bought a house because it was cheaper than renting. Next, rents returned to reasonable levels (sort of, $1000 for a 2 bedroom apt.), and housing skyrocketed. Now it seems like about a quarter of the apts. in my complex are vacant, and I think rent is at about $875. -jrleek \_ Oh no! If my house drops in value by 30%, my leveraged profit could drop as low as 300%! \_ ouch! that would hurt! \_ Interesting way to report it. That means that 60% of booms are followed by no bust. \_ If you priced the houses in 'real dollars' I'd bet a lot of those 60% are long shwallow busts. those 60% are long shallow busts. \_ except you have the use value and tax benefit of home ownership. \_ I'm not dissing home ownership, but just saying a bust is still a bust. \_ decline != bust |
2005/3/31-4/1 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:37003 Activity:very high |
3/31 I own a small Chinese in el cerrito.I called city hall and asked if/how I could get a copy of the blue prints. (I may want to knock down a wall or two). They told me that they would *not* make a copy of the blue prints for me as blue prints are copyrighted. Now it seems to me that, as the owner of the damn house, i have a pretty strong fair use claim to a copy of the blue prints. What gives? What should i do?? \_ you own the house, not the copyright to the blueprints. Find out who actually owns the blueprint copyright and persue a copy from them. \_ I did not imply that I did. There are lots of things that I don't own that, none-the-less, I am able to copy for personal use. Get the question now? \_ You do not own the picture that I just took of you! ;) \_ Actually, he might depending on the circumstances. \_ If he's not a public figure and he buys the picture from you, he owns the physical picture and you own the copyright. If he is a movie star or something, I don't know. \_ are you a lawyer or something? ;) \_ No, but I'm a freelance wedding photog on weekends. \_ See if they'll let you inspect the blueprints. Then take a picture with a good-quality camera. \- You could also pull a Sandy Burger. --psb \_ Hire an architect to draw a blueprint of your building. That's what I did when I remodeled my house when the city didn't have a blue print available. |
2005/3/30-31 [Computer/Rants, Reference/RealEstate] UID:36982 Activity:high |
3/30 Do I have to give a 1099 form to a contractor who works on my house? If not, what's the difference between him and a guy who works on my computer? \_ you don't give the guy who works on your computer a 1099 either \_ I am pretty sure you are supposed to. \_ Why? You're not their employer. I thought 1099's were for employers reporting wages for an independent contractor. I would think a housing contractor would be self-employed, or an employee of a firm (who would handle 1099 reporting) \_ Why? You're not their employer (or are you?). I thought 1099's were for employers reporting wages for an independent contractor. I would think a housing contractor would be self-employed, or an employee of a firm (who would handle 1099 reporting). I would think the distinction is that you, the owner of the house, are not a business. However: http://www.irs.gov/businesses/small/article/0,,id=99921,00.html \_ If he is self-employed and you give him money, who is supposed to report it? Yeah, it says right there that you are supposed to file a 1099-MISC for payments of over $600. \_ What if he is not self-employed, but works as a sole proprietorship or has incorporated? \_ I think you've got the definition of building "contractor" confused with the HR definition of 1099 "contractor." The guy who works on your house is just someone with the word "contractor" as a job descr/title. For the "guy who works on your computer" he's a "contractor" as an employment category. Both are self employed, yes -- but the building contractor probably has his own business and is (hopefully) licensed and bonded. You would probably not issue him a W9. You would probably just pay his company. \_ What is a W9? |
2005/3/30-31 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:36978 Activity:high |
3/30 Dear home owners who have|plan to buy 2nd/3rd/4th homes for the purpose of investment, PLEASE STOP IT! For each home you buy, you're taking it away from first time buyers. Last year, ~1/4 of the homes bought were investment homes. That's at least 3-4 million less homes for people who really want one. I mean, come on, what is this, the era of Monarchs and Aristocrats? Medieval period where the people who own land gets to own even more land? I thought social equality is suppose to improve especially after WWII. Something's wrong here. \_ Tough Shit -- getting ready to buy 2nd home. \_ We REALLY need to do something to the Chinese population. They're like the Jews in Germany in the 30s, buying and owning all the properties and making everyone else's life a total hell. \_ Yeah! go go final solution! \_ But Chinese immigrants are relatively poltical quiet. They don't try to influence American politics to benefit their home country like the Jews do. \_ YOU TELL EM! Damn Dirty Jews. \_ Ah, now it makes sense; Sour Grapes Housing Guy is someone who has been holding on to his money since 1998, waiting for the housing market to go down so he can buy. -tom \_ He'll "save" $200K in the end, but will have spent $150K in rent and will have lost another $50K in deductions while having lived as a renter the whole time. We'll have to hear endlessly about the $200K he saved on his house price. \_ the amount that goes to mortgage interest is higher then rent these days, even after tax deductions. no point buying unless you think home will appreciate. rent savings, tax deductions, etc. no longer are sufficient justification for buying. Only buy if you think house will appreciate more than you can earn with your principal invested elsewhere. \_ Interest is higher than rent? I rent out a house for $2000/mo, and I'm paying a $1500/mo. mortgage payment on a 15-yr fixed loan for that house. \_ yea, but when did you buy the house? try buying one now and renting it out. \_ I bought it in 2000. \_ I bought mine in 2004 and my mortgage interest is around $1800. \_ If you buy $650k house in the southbay, the MI would be around $2k. It's reasonable that a 3bd house can be rented for over $2k/mo. \_ Interest is supposed to decrease over time, but rent is increasing. Don't forget there are tax benefits with interest. \_ rent is increasing? SourceP \_ #t are you talking short-term or long-term? \_ give me a break, there are more than one person on the motd that believe the current housing market is in a bubble, and I do own a home. -!pp \_ Please move to a communist state, where social equality is mandatory for everyone except the Chairman. \_ We need land reform for urban areas! \_ Yeah right. seriously though all the housing tax incentives are totally unhelpful to regular people wanting a home. They are designed to help investors (low capital gains tax on appreciation, bullshit depreciation writeoffs, mortgage writeoffs, etc.). All that stuff does is help those with leverage and jack up the price that much (since houses are sold based on monthly payments not on actual value). I'd also argue it harms the economy, relatively speaking, to have so much debt and assets tied up in these useless houses that in the end just sit there not producing anything. \_ Gotta love capitalism! The more wealth you own, the more wealth works for you. What are you gonna do, revert Reagan's great tax cut for inheritance and investment property? Revert Bush's income tax cut for the upper-class Americans? Unlikely. \_ Patience young Skywalker, you waited this long, don't be tempted by all the house talks in the news, etc. It IS a bubble, it will dip like it did at the end of 2001, that's when you go in with your savings. At any rate, it cannot sustain the current growth for another year, period. The best investors have a cool mind when everyone else is buying into the hype, like all those stupid people who decided to join Nasdaq when it is at 4000-5000. Even Greenspan acknowledged the housing market is in a bubble, do you remember what he said about the stock market back then? Trust yourself, don't buy into the hype. \_ You know, that's what I said in 2002, 2003, 2004. It's 2005 and things haven't changed a bit. I don't have problems with housing going up. I have a lot of problems with people buying investment homes and claiming deductions and other loopholes in the tax system. If your 2nd/3rd home is an investment, then it is business, and should be subject to business tax rules and tax brackets. The current tax system and interest rate encourages everyone to buy a house, but made it even easier for existing home owners who could take a 2nd mortgage loan or reallocate and what not. And in the end, when there's only so much land to offer, the winners are the people who have the most land. Fuck GW Bush and fuck Reagan. \_ I admit it's easy for me to say this because it is all in the past, but things are not quite the same in 2002, 2003, 2004, and 2005. 2004/2005 can be classified as red hot, but in 2001/2002 and even in part of 2003, it was actually quite manageable. Perhaps your expectation needs to be adjusted slightly. Instead of waiting for a crash, watch out for cool periods. Have realistic goals. As it is right now, it's unlikely that the house you like will drop back to 400k, but a instead of selling at 600+, it may drop to 550 or something. Are you willing to take it then? Don't get stuck waiting for it to go back to 400k just because that's your limit, limit can be stretched. The bay area is a special situation, everyone I know, including myself, my parents, their friends, have "bit the bullet" when they bought the house and at the time it all seemed very expensive. But sometimes you just need to do that, even if you buy it relatively high, in the long run, say 5-10 years, you are still likely to be ok. (Still, I don't recommend you do that right now, in 6 month or a year, see what it is like, I don't think my house will approach 1 million, trust me, it will level off and people will stop bidding up as much)... Vegas has already dropped 25% and one person I knew who's in your accused category is in a hurry to sell the home he has and guess why... \_ Think outside the box, do you really need to live in the bay area? How about somewhere else? You DON'T have a house yet, so you are not tied down. Find a job somewhere else and see if you like it. Houses are more affordable elsewhere. If you are Asian I can understand your desire to stay in the bay area, but if you are not, then why not? If I don't have a house, I may very well move to shanghai. With my savings, I can buy a very decent home in shanghai. There are also other options as others have pointed out. There are still 400k homes around. Your first home doesn't need to be perfect, like your first gf. ;) \_ Do you absolutely need a house right now? or it would be nice to have one? Our advice depends on your situation. \_ Let them buy their 2nd, 3rd, 4th and 5th home. While they are waiting and waiting for them to appreciate, rent it from them for cheap. Then, when the housing prices start falling, and their highly leveraged investments go south, and they are forced to sell at a loss, buy it from them for cheap. Be merciless when bargaining for a good price. Housing bubble's gonna pop! bwahahaha! \_ what if they're so dang rich they already own all 5 homes and can wait 20 years? \_ Yep. Lots of landlords have been doing this since the 1970s. They bought all their houses/buildings for cheap. If the portfolio takes a dip that's okay as long as income stays good. |
2005/3/30-31 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:36960 Activity:high |
3/29 Great Bubble Housing blog post by Dan Gilmor: http://csua.org/u/biy \_ Tell me, Sour Grapes Housing Guy, what do you get out of posting things like this? -tom \_ He's trying to warn potential home buyers to avoid the bubble. \_ I enjoy yanking your chain. -sghg \_ There may or may not be a bubble, but I believe that real estate prices will only go down in the long term as the demand goes down, and demand is tied to population levels, which won't go down for a long time... -ax \_ nah. interest rate, my boy. some say inflation will keep housing prices up. but that's for regions where the cost of building materials represents a large chunk of the price of a house, which isn't true for the Bay Area. Home price inflation will end when interest rate goes up. OTOH, US economy isn't that great, and the Fed may not dare to raise rates too much, but if they don't, the pain will just be delayed and exerbated. \_ My definition of long term is > 10 years... In the short term, yes, interest rates going up will bring prices down, but keep payments the same. -ax \_ I wouldn't be surprised at all if housing prices is lower 10 years later than it is today. \_ I would. Has this ever happened in California? \_ I believe so. In LA at least. \_ Which 10 year period? \_ Not 10 years, but from ~1991-1998. \_ In the long run or the short run? In the short run, interest rates may win out, but in the long run, population and land availability will be the key. \_ yea, someday, the nasdaq will reach 4000 again too, but why buy at 4500 when you can buy at 1300 three years later. \_ If you are waiting until prices drop 70% to buy, you will be waiting a long, long time. \_ For most people, a home is a leveraged investment, you can easily lose your entire principal and more. \_ What has that got to do with the original statement? \_ For most people, a house is a home. They live there. Unlike stocks, if the house loses value it still has value as a home. Leverage only matters if you are buying a house as an investment, which most people are not. \_ Something like 25% of them are, currently. \_ Which means 75% are not. |
2005/3/29-31 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:36951 Activity:kinda low |
3/29 Dear financial guru dans, for the past 3 years I've been trying to save enough money for a down-payment in a decent house in N Cal. However, no matter how much I save, it seems like the housing price goes up much faster than I can save. I mean, this is pretty frustrating. I can't even buy anything around $400,000 with what I have saved (I have saved about 20% of that), and if I buy something out of that range, I will not have enough to eat. Do you have any suggestion for people like me? \_ Well I can attribute some of the reasons why pricing is going up faster than you can save. For one, a lot of people are buying 2nd and 3rd houses for the purpose of investment. While that is good news for people who already have money (and thanks to Bush, it's much easier for them to do so), for each house that they buy for investment, it is also one less house for first time home owners to buy. Capitalism-- the more you own, the more you get to own. \_ You're screwed. although, you can buy a $400k place with 10% or even no money down if you want, well probably anyway. Definition of "decent house" varies of course. Your choices are 1. buy whatever you can afford (1 bedroom sj condo?) 2. buy something somewhere else that seems like a better deal and either rent that or move there \_ but then you go back to the problem of not being able to buy something and rent it and still make money. There's a reason why its cheaper right now to rent than buy... 3. invest in something other than houses \_ Although if you have < 20% down, most (if not all) lenders will require you to pay for mortgage insurance. \_ 42% of first time buyers bought with 0% down... FYI http://csua.org/u/biq \_ There are places less than $400K, with upside; West Oakland comes to mind. You could also look at something like buying a duplex and renting the other half to cover the mortgage. -tom \_ Not really a great idea these days. Compare cost for duplex vs. what you can actually charge in rent for half of it these days. Rent : Mortgage+Tax+Ins ratios are shite these days. \_ Stop thinking you need 2000 sq ft. There are plenty of smallish places in halfway decent neighborhoods for $400k. Where do you work? You might have to take in a border to make your mortgage. \_ I agree with this. My sister bought a nice 2+2 townhouse in Walnut Creek with a big fenced yard near BART for $439K a year ago. With $80K in the bank you either waited too long or make a really small income. Maybe you should take in a border in the form of a gf/wife. Single people always have trouble affording houses unless they have really good careers. \_ What's a 2+2 townhouse? \_ 2 bedrooms, 2 bath \_ Here ya go: http://csua.org/u/biu A cute starter home in an up and coming neighborhood with a bedroom you can even rent out if you need to. \_ Are you sure you won't have enough to eat if you go for a house over $400k? I just ran a quick check on http://www.eloan.com with $400k and 20% down, and you can get a 30yr no-point fixed loan with monthly payment of $1944. How much do you make now, and how much rent (if any) do you pay now? With a CS job this kind of payment should leave you plenty of money to eat. Just stop going on frequent vacations and driving a fancy car. \_ + $4k+/yr in prop. tax =~ $333/month makes that $2277/month. Going up just to $450k makes that $2246 + 375 = $2621/month. That's getting pretty pricey. \_ You get a huge tax break from buying a house. Your property tax and the interest on your mortgage is deductable. You need to include this in your calculations. \_ I wish I had an answer for you. I find myself in a similar situation (though I am still saving for a downpayment). I actually don't know much about loans and the housing market, though I've heard that conventional wisdom states that if you are going to stay in one place for three years or more, you are better off buying then renting. The nice thing about buying is that your monthly loan payments build up equity, whereas rent payments are just money down the toilet (which I guess would make your landlord's pocket the sewage system, apt description IMO). Ultimately, you just need to run the numbers. How much would you spend on rent over the next three years? How much would you spend on down payment/loan payments over the next three years (don't forget to factor in tax deductions from your loan interest payments). If you then sold your house, how much of that would you recoup? Barring housing bubble disaster, you should actually end up with a 5-15% profit, but there's nothing to stop you from calculating the worst case scenario where your home depreciates 10%. -dans \_ Agreed. Don't forget property tax. There's also homeowner's insurance, but it's negligible in the big picture. \_ Also, don't forget about HOA fees (for townhomes and condos), although you might be able to recover some of the costs for property tax from the tax break. You may want to start small and several years later after your property appreciates, upgrade to a more comfortable home. Another option is to invest with a trustworthy and reliable partner. \_ Wait for the next big al kida attack. Seriously though, I don't recommend you buying right now. The housing market is in what a lot of experts agree as a bubble. Now people own homes obviously do not want to believe that, but the best time to buy when you have cash would be when the market is not doing so well. Unless you have urgent needs for a house, ie, you are getting married, or something, renting is a better option for you right now. If you really having been saving for 3 years, then you should've bit the bullet and bought the biggest house you could afford when US attacked Afghanistan, everyone is selling, it was a buyer's market. I even bargained the price down by 20k. right now the housing market is stock market in 2000, do NOT go in with all your savings. You'll be sorry. \_ Find an ugly (or not so ugly) chick that has a house! Yes, they are around. :) In a few years it won't matter (whether they are ugly or not), and having more cash to spend each month (for you, your family, and kids) could mean more to you than banging the girl you really want when you are 40. ;) This is an equal society, guys should be allowed to marry for money too!! \_ what if you're gay? \_ tell her to work out until she has nice broad shoulders and looks good from behind and make sure you're on top. \_ Marry an ugly guy then. \_ Marry an ugly rich guy then. \- FYI: there is a Nolo book called How to buy a House in CA which seems decent to me. --psb \_ Even though Bay Area is nice, maybe you guys should just dump the Bay Area and move somewhere else. |
2005/3/25-26 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:36881 Activity:moderate |
3/25 Poll, in your deep desire, you wish housing would do the following. Also, put a number to indicate the number of houses you have: \_ pop the bubble: 0 \_ pop the bubble: 000 \_ I want interest rates to go up to around 8 so there isn't so much easy money flying around. I want to see people get burned on their $500k, no-money-down-interest-only-loan'd shitty condos and desert houses in arizona where water restricts growth more than the desert land area. \_ I'm the bitter housing guy and I'll tell you why. I'm a strong believer in meritocracy. Take the dot-com for example. Some people got rich just because they happened to get in and out at the right time, regardless of how much good work they've contributed to the society. That's not meritocracy, that is lotteritocracy. Life is already random as it is, and when you have people making 2X in speculative Arizona housing, that just feeds on lotteritocracy. Is that the kind of message we want to give to our children, that hard work and contribution to society is secondary to just getting lucky? \_ It is very rare that anyone makes money investing (whether in stocks or real estate) because they got lucky. People who don't know what they're doing (who haven't put in the work to learn about investing) get fleeced. -tom \_ You're an idiot. \_ keeps going up: 2 \_ and I'm considering buying a small apartment complex \_ You are obviously a landlord in SF \_ The more you own, the more you get to own. I love this country. -pp \_ Decline 10% and remain flat for a few years: 0 \_ Same as him: 1 duplex \_ Fall by 50% so that I can buy more: 1 \_ Crash by 70% so that I can buy 5 houses. I sold my house at a very nice profit 1 yr ago. Local market is down about 10 pct since then. No houses now. \_ do you live in vegas? where has the market fallen? |
2005/3/25 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:36878 Activity:kinda low |
3/25 http://csua.org/u/bhu [nytimes.com] More on the housing bubble, comparing it to dot com bubble. From the article: "South Florida," he said, "is working off of a totally new economic model than any of us have ever experienced in the past." Sound familiar? \_ Yay, it's Sour Grapes Housing Guy! Thank you for your brilliant insight! -tom \_ Oh, no. Thank you for *your* brilliant insight, Mr. Pyramid Scam! \_ And just like the dot-com bust, for some reason I still haven't gotten into this game. (Dot-com: Bought some shares in Yahoo! with plans to sell it for a 50% profit several months later.) Real estate: Sold my $700K house with plans to come back several years later to buy another one for $500K). Real estate: Sold my $700K house with plans to move back into the same neighborhood several years later for $500K). \_ Actually it sounds like you have gotten into it and out of it. |
2005/3/24-25 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:36862 Activity:nil |
3/24 New housing numbers: http://tinyurl.com/59xbe \_ ITS A BUBBLE I TELL YOU A BUBBLE!!! IN THREE MONTHS I WILL BE ABLE TO BUY MY DREAM 4 BEDROOM 3 BATH HOME IN ROCKRIDGE FOR UNDER $200,000! \_ Heh, I bet you bought into the NASDAQ in 2000 also, didn't you. Now I can buy stock at less than 50% of their highs. \_ Yeah, but I also bought stock in 1997, 1998, 1999, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004 and 2005. |
2005/3/22-23 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:36812 Activity:high |
3/22 Are you ready for the Bay Area housing crash? http://patrick.net/housing/crash.html \_ http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/4373687.stm Good, I can't wait. I missed out while everyone around me is buying a second home or a vacation home in Arizona and all they can say is how stupid I am for not buying something. -frugal saver \_ In some parts of the country the market has been stagnant. Likewise, when it is stagnant in the Bay Area it might be hot somewhere else. I personally would not buy right now, but it was certainly smart to have bought a few years back. When prices fall, what do I (as a homeowner) care? \_ Well you are and you aren't. It's like the dot com boom... you were right if you thought it was stupid... but you also missed out on the boom. Still unlikely to see a real drop in prices in bay area for a couple years I think, there's no recession here and tons of demand. here and tons of demand. But it does look a lot like 2000 in that a) prices seem ridiculous but keep rising, leading to b) ordinary people hyped up about house appreciation gains and speculating, just like every Joe was buying Cisco back in the day with no regard for investment principles. I look at the low interest rates like a money faucet the fed turned on, that seems to mostly go into housing because it's easy to do and touted as low risk. Ordinary folks don't normally buy a ton of stocks on margin etc., nor do they have the savvy to borrow to start successful businesses. So if the housing market is like a money balloon filled from low interest rates, the question is when it would deflate... I have the feeling that it won't really deflate here due to low housing supply. Then again a lot can happen in a couple years. \_ Rather than being like nweaver (maybe Sour Grapes Housing Guy is really nweaver), and pretending like predicting for 4 years that prices will at some point stop going up is clever, why don't you do something useful and tell us when the turn-around will happen, and how much it will drop? Because home values are up probably 50% since you started posting this crap. -tom \_ You want to start a crash pool? \_ No, I want Sour Grapes Housing Guy to give a real prediction, rather than going on for the next N years about how a drop in housing price is imminent, and then saying "see I told you so!" after one happens, while ignoring the fact that prices rose 100% during the time he was predicting a crash. -tom \_ tom is just following the common strategy of Wall Street stock analysts. \_ You lead an impoverished life indeed. \_ The Sour Grapes Housing Guy is just following the common strategy of Wall Street stock analysts. \_ I would also like to know when the nadir will be reached so that I can buy at that moment. +/- a year is fine. Thanks! \_ Home prices will start to fall in Q4 of 2005 and reach a nadir on Nov 17, 2007. -Swami the Magnificent \_ Wow, well if you're right we'll give you respect and accolades. If you're wrong, I'll personally hire four large white supremacists to come to your house and sodomize you until you squeal like a pig. Whaddya say? \_ Swami the Magnificent is above your petty threats. \_ Hey, if you're confident enough to bet your prediction against being gang-sodomized by big angry white supremacists, then I'm going out to buy some popcorn for the show. \_ I think Swami swings that way already. \_ has some interesting points, but much of it is ruined by the crackpot sensationalist exaggeration. Many of the points are assuming the crash has already started/happened, which is blatantly false. \_ Yeah, he starts off ok but if you've looked at buying something lately you'll know prices are higher than ever. And he makes crazy statements like this: "under current conditions, a renter would be able to live in a house for 30 years, then buy that house outright with the saved principle payments, and have an extra $227,200 of savings on top of that". \_ I think he is correct. An average home in Noe Valley costs $1M. You can rent the same house for ~$2800/mo. PITI on a $1M house are ~$7k/mo, which if you are in the 40% overall bracket come out to ~5800. This means you save a $1M house are ~$7k/mo, which if you are in the 37% overall bracket comes out to ~4800. This means you save $2k/mo by renting. $2k/mo invested in 6% bond for 30 years has got to be worth over $1M. Let me do the math and get back to you. -motd thought leader Okay, it is more like pay off the $1M house and have $1M left over. But this makes the unsupportable assumption that the house will not appreciate in value in 30 years. \_ Also the unsupportable assumption that your rent won't go up in 30 years. -tom \_ Yeah, there are other varibles too, like the fact that the mortgage deduction is worth less as you pay off the loan. But I think those two probably cancel each other out. SF has rent control, so rents can't go up *that* much. -mtl \-SF doesnt have that serious rent control if you move in today. \_ You are obviously not a landlord in SF. \_Yes the annual permitted rent increase may be small, but I think something like stuff built in the last 25 yrs is not covered. Some people are highly protected but overall, it's not as onerous as Berkeley or as it used to be. \_ Please kill yourself, fucker. \_ What rent are you paying now compared to 15 or 30 years ago? -tom \_ 15 yrs ago, my family rented a 4br house in Cupertino for $1k/mo. \_ If I had gotten the maximum allowed annual rent increase according to law, my rents would have gone up 45% since 1989. \_ but what if you had moved? -tom \_ In 30 years $1M is not a whole lot. But the $1M house could worth $10M n 30 years. \_ At a very conservative 3% yearly appreciation rate, the home is worth more than $2M. -mtl \_ You'd have almost exactly $2M. \_ "Even a broken clock is right twice a day." Brilliant. \_ "It's a house. Wherever one lives is a home, be it apartment, condo, or house. Calling a house a 'home' is a manipulation of your emotions for profit. " This guy probably never owned a house. \_ "This winter's sales volume in Santa Clara County is only 44% of what it was last summer, the worst ratio in at least 10 years. Prices are already down every month for Nov, Dec, Jan, and Feb." 1) Sales volume means nothing. (Could be low supply) 2) Winter months volume are typically lower than summer months for obvious reasons (holidays, weather, etc). 3) Where did he get the numbers that prices are down every month? From what I've seen, prices have gone up. \_ I think he was comparing the ratio, not pointing at lower volume itself. I don't know where this data is though. |
2005/3/17 [Recreation/Food, Reference/RealEstate] UID:36738 Activity:high |
3/17 It's spring season and every now and then I see spiders inside my house. Anything I can do to stop them from coming inside the house? \_ kill all but one. rip one of his legs off. he'll go back and tell his friends to stay away. \_ Think this would work in Palestine too? \_ This doesn't work. No one makes that small of a wheelchair that works with the straw. You need to leave at least 1 leg intact. \_ Read: "...... rip one of his legs off." \_ One? Hell, that doesn't prove anything. If you gonna do this right, you need at least four ripped out. -Scored low in SAT verbal guy \_ You don't want to incapacitate him. He needs some cred, though, for his story that everyone else was killed. \_ Yeah, but he could have lost one leg in some sort of accident. If he's missing every other leg, the others know you're not screwing around. \_ Stop leaving delicious insects all over the place. \_ This is the correct answer. Spiders are hard to kill systematically, but they only go where the food is. \_ And as long as you do have spider food all over your house, having spiders to eat it is probably a good thing. \_ Except they leave sticky piles of spidercrap beneath them if you let them hang out too long. Just so you know. -- been there. \_ The house hardly has anything even for me to eat. I think it's too hot outside during the day so they tend to come in. What type of food attracts spider? I don't even leave kitchen garbage inside overnight so I don't think it's the problem.... \_ Spiders eat insects. If you have any insects, it will attract spiders. Even if you have no insects you will get the occasional spider looking for insects. I'd guess it's more likely they want a nice warm house at night. \_ Spiders also eat other spiders. \_ Rear some cockroaches. They will breed really fast, and eat up all the spiders. They will also quickly infest your annoying neighbours' homes. \_ How do you get rid of the cockroaches afterwards? \_ Call the dude who sprays lots of chemicals. That, or just move to a new place. \_ Then there will be a lot of dead cockroaches lying around, which attracts spiders again. \_ Spiders don't eat dead insects. \_ Camel Spiders \_ No way dude, cockroaches tend to smoke in bed. Next thing you know, the apartment is aflame. Plus secondhand smoke kills! And the filters everywhere are a pain to clean. \_ Similarly, if you have termites, encourage ants to infest your home. They will feed on the termites and neatly stack their refuse (e.g. piles of their dead) in piles for you to clean periodically. refuse (e.g. their dead) in piles for you to clean periodically. \_ A coworker killed the ants milling about his doorstep and the next year termites were discovered in the same place. \_ Are you sure what he was killing weren't termites? Termites look a lot like ants. \_ IMO, termites and ants are easily distinguishable. Also, termites don't tend to mill about outside. \_ Also, ants won't strip your face to the bone in seconds. Termites are dangerous, man. \_ Termites killed my mother. Bastards. |
2005/3/16-17 [Transportation/Car, Reference/RealEstate] UID:36711 Activity:high |
3/16 Hitachi's new robots: http://tinyurl.com/4rmv7 (news.com) \_ Why do robots have to resemble human appearence anyway? Eyes (video cameras) on head, two arms, and so on. And somehow using wheels that are much simpler instead of legs is a technological breakthrough? \_ Cf. Daleks. \_ mere shells housing organic matter. \_ Do you have stairs in your house? \_ No. But if you do, you can get two robots without legs at lower cost. \_ Then I'd be protected. \_ You might also stand a better chance of getting away in case they went nuts and started biting off people's heads or bludgeoning them with their own torn off limbs or something. |
2005/3/14-15 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:36693 Activity:moderate |
3/14 More evidence of Real Estate Speculation. We are definitely in bubble land here folks: http://money.cnn.com/2005/03/14/magazine/flippers_0504/index.htm \_ great, since you were so accurate predicting the dot-com bubble, that means we can only expect another 150% increase before it's time to sell. -tom \_ eh, you need some major event that affects national psychology: like gas prices going too high, something getting all blowed up, deficits finally affecting the economy / all the banks pulling out of the dollar. Otherwise it will be a slow-motion bubble pop. -total newb |
2005/2/6-7 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:36081 Activity:high 54%like:36078 |
2/6 Gambling on housing: http://www.csua.org/u/az4 (to the schmuck who put in the boobs, thanks) \_ whoo! http://tinyurl.com/5jk9o \_ I would say I hope these speculators loose their shirts and go \_ ObYermom bankrupt, but that's an understatement. I hope they get tarred and feathered, and get cancer from the tar. Fuck all real estate speculating parasite bastards. \_ Yep. A good friend told me oh 6 months ago that the smart Vegas real estate types were all moving money out of Vegas and into Phoenix. I imagine those guys will move out now that the dumb money is moving in. \_ Seriously, can't these people find something to invest in the grows the economy instead of just screwing the little guy? \_ Ergo, the need for fair market, rather than simply "free". \_ Market must be fairly regulated for all citizens, comrade. \_ To be frank, the controlled housing market around here is screwing me far for than the housing speculators. \_ I have no proof, and don't really know what I'm talking about, but I'll bet dollars to donuts those laws that make a "controlled" housing market were written by politicians who are in the pocket of real estate speculators. In the end, this is why I've come to be anti-regulation: regulation will always be written by the shitheads, and I'd rather fight them in the free market than live in a world where they write the laws. \_ Actually, it's much simpler than that. For whatever reason, no matter what type of system you have, whether it be heavily regulated or not, whether it is communist, capitalist, fuedalist, etc. there will always be people who learn how to beat and cheat the system to their own advantage. So, it really doesn't matter what you do, there will always be have and have nots, and the have nots will always outnumber the haves. The only way to have true equality is to make everyone equal, and that's not going to happen because doing so would result in a meltdown in society. \_ Well, that, and it would be wrong. \_ What is wrong with real estate speculation? \_ When speculators take over, they end up driving the prices up way beyond what people in that area can afford, meaning that people who live there get screwed and end up spending way more money on houseing or just gettin gdriven out of the area. If the speculating frenzy is not connected with real economic growth of the area, everyone gets totally fucked except for the early speculators who screwed the later speculators. I've lost my apartment three times in as many years to these fuckers, and at least one of the places I had to leave is actually still sitting vacant now, two years after I had to move out. No, I don't live in the Bay Area. \_ Just for clarity, where do you live? \_ New Haven, CT. \_ Yale has been buying up whole city blocks around the campus for years now. It took real estate speculators this long to capitalize on this? \_ Gee, that's too bad for you. Do you need big government to keep the bad evil capitalists away at night too? \_ Hey, asshole, I was the one advocating deregulation. Just because I think something should be legal doesn't mean I don't hate the bastards who do it. \_ Have trouble reading, moron? I was saying the government IS the problem usually. There's miles of wide open completely unused land around here (literally), but it remains unused because the local government says that it can't be built on. As far as I can tell, this is simply to keep land prices as high as possible. \_ You have to hand it to this guy, he's a skilled troll. He managed to elicit a "asshole" and a "moron" from people who agree with him on this issue. Funny. \_ You know, the owner of my favorite neighborhood lunch place retired and her son took over the running of the place. You know what the bastard did? He decided to go upscale, changed the menu, and raised prices! Now the place sits half-empty, and I have to get my lunches from another restaurant. There should be a law against restaurants changing owners and raising prices. |
2005/2/6 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:36078 Activity:very high 54%like:36081 |
2/6 Gambling on housing: http://csua.org/u/az4 \_ I would say I hope these speculators loose their shirts and go \_ ObYermom bankrupt, but that's an understatement. I hope they get tarred and feathered, and get cancer from the tar. Fuck all real estate speculating parasite bastards. \_ Yep. A good friend told me oh 6 months ago that the smart Vegas real estate types were all moving money out of Vegas and into Phoenix. I imagine those guys will move out now that the dumb money is moving in. \_ Seriously, can't these people find something to invest in the grows the economy instead of just screwing the little guy? \_ Ergo, the need for fair market, rather than simply "free". \_ Market must be fairly regulated for all citizens, comrade. \_ To be frank, the controlled housing market around here is screwing me far for than the housing speculators. \_ I have no proof, and don't really know what I'm talking about, but I'll bet dollars to donuts those laws that make a "controlled" housing market were written by politicians who are in the pocket of real estate speculators. In the end, this is why I've come to be anti-regulation: regulation will always be written by the shitheads, and I'd rather fight them in the free market than live in a world where they write the laws. \_ Actually, it's much simpler than that. For whatever reason, no matter what type of system you have, whether it be heavily regulated or not, whether it is communist, capitalist, fuedalist, etc. there will always be people who learn how to beat and cheat the system to their own advantage. So, it really doesn't matter what you do, there will always be have and have nots, and the have nots will always outnumber the haves. The only way to have true equality is to make everyone equal, and that's not going to happen because doing so would result in a meltdown in society. |
2005/1/20 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:35830 Activity:high |
1/20 "People are buying strictly on the basis of price appreciation, and that's a recipe for disaster," Thornberg said. "It's obvious we've peaked out. The question now is when do we start coming down the other side? -UCLA economist Christopher Thornber (on home prices) http://csua.org/u/as3 \_ I like Mr. Fair and Unbiased Poster! The whole article is saying how things are unclear, there's indications that the market could head either way, and he/she posts the last paragraph in the article as if that's the proper summary. Fine work! \_ These grapes, dey are so SOUR! \_ *sniff*! Yeah, I sure miss being sick half the year from the fucking polution, sitting in traffic for an hour to get anywhere, and dealing with the attitudes of fucks like you. I wish I were worthy of the privelage of paying an outragous fraction of my income into a mortgage on some fucking tract home surrounded by strip malls. yep. Sour grapes all the way. You just keep telling yourself that, buddy. \_ You are worthy. Your spelling qualifies you. \_ Well, I live in San Francisco, with the cleanest air and water of any big city in the nation. I don't sit in traffic, in fact I don't even own a car. I use Muni to go back and forth to work. And yeah, it is late sometimes, but even on a bad day, it only takes me 50 minutes to get to work. 50 minutes I spend reading the paper, I might add. \_ SF and north bay are tolerable. It's south bay/silicon valley that is the shithole. -not previous guy |
2005/1/16-18 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:35736 Activity:kinda low |
1/16 If I own a condon/town house/house/etc. in SJ and I want to rent out one or of the rooms, i.e. "share" my place, can I discriminate? Can I refuse to rent the rooms to males/females, singles/married/etc., gays/straights/bi/etc., smokers, drinkers, partiers, nerds, etc.? Is this legal since I am "sharing" the place with them? \_ I'm pretty sure I've never been in a rented apartment outside of student housing where there wasn't *some* form of discrimination. I have no idea what the legality of that is, but if you were to decide not to discriminate on the basis of gender, age, and marital status, you would be in a *very* small minority of landlords. And what about all those apartment ads that are in Chinese only? I've always wondered what would happen if a white guy were to call one of those up and ask to see the place. \-i think if you are a landlord as a business, you really do have a lot of obligations. for example, i have had bldg managment people could tell me "i am not allowed to answer your question whether there are a lot of childrent in the bldg" ... they were clearly sympathetic to the inquiry but said thier hands were tied. so what they ask explicitly is constrained ... i dunno how strong the presumptions are in this area and dunno what actually ends up happening. \_ Your naivete is almost touching. \_ There are of course ways of doing an end-run around some of these restrictions. A common anti-children one is setting a maximum occupancy. For "no young adults" there's a credit check, large deposit, and a minimum income figure. \- well i am not sure what would happen if you advertised "blacks and jews need not apply" ... if anything you'ld probably be asking for "extra-judicial remedies", but i do think in a case like this you can for all practical purposes pick anybody you want. if you have a poker game or movie night or book club at your house, nobody can force you to integrate something like that. if your book club meets at the public library, it may be another matter. while "state action" doesnt mean "wholly run by the govt" and the trigger may be as small as something like admitting a student with a pell grant or applying for a liquor lic, it still doesnt apply to who you invite to your house. it may be an interesting first amd case to see if you could be liable for some kind of group defamation of you took out an ad for something like "hong kong businessmen in vancouver are dirty cheats." / is this psb? - psb's last fan ---/ \_ As it's a rental, I'm pretty sure non-discrimination law applies. As a practical matter, you can rent to whoever you want and nobody has any recourse. Where you'd get in trouble is if you put "no <protected class> need apply", or if you had many, many rentals and consistantly excluded some group. It's illegal to decide to say not rent to gays or something, but you could always say "person X was the best fit". \_ The Federal Fair Housing Act 48 USC Sec 3606 (b)(2) probably applies to you and exempts you from the anti-discrimination requirement ("rooms ... in dwellings containing living quarters occupied by no more than 4 families living independently of each other, if the owner maintains and occupies one such living quarters as his residence"). While it is okay to say M (or F) only and non-smoker/drinker/ partier (b/c of the noise) you probably shouldn't say no gay or married need apply. \_ More importantly, can you advertise that you are only looking for hot single asian female roommates? My...um...friend wants to know. \_ Why do you only want hot asians? Are you broken? Hot black chicks are just as hot, and so are hot white chicks, and hot Latinas, and hot Indians. I love them all. I will go look at my multiracial porn now. \_ Single/Female is probably okay. Maybe even asian. Hot is not. Even if it were, if your friend expects to get some action from his tenant, he is walking into a legal mine-field. Unless he wants to defend against all sorts of harassment claims (and possible criminal charges) if things go badly, advise him against picking tenants b/c they are hot. |
2005/1/13-14 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:35701 Activity:insanely high |
1/13 Go rent Control Room on DVD. Documentary on Al-Jazeera. Has a lot of footage of a U.S. liason, too. Rated 8.0 on http://imdb.com. \_ Saw it in the theaters. Thought it was interesting and thought- provoking. Was sad to see it overshadowed by the other documentaries last year. \_ Does it have a political agenda or is it a true documentary? \_ A documentary can't have a political agenda? Go home, little boy. \_ No, it can't, to answer your question, fag. \_ No, it can't, to answer your question, fag. -chrchan \_ I love how someone signed my post for me, as if that's supposed to piss me off or something. \_ When someone is that stupid, it's good for everyone to know who it is \_ Seconded. Thanks. And the beauty is, the jackass acutally verified it for you. \_ Whoever said the person who signed my post got it right, bitch? \_ Chris, you're wrong. Grow up. \_ Comedy gold. Like now I'm supposed to be freaked out that someone knows how to use finger, w, and cron. Is this the same person who thought that one guy was running an online pharmacy on here? \_ Freaked out? Why on earth would you be freaked out over this? Get a grip, dude. I think it's more to do with either accepting the fact that people now associate your name with stupidity, or continuing to freak over something so dumb as being 'outed' on motd. You have GOT to be an undergrad. \_ Yes, it can, moron. -phuqm \_ I saw 9/11 and it had no agenda whatsover. Nope. Nada. Nothing. Totally unbiased. Nada. Nothing. Totally unbiased. -fag \_ Noone said it was. \_ It's a feature about Al Jazeera. It presents Al Jazeera as being reasonable, rational, and concerned with doing the right thing. Most of those interviewed are moderates, although they tend to get (understandably) strained after a stray US bomb kills one of their field corespondents. It's interesting because it's a point of view you're not likely to have seen on the American news. \_ "Stray bomb" isn't exactly the right phrase. "Missiles deliberately targeting journalists" is probably closer. \_ I'm still not convinced "journalists" is the right term for the enemy propogandists at Al Jazeera, but I guess I'll have to rent the DVD and decide for myself. I'll rent it tomorrow. \_ Looking forward to your take on it. \_ I also watched Control Room. I think it's possible that Al-Jazeera's Baghdad office (whose location the coalition forces had) was deliberately attacked, but I think it's more likely the A-10 pilot thought the guy with the helmet pointing the videocamera at him was aiming a shoulder- mounted SAM. I've also read one report suggesting that this was the first time an A-10 was in the area, so he probably either freaked, was trigger-happy, or there really was someone firing at him from the same building. The last explanation was the official U.S. one, but I don't think it's correct given eyewitness reports. -liberal - idiot liberal \_ Yeah, just make conjectures based on no proof. How are you any better than those who you condemn? \_ I just read the previous post twice, and I'm still trying to figure out who you think he's "condemning". |
2004/12/16 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:35327 Activity:moderate |
12/16 Another report showed housing starts unexpectedly plummeted 13.1 percent last month, the biggest dive since a 17 percent tumble in January 1994, as groundbreaking activity fell sharply across the nation. Housing starts slid to an annual rate of 1.771 million units in November from an upwardly revised 2.039 million clip a month earlier, the Commerce Department said. Economists had expected starts to ease only slightly and some saw the report as a sign of brewing trouble for the long high-flying U.S. housing sector. "The housing market is finally beginning to cool off. This is the beginning of the end," said David Wyss, chief economist for Standard & Poor's. "The housing number is scary." (Additional reporting by Alister Bull in Washington and Pedro Nicolaci da Costa in New York) \_ Why do you hate America? \_ Am I naive to think that this is just the price rising enough to get closer to the point that supply and demand actually meet? \_ Yes, because housing has always tracked inflation. When housing tracks 10X inflation you know you're in a bubble. \_ hey it's Missed Buying A Home Sour Grapes Guy! |
2004/12/16 [Computer/Rants, Reference/RealEstate] UID:35316 Activity:high |
12/15 some terraserver data in color now in urban areas http://csua.org/u/ad4 - danh \_ Jesus, I can see my sister's car. \_ Peter, I can see your house from here. \_ i can see his mom \_ this is still cooler http://keyhole.com \_ this IS cooler, but it ain't free like TerraServer \_ I can see my wife in the pool and ...... hey, who's that man!? \_ This is awesome. \_ alright this is awesome. Let's collect some interesting data points, like Sather Tower, Statue of Liberty, Bill Gates' house, etc etc. Can someone start the list? Thanks. \_ http://csua.org/u/adi is slightly out of date - danh \_ http://tinyurl.com/4nuzj Oracle, my former employer Anyone know the address of B Gates and Larry Ellison? I'd like to know where the rich Walmart people are as well. \_ Ellison has a home in Pac Heights on the same block as Sen Feinstein. I am pretty sure it is that last block of Broadway just before the Presidio. Not sure exactly which house though. \_ http://tinyurl.com/5dy83 Soda Hall \_ http://csua.org/u/ads http://csua.org/u/adr - danh \_ http://tinyurl.com/3jyta Hearst Castle |
2004/12/14 [Reference/Law/Court, Reference/RealEstate] UID:35277 Activity:very high |
12/13 When I moved recently, the manager inspected my apartment and told me that I cleaned it well enough so that I do not have to pay for cleaning the kitchen and bathroom. However, 2 weeks later I received a letter from the company owning the property that I owe $85 cleaning fee in addition to the carpet cleaning that I knew I should pay. I also found that on the move-out checklist that the manager and I both initialed she checked neither the clean nor the not-clean column. I am away and traveling and cannot (afford to) fight them in small court even if I have ground to win. What can I do? \_ Send them a copy of the checklist and demand the $85. Ask your former manager for help. \_ whoa, the exact same thing happened to me earlier this year. Basically verbal agreements mean... nothing. Did you record the conversation? If you did, you'd have a case. Otherwise, :( I learned my lesson, I hope you do too. \_ Recorded conversations are not admissible as evidence w/o the consent of those being recorded. What you need is statements in writing. \_ Why is that? So we recorded the terriorists conversation but cannot use against them because we don't have their consent? If we cannot apply the same kind of laws to our so called enemy, then the law we think is so great, isn't so. \_ Just so you're aware, there's a little leap from damage charges on a rental to fighting int'l terrorism. \_ That's a provision of civil law, not criminal. For wiretaps occuring in this country, you need a warrant, but outside of this country, I don't think so. \_ But why do we need their consent? If you overhead Simpson said, "Yeah, I killed that bitch", but you can't use it because obviously you don't have his permission? What about all those movies where the agents are wearing a tap? It sounds silly if the otherside knows that you are recording, what the fuck do you expect to get? \_ Re-read what I just wrote. In criminal law, you need a warrant, not permission from the other party. In civil law, it's meant as a reasonable safeguard of privacy and free speach. Otherwise you could just go privacy and free speech. Otherwise you could just go around recording everyone all the time. \_ Further clarification: You CAN go around recording everyone all the time. Some people do. You cannot submit any of it as evidence unless you have the consent of those being recorded, though, acc to, as pp above says, civil law. \_ Actually in some cases (phones for one) recording someone without telling them is illegal. \_ Not in New York! (but in CA, illegal, yes) \_ Call the manager, recall the conversation, and ask her to contact the company owning the property on your behalf. While this may get you nothing, and everyone may be out to screw you, it's equally possible that this charge is something they hit everyone with reflexively; they may not even realize they've mistakenly hit you with it. \_ I once lived in a shitty apt. in the ghetto which got bought by some evil corporate real estate speculating fucks. I spent months calling them every other day or so to try to just get a fucking lease to no avail. It was literally impossible to talk to a real, competent human at this company, so with no lease, we just moved out(after giving them written notice a month in advance). I then spent weeks again trying to get them to give me the security deposit, again getting blown off, trying to call people who have pager numbers only and never call back. After weeks and weeks of that, a check showed up for exactly twice what it should have been. Fuck 'em. If it had been a real human landlord I would have given them half the money back in a second, but I just kept the money, and i'm positive that they'll never know. I think they actually lost all the paperwork, and ended up just guessing an amount for the check. Sometimes what looks like malice is in fact just stupidity. In other words, I agree with you. |
2004/12/12-13 [Finance/Investment, Reference/RealEstate] UID:35255 Activity:nil |
12/12 Oh so sorry bubble boy. You will not get the house of your dreams for next to nothing after the bubble pops: http://csua.org/u/aan \_ You're missing the point dickhead. I and pretty much all bitter renters from the bay area who post to the motd can afford a *nice* home outside the bay area now, 10 years ago, and ten years from now. Maybe the bay area kool aid will never wear off, and housing in the Bay Area will always be totally disjointed from reality. But think on this: when you talk to homeowners *outside* the Bay Area about the benefits of homeownership, they don't get all defensive and assume you're starting a fight. Why do you think you people are different? Could it be because you know deep down that regardless of what your koolaid bretheren who control the *local* housing market say, that you got screwed? \_ Wow thank you! I've been looking for a commentator who tells me I _should_ buy in this market! Now I have one! \_ Did you actually read the article? |
2004/12/6 [Reference/RealEstate, Reference/History] UID:35187 Activity:kinda low Cat_by:auto Edit_by:auto |
12/6 Awsome site: http://nationalatlas.gov/natlas/natlasstart.asp Statistics on geography and other things \_ Florida IS for old people! Look at age over 65. Look at the Black population, it's interesting. This also confirms that the Bay Area IS a haven for Asians. Also, this confirms that Mormons DO have more children! \_ Stats for crime and population seemed to be grouped by county, so LA skews the visual for California. \_ very cool; thank you --darin \_ wow. the country-wide trends for breast and ovarian cancer are strange. Truly a rich, white woman's cancer. \- isnt breast cancer higher among the nulliparous ... hence the "marin county effect" --psb \_ nice map/atlas, nice demographic/statistic stuff. |
2004/11/28-29 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:35101 Activity:high |
11/28 Condos are appreciating faster than single family homes: http://csua.org/u/a4t (sfgate) |
2004/10/17 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:34181 Activity:nil |
10/17 I seem to be breeding drosophila like crazy in my apartment. is it possible to make a few bucks by selling them to biologists? |
2004/10/10-11 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:34023 Activity:nil |
10/10 Anyone know where I might be able to find out approximately how much real estate LOAN agents make per transaction versus real estate in the East and South Bay? From what I know, most real estate agents make 50% to 80% of 1.5% of the total transaction. How about real estate LOAN agents? I know they get about 0.25% to 2% of the total loan amount. I am interested in knowing if the real estate LOAN agents also add other bogus charges, jack up the interest rates, etc. to make more money. And, how much of that total amount do they get from their bosses. \_ I do know that they make most of their money from buying loans at "wholesale" and reselling them at "retail." The loan disclosure docs tell you what they paid for the loan. In my first home purchase, they bought the loan at 5.9% and resold it at 6.0% to me, which meant that they made about 1.4% on my loan. It was an owner operated business, so I assume they got all of it. On my refi, I was not in such a rush, so I was able to negotiate it down to 3/4 of a point, or .75%. In this case, the guy worked for a big company, so I have no idea how much of it he made. And yes, they will try and charge you more if you let them. In my first loan, they tried to charge me 6.5%, claiming various bogus reasons for such a high rate. So make sure you know what the market rate is for you loan before you go in to negotiate. They are called mortgage brokers, btw, not loan agents. Calling them by the wrong name is confusing. |
2004/10/5-6 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:33937 Activity:very high |
10/4 Vegas bubble pops. Can CA be far behind? http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/041005/vegas_pulte_2.html \_ Your schaudenfreude is unseemly. I feel pity for you that your \_ Wow, a Simpsons fan trying to sound smart. \_ You nailed it perfectly. Now just read that paragraph in the tone of "the comic store guy." life is so hollow and empty that triumphalism about housing prices is one of your high points. Enjoy your glee. \_ An admirable effort, but still Worst. Troll. Ever. \_ Uhm, having housing prices drop is a GOOD thing. We pay less for the house, the property tax goes down, responsible people can afford to buy a house again. This artificial atmosphere of low interest rates/high housing prices is not healthy in the long run. Look at what happened to Tokyo, look at what happened to LA during the early ninties. The market is way overdue for a correction. \_ Lest we forget potentially massive fraud at Fannie Mae, home of the Democrat sinecure. It could get very very ugly. \_ Housing prices drop will have cascading effects on the economy. You may be paying lower prop tax or rents, but those who lost their equity will spend less. This will cause stores and companies to make less and start laying off workers. \_ Not to mention some companies own their office buildings. Now they'll have less capital to work with. \_ I'm with him. It sounds evil but watching a housing market crash would please me quite a bit. I don't actually think it will happen anytime soon though. This Vegas pop isn't yet a pop so much as a "stop growing so fucking fast". \_ Why would it please you? Still renting and missed the boat? \_ No. I am more "nervous homeowner" than showingFreud. -op \_ Nervous about what? If you truly believe what you're saying then the only smart thing to do is sell now and buy back after this coming catastrophe in the housing market. \_ Nervous about a drop in the housing market of course. Isn't that what I said? Nervous about something happening isn't the same thing as being certain that it will happen. \_ Well, look at it this way. There's no way that housing prices will go up. $500,000 for a crap house isn't going to last when interest rates hit 7-8% by next year. Remember, this has been THE LOWEST rates have been for the past 40 plus years. You're not likely to see rates like this again in your lifetime. So, although they might not go down, it's unlikely that they will go up. In other words, you shouldn't rush into a housing market. (Boy, where did you hear that one before, oh yeah, a couple years ago when everyone was buying internet stocks, har har har). Plus, historically house prices track inflation, so it seems like that there is a very high probability that there will be a major adjustment coming in the next 12 months. My family has personally seen this happen with real-estate in SoCal during the early ninties. Housing prices dropped 25-33% from peaks. \_ That could be kind of a weird situation. Homeowners' loans would not be 'underwater', but housing prices could still fall in real dollars. Hmm... So if inflation was a cumulative 200% and housing prices went up 100%, then your house fell 33% in real dollars, but if you sell you gained 100% in book value. Thinking about it a bit more, since houses are generally a heavily-levereged investment, the homeowner could come out way ahead in this scenario. If you put $100K down on a $500K house and a few years later you sell for $1M, you've increased your equity by 500%, which in real dollars might still mean doubling your money. \_ like all heavily-leveraged investments, you can come out way ahead or way behind. As leveraged investments go, a house ain't bad in terms of volatility. In the current market, it's hard to say ... \_ I guess just about any heavily-levereged investment will do well in inflation if you have fixed-rate interest. \_ you seem to be talking about really drastic inflation though. But how did housing prices go during the 70s, when inflation was very high? \_ I just picked big numbers to make the math easy. \_ They rose a lot in CA. One thing not to miss is that this money is tax-free. \_ Your HOUSE is so BIG and TAX FREE! What does this mean? Basically it means that your downpayment for your house is basically wiped out. So, there is reason to be nervous... Let's just hope the next quake isn't too big.... \_ Actually there is a really easy way for housing prices to go up: inflation shoots up. I am starting to believe this is how it will play out. \_ when inflation shoots up, doesn't it mean that the fed would be forced to raise the interest rate more? would not that cause a decrease in home prices? I am confused on this one. Anyone? \_ Sure, they would raise interest rates. Sure this would tend to cause a crimp in home prices. But inflation could still force nominal prices up. \_ I think the effect of a interest rate rise would be more drastic and immediate. \_ I don't think this is going to happen in Bay Area anytime soon. I can understand it happening in Vegas. LV has land to meet the demand. But here, there's no more land. There's always a big demand. Another reason for the Vegas bubble is very similar to Japan and HK. People in Vegas buy houses in hope of making money out them. But here people buy houses because they need a place to live and start a family. Thirdly, there are still people who can buy houses with all cash regardless of the interest rates. \_ Oh, it will happen in the Bay Area and relatively soon, too. The irony is that the renters still won't be able to afford a house owing to higher rates and the homeowners will still have a place to live that they can afford. After that, the prices will go up again. There is a high demand and a lot of wealth, but demand will fall and take prices with it. Prices will still be expensive relative to elsewhere, but less than they are now. All the factors you cite are already in play. |
2004/10/5-6 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:33929 Activity:moderate |
10/5 Just read in an article in today's WSJ that 10-15% of new mortgages today are interest only ARM, and the percentages are even higher in regions where housing prices have soared. After say 5 years, these people would suddenly face much higher payments due to the principle payments kicking in and potentially higher interest rates. It uses an example of a $350k loan where the home owner currently pays about $1900 monthly but would have to pay about $3700 when the principle kicks in and assuming a higher interest rate of 7%. Historically, the percentage of these interest only loan is about 2% of total number of loans, and most of it is used by very well-off people for tax / invesment purposes, but now it is often used to entice people to buy a bigger house than they can afford. \_ And in the Bay Area the precentage is quite a bit higher, like 30% and even higher in The City, like 60% \_ And in California the precentage is quite a bit higher, like 50% and even higher in The City, like 60% \_ Overall in the Bay Area it's about 65% for ARM, but I do not know what percentage of that is interest-only. \_ Oops, misread it. I thought you meant all ARMs. \_ Statistically, the average stay of a first house is about 3.5 yrs. Getting a ARM for your first house makes sense. There's no point of paying more interest for a 15 yr loan when you know you won't stay for more than 5 years on your first house. \_ with big bubbles and its aftermath, you can throw history out the window. the window. there's this thing called negative equity. \_ Most people keep their house for 7 years before selling. \_ If that's the case a 5yr ARM and a 15 year fixed are same. \_ First time home buyers keep theirs shorter, especially those who buy condos and townhouses. \_ Can these people refinance after 5yrs and get a new interest-only ARM? \_ Yes. \_ I get a 15yr fixed mortgage when I bought my first home 4yrs ago. I guess I'm conservative compared to the average Bay Area homeowner. \_ I got a 30yr fixed when I bought our first house last year (and am Bay Area). I guess I'm more conservative than you. Well... poorer, I guess. \_ I got a 30 year fixed too when I bought my house 2 years ago in the south bay. Often loan agents advocate ARM because if everyone gets 15/30 year fixed, then they will have less business. \_ the problem with this is if housing prices collapse, these people will be completely and royally screwed as they wont even be able to sell the house to recover the mortgage debt. \_ I recently met a dude from HK who said he still has a condo in HK with negative equity. The price got halved after they bought it a few years ago. HK with negative equity. The price got halved after he and his wife bought it a few years ago. \_ And if he bought in Bumfuck, Arkansas, it would have cost 1/20th as much, been 5x larger and the price wouldn't have changed at all. So? \_ that's not the point. the point is he and his wife would rather have bought after the price came down. |
2004/10/4-6 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:33912 Activity:high |
10/4 "If you live in Mountain View, California, and someone gives you $1 million, you might be able to pay off your mortgage, but you can't retire" http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/nm/20041002/bs_nm/tech_google_dc_3 This is the exact reason why I moved out of Silicon Valley, one of the most inhospitable places to be as a tech worker. Moving out was the best decision I ever made. I now have a nice house, a nice car, and a pretty gf... thing that are difficult to obtain had I stayed. \_ Google brain drain here we come! All those smart Google people are taking their $1m to some place nice out of state to raise their families. \_ Wow, you're so cool. Tell me something else neat. --googler \_ That must be why the stock went to 138.37. Let's see you short it, smarty pants. \_ where did you move to? \_ get a clue, get rich first then move out \_ by then, going bald already. \_ Mountain View is a relatively inexpensive area to buy a house. The part that borders Los Altos is pricier, but still not as silly pricewise as South Bay can get. \_ Who the heck wrote this? Have they actually priced out MV houses? Houses anywhere outside the high crime areas are rediculous. Maybe not LA or PA rediculous, but still bad. ridiculous. Maybe not LA or PA ridiculous, but still bad. \_ I sold my Mtn. View house 6 years ago for $550k, and other houses around that one have been hovering around $800k for the last year or so. That's pretty damn awful growth for 6 years (in comparison, I moved into a $650K house that's now $1.3M). Median for Mtn. View seems to be high $700K, average low $700K. Like I said, relatively inexpensive. \_ You must be a Republican if you think high $700k is inexpensive. \_ I am probably not a Republican, but you certainly are not a logician if you don't understand that inexpensive != relatively inexpensive. \_ Overall it is $545K for MV. $675K in 94040, $532K in 94041, and $530K in 94043. That is not too bad for the Bay Area. \_ These numbers don't tell you much. True valuation is based on $$$/sq ft for single family, condos, and townhouses. \_ Yeah, some places a $100k salary is actually considered high \_ You can't retire on $1M if you expect to live an extra 40+ years unless you decide to find a nice third world country or someplace in BFE America. Choices, choices... \_ But you *can* take your $1m to almost any other part of the country, buy a house in cash better than anything that even exists in the SFBA, and take an nice easy slacker job for spare cash that will still allow you to enjoy life. \_ I know this will be very hard for you to understand, but some of us value things other than material possessions - things we may not find in Colorado or Las Vegas. There are all sorts of different ways to measure quality of life other than the size of your house, the size of your car, and the amount of plastic surgery your wife has. I'm glad you're happy where you are, but please stop belittling people that make different choices than you. ok tnx. size of your house, the size of your car, the size of your penis, and the amount of plastic surgery your wife has. I'm glad you're happy where you are, but please stop belittling people that make different choices than you. ok tnx. \_ hear hear. \_ Where did you move to? -serious \_ Do yoy make as much as when you're in the Bay Area? \_ You will probably make 15-20% less in, say, the Midwest but salaries for CS/IT are pretty high everywhere. My friends who moved out of state definitely came out ahead, especially after selling their houses in this seller's market. The problem is that they will never be able to move back here if they want to - or, rather, it will be difficult. \_ Assuming they moved somewhere that will grow faster than CA, they would be able to move back no problem. Have you seen Vegas prices? My friend's house gained $400k just in the last year. \_ Once you leave CA, you won't want to come back. I've already started my search in other states for both jobs and housing. Taking a 20% or even higher pay cut and I'll still get a *way* nicer house, an easier job, have a few hundred grand in the bank, and work less for nicer people. You can keep CA. No sane person would want to come back once they hit gold (or silver) and cashed out. \_ A lot of people who leave miss it and want to come back. Get back to us after you've lived 10 years in Missouri, Minnesota, or Reno. \_ I live in Chicago, and I kind of miss the Bay Area. But then, I found my dream girl here in Chicago, so overall, I am happy. I didn't leave the Bay Area on choice. I left for school and then found a nice job in Chicago. \_ Chicago, Boston, NYC, and some other places have similar quality of life to CA. None of them are particularly cheap. \_ It is amusing that you say this, because I have talked to three people this *week* who have told me they sold their San Francisco house for a house in the suburbs and now regret it a decade later because they cannot afford to move back now. \_ Nowhere is going to grow faster than CA that also doesn't have plenty of land. Thank the illegal immigrants for that. If you sell a house in CA for $600K and buy one in NV for $600K then you are not financially ahead moving. The assumption is you buy a cheaper place elsewhere. I had a friend who moved back to San Diego and found he could only afford a condo, although he sold a house when he initially left. \_ The bubble has already popped in LV. Home prices are now declining there. http://csua.org/u/9bv |
2004/9/8 [Reference/RealEstate, Computer/SW/SpamAssassin] UID:33421 Activity:nil |
9/8 Can someone please explain the following spam that I just received: "Any prime minister can bounce apartment building beyond marzipan, but it takes a real freight train to sheriff living with.Any short order cook can seek related to satellite, but it takes a real bubble to toward midwife.And befriend the dark side of her philosopher." ??? What is this an advertisement for? \_ umm, that's just some random text to fool spam filters. the real pitch is probably an html attachment or graphic or something. \_ Nothing was attached. \_ It's most likely an address miner. It didn't get bounced, so it was sent to a valid address. \_ No need to send any text in that case. |
2004/9/3-4 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:33327 Activity:high |
9/3 How much does it cost to tear down an old house and rebuild a new ~2500 sqft house on a flat lot in the bay area? \_ Call a building contractor. \_ I seem to remember it's around $200/sf. for 'luxury' homes. \_ My house appraised at $150/sq ft replacement cost, but it is certainly not luxury. I think the going rate for new construction is $250/sq ft right now. I will ask my architect friends and get back to you. \_ I seem to remember it costing a lot lot more if you tear the whole thing down... then it's a rebuild... leaving one wall up allows it to be a remodel, or something like that. \_ By law or by union contract or what? I'm not disagreeing with you because I don't know about this, I just think this is weird. \_ This is usually by city ordinance, but there is a Prop 13 aspect as well. If you gut the house but leave something standing it's a remodel and you will pay less tax on it. |
2004/9/3 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:33325 Activity:very high |
9/3 Cool! Housing market slowing down: http://www.bankrate.com/brm/news/mortgages/20040902a1.asp Prices will soon slide down. \_ They've already started down, but the questions are how far and for how long. \_ In what part of the universe do you live where housing prices are dropping? \_ Prices fell in Ventura and Orange Counties, at the least. \_ Prices fell in San Francisco last month. A tiny bit, but still. \_ Speaking of which, can you recommend an online reference for browing through San Francisco apartments and/or condos for sale? I'm curious what sorts of prices are out there. \_ http://www.sfarmls.com \_ Thanks! Looks like its still insane: $400,000 for a 1 bedroom! \_ Yeah, I'll shed a bitter tear when my house stops going up $75k per year in my neighborhood and only goes up $15k a year instead during the coming housing bust and slow down. \_ will you cry like a big mama if it goes down like 15% ? would you recommend people to buy house now like the recent crazy motd idiot? |
2004/8/18-19 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:32992 Activity:high |
8/17 Watch out tom! People are beating up peeping toms! Who's to say freeping toms won't be next? http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ibsys/20040818/lo_wews/2334207 \_ This site has more graphical details: http://www.thesmokinggun.com/archive/0818042nroyalton1.html \_ milfish picture included. \_ Yeah not bad until you consider for a moment she beat on a guy for an *hour* and stuck a tree branch up his ass and left him to bleed to death. |
2004/8/12-13 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:32859 Activity:high |
8/12 besides craigslist, what is a good place to find duplexes to rent? \_ you know what city or area you are looking for would help... \_ oops.. campbell , san jose, thanks \_ How is the rental market now? Is it easy to find rooms to rent? \_ Obvious troll. \_ No, I am trying to decide if I should rent out my rooms. Last time I did it it was quite difficult to get tenants. |
2004/8/10-11 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:32813 Activity:very high |
8/10 Nothing to see here. move along, yes this is another "housing market crash is coming" link: http://csua.org/u/8jd [nytimes.com] \_ eh, whatevah, home prices in SoCal and NoCal will not crash, too many yuppies with money who don't have any money in the stock market. Prices will stagnate at some point; and will only dip if something goes boom. Take it from someone who has no experience. Can't say the same about other areas or states. \_ Yeah, like they didn't crash during the early ninties... (Someone who DOES have experience in the SoCal housing market because my family has owned real-estate there for over fifteen years, amongst other places around the globe) \_ Wasn't that "crash" a small drop followed by several years of stagnation? My mom bought her house right before the crash and has done quite well regardless. \_ After the peak in 1989, interest rates fell for 4 straight years, staving off a more severe drop. Where are the interest rates going to fall to this time? \_ FWIW, my neighbors paid $50K less than I paid for my house. I bought mine in 2001. They bought theirs in 1989. Of course, now values have doubled off of their original price. However, the drop was significant. It took 10 years to reach the original price again. You could see a 30% drop or more easily, which sucks if you just bought a place for $600K and find it's worth $400K in 2 years. \_ YOu must live in a lowsy neighborhood. My parents bought their house in 1989 before the so-called crash, and now it's valued at more than twice the price they bought it. \_ What part of 'doubled off original price' did you not understand? \_ in 10 years? the fact is that most houses in my parents' street doubled in prices from 1989 to 1999. Only in the early 90s, it dipped like 5%. That's hardly a crash. \_ Your parents are lucky or you are full of shit. In 1996 the median for houses was $160K. In 1989 it was $176K. That's a 7 year period over which there was a loss. It wasn't until around 1998-99 that houses regained the old values. In the early 1990s the dip was more pronounced than "like 5%". In 1993, 43% of *ALL* home sales (no matter when the house was bought) were for a loss. The median loss was $23K on a $200K house. Median prices for La Crescenta, CA: 1990: $290K, 1995: $212K, 2000: $310K 2002: $382K, 2004: $537K Median prices for Newport Beach, CA: 1990: $457K, 1995: $390K, 2000: $675K 2002: $800K, 2004: $1090K \_ Probably lucky to purchase a house in a city where the job are. And the real estate growth probably will continue since Google is there. The price of a Mountain View (94043) house in '89 was $260k, $350k in '95, and $500k in '89 and now close to $650k. Sadly, this is not the best part of Mountain View and the schools are average to good. \_ My parent's house that I lived at for 15 years got foreclosed on because of that. Too much leveraging. I still say there won't be a crash; too many people with money these days, and SoCal and NoCal will remain hot for yuppies looking for a new home and speculators. -"eh, whatevah" person \_ There are just too many millionaires out there in the bay area. If google goes IPO, there will be hundreds more. \_ If this another "housing market crash is coming!!!!!" article? Please save the rest of us from following another content free link description. \_ like the internet boom and bust, the hottest regions will have it the worst during the bust, just like your hot internet stocks. \_ No, because the most desirable locations will hold their value better. San Marino was one of the best places to own real estate during the last 'crash'. \_ I really, really doubt it. How much did Internet stocks inflate as a percentage over how many years (let's take YHOO)? Then compare that to real estate. This is just a dumbass test; I'm sure there are more fundamental differences. \_ Not likely because: 1) land is scarce. 2) population growth. 3) house ownership is an American way of life. |
2004/8/5 [Reference/RealEstate, Reference/Tax] UID:32716 Activity:high |
8/5 Berkeley homeowners: what are the bad things about owning in Berkeley? -brain \_ I have some friendss whose property splits thhe oakland/berkeley border, which made them happy because they could get a number of permits cheaper in oakland. --scotsman \_ your friends should be happy, nay, *proud*, to pay the higher berkeley fees because those fees support the community. \_ Socialism. \_ You can't rent it out without dealing with the city rent control board. \_ Anyone live near the N. Berkeley BART station? How do you like your neighborhood? We're thinking of buying there, within a few blocks (walking distance). Thoughts? \_ n berkeley is great, by n berkeley bart \_ Used to rent a few blocks east of there. Nice neighborhood but busses and emergency vehicles favor taking MLK to I wouldn't want to buy a place on MLK or Sacramento. \_ Property taxes are thousands more per year than neighboring cities. \_ 1.8%/year, versus 1.2% in many other cities. This adds $50/month This is based on the figure that mortgage,taxes, insurance and maintainance run you about $750/mo/100k per $100,000 your house costs over neighboring cities. So a house in Berkeley is about 7% more expensive to own than a house that has the same price but is in a different city. \_ A $500,000 house will cost $3000 more per year in property tax. This is significant. What do you get for the extra money? \_ Probably the biggest thing is public schools; Berkeley's one of the better districts in the state, Oakland's one of the worst. \_ wildly inflated profits when your house appreciates? - danh \_ does berkeley house prices appreciate faster than the surrounding cities? \_ A cable-access show where a bunch of hippie retards do naked interprative dance and show off their wrinkles. \_ I could do without http://www.eroplay.com too. - danh \_ What's your point? If you can afford a half million dollar house, you shouldn't complain about paying extra $3k in property tax. We should have a graduated property tax schedule so that expensive houses pay a higher rate of property tax. \_ not necessarily, some people might have come across a large wad of cash (inheritance for instance) but do not have a high income. \_ The homebuyer should know how much property tax is owed for the house and should plan according. If he spends his windfall in one wad and does not plan for taxes, insurance, and other fees, then he's an idiot. \_ Hey asshole: maybe the homeowner did plan for taxes. The question was what sucks about Berkeley. Paying more taxes sucks. STFU. \_ If you planned for the higher tax, then you shouldn't complain you can't afford to pay it. Buy a cheaper house, or buy it in another city than Berkeley, if you can't afford the tax here. \_ This is the most stupid reply I've seen, I mean really, STFU. -!op. \_ I take it you're another selfish property owner who doesn't want to pay his fair share? But you'll vote Kerry and go to bed at night with a clear conscience because you've done your share for democracy. You make me sick. \_ I agree. Vote Bush! \_ Ermm. what does Kerry have to do with local property taxes? \_ The point is that its $3K less in the city next door. What am I getting for that extra money? By the way, why the hell should more expensive houses pay a higher % of property tax? Property tax is beautiful in that it is FLAT. People pay more if they buy a more expensive place. Why raise the RATE? \_ Because it would be *fair*, the same way the regular income tax is graduated, despite what some Republican zealots would like to do otherwise. Those who have more money, who can afford the big expensive houses, should pay their fair share to maintain the community. Instead of making the poor family who can barely pay the mortgage for a broken down house in marginal neighborhood pay more taxes, why not make the fat cat who can afford it pay more? Sounds reasonable to me. \_ Fair share? The most fair system is the same tax rate, be it the income tax or the property tax. With income tax, people who makes more have the luxury (most of the time) to pay a slightly higher tax rate. With property tax, most home owners in the bay area do not have the luxury to pay a higher property tax rate. Ask most working family in the bay area, do they have extra 10k to burn on property tax each year? This has nothing to do with fairness. I worked hard to save up the money to buy the house while at the same time paying my share of taxes. With income tax, we are talking about the top 1%, with property tax, you are talking about 50% of the home owners (higher than the medium price). With income tax, you only pay when you make money, with property tax, you pay no matter what. Do you think it's fair that older people who have worked all their life has to move out of their homes into a dirty shit area because now they cannot pay the higher property tax rate you proposed? And what does this have to do with Kerry or Bush you troll? \_ Actually, in CA property tax is largely regressive. Because of Prop 13 the peopel who bought their houses earlier are paying tax on a price far below market value. They are paying a lower tax rate even though they have seen more appreciation and have more equity than a recent buyer. There are legitimate public-policy reasons for progressive taxation, and instituting it in property taxes would not necessarily raise the average rate, though it *would* raise it for people with more expensive houses. poor family who can barely pay the mortgage for a broken down house in marginal neighborhood pay more taxes, why not make the fat cat who can afford it pay more? Sounds reasonable to me. \_ Even better, how about we do this? Keep the property tax rate as it is for houses under some kind of state or regional median price. Have a graduated property tax schedule for houses more expensive than the median, and use the additional tax revenue to fund schools and other projects in poorer neighborboods. \_ You obviously are not a home owner. Keep dreaming. \_ I am obviously not a selfish hypocrit. \_ Have you ever lived in a poor neighborhood? Do you think more money is the solution? I for one have lived in one and a bullet is a much better solution for some of those fuckers. \_ I don't like the idea of a high property tax at all. It discourages savings. It discourages home ownership. It forces people to work forever. For instance, I have a good job and is earning big bucks, and already bought a nice home. Now I want to devote the last 5 years of my working life to charity work, but can't because I want to keep my house but charity work job pays very little and high property tax would be a big hit. High property tax is also bad for older people and retirees who labored all their life and should now enjoy the fruits of their labor in the form of a nice house. A home is important part of one's life and highly illiquid in that one can't just move on a whim; but life circum- stances changes, and a high property tax (a recurring cost) would force people to move when they suffer a bad break. I don't mind a graduated income tax and inheritance tax, but property tax should be low (we are already taxing rent income). \_ You have no right to save money. You have no right to live in a nice house. You have no right to stop working when you can't afford to. \_ Very well said, thank you! \_ I don't think it's a good idea to just tax income and leave assets (like a house) un-taxable. Your house needs police and fire protection whether or not you are retired, and I think you'd still like schools to run and roads to be repaired irrespective of how many of the homeowners are working. For people who are retired or in your situation, there is something called a "reverse mortgage". In any case, you still need money for food and clothes, so you should just budget for your property taxes too. \_ I don't think housing price necessarily reflects the income level. If you really want the fat cats to pay more, then increase income tax on the rich people. Housing price reflects more than just the income level, it reflects years of hard working, saving up, sacrifice, family contribution, etc. People should not be punished for that. If you and I make the same amount but I saved more than you do and I bought a more expensive house, then why should I cover your share? Home is not a luxury, it is a necessarily. \_ A house is a necessity, but a $750k house is a luxury. \_ Your 1500 sq. foot half million dollar house in Berkeley is certainly a luxury and not a necessity. Come back to me with that necessity line when you're in a 10' x 10' hut. \_ WTF? Can you find ANY DECENT HOUSE under half a million now a days? shut the fuck up! \_ Berkeley Hills homes are very nice. You just have to worry about hill fire. |
2004/7/30-31 [Reference/RealEstate, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:32601 Activity:very high |
7/30 How do you try to save money? \_ The big things are obvious. It's the little things that add up real fast. My big pet peeve is credit cards and debt in general. I have never had a CC that had any sort of monthly/yearly/etc fees associated with simply holding it unused. I pay off my entire bill every month so I don't pay interest. I things I need. I buy very little crap that I merely want. A new ipod, cell phone, mega digital camera, faster computer, etc doesn't bring happiness. And lastly, the first thing my wife and I did after getting jobs was to immediately put all extra cash into paying off school loans and now we try to put extra cash against the mortgage which is our only remaining debt. \_ Eat out less! Including lunch. That's the biggest one for me. Get a copy of quicken or something and really keep a budget for a month or two. It sucks, but stick at it. Really look at what you are spending. Then you can try to devise a budget that trims some stuff that is excessive. If you are a gadget freak think about cutting down on your gadget budget, or having a gadget budget if you currently just sort of buy when you like. Oh and yeah, get a fixed amount from the bank every few days and try to pay for things in cash. It really does make you pay attention to how much you are spending on crap. \_ fuck money! money's a tool of the Man to keep us tied down to jobs we hate and toys we don't really need! we should tear down the banks and credit card agencies and revert to direct trade of goods and services. \_ Hi Paolo! \_ hey! that was me! -sax \_ Calculate your monthly expenses. Autodeposit this to your checking. Autodeposit some other amount into a Mutual Fund/Brokerage account where you don't see it and won't spend it. The rest is yours to spend \_ Make most purchases with cash, withdraw a fixed amount from the ATM once a week. Have to make the cash last the week. \_ sounds like it worked for you. did you have to cut back on expenses? what did you cut? \_ Eat out less at expensive places. When I get the craving, I cook something really nice for myself. Also, fewer impulse purchases and you start to thing of the credit card as only for major purchases so you don't just whip it out for some new shiny toy. Oh, and stay off online shopping sites, especially eBay. \_ direct deposit some money to a special account. \_ housing is ~1/2-1/3 of your salary. Once you've figured out how to reduce that cost, you've saved a lot. \_ The motd has previously established that owning real estate is A Good Thing; although you shouldn't buy more space than you need \_ just wait till the bubble pops... \_ Then what? I'll have a fixed rent I can afford and a house that falls all the way back down in value to what I paid for it - except my interest rate is lower now than it was then. How scary is that? \_ Uh, there's a thing called "property tax" that's based on the worth of the house, moron. People keep forgetting to factor the cost of that in. \_ Right....so when the bubble pops, you get a reappraisal and your prop. tax goes down... \_ Don't try to argue with the bitter renters. \_ Hey, if it makes you feel better about your shitty investments to think that all renters are bitter, then hey! Go for it! \_ You think you're reminding a homeowner about property tax? Writing those massive checks twice per year is a pretty good reminder, I think. \_ Don't have family, don't have a car, share your appartment/house with other roommates. \_ that worked 1 year after we graduated. But then my roomate got a gf. She told him to move out, and move out he did. Then they got married. Bought a house. Had a kid. Doesn't play computer games and doesn't hang out with his buddies. Does laundry and lawn and backyard work every weekend. Me? I'm still paying a shitload of rent in my apartment. At least no one bosses me around. Oh well. -getting old \_ Why don't you get a new roomate? \_ I went through a few, but they either moved out, got a gf, or both. Getting old. -getting old, 30 something \_ On average, how much of your time does it take to get a new roomate? And on average how much money do they end up paying you before they move out? How much is your time really worth? You must 'make' hundreds per hour when looking for a roomate! \_ But you can't run around naked when you have a roommate! And when having sex on the kitchen counter you gotta always keep one ear on the front door. \_ that's why it's good to have your roommate be the person you have sex with on the kitchen counter. then you can save money *and* listen to motorhead while having sex on the kitchen counter. \_ A car should last 10 years easily. Buy a 2-3 year old car, take good care of it and drive it into the ground. You only need a new car if your job depends on your image, and if you're a Sodan it probably doesn't. \_ I don't think that has much to do with sodans -- I think that's just generally true. CSUA is a surpisingly diverse crowd -- it's too bad that, as a group, we've all allowed the 9-5 suit types and ex-fratboys to define our self-image. I'm not sure what's worse: that we've bought into the stereotype of computer tech people as overweight, socially clueless, stinky people - or the type of people that we're bought into that image from. \_ The peole who's jobs depend on having a new car are people \_ The peole whose jobs depend on having a new car are people like car dealers, real estate agents and plastic surgeons. \_ you left out drug dealers, pimps, and lawyers. \_ I get lots of h0t aZn ch1x with my new car. \_ You get Ac-ur-Uh Integ-rah hah?!!!!1! \_ Why do you let other people define you? Either you're a smelly geek with no social skills or you're not. If you are then someone else calling you that is just the truth. Deal. If you're not, then who gives a shit what they say? \_ Maxing out my 401(k) and ESPP. Making extra payments to my mortgage principal when my bank account has a high balance. \_ don't make extra mortgage payments if your interest rate is low. You could make more income with your extra money. \_ yea, after tax deductions a 30-year 6% interest becomes like 4%. Not that hard to beat it by investing. \_ Just play the stock market and earn big bucks like me. \_ Get married. It worked for me. \- you know i think prior to everything else is to "profile" your spending. if you spend $50/week on drinks in bars, that's better place to optimize than "dont buy the da vinci code, get it at the library" if you amazon budget is $300/yr --psb |
2004/7/29 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:32564 Activity:very high |
7/29 http://www.economist.com/displayStory.cfm?story_id=1794913 A house in Tokyo now costs less than half what it did in 1991, after a now legendary property-price bubble in the late 1980s. They also include a chart which indicates that home prices have fallen 20% in Japan and 13% in Germany in real terms, from 1995-2002. Prices fell in Tokyo 32% during that period. Most of the world, of course, rose in the period, some of it very sharply. \_ Does it still take three generations to pay off the mortgage of a house in Japan? \_ Is that chart ferreal? Average home price is lower in Japan than in the U.S.? (I suppose the house sizes are different.) \_ You can't compare markets like that. You can't get most American houses with associated land in Japan at any price any normal person could earn in a lifetime. It doesn't even work from place to place in the US or even within the same county or town many times. \_ Work with me here: Let's compare a U.S. home priced at the average, and a house in Japan priced at the average. Now, average, and a house in Japan priced at the average. First, let's identify what these are, and then talk about how they're different. |
2004/7/27 [Reference/RealEstate, Politics/Domestic/President/Bush, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iraq] UID:32515 Activity:very high |
7/27 So was the home-buying thread intentionally to hijack the motd? \_ housing prices as a topic are currently the #1 most reliable troll topic, where reliable means "guaranteed to produce maximum verbiage, maximum flameage, and minimum knowledge." Politics have become too obvious. \_ hey, fuck off. that doesn't make it a troll. housing is an extremely important issue to absolutely everyone. \_ I got trolled :( \_ You missed the Bush lied/did not lie flame war. \_ Well, he didn't lie, nor did the CIA "trick" him -- I don't know who came up with that one. -liberal |
2004/7/27 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:32507 Activity:very high |
7/27 Buying a house in today's market: a totally insane thing to do, or what? We're still thinking very broadly: considering both the SFBA and the LA area, looking for a "buy and hold" house (we'd like to stay there for a while), wanting to get a straightforward 30-year- mortgage (now doesn't seem like the time to get an ARM). Should we just suck it up and go through with it now, or wait around to see whether gradually rising interest rates finally start deflating the California housing bubble? \_ there's a lot of good info below but he's the short answer: if you live in an expensive place like the SFBA and plan to stay here for many years then buying a house is the smartest thing to do *over the long run*. Rents will continue to rise but your loan rate is locked in. By the time you make that 360th payment it'll cost you more to buy a cup of coffee but your rent will still be the equiv. of whatever it is in the future in today's dollars. HOWEVER! If you live in a place where rents are dirt cheap and likelt to stay that way then owning is possibly a financial loss over time because you'll be paying out in time for maintenance, etc. On the higher priced home the maintenance costs will get sucked up by the rising value of your home. That won't happen so easily on your low priced home in a low priced area with slower price increases. The idea that housing prices are going to take some dramatic dip soon is foolish. I waited an extra year 5 years ago and it cost me $100k up front. Since then my house has gone up another $260k and continues to rise. Do the math. \_ locking in the rate is overrated. you may change to a bigger house, move to a different city in the bay area, or move to a different region of the country, etc. average american move once like every 7 years, so your 360th payment would likely never happen. If Bay Area rent over price ratio is good, at least you have the option of keeping the place and renting it out (you get tax savings for first two houses). Unfortunately, rent over price ratio sucks in the Bay Area. \_ Don't so quickly dismiss the ability to borrow $3/4M at 5.25%. \_ are you talking about a home equity loan? \_ No, just look at what payments would be if you end up borrowing the same exact amount at 8%, the historical average for mortgages. Home prices would have to fall a lot to make it equal. \_ You can do all right with a duplex or triplex. Agreed with a single family home. \_ school choice and vouchers would go a long way towards rationalizing the real estate market. \_ You'd be an idiot to buy right now. Why buy when you can rent for half of the cost? \_ renting is just throwing money away. buy now and build principle \_ why do people keep saying this? for a typical loan, the amount that goes to the principle for the first the amount that goes to the principal for the first 5 years is very minimal. \_ ARG! It's called equity, not principle! Second, the \_ ARG! It's called equity, not principal! Second, the interest is tax deductible. \_ nah, it's principal. you don't pay equity, equity fluctuates with the market. \_ I have owned my house for 30 months. I paid the loan down $10K in that time. Is that minimal? I am now paying myself about $400/month in principle. As a renter, I pay myself $0. \_ the more important questions are, how much interest are you paying per month, and how does that compare with rental cost. \_ How will it compare with the rental cost in 20 years when I have paid off the loan? The truth is that I am paying myself money if the property value remains level over 20 years and I am making more money if it goes up. Renters are deluding themselves. How many renters are dumping $1K/month into stocks for the next 20 years? For those that are, what will they buy with that money at that time? A house!? \_ You have a point. If instead of paying for the house, one would just spend the money on entertainment, etc., or if one is a very bad investor, then throwing all your money at a house may not be such a bad idea. it's a nice little forced savings plan for the weak-minded and the investment-challenged (or just conservative investors). \_ Bingo! Although to that I'd say you should add property taxes but deduct income taxed saved from deducting the interest payments. If CASH_TO_INTEREST+TAX-TAX_SAVING < RENT then you should buy. \_ if ( + estimated monthly investment income from downpayment + monthly interest + property tax + association fee - interest and property tax tax savings ) < monthly rent then buy \_ You forgot that the property value will also change. So you should really add: - monthly_increase_in_property_value \_ or decrease. also, add the "enjoyment" factor of living in a nicer home of your own, but also add the negative factors of having to mow your own lawn, and various repair costs, and likely higher utility costs. \_ Well, obviously it could be a negative number, but in the long view (which the OP wanted) it will probably increase. Trying to quantify all the intangibles is beyond the scope of this document. \_ you are right. I do calculations for my modest townhouse using a 2% annual increase. Am I too pessimistic? \_ Knowing nothing else: probably. \_ The part of the equation you added, "monthly_increase_in_property_value", seems to be THE big question everyone is now concerned with. The rest are more predictable. \_ Higher interest rates may bring prices down, but they'd also increase your costs. If you're interested in buying, you might as well start. -tom \_ all things being equal, you would rather have high rate and low cost than low rate and high cost. reason is, you can refinance if rate later goes down. of course, if you need a house, you need a house. \_ Also, per chance you come across a large wad of cash, you can pay off a larger percentage of the loan. \_ dunno, if you got cash then go arm and wait, if not prices won't fall that much but interest rates will rise by a point if you wait too long \_ Bay Area is pathological. SoCal still has bargains. Live in Carson, or along the 10/60 freeway east of downtown, watch real estate values go up. Don't buy the $700K 40-year-old 3-bdrm home in West L.A. on a busy street. \_ how much is an average 2 bdrm townhouse in LA these days? what about 3 bdrm? What about Bay Area? - chicago sodan \_ This guy is kidding if he thinks he can touch anything in West LA for $700K. Irvine is $700K these days. The average house is around $500K (same as Bay Area), but LA is a big place. Where? Covina? Riverside? Torrance? OC? \_ say Torrance, Hacienda Heights and OC. What the price for townhouses there? \_ I just did a lookup and a 2bdrm condo in torrance will run you 300-400k. +100k if you want a 2bdrm townhome. Try http://themls.com if you want to look at West LA. you can find homes for $700k. my buddy just bought a 1700 sf home in Inglewood for $450k (nice home, quiet area, but about 90% African American). \_ wow. I used to hang out around Torrance a lot when I lived for a while with my uncle up on Rolling Hills Estates. His city-facing home used to be around 300+K (1996). Wonder how much his 4 bedroom single family home (with nice front and backyard) is worth now. \_ The *lowest* house there is $610K and is 2/1. By the way, http://www.dqnews.com has prices by city and by zip code. \_ Wrong, all in West LA: http://csua.org/u/8cr 3/2 $620k http://csua.org/u/8cs 2/1 $540k Why do all these people in the motd talk out their ass all the time??? \_ Beautiful Exposition Boulevard is what I think of when you say "West LA". Get a clue. $700K in West LA buys you nothing in the way of SFRs. All those houses are near the freeway. It's like saying you can buy a house for $350K in the Bay Area. Yeah, in Oakland. Technically correct, but not really true. \_ Yeah, they are sucky spots of West LA that is why they are cheap. Hey, don't be knocking Oakland! I just saw a beautiful craftsman 2/1 for $429k there. \_ I don't understand your first sentence. \_ In the Bay Area, even the $500k houses seem pretty shitty to me. There are some older townhomes in that range. \_ I've been advised to look in either Valencia or Simi Valley. Are those reasonable choices? \_ You can find a house in Valencia for maybe < $500K but the real question is: Where are you commuting to?! \_ too many unpredictable factors. I would say, if you need a house buy it. if not, save aggressively and wait a little while. also, don't stretch your finances and leave a little margin, if it is at all possible given the high property prices. \_ so you are saying you think the housing market will cool down, but if it doesn't, at least you'll have saved money for the down payment? \_ more or less. saving and investing wisely. \_ what about buying a condo as an in-between home? \_ it's a consideration, and a way to not put everything in one basket, spreading your bets and hedging against further price increases. What I would want to find out would be how well the condo would appreciate, how easy they can be sold, etc. I did something similar, but it's a townhouse since I am in a cheaper area (chicago). Chicago does have a more reasonable rent to price ratio ($1200 rent for a $200k townhouse) so renting out is an option if I move to a larger place. It should cover the monthly mortgage ++ cost. Tougher in the Bay Area. But hey, Bay Area is so much nicer than Chicago! \_ Condo's give you more house for your money and their rent/buy price ratio makes them more sensible to buy. \_ http://csua.org/u/8ce . Somewhat reasonable set of to buy or not analysis from the Chron. \_ Something a real estate agent told me that made a lot of sense: The people paying $500-600K for cute 2-bedrooms in the SFBA are the people most likely to be screwed. They will have their 2.1 children and need to buy a bigger house. Meanwhile, for $700-800K they could have bought a 3-4 bedroom or a duplex and rented some of it out. The fact that very few people can qualify for a loan to carry a 7-800K house keeps these properties cheap relative to the much smaller 5-600K places. \_ The trick is to rent out 1/3 of your house, or put up with a duplex, while still maintaining privacy and dealing with various maintenance requests. Nevertheless, the point from the real estate agent is valid, but the money to buy a $700-800K place could instead be coming from your parents or similar avenues. |
2004/6/17 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:30859 Activity:insanely high |
6/17 There's a car rental place near my house that has a sign: TULOY PO KAYO (spelling might be wrong, just going off of memory). What does this mean, and in what language? \_ Formal Tagalog for "Please come in." -elizp \_ why are Flip girls so hot? I met one in dance class and she had the most perfect butt and the cutest face. |
2004/6/11 [Reference/BayArea, Reference/RealEstate] UID:30747 Activity:high |
6/11 Is there still rent control in Berkeley and Oakland? Thanks. \_ Yes and no. There's rent control as long as the unit is being rented, but when the unit becomes vacant or the "original tennant" leaves, they can reset the rent however they like. \_ Yes in Berkeley and no in Oakland? \_ The above rules apply to both places. \_ In Oakland there is an exemption from rent control for 3 unit buildings or smaller that are owner occupied. There are probably some other exemptions, like for new construction, as well. \_ Berkeley has some similar exemptions too. \_ Oakland Rent Board: http://csua.org/u/7pv Berkeley Rent Board: http://csua.org/u/7pw |
2004/5/31-6/1 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:30505 Activity:high |
5/31 Occasionally I can feel drum beat in my apartment. I can't find the source but I can feel it, what is the best way to deal with this problem? Should I blast back, tell the manager (already tried once but she didn't seem to care), or what? \_ play electric guitar really loud, when a drummer comes and knockks and wants to start a band, kill him. \_ Won't work. Anyone can play guitar, but drummers are in demand. \_ is it at 3 in the morning? 'cause otherwise, just deal. You live in an apartment. One of the disadvantages of sharing walls with others is that you can occasionaly hear them. Jeesh. (you will live a longer and healthier life if you learn not to let stuff like this slide. Also, people will like you more.) \_ yea... there's MANY things worse you could be hearing through the walls.... \_ Keep trying to track it--you'll find it eventually. Then, ask nicely. Then, ask nastily. Then, move. \_ If a little thumping bugs him so much, it's hopeless. It's a part of apartment life. He can't even locate it. How bad can it be? Of course the manager ignored him. \_ I once heard my neighbors having sex. She was a blonde, cute ex-cheerleader. He was a balding, geeky English teacher. Never since have I experienced something so sexy and revolting at the same time. \_ Well, I hope she at least got an A. \_ Or at least an 'O'. \_ Sexy, revolting and strangely appealing as it gave hope to you. \_ Get 2 microphones feeding into different channels of a stereo connector and feed it into your computer. Set up the 2 mics maybe 10 feet apart. Then when he's drumming record the feed into your computer. If you view the wave, you can see a drum beat arrive at one mic a little sooner than the other one by comparing the two stereo channels in a sound editor. By varying the position of the mics, arrange them to maximize the difference in sound arrival time. The line between the 2 mics will point at the drummer. If you move the whole setup and repeat the process you can triangulate his position. \_ What if he's above/below you? -John \_ Let me correct myself. You can actually get the most accurate directional measurement by rotating the mics so that the sound arrives at them at the same time. This won't tell you what side of the arrangement the sound comes from, but with 44kHz recording you can resolve about 1/3" of distance difference, and with mics a yard apart, that can resolve the angle of origin to within about 1% of a radian. \_ Why go to all that trouble? Get a gun, let your neighbors know you have a gun and that you're pissed off at the asshole with the drum, and you just might shoot him in the head. \_ Excellent idea! You probably won't be hearing drumbeats in your jail cell. |
2004/5/6 [Science/Space, Reference/RealEstate] UID:30053 Activity:very high |
5/6 After moving into an apartment in BA, I began to notice that sticky and pinkish (lighter than rust color) stuff over areas on the bathtub and sinks in the kitchen and bathroom. Although it seeps mostly next to faucets housing where water usually seeps out, it also builds up along the edge of bathtub. What is it and does it come from the water, the water pipes, or the faucet? \_ The pink stuff is microbial growth - either bacterial or mildew resulting from a bathroom with poor ventilation and no fan. My wife and clean this every couple of months with a toohbrush and very mild bleach solution. It takes no more than about five minutes. \_ It's alive. Growing. Not mineral. \_ Quite possibly a mix of soap scum and mineral buildup. \_ Why is it sticky (almost like grease)? It's not where I pour soap. \_ Soap scum is generally from accumulation of splashed soapy water. Just clean you bathroom. \_ Have you ever felt moss on a tree or ground, very slimy/ slippery, same thing, mildew, mold of that type tends to be like that. \_ bleach, cleanser, lime scale remover, repeat. \_ Speaking of cleaning, how do you clean the bathtub bottom? You know, the area that's anti-slippery but also traps dirt. It looks a little darkish and I can't seem to clean it out but scrubbing. \_ blee-och! \_ softscub + scotchbrite |
2004/5/4-5 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:30012 Activity:insanely high |
5/4 I am living in a house with a large garden around it. What's a good but cheap way to make sure that the ants don't venture into the house during summer? \_ when my roommates and i threw out the piles of rotting food, the ants left. \_ what about the maggots? WHAT ABOUT THE MAGGOTS? \_ FLYPAPER!!!!!! \_ Leave a trail of sugar from your garden to your house. \_ did you mean to say "from your how to your garden" (so that the ants leave the house)? \_ Put ant baits at the windows and doors. \_ water your lawn before sun rise helps. and, periodically check the seal between your house's fundation and the wooden walls. The concret-like seal tend to break easily, and ants find its way in from there. \_ buy some chiton based pest control. it shreds the little buggers and doesnt poison the earth. \_ Dig a 3 foot trench around your house, fill with oil, light. Refill as needed. \_ Ah, the Boys from Brazil are back. \_ "Grant's Ant Stakes". They work great when put around your house. I used to live in SoCal, where ants can be a big problem. |
2004/5/3-4 [Reference/BayArea, Reference/RealEstate] UID:29962 Activity:moderate |
5/3 I'll be working at the Powerbar building this summer and I need housing from late June to late September. If you have a place to sublet or have a room to rent near the Berkeley/Oakland/Walnut Creek please email me, thanks -kchang \_ wtf? \_ and just to authenticate myself, here: {soda}/home/apollo/kchang/bin> last kchang kchang ttyAX 131.179.224.88 Mon May 3 11:15 still logged in Name: http://Samoa.CS.UCLA.EDU Address: 131.179.224.88 \_ Craisglist must be chock-full of summer sublets right about now... |
2004/4/29 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:13462 Activity:nil |
4/29 What do you think of an engineering themed / hacker house? http://www.livejournal.com/users/nibot/175102.html --tobin \_ Doesn't Cloyne already qualify? |
2004/4/28 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:13431 Activity:high |
4/28 What's a good excuse to kick out a roommate without pissing her off? She's just a mean bitch and a nice sodan's home is no place for such a bitch. --landlord \_ Try and sleep with her. She'll leave of her own accord. \_ In Berkeley, these are the "good cause" reasons for eviction: http://www.ci.berkeley.ca.us/rent/geninfo/guide/guide4-6.htm Pick which ever one applies and is least adversarial. \_ I just don't like her, and I have to live with her under the same roof. Can I just say something like: - I make enough $$$ now, no need to rent out rooms - I am renting out the whole house - I am making large repairs - my parents would like to live-in for a while? \_ "Renting out the whole house" and "My parents..." probably both count as an OMI eviction, which would require you to not rent to other people for >= 36 months. If it's a single family home, the rules might be different though. You can call the rent board and they might be able to answer your questions better than I can. \_ Sorry, no such luck. Either make a pass at her (as noted above), or take some cues from that movie Pacific Heights. |
2004/4/23 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:13357 Activity:nil |
4/23 I'm currently renting an apartment in Berkeley on a month-to-month basis. If I'm going to give 30 days notice on moving out, do I have to pay for a whole months rent, or can I say give notice on 5/15 and pay a pro-rated rent for 6/1-6/15? \_ It's pro-rated. See http://www.ci.berkeley.ca.us/rent for this and lots of other useful information. \_ Thanks \_ Are you renting from your cute roommate or geting rent deduction based on your service? I wonder how you could do it since neither of you will go very far on *that* basis. |
2004/4/20 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:13296 Activity:nil |
4/20 I am a relatively recent California homebuyer, so I have tended to poo-poo these talks of a real estate bubble. But this factoid makes me nervous: 64% of new home buyers in the Bay Area now use ARMs. What are they thinking? http://www.dqnews.com/RRCA1203.shtm \_ "I can't get 10% down. Prices have continued to go up despite the bubble talk. Everyone else is doing well in real estate. Land is is a better investment than the stock market." \_ "I have been talking about a housing bubble since 1998, and now I'm pissed that I've missed out on 80-100% gains in value." \_ Why wouldn't you use an ARM if it is your first "starter" home and you plan on moving within 5-7 years? On a separate note, if you put 10% down and your home price drops 25%, when does it make sense to let the bank foreclose and not lose 150% on your original investment? |
2004/4/13 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:13168 Activity:high |
4/13 What's your favorite cliche about real estate? \_ Location, location, location! \_ Price, condition, location: choose two. \_ This is more true in non-Bay Area places where housing is more available. I live in the burbs and the real estate agents are going door to door looking for sellers. I'm in a terrible location yet prices keep going up due to zero supply. \_ when the market is going up and up, of course there will be zero supply. supply will become plentiful when the market is going down and down. it's a speculator market now. \_ "The Bay Area housing market will never collapse." \_ It hasn't yet. \_ Although it does make some noticeable readjustments every once in a while. \_ It has gone down once in my lifetime. And after that it recovered. Oops, that's not a cliche! I've been trolled! \_ Learn how to indent your posts properly. \_ I can't afford a home here. \_ You can afford a lot more than you think. Talked to a mortgage broker yet? \_ Well, a comparable rent is probable closer to $1200, but still... With taxes, interest and insurance, the cost of a $100k is about $750/mo. \_ Why would I want to buy a condo at $350k when I can rent something comparable for $900/month? \_ A 350k condo would probably have a comparable rental for $1200, but your point remains valid. 100k of purchease price carries about $750/mo in mortgage, taxes and insurance, so the condo would cost you $2626/mo. \_ Keep in mind all that interest is tax-deductible \_ here in chicago burbs, I just bought a condo at a good, easily rentable location for $150k. current tenant is paying $985/month. I am quite worried price of condo may fall but then mortgage and extras is like $200 per month lower than my current rented apartment after tax savings, so as long as I am not forced to sell, I guess it's ok. OTOH, $350k sounds like a risky bet that property will appreciate especially if you can only get $900-1200 rent for it. \_ You squished some people's changes. Please consider motdedit. \_ Why rent? \_ Bay Area homes are overprices. \_ how do you know? People were saying that in 1998, back when my house was worth half what it is worth now. \_ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earthquake http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loma_Prieta_earthquake http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Francisco_earthquake_of_1906 \_ single-family wooden homes are about the safest structure in an earthquake. \_ 'safest' is a relative term. \_ Hmm. I'd like to see a URL on this, if you don't mind. I'm not structural, but the statement you are maybe-ing is exactly consistent with what I got in my seismic exam. Cross-bracing helps, certainly, but wooden frame houses are pretty good regardless and much better than most of the alternatives or so we were told in class. -- ulysses (P.E.) \_ Maybe. But only if it has good cross-bracing. \_ No money down! \_ Works on contingency? No, money down. --Lionel Hutz |
2004/4/11-12 [Reference/RealEstate, Finance/Investment] UID:13135 Activity:nil |
4/11 Housing Bubble about to burst? http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/features/2004/0404.wallace-wells.html \_ I can hardly see how it wouldn't burst, sometime. I had the same kind a quesy feeling in the 2 years preceeding the dor-crash. Everyone says that housing prices never crash, they just stagnate, but... what, are they gonna stagnate for the next 30 years? That's just a protracted crash. \_ The market crashed about 15 years ago. It didn't stay down very long. If it falls then I am going to buy a second home. Don't let Chicken Little keep you from your goals. I know people who have bought high and low both - and in all cases they came out way, way ahead in the long term. In a place like CA this will always be the case. \_ Crash? No. It's called an economic cycle but overall in the mid and long term no one has ever lost money on real estate. |
2004/3/24 [Reference/RealEstate] UID:12833 Activity:nil |
3/24 When are Bay Area home prices going to drop again? http://www.dataquick.com/articleitem.asp?industry=2&item=196 \_ When interest rates go up, home prices will drop. \_ never any significant amount. prices drift up and down a bit but it's a game of 5 steps up, 1 step down. repeat until priced out of market. \_ After the "Big One" destroys most of the region's infrastructure causing the local economy to collapse, forcing the feds to bailout big insurance companies despite the fact that most homeowners didn't buy earthquake insurance and are taking a total wash on their red tagged homes, the prices will dip for land. However it will be impossible to build a home to replace it during the next five years. |
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