T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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546.1 | | MSBCS::BROWN_L | | Wed Aug 11 1993 16:57 | 10 |
| Sunday's Globe [or an issue within the last week] had San Francisco
pegged as having the least affordable housing in the nation. The
article also said that Nashua and Merrimack had moved up [i.e. some
of the most affordable]. While California may be undergoing
problems, and Silicon Valley has plenty of layoffs, the limited
buildable land combined with the desirability of the bay area
helps keeps a floor on prices. Even the mountains south of Oakland
are getting built up, and that's over an hour commute to anything.
.02 Kb
|
546.2 | A buyer's market | CALDEC::DMILLER | | Thu Aug 12 1993 14:07 | 6 |
| Townhouses are running in the high $100K low $200k range now in the
Santa Clara (Silicon) Valley, depending on location. This is lower
than it was 5 years ago. It is a buyers market at this point, and
probably will be for a while. As to where it will go, it's anybody's
guess. As long as there's no big 'quake to drive people out, the
prices probably won't drop a whole lot more.
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546.3 | | LAGUNA::MAY_BR | squished tomatoes | Fri Aug 13 1993 13:38 | 18 |
|
I sold a house in the Bay Area about 18 months ago. I could probably
buy it for 80-90% of what I sold it for, and the price is still going
to drop. It took about 15 months to sell, and I probably could have
sold it for $75K more, had I put it on the market 6 months earlier
thaen I had. Sounds like a bad market, huh (I still made about a 40%
profit on the 6 years I owned the house, though)?
I don't think it's going to get better, either. Much of the Bay Area's
economy is defense based, and that business is shrinking rapidly. I
believe that it got hit with 5 base closures in the latest cut, and
will probably lose some more. The high tech and biotech industries are
also very important to the local economy, and neither of those are
doing well. I would wait as long as I could before buying there, and
think you would get more for your money. Except for the housing costs,
it's a great place to live, though.
Bruce
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546.4 | bottoming of a cycle | DWOMV2::KINNEY | | Fri Aug 13 1993 14:38 | 11 |
| I believe the housing industry will continue to drop.This is due to
a lopsided balance of our population.Baby boomers, age 31 to 40
something, make up the largest group of our population.Many of these
have bought and bought up during the eighties.The next generations,
being smaller and suffering thru worsening economic times have not
been in position to buy,therefore creating compromises on behave of
the sellers in order to sell their homes and creating a buyers market.
I don't foresee the sellers market reappearing until the baby boomer's
offspring are grown and in the market to buy.
My 2 cents
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546.5 | | AMCUCS::HALEY | become a wasp and hornet | Tue Aug 17 1993 19:46 | 28 |
| It is hard to predict the whole bay area housing market currently. The
Oakland area is going to be greatly affected by the base closures,
approximatley 35K people dirrectly, and some large number indirectly. We
haven't had the same type of Defense layoffs that have hit the LA and
Orange County area, though they are possible. More of the Aerospace
industry is electronics and survelience which is growing slowly in the 5
published future budgets.
Many people look in a small region, (East Bay, South Bay, The City...) and
don't concider it a unified market though the census bureau does. The
median age is much lower than much (most?) of the country, and we have a
very high level of immigration. Obviously not all can buy, but the demand
is still rather high.
Some of the lower priced areas are getting very stable, and there are
starting to be more demand for the midrange houses. Low starts at the 130Ks
for a small townhouse in a less than perfect area, and the midrange is
still high 200s to mid 400s in the San Jose area.
Where in the area will you want to work, and where will you want to live?
I would strongly reccommend renting for a while in th area yo would buy in.
Tracy seems close until you drive it during commute hours.
The commuting is still much better than LA and NY, but I would think hard
about living on the transit line that can get you to work. BART from the
East through South San Francisco, CALTRAINS anywhere on the peninsula.
Matt
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