Quote from stevempaq:
You would look at those numbers and think that it would be a pain to find buyers that could afford the houses. But the houses I have been selling are in the 800k to 1.2mil range are sold before the house is even built and if not within a week of them being listed.
You can still find decent homes in so cali for a semi fair price (for cali standards) if your willing to live in the outer areas.
We all need at least $250K salary to be able to afford a median-priced home in most coastal areas of California. Problem is less than 5% of the families are paid that well.
The discrepancy between 50% of the houses and 5% of the population is huge. That means 45% of the houses are either owned but not used as primary homes by the very rich people or owned by people who can not really afford them.
As time goes by, speculators or home owners out stretch themselves will have to give up. The longer they hold the houses, the more money they will lose. We're just running out of high income people to keep the pyramid game going.
The day of judgement is coming. Market always punishes excesses.
http://www.santacruzsentinel.com/archive/2005/May/10/local/stories/02local.htm
"One realtor says the easy money loans are propping up the market. "The continuing high housing prices, said Szychowski, are the result of those low interest rates, combined with low inventory and the loans available."
"The interest-only loans have pulled in another huge buying pool,' he said. 'Weâre seeing a lot of dual incomes and a lot of big down payments on the move-up buyers, which is new equity created by this run-up."
on't forget those people who have owned a home through the run up in prices and simply apply that equity to the new home that they buy..... The true loser in this situation is the first time home buyer who has no equity in real estate or the new resident that moved from an area of the country that has more reasonable home values.