Your point here is a good one. I'm back in a very nice east coast town for Thanksgiving with the fam. A year ago I remember a discussion I had with a real estate lawyer, who claimed that, while some towns' real estate in our area would fall, this town's would be spared price dives. Nevertheless, I pushed and prodded my parents to sell their home, which they did this summer. Since then, prices have dropped 10%. My parents told me yesterday of their friends who have a house on the market for 2.9M. No one is interested. Too bad for the sellers, because they already purchased a new place, expecting that their old one would be snapped up.
In the summer, my fam's house sold in a day. There are no takers now. Prices are dropping.
In the summer, my fam's house sold in a day. There are no takers now. Prices are dropping.
Quote from onewaypockets:
Often people think their own area is very special and exempt from downturns. The people in Orange County to the south also think thats only other areas will crash. I hear the same from people in pockets in Florida, that "crashes" or severe corrections only occur in other, usually distant, places.