Quote from sunggong:
So many people here are very pessimistic about the real estate market.
I'm the guy that said 20% depreciation is probably the worst-cast scenario for my area.
The reason I'm not worried is because:
1) SF Bay Area has always had inflated housing prices, but people still live here because it's one of the best places in the whole country to live. Prices have never "tanked" in this area for single family homes even when the tech bust happened. (I don't know much about condo prices, but I do know that they are more volatile) Unlike SoCal, where LA area experienced some severe pullbacks in late 80s and early 90s, NorCal has not had severe pullback. We are talking 10-15% at most in the recent history going back about 50 years....
2) I have locked up my mortgage at 5.125% for 30-years. I lucked out when I bought the house as the rates were very low.
3) I don't plan on selling my house in the near future, so I can certainly deal with price fluctuations that will inevitably come in the near future.
What's the big deal? Unlike stocks, real estate never "tank" fast. It never has and most likely, it never will.
Comparing single family home real estate market to Enron/Worldcom is beyond idiotic. It's plain stupid.
People are making too big of a deal with this real estate stuff....
If Bay area is one of the best places to live now it was even better 10 years ago and houses were half the price.
Real Estate can't "tank" because of their illiquidty. They just get foreclosed on and the "sale" never hits the books until later and only after the bank haggles with buyers and only after they get sick of holding it.
Right now no one knows what the real market is because of the lask of buying interest. The statistics only reflect what has been closed on.
The real market price is probably 50% of what the houses in San Diego, Bay area went for in late 2004, early 2005.
John