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15   Ceffer   2020 Apr 1, 7:15pm  

SunnyvaleCA says
The condo and apartment building in and near Sunnyvale is jaw-dropping. That's what will crash the market. It makes it a worse place to live (congestion, noise, pollution, crime, etc) as well as competing with existing housing on the supply side.


Huge apartment complexes along the 680 South north of Mission in Fremont. Did they study any of the street traffic patterns and planning infrastructure before they built these? Of course, they will come with the insta ghetto requirements attached, so they might be tenements before the decade is out. Because all neighborhoods need to share the crime and ugly graffiti.
16   Shaman   2020 Apr 1, 8:02pm  

BayArea says
Housing will trail the stock market by approximately 3mo. There will be impact but nowhere near the % decline of the stock market.


Yes, but housing is sticky, and reflects the true economy. If the economy is just sleeping, housing will ultimately be unaffected when things go back to normal.
17   B.A.C.A.H.   2020 Apr 2, 9:21am  

Ceffer says
SunnyvaleCA says
The condo and apartment building in and near Sunnyvale is jaw-dropping. That's what will crash the market. It makes it a worse place to live (congestion, noise, pollution, crime, etc) as well as competing with existing housing on the supply side.


Huge apartment complexes along the 680 South north of Mission in Fremont. Did they study any of the street traffic patterns and planning infrastructure before they built these? Of course, they will come with the insta ghetto requirements attached, so they might be tenements before the decade is out. Because all neighborhoods need to share the crime and ugly graffiti.


The target demographic is Tech Yuppies, many of them coming to the Bay Area the H-1 route.

If those units aren't occupied by the target demographic, maybe they can be used to house the homeless. To a large extent homelessness in the region has been exacerbated by the Techies like those H-1's bidding up the rents.
18   FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden   2020 Apr 2, 12:03pm  

No one is buying anything non essential right now.
19   RWSGFY   2020 Apr 2, 12:19pm  

Fortwaynemobile says
No one is buying anything non essential right now.


Condos built out of TP would be an instant hit!
20   FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden   2020 Apr 2, 12:25pm  

TEOTWAWKI says
Fortwaynemobile says
No one is buying anything non essential right now.


Condos built out of TP would be an instant hit!


Not in LA. Bums here would steal it all. One dragged away an empty bucket from my patio last month.
21   Malcolm   2020 Apr 3, 9:33am  

WineHorror1 says
Keep dreaming.

The people being hurt the most right now are the people with shitty jobs. For massive price declines, you need 1) lots of people with good incomes falling on hard financial times AND NOT GETTING GOVERNMENT BAILOUT $$ and/or 2) massive increase in housing supply. Do you see any massive housing being built? I see 2 types of housing being built (I'm in DC area). McMansions and condos. That's it. And not in massive supply either. Watching asset prices go up without having to do any work is too easy/juicy for those who have control over supply.


We'll see. For a few years now, California has been bailing out homeowners who are upside down.
All areas are different, I am seeing the exact opposite of what you are talking about, where it is the high end market that is hurting the most. I can show you houses that have been on the market for years with hundreds of thousands of dollars of price declines.

You do realize that we are already at double digit unemployment right? It is not actually 4.4%. That means the "rich" who depend on customers for their businesses don't have customers.

You do realize that margin calls are happening again on mortgage backed securities right? That's what caused the last implosion.

BTW, there is another word for those low income people who are being hit the hardest. They are called renters. A large component of housing values are based on rental income.

Don't forget the stock market has crashed again. It is not going to simply spring back, there is going to be a year or more lag and if it does spring back it will be because investors see it as a bargain over overpriced investment homes.

As I said on another thread, I see absolutely no upward pressure on housing prices. They had already stalled and were falling in areas around me as there is no more to cut in the way of interest rates.
22   Malcolm   2020 Apr 3, 10:03am  

Just for comparison, this bailout is already twice as big as the one in 2008 and we're only into this thing a month.
23   Onvacation   2020 Apr 3, 5:52pm  

Malcolm says
Just for comparison, this bailout is already twice as big as the one in 2008 and we're only into this thing a month.

Now there's a hockey stick!
24   Patrick   2020 Apr 3, 6:13pm  

That was just the first bailout.
25   Onvacation   2020 Apr 3, 6:21pm  

$1,000,000,000,000 federal spending / ~330,000,000 citizens

Every time the government spends a trillion dollars the share for every man woman and child in this country is around $3,000, and that's just the feds. The numerator is smaller for what the state's spend. The numerator is smaller still for the people that actually pay taxes.

How can this end well?
26   Malcolm   2020 Apr 3, 6:31pm  

Onvacation says
How can this end well?


If the Feds realize that a Basic Minimum Income actually grows the economy and ends up not costing anything. I see this crisis as a very interesting experiment with all sorts of things.
27   Malcolm   2020 Apr 4, 7:04pm  

OccasionalCortex says
And where is this 'ends up not costing anything' BS coming from?


For one thing, you don't need any of the agencies that would be replaced by BMI. So picture, no unemployment employees or buildings, no HUD, no food stamp programs, none of it. Hundreds and hundreds of billions of dollars right off the bat, that the government doesn't have to spend on administration, would go right into the program.

The other way the program costs zero is because the economy grows. When someone spends their money, the recipient is collecting income, therefore it is taxed, and then when he spends it is taxed and so on and so on.

It is not a way to make everyone rich, it is a way to fairly extend benefits to the lower range of society. Quite simply, everyone would start out with a refundable $10,000 tax credit. As that person earns income, the benefit is reduced as his tax liability increases.

So, the program conceptually, even if the beneficiaries remained the same as now would not cost any more, but there is more to go around by cutting the government bureaucracy.
28   Malcolm   2020 Apr 4, 7:14pm  

OccasionalCortex says
Feeding money into the economy that pretty much gets captured by landlords and banksters doesn't 'actually grow' the economy


Since you seem to have a beef with banks and landlords, consider another benefit is that a BMI gives people more freedom to live away from the overpriced areas that exist because they are near to scarce good paying jobs that aren't worth taking, but people have no choice. Small towns can sustain themselves because there is always a base of customers with some sort of an income, so rents adjust, and housing prices follow, when people can move to where it makes sense to live.
29   PeopleUnited   2020 Apr 4, 8:06pm  

WineHorror1 says
Malcolm says
I predict another crash that will mean price declines of 45% off peak highs statewide.

Keep dreaming.

The people being hurt the most right now are the people with shitty jobs. For massive price declines, you need 1) lots of people with good incomes falling on hard financial times AND NOT GETTING GOVERNMENT BAILOUT $$ and/or 2) massive increase in housing supply. Do you see any massive housing being built? I see 2 types of housing being built (I'm in DC area). McMansions and condos. That's it. And not in massive supply either. Watching asset prices go up without having to do any work is too easy/juicy for those who have control over supply.


I just heard that a large health system near me is asking their doctors to work for half salary but work the same hours. They are furloughing as many other workers as they can. Sure this is hurting middle and low income people disproportionately, but if even physicians “on the front lines” have their income cut in half are we not living in a failed economy? This does not end well unless you consider living under a totalitarian state such as Communist China, a happy ending.
30   RC2006   2020 Apr 4, 8:09pm  

Post office is threatening to close down in a few months without bailout that would hit a bunch of sectors.
31   PeopleUnited   2020 Apr 4, 8:12pm  

PeopleUnited says
WineHorror1 says
Malcolm says
I predict another crash that will mean price declines of 45% off peak highs statewide.

Keep dreaming.

The people being hurt the most right now are the people with shitty jobs. For massive price declines, you need 1) lots of people with good incomes falling on hard financial times AND NOT GETTING GOVERNMENT BAILOUT $$ and/or 2) massive increase in housing supply. Do you see any massive housing being built? I see 2 types of housing being built (I'm in DC area). McMansions and condos. That's it. And not in massive supply either. Watching asset prices go up without having to do any work is too easy/juicy for those who have control over supply.


I just heard that a large health system near me is asking their doctors to work for half salary but work the same hours. They are furloug...
If universal basic income would solve the poverty problem, Rosebud South Dakota would not be the shithole it is. The “natives” get free healthcare, free housing and UBI and yet they live in extreme poverty. The fact of the matter is that poverty is a state of mind, not a consequence of lack of UBI.
32   RC2006   2020 Apr 4, 8:13pm  

I really hope for a crash I'm still up 50% and dont care about equity. I would love to upgrade but taxes kill the possibility. Always looking for a cabin in the mountains as a weekend getaway to take kids and family to but everything is overpriced.
33   HeadSet   2020 Apr 4, 9:02pm  

Rosebud South Dakota would not be the shithole it is. The “natives” get free healthcare, free housing and UBI and yet they live in extreme poverty. The fact of the matter is that poverty is a state of mind, not a consequence of lack of UBI.

My wife's grandpa was a county commissioner in Rosebud County, Montana. What you are saying applies to this other Rosebud and its Cheyenne population. Uncanny.
34   Malcolm   2020 Apr 5, 5:20pm  

RC2006 says
Post office is threatening to close down in a few months without bailout that would hit a bunch of sectors.


When they first came out, I bought a couple thousand dollars of Forever Stamps. This might be their time to shine.
35   Malcolm   2020 Apr 5, 5:21pm  

PeopleUnited says
If universal basic income would solve the poverty problem, Rosebud South Dakota would not be the shithole it is. The “natives” get free healthcare, free housing and UBI and yet they live in extreme poverty. The fact of the matter is that poverty is a state of mind, not a consequence of lack of UBI.


Believe it or not, I agree with you. I still like the idea of a UBI though.

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