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Strawberry Picker Buys $720,000 House on $15,000/year Income


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2007 Apr 13, 7:12am   24,494 views  336 comments

by HARM   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

This is not a joke.

Strawberry Picker Buys $720,000 House on $15,000/year Income

HARM

P.S. Sorry about the lazy post. I didn't have time to come up with something witty, but I'm sure you'll be able to help me out in that department.

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54   Peter P   2007 Apr 13, 9:42am  

Palo Alto has pretty good Italian food now on University Ave.

You still need to go to SF for a nice French dinner though.

55   Peter P   2007 Apr 13, 9:59am  

At least, you should be able to block by IP addresses and/or keywords.

56   DaBoss   2007 Apr 13, 10:02am  

Many of my favorite restaurants are not in SF.
NYC has much better Italian food. ---> Move to NYC
Saw 100 people running in the street buck naked on Saturday Afternoon?
Can I have them arrested for indecent exposure? ----> Why?
Went to a Art gallery ? Europe has more. --- Move to Europe
Went to a baseball football or Golf event ? You mean crowd? --> Yea!
Been to a actual trade or hobby convention ?
I have been to a gemstone show in San Rafael. I Bought a Tibetan meditation bowl. ---- Ever been to the Heigh Ashbury???
Go to a night club, where the women actually do go back to your place for the evening ? Huh? ......... Oh you prefer the Fat Chunky kind in San Jose.

LOL! Sorry Peter ! Your just not a great date!

57   StuckInBA   2007 Apr 13, 10:03am  

3.1B for Double-click ? Crazy. At least they will not add as much legal trouble as YouTube.

58   skibum   2007 Apr 13, 10:04am  

There are plenty of good restaurants on the Peninsula though.

I wouldn't say plenty, unless by good you mean passable. SF and the East Bay have MUCH better food.

59   azrob   2007 Apr 13, 10:05am  

The spanish is a bit rough on the "raunchy grande" page; But I am not mexican, so maybe that will pass for mexican spanish...It reads more like english written in spanish, the grammer is bad and the accent marks are missing on at least 50 words.

One of the reasons I got my license as a real estate agent (My full time job is university professor) was intense disgust at the abuses I saw other agents and especially loan officers commit on recent immigrants.

On another note, many many times I advised clients to buy less house and use fixed rate financing, but I have never had a client follow that advise. I think countrywide's advertisement from a couple years ago sums it up best: "Don't let the payment stand between you and the house of your dreams." What the f*&^ kind of advise is that?

60   skibum   2007 Apr 13, 10:10am  

Try Marahs on Columbus….

I'll give it a try - thanks for the tip. I'll have to say, the cannoli bar is set very high for me!

Similarly, like Peter P said, the Italian food in all of the Bay Area leaves a lot to be desired.

61   DaBoss   2007 Apr 13, 10:23am  

Skibum - I will take your word for it.

I heard that Millers on Polk imports their Bagels from NYC daily.
They have some other good deli items NYC style.

62   e   2007 Apr 13, 10:38am  

Similarly, like Peter P said, the Italian food in all of the Bay Area leaves a lot to be desired.

"Fifth and Madison" in Palo Alto gets a thumbsdown from me.

In part for their ridiculous name. It's not even a funny joke.

The only redeeming aspect is they have mortadella - that's hard to find.

63   e   2007 Apr 13, 10:39am  

From what I have seen almost all the sales in crappy parts of San Mateo, Redwood City and the Bayview/Hunters Point have been to low income minorities who don’t speak English or understand the term “NegAm/IO”…

That reminds me, I need to move to RWC or somewhere more North this summer. Between 92 and 84. Pref closer to 101 for commute purposes.

And, I'll still be a JBR.

Any recommendations?

64   skibum   2007 Apr 13, 10:46am  

“Fifth and Madison” in Palo Alto gets a thumbsdown from me.

Other "Italian" places around here that get my thumbsdown:

- Il Fornaio: overrated, bland food
- Bucca de Beppo: chain store quality
- Rose Pistola: overrated, flavorless
- Kuleto's: bland, feels like a "Cheesecake Factory" inside

Much better, but still problematic:
- Olivetto: good food, but it's not really Italian
- Quince: same as above

I've never been to Don Giovanni up in Napa, but I suspect it would be similar to Olivetto or Quince in criticism.

65   astrid   2007 Apr 13, 10:49am  

Peter P,

Even though my professional responsibility professor specifically warned giving any kind of advice over the internet, I think this is generic enough to be okay.

You have an annual gift exemption of $12,000. Those theoretical philanthropic organizations would have to be exceptionally generous for this to ever be a problem.

66   skibum   2007 Apr 13, 10:50am  

That reminds me, I need to move to RWC or somewhere more North this summer. Between 92 and 84. Pref closer to 101 for commute purposes.

If you want commute convenience, that particular location, and you don't care about ambience or culture, I'd go for Foster City or Redwood Shores. They'd be fine for renting, but I'd never buy there (built on landfill). For more stuff to do, San Mateo is not bad. Lot's of decent restaurants in downtown.

67   astrid   2007 Apr 13, 10:54am  

Oh wait, bad advice. Substitute "philanthropic organization" with "mom dad"

68   Malcolm   2007 Apr 13, 10:55am  

SFBubble says
"I think Prop 13 should be interpereted to make the 2006 buyers’ property taxes grow at 2% a year. See how long until they pay the same as people who buy in a few years. "

It will drop with the current values. It can only go up a maximum of 2% a year if the value goes above an overall 2% per year.

69   astrid   2007 Apr 13, 10:56am  

I will never understand Olive Garden, why wait in line for food you can prepare in less time and 1/2 the money (or 1/5th the money if you use their ingredients)?

70   Malcolm   2007 Apr 13, 10:56am  

Wouldn't it have been smarter for him and his friends to buy a farm instead?

71   astrid   2007 Apr 13, 10:58am  

Hobby farming is expensive and very tiring.

72   astrid   2007 Apr 13, 10:59am  

Whereas career farming will buy you a $720,000 house!

73   astrid   2007 Apr 13, 11:01am  

The Housing Bubble Correction be Napoleon's Russian campaign + Hitler's Russian campaign.

74   MtViewRenter   2007 Apr 13, 11:02am  

Skibum,

My wife really likes Pezzella's in Sunnyvale. It's a bit pricey for the style of food (dishes her grandma would make at home). We're not Italian food connoisseurs though.

75   sfbubblebuyer   2007 Apr 13, 11:13am  

Malcolm,

I know they'll go down. Laws like that are never 'fair' or 'balanced' in any way, shape or form.

I'd support prop 13 if it had a means and age qualification.

76   DaBoss   2007 Apr 13, 11:16am  

"So the housing premium required in CA in the 50s and 60s was not as high as the premium required today in an economy dominated by Microsoft, Google, Cisco, Intel and so many companies based in CA."

What about the other side of this logic why not factor in the employers that went under... like hundreds of Computer, Semi, Semi-Equipment Maker, Networking, Software and others..... Bay Networks, Ask Computers, Ungerman Bass, Tandem, Amdahl, Norton, AltaVista, Atari, Excite, "old" Borland, Fairchilds and so many names we lost count. Seibel, Maxtor, Hyperion added to the list recently. .... THEY ALL WENT BUST... you know failed to survive. Many didnt survive because their employees were too expensive.. Their mortgages were far more than the employer can bear and be globally competitive. And that was in the 80 and 90's...

What is this PREMIUM people talk about?

FYI, Microsoft was never in CA. They were in New Mexico and then moved to Washington.

77   DaBoss   2007 Apr 13, 11:18am  

I forgot to add the other Google darling in its day "Netscape"

Hey ever recall that one???

78   Malcolm   2007 Apr 13, 11:18am  

Why fly planes into the WTC? Al Quaeda could have done way more damage to the economy if they had just had the foresight to put their resources into the subprime market.

79   sfbubblebuyer   2007 Apr 13, 11:20am  

I forgot to add the other Google darling in its day “Netscape”

I always refer to it as "Nutscrape" in my head.

80   OO   2007 Apr 13, 11:21am  

Actually I don't know of any extreme cases like that in real life. The more extreme cases I know of is like $250K household taking on a $750K to $850K mortgage, which is manageable if you know these people in person, because they live a really really frugal lifestyle, driving an entry-level car, having no vacations, buying clothes only on half-off sale etc., and doing everything possible to minimize tax.

There is only one couple that borrowed way over their head, over $1.5M in debt on a household income of less than $250K, but the guy joined GOOG right after it went public, so I figured he'd be ok.

I don't think a typical professional couple household in BA are that crazy. They usually max out at a debt load of 3x income.

81   DaBoss   2007 Apr 13, 11:22am  

"So the housing premium required in CA in the 50s and 60s"

Damn me ... I forgot to add the whole aeropace industry that went belly up. I sure hate to be the fool who purchased a home in San Diego in 1989 (peak year) when the Berlin Wall went down. Yea that turned out well, prices crashed 40%"

82   Malcolm   2007 Apr 13, 11:23am  

Re Prop 13.

With all due respect, I must say I find it curious why people (who I perceive lean slightly left) keep hammering this prop 13 thing. It in essence is a regressive tax benefit, which turns into a regressive tax if you take it away. (Regressive meaning it penalizes the lower brackets more than the higher ones.)

The other thing is that talking about it is a waste of time. It was passed by initiative. If it is not a good law it can be removed the same way. It can only be undone by a general vote with a super majority.

83   DaBoss   2007 Apr 13, 11:23am  

"I always refer to it as “Nutscrape” in my head."

I pitty the FOOL that paid $90 a share for that PIG!

84   Brand165   2007 Apr 13, 11:33am  

Speaking of Strawberry Fields...

I went to the REO up near the college today. Listed at 188K about ten days ago. The place was built in 1915, probably leased out to students for the last twenty or thirty years. It was a DUMP. Porch slanting into the front yard, all the grass dead as a doornail, cracks in the walls and foundation, the hardwood floor warped so badly that it looked like water damage. None of it looked like spiteful pre-REO vengance, it was really just that badly beaten up. There is no way in hell I would live there. In fact, I would even feel slimy renting it to college students, who were obviously slobs enough to destroy it in the first place.

My agent called me before I got there. 19 offers so far. Highest was well over $200K, all cash, fast closing. While we were there, I got to see some competition. A college kid and his realtor. Couldn't have been more than 21, shaggy haircut, loose jeans and a perky new ballcap. The guy flat out screamed college student.

Maybe I'm misjudging the kid, but I'd like to see this entire demographic of competition just vanish. Subprime can't dry up fast enough to get all the Gen Y "real estate is totally a path to easy riches" speculators out of the market*. I want to see the market require 20% downpayments for the coming 10 years. The next demographic I'd like to leave is the people who have no idea how to do their own comps, employing rookie realtors who have no idea how to do their own comps. You can always compare the property to something in its price range, ignore all the details and come up with the exact asking price.

Bitter? Check. Jaded? Check. Renter? Check.

An engineer at lunch said to me, "Even if prices fall 20%, if credit goes up then you'll still pay more per month." I went off on that. How could a goddamned engineer say that?!? AUGH!!! If college educated engineers can suck that badly at math, what hope is there for the normal people in society? If a $250K house lost -20% to $200K, and I had considered a 20% downpayment, let's examine:

1. $250K pre-drop price, $50K downpayment, I pay 6% on a $200K loan. $1000/month IO, I have lost all of my $50,000 downpayment. The market vaporizes the equity.

2. No money down after the fall, I pay 8% on a $200K loan. $1333/month IO, and I still have $50K in the bank.

3. $200K price, $50K downpayment, after the fall, I pay 8% on a $150K loan. $1000/month IO, and I still have my $50K downpayment in equity.

Hmm. #3 vs. #1--I still have my hard-earned equity, my payment is the same, and I get an even bigger interest deduction for my taxes.

People piss me off. This is like the mockery I got from all the new hires in 2001. People were off buying a Lexus or a house, goading me into getting something nice because we were all newly minted engineers. I looked like an over-conservative nerd (which, to be fair, is probably an accurate description). Six months later, three-quarters of them were fired. Happy trails!

* However, there is no way a college kid made a $200K+ cash only offer on that dump. It had to be an investor, who knew quite correctly that they could lease out the house for far more than the loan amount each month.

85   OO   2007 Apr 13, 11:33am  

I also think people here are a bit too conservative, I bought my home on 2x household income debt load, or else I would have to buy on the east bay, plus we were both out of grad school back then, so we figured there would be a much higher chance of our pay doubling than going down in the next decade, and things did progress the way we expected, and better.

BA's housing problem, apart from the housing bubble, is also a manifestation of rat race at its best. Almost every professional couple households make $200K+, and if you distribute these households evenly across the nation, they will all be living happily in the best local neighborhood. Unfortunately, you have a high concentration of these people in a limited geography with all of them thinking that they are entitled to live in Portola Valley, Monte Sereno, etc. So most of them are just miserable.

A $250K household is considered high income household in every single first world country, even in places like Tokyo, my director (a real director with a team of people reporting to him, not just a "director") friend in a large Japanese corporation makes only $160K and his wife doesn't work. Somehow he is happy with where he is, and considers himself lucky. A $160K household on this blog will consider themselves losers and wonder how they get by for the rest of their lives.

86   Jimbo   2007 Apr 13, 11:39am  

TOS,

I am looking for long term rate. I am aware of appreciation rates since 77, but trough to peak measurements are not very useful and I want to figure in the value over many cycles. If you don't have the data, just say so, no part in being deliberately difficult about it.

I know you have not been reading for long, but I am one of the SF homeowners who posts here. I don't have any particular dog in this fight, though I might like to buy a bigger house someday.

I beg to differ. SF doesn’t have real Italian cannoli.

Try Stella's on Columbus. I have never heard of Marahs Space Ace, are you sure you have the name right?. My Queen's born and raised g/f liked Stella's, if that counts for anything.

87   Jimbo   2007 Apr 13, 11:49am  

OO,

Me and my wife had a combined income of $140k, took on a $640k mortgage on a $710k duplex and are doing just fine. I really had to push her into it, but it has worked out great. We also had the income stream from the unit downstairs, which even in the beginning paid almost half of the mortgage.

I agree that people who post here are too conservative investors. I am pretty sure that I am the most aggressive investor of them all, or at least amongst those who talk about the financial risks they take. You should take more risk when you are young, when you have more time to catch up to recover from your mistakes. I lost half my net worth in the dot com crash, but I recovered it all in a couple of years.

88   Randy H   2007 Apr 13, 11:55am  

Jimbo

The long-term rate over the past century for housing, nationally averaged, is just a tiny fraction above 0%. That's right, after adjusting for inflation, housing has not appreciated even 1% faster.

CA has appreciated more, but not much more being the substantial gains only came in the past 3 decades. I think it's about 1.0-1.5% above inflation, but I'll find the reference later (again; we've linked all this before in the past 2 years).

If you take the 70s until present then you get under 3% appreciation after inflation. Under 5% in CA. But, as many will point out, the dataset for this shorter period CLEARLY shows the past 3 years as extraordinary outliers. So much so that were this any other kind of statistical data set we'd apply some kind of smoothing function, or eliminate the values from the set altogether (which we cannot do until after we revert to mean, of course).

I'll bet the 70s - 2015 end up showing about 1% nationally and 3-3.5% in CA, after inflation -- and that is a very generous estimate.

89   OO   2007 Apr 13, 11:59am  

Jimbo,

just lock down your rate. If you have locked down a low rate for 30 years, then I think you have greatly minimized your downside. Everyone's situation is different, so one should play his card according to his advantage. What you are doing is actually borrowing only $320K, because the other half of the mortgage is self-sustainable through rental income, so that gives you only a 2.3x HH income debt load, which is so much better than many newly-minted FBs.

90   azrob   2007 Apr 13, 12:00pm  

Jimbo:

I kinda agree with what you say. While I believe that housing prices in AZ will decline drastically, I am not selling my last 2 homes. ( 3 years ago I had 5) One, I need a place to live, and i know yadda yadda i could sell it and invest the money even at 5% and rent the same house, BUT IT IS NOT THE SAME. I don't want to move, as an owner I can do whatever i please to the home, I have 2 big dogs which makes renting a bit problematic anyways, and since I own the place I put a hottub behind it where I can get drunk on red wine whenever I want... the other property is paid off too, centrally located and the rents seem to be increasing nicely now that gasoline is too expensive for people to drive in from the burbs...

Looking at the development of phoenix, I think that a drastic change in the oil outlook could seriously disrupt our current rent/price structure. Both of my remaining homes are centrally located, near ASU, and within one mile of the long over due light rail stations. So, even if PHX takes a 50% inflation adjusted hit, it may not be evenly distributed, and long term, these 2 may do much better than most. Hell if it really drops alot, I will buy more.
Peace all

91   astrid   2007 Apr 13, 12:00pm  

Mmmmm, Statricks...sounds like a delicious faux math filled sugary cereal.

92   Jimbo   2007 Apr 13, 12:01pm  

(again; we’ve linked all this before in the past 2 years).

Sorry if I am asking something that has been covered before. I have read the blog here on and off for a long time, but not religously and probably missed it. I will try to Google for it, but have not had much luck with finding stuff on Patrick's in the past.

Yes, I am aware that recent events are an outlier, which is why I am asking for data through 2000 specifically to exclude the most recent runup.

93   OO   2007 Apr 13, 12:02pm  

Real estate benefits from two factors: discovery factor (which is the biggest driver of real estate appreciation), and inflation.

CA benefits the most from the discovery factor in the last 30 years. Now we are fully discovered and world's #1 in many aspects, there's not much appreciation potential left in that bracket. CA housing will only appreciate in line with inflation for the next 30 years.

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