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Why Bayarea Housing is costly?


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2012 Jan 25, 3:37am   29,459 views  71 comments

by crazydesi   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

A Six-Figure Salary Is The Average For Silicon Valley Engineers

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/six-figure-salary-average-silicon-161410243.html

#housing

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9   thomas.wong1986   2012 Jan 25, 12:11pm  

CrazyMan says

It also depends on what they considered "tech" so it's open to interpretation.

The term "Tech" has been perverted at best. Most journalist who frequently use it dont understand the difference between Google which is advertisment and real tech companies.
No clue at all...

10   thomas.wong1986   2012 Jan 25, 12:23pm  

SFace says

Besides salary, the other reason housing is so costly here:
Prop 13. which chokes off supply severly and the property tax rate is among the lowest in the country and predictable. Making property ownership very lucrative than otherwise.

Prop 13 hasnt prevented prices from falling from 1989 to mid 90s or 2008 to date, nor prevented more inventory being created during the 80s 90s and more recently in the past 10 years. Nor has Prop 13 prevented jobs moving to other states and over seas keeping salaries locally only.

No law has prevented any homeowner from selling their homes. Sales volumn compared to prior decades is way above the historical norm.

11   swebb   2012 Jan 25, 12:54pm  

edvard2 says

The same tech worker in Austin would be doing about 1000% better there than here financially.

But they'd have to live in Texas.

12   LarryPatrickMaloney   2012 Jan 25, 2:02pm  

This is a popular MYTH. That "tech people" and founders, and CEO's of tech companies in the Bay Area keep the prices high for real estate.

There are ~7,000,000 people int the BA.

How many tech people are there? 100,000 ? 200,000 ?

Less than 10% of the entire pop.

So, that isn't the only cause.

(besides, did you know starting salary for San Jose police is $94,000 ?)

13   SparrowBell   2012 Jan 25, 2:05pm  

swebb says

edvard2 says

The same tech worker in Austin would be doing about 1000% better there than here financially.

But they'd have to live in Texas.

Maybe, one doesn't have to go far, housing at Folsom, CA, is very cheap too. 400K houses there would cost more than 1M here or the high end of 2M. Another thing I don't understand, besides the land value, why would two California houses differ so much in *values* if built from the same materials?

14   thomas.wong1986   2012 Jan 25, 2:18pm  

Best job working for Silicon valley company are sales people(account executives)...working outside of California. Makes sense, they can live anywhere, travel expenses/hotels paid for ..make good money,plus commission and have no motivation to move to Silicon Valley.. closer to the mothership.

Many AEs i known are very happy where they are at.

15   dunnross   2012 Jan 25, 3:48pm  

SFace says

Besides the base salary, stock compensation and bonus compensation are among the highest in the world.

Salary, bonus and compensation in Chicago is on par, or higher than in the Bay Area. Tech people in Chicago make the same pay as in the Bay Area. Financial sector employees in Chicago make more than the Tech workers in the Bay Area, and they have less competition from China and India. House prices, however, are about 50% lower.

16   thomas.wong1986   2012 Jan 25, 4:45pm  

SFace says

salary.com indeed.com

Payroll service data like ADP or Ceridian might be better than some web sites who dont process PR data.

17   bg1   2012 Jan 25, 10:23pm  

LarryPatrickMaloney says

This is a popular MYTH. That "tech people" and founders, and CEO's of tech companies in the Bay Area keep the prices high for real estate.

Sometimes what is really interesting to me is that it seems like people need an explanation to justify their behavior, but that explanation doesn't have to be true. But once the debt slave has it, they can reference it as a reason they *had* to go into all that debt.
1. the banks made it easy, like drug dealers. If I hook you, I own you.
2. extravagant consumerism is fun
3. there is/was peer pressure -my friends are doing it, it must be OK.
4. it is an important indicator of success for me and my family to have a house
5. engineers force home prices up around here. What choice do I have?

18   toothfairy   2012 Jan 25, 11:15pm  

dunnross says

SFace says

Besides the base salary, stock compensation and bonus compensation are among the highest in the world.

Salary, bonus and compensation in Chicago is on par, or higher than in the Bay Area. Tech people in Chicago make the same pay as in the Bay Area. Financial sector employees in Chicago make more than the Tech workers in the Bay Area, and they have less competition from China and India. House prices, however, are about 50% lower.

it's also about 50% colder.

19   dunnross   2012 Jan 25, 11:58pm  

toothfairy says

it's also about 50% colder.

Yes, but there is 100% more culture, night life, friendlier people, more trees/greener, lake, etc. Besides the weather, the Bay Area doesn't really have that much to offer in comparison to Chicago.

20   toothfairy   2012 Jan 26, 12:27am  

If I were going to live somewhere cold I'd move to New York. Chicago's got nothing on New York except the fact that it's cheaper. But As usual there's a reason for that.

21   edvard2   2012 Jan 26, 1:04am  

swebb says

But they'd have to live in Texas.

Yup- another bonus. Better than other places, like CO where its freezing and snowy during the winter...

22   dunnross   2012 Jan 26, 1:29am  

toothfairy says

If I were going to live somewhere cold I'd move to New York. Chicago's got nothing on New York except the fact that it's cheaper. But As usual there's a reason for that.

Although I agree that New York has more culture, Chicago is a much more livable city. Besides, prices in New York are much much higher than in Chicago.

23   TheBubbleBubble   2012 Jan 26, 3:53am  

Apparently, the social media IPO boom is helping to reinflate Bay Area housing prices:

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/ipos-stoke-san-francisco-housing-034321653.html

24   CrazyMan   2012 Jan 26, 4:00am  

Good luck with that.

Did you read the article? It's just speculation.

Also:

25   thomas.wong1986   2012 Jan 26, 4:12am  

dunnross says

Yes, but there is 100% more culture, night life, friendlier people, more trees/greener, lake, etc.

Geeks and Culture dont mix.. either you are a partier at night or your coding.

26   TheBubbleBubble   2012 Jan 26, 4:16am  

CrazyMan: I agree with you that it's speculation and even a bubble (see my name, TheBubbleBubble? ;) )

27   B.A.C.A.H.   2012 Jan 26, 4:20am  

dunross,
your posts are as hilarious as they are irrational. If Chicago is sooooo great and the Bay Area is so awful, what are you doing here?
I remember the bumper stickers from the 1980's: "Welcome to California. Please go home."

28   LarryPatrickMaloney   2012 Jan 26, 2:59pm  

Nomograph says

LarryPatrickMaloney says

did you know starting salary for San Jose police is $94,000

Incorrect, as usual. In fact, that's almost the TOP salary, not the starting salary.

http://www.sjpd.org/joinsjpdblue/SalaryBenefits.html

WHERES MY FREE HOUSE LARRY I WANT MY FREE HOUSE

Did you calculate in the benefits package?

29   tatupu70   2012 Jan 26, 9:09pm  

LarryPatrickMaloney says

Nomograph says



LarryPatrickMaloney says



did you know starting salary for San Jose police is $94,000


Incorrect, as usual. In fact, that's almost the TOP salary, not the starting salary.


http://www.sjpd.org/joinsjpdblue/SalaryBenefits.html


WHERES MY FREE HOUSE LARRY I WANT MY FREE HOUSE


Did you calculate in the benefits package?

Why would he have done that. You specifically stated "salary".

30   ducsingle5313   2012 Jan 27, 1:47am  

Take a drive down Central Expressway in Santa Clara between Lawrence and De La Cruz and note the number of For Sale and For Lease signs. Those are a pretty good indication that the total number of jobs continues to decline in the Bay Area. . . .

It's misleading to focus on average compensation for tech workers. You have to look at median family income overall, which I seem to recall is about $70k/year for Santa Clara County. That's actually very high compared to the rest of the U.S., but still grossly out of whack with local median housing prices.

31   edvard2   2012 Jan 27, 2:05am  

dunnross says

Yes, but there is 100% more culture, night life, friendlier people, more trees/greener, lake, etc. Besides the weather, the Bay Area doesn't really have that much to offer in comparison to Chicago.

I lived in Boston for a few years. If Chicago has as bad of weather as Boston, and I'm pretty sure its actually worse, then I could really care less about night life, culture and whatever else might be there. I absolutely hate nasty, cold, miserable cold weather.

32   dellman   2012 Jan 27, 2:49am  

One of the factor for housing demand in Bay area - immigrant mindset to buy property. If you are making above average (I consider $100K as above average salary for Techies), you are tempted to invest in property. Think of the alternative - moving from one apartment complex to another every year

33   jdubbs29   2012 Jan 27, 2:54am  

The Bay Area is one of the few bright spots in the entire economy.
People are very confident here in their future earnings potential. And companies are doing very well, too many to name. Couple that with the highest salaries on average in the nation, and limited space, and I see housing prices maintaining in the good areas, though not booming.

34   Â¥   2012 Jan 27, 3:13am  

dellman says

Think of the alternative - moving from one apartment complex to another every year

Motherfucker movers destroyed my Ikea bookcase last year.

I didn't blame them because it's Ikea, but that thing cost more than the cost of the movers.

Wish I had stuck to my rule 2000-2005 of not buying anything that wouldn't fit in my Miata.

35   Â¥   2012 Jan 27, 3:15am  

ducsingle5313 says

Take a drive down Central Expressway in Santa Clara between Lawrence and De La Cruz and note the number of For Sale and For Lease signs.

Here's the old Sony building in N San Jose:

http://g.co/maps/96q4p

Goodbye!

Last year I was driving by a perfectly good office building from the late 1980s being torn down.

More housing, yeay! I guess we can all work from home or Starbucks now.

36   Serpentor   2012 Jan 27, 2:06pm  

dellman says

One of the factor for housing demand in Bay area - immigrant mindset to buy property. If you are making above average (I consider $100K as above average salary for Techies), you are tempted to invest in property. Think of the alternative - moving from one apartment complex to another every year

1. riiiight magical immigrants with unlimited money.
2. why would you move from one complex to another every year? I've moved 3 times in 15 years renting, all of them because I wanted to be closer to work or wanted to upgrade.

37   madhaus   2012 Jan 27, 5:09pm  

ducsingle5313 says

Take a drive down Central Expressway in Santa Clara between Lawrence and De La Cruz and note the number of For Sale and For Lease signs. Those are a pretty good indication that the total number of jobs continues to decline in the Bay Area. . . .

Okay, so boring median areas are declining. But the Real Bay Area continues to skyrocket in price! And if you show a place with prices going down, then obviously it's not in the REAL Bay Area.

Of course I think the RBA is down to 6 houses in Palo Alto and one of them belonged to Steve Jobs.

38   CrazyMan   2012 Jan 28, 3:37am  

The RBA gets smaller and smaller each year.

39   bmwman91   2012 Jan 28, 3:49am  

CrazyMan says

The RBA gets smaller and smaller each year.

Yeah, but don't forget the law of conservation of REAL. REAL can neither be created nor destroyed. As the RBA shrinks, the REAL-density increases. At some point all of the REAL will be crammed into a single property, probably somewhere in SF. This will be where the portal to hell inevitably opens as the REAL density reaches a critical threshold and tears a hole in our universe through which demon spawn will march.

Actually, I think this already happened. Considering how many realtors are around, it would seem that numerous demon-spawning portals to hell have been open for quite some time.

40   ducsingle5313   2012 Jan 28, 6:04am  

I make more than $250k/year and chose to rent because for me it makes economic sense to do so. The comments about renters having to move every year seem strange. I've *never* been forced to move from a rental, and none of my renter friends have either. So this issue seems grossly exaggerated.

41   ducsingle5313   2012 Jan 28, 6:11am  

The comments about California weather are interesting. Lots of folks mistakenly think that this has a huge impact when there are very clear studies that show weather has little effect on happiness. The reality is people adapt to their local weather conditions and life goes on. In fact people who experience crappy winters tend to appreciate the other seasons more.

I know lots of folks who say they live in California for the weather who are complete homebodies. They make absolutely no effort to engage in the wide variety of outdoor activities available in the Bay Area and spend most of their time glued to the TV or computer.

42   ducsingle5313   2012 Jan 28, 6:22am  

I was chatting with one of my work friends (who recently bought a house in Los Altos) about high end Bay Area prices.

He asked me if I thought high end prices would remain stable or increase. In response, I asked him what percentage of people who own houses in Palo Alto, Los Altos, etc. could afford to buy their own house at current market value. Then I asked him if he thought enough *really* wealthy people would be moving to the Bay Area over the next 20-25 years to soak up the number of $1.25 - 3 million houses that would be put on the market by aging Baby Boomers during that time.

Prices will only remain stable or grow if there is sufficient demand to soak up supply. It will be interesting to see what happens when more aging Baby Boomers sell, either to fund their retirement or to move closer to their grandkids because their kids can't afford to buy in the Bay Area.

43   B.A.C.A.H.   2012 Jan 28, 6:26am  

Serpentor says

1. riiiight magical immigrants with unlimited money.

Unlimited money? Maybe.

Maybe not. Maybe, "just enough money". And to have "just enough money" to buy in The Fortress, or to even rent in The Fortress, is to be wealthy.

Of course it is. Just ask the people like my neighbors in my Blue Collar neighorhood. The kind of people who clean the toilets in the office buildings Fortress residents work in, the kind of people who bring them their food at the restaurants, change the oil in their cars. They work their assess off to live in blue collar neighborhoods around the Bay, and the only reason they go into The Fortress is for their low wage service jobs, to serve the wealthy people in The Fortress.

Because you have to be weathly to pay cash for a residence in The Fortress. You have to be wealthy to qualify for a mortgage to borrow for a Fortress residence. You have to be wealthy to pay the Property Taxes on a recent purchase in The Fortres, or even to pay the Market Rents in The Fortress.

Of course they are wealthy.

Yes, yes, I know there's the Old Folks living off Prop-13 subsidy in The Fortress who are not immigrants, but they have not had to pay market prices to live in The Fortress for decades, and their kids grew up already.

The rest, outside of a relatively few Hipsters from places like Chicago or wherever, and wealthy immigrants. Go to the Public K-12 in neighborhoods in The Fortress and look at the faces of the kids. Yes, mostly children of immigrants. Wealthy immigrants.

Never said they have unlimited money. But by comparison to most of The Rest of Us in the USA and in the Bay Area, they are wealthy.

44   Â¥   2012 Jan 28, 9:18am  

ducsingle5313 says

It will be interesting to see what happens when more aging Baby Boomers sell, either to fund their retirement or to move closer to their grandkids because their kids can't afford to buy in the Bay Area

Thanks to Prop 13, they & their heirs can just rent these places out for a nice monthly income.

45   thomas.wong1986   2012 Jan 28, 3:02pm  

ducsingle5313 says

Then I asked him if he thought enough *really* wealthy people would be moving to the Bay Area over the next 20-25 years to soak up the number of $1.25 - 3 million houses that would be put on the market by aging Baby Boomers during that time.

You could have asked why these homes were only a fraction of the million dollar price before the bubble. Were they aware that $1M home was only $300K, even though we had a booming tech industry for decades past. Why didnt these same $1M homes skyrocket decades before ?

46   thomas.wong1986   2012 Jan 28, 3:05pm  

ducsingle5313 says

I know lots of folks who say they live in California for the weather who are complete homebodies. They make absolutely no effort to engage in the wide variety of outdoor activities available in the Bay Area and spend most of their time glued to the TV or computer

No, Charlie dont surf ! I wonder if they even passed through La Honda!

47   SFMikey   2012 Jan 29, 1:03am  

ducsingle5313 says

I was chatting with one of my work friends (who recently bought a house in Los Altos) about high end Bay Area prices.

He asked me if I thought high end prices would remain stable or increase. In response, I asked him what percentage of people who own houses in Palo Alto, Los Altos, etc. could afford to buy their own house at current market value. Then I asked him if he thought enough *really* wealthy people would be moving to the Bay Area over the next 20-25 years to soak up the number of $1.25 - 3 million houses that would be put on the market by aging Baby Boomers during that time.

Prices will only remain stable or grow if there is sufficient demand to soak up supply. It will be interesting to see what happens when more aging Baby Boomers sell, either to fund their retirement or to move closer to their grandkids because their kids can't afford to buy in the Bay Area.

You bring up a really good point re: how many of the those living in the more expensive areas could afford to buy their home at the current market prices especially when you factor in the property tax increases they've been sheltered from by Prop 13. Demographics - i.e., the Baby Boomer generation - certainly aren't in favor of increasing home prices either nor is globalization with many decent paying jobs flowing overseas. Lastly, you can only kick the can down the road so far before the debt / deficit problems come home to roost.

48   thomas.wong1986   2012 Jan 29, 3:54am  

SFace says

Ask Thomas how many wealthy people moved into Los Gatos and how many homes were built in the last 20 years in Los Gatos?...In any case, affordabiity is a function of earnings and wealth, wealth is accumulated over time. I don't get the argument if everybody have to reset and buy today?

Things in LG were fairly stable when I moved here in early 80s up to the late 90s. Prices were not all that inflated unless your thinking of homes on the hill, which were the millions dollar homes.

The increase in home pricescame from in inflated stock prices from the late 90s. Or as some would call it, lotto tickets. Its easy to make a Pandora, LinkedIn, or FaceBook employee a Millionair.. just give them your cash for over inflated stock which will tank by over 50%..and you take a loss.. they become rich its that simple. I would not call it 'getting rich from accumulated savings over time' by any measure.

Prices from LG to LA to Menlo would be much lower without stock bubbles.

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