I just read the LA Times article and was amazed to see prices in some areas of California falling below prices of 20 years ago. It seems impossible, but it is real and it is here now. I think these price drops may stabilize the housing economy in the near term. I don’t know if this is consistent throughout the state or just little pockets. Either way rents and mortgages will become reasonable again for everyone.
LA Times:
The reversal is a bonanza for some first-time buyers. They’re nabbing houses for less than what their parents paid in the late 1980s, jumping into a real estate market that has become a kind of economic time machine.
To return to the past, take a stroll down Mulberry Avenue in Lancaster. John A. Beatrice, 55, bought his spacious two-story Spanish-style house there brand-new for $120,000 in 1989. It was a price he could comfortably afford, and he planned on staying through retirement, so he wasn’t worried about price swings.
“I always knew real estate goes like this,” said the aerospace engineer, moving his hand in an undulating motion like bell curves on a graph.
But he never imagined his neighborhood would drop off the charts. In April, a slightly larger home two doors away sold for $66,500. That’s just over half the $130,000 it went for new in 1992. In 2005, that house sold for $330,000.…Prices also tumbled below 1989 levels in neighborhoods in Palmdale, Hemet, Barstow, Desert Hot Springs, Victorville, Highland, Santa Ana and Oxnard, according to DataQuick. Several other inland communities, including parts of Moreno Valley, Banning and Rialto, had median prices that were only slightly above 1989 levels and below the April 1990 median.
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Any pictures to what these houses look like? They might sound cheap but after seeing what some of those previously expensive homes were when the boom was present – very overpriced and looked like crap.
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