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Thread: Real Estate Crash thread

  1. #28526
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    I am certain Nick understands the issue better than other commenters. $120 burgers? Typical dumb ass response for Mr Ignored. Based on my wages in 1984 and what a burger sold for ($2.50) today's $10 burger is pretty close to where it would be based on what I made back then.
    The fact of the matter, at least in coastal CA, is the prices have far exceeded wage growth, It would be nice to see wages go up and prices come way down.
    Never in U.S. history has the public chosen leadership this malevolent. The moral clarity of their decision is crystalline, particularly knowing how Trump will regard his slim margin as a “mandate” to do his worst. We’ve learned something about America that we didn’t know, or perhaps didn’t believe, and it’ll forever color our individual judgments of who and what we are.

  2. #28527
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    Several California cities were also among the 50 most populous metropolitan areas in the U.S. with the biggest imbalances between sellers and buyers in April, according to a recent Redfin study. These included Riverside (61.3 percent difference), Sacramento (44.9 percent), Los Angeles (44.8 percent), Anaheim (38.7 percent) and Oakland (36.2 percent).

  3. #28528
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    Quote Originally Posted by 4matic View Post
    Why? There’s plenty of houses for sale and new multi family all over.
    LA passed a couple seemingly minor laws to allow building more market rate high density affordable housing and it sparked a boom that the mayor freaked out about and tamped down.

    San Francisco has the oldest housing stock of any major city.

    Oh, and while California is one of the richest states, it has one of the highest rates of homelessness. Southern states with drastically higher poverty rates than California have lower rates of homelessness... because they have more housing.

    California laws have drastically limited the number of housing units being built, and specifically high density affordable housing.

    Do you really think that more high-density housing would not have been built in SF, for example, if developers were allowed to build?

    Or look at places like Palo Alto. There is virtually no high density housing, its all just single family homes for miles on end. That is not because developers are not willing to build higher density housing. It not because there are no more workers who want to move to Silicon Valley.

    Or lastly, look at net migration. People are not leaving California because the weather, or the landscape, or the jobs all of a sudden suck. It is because housing is unaffordable, because there is a shortage.

  4. #28529
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    -right now- there may be some housing available, but I would suggest that is a symptom of prices running up during Covid and then interest rates jumping up. Those two things will put a damper on demand. But I think it is crazy to suggest that over the past decade or two California has not had a housing shortage.

  5. #28530
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    Like, come on now:

    The state’s population has steadily grown, but it hasn’t been building new places for people to live at anything close to the same rate. It now ranks 49th in housing units per capita.

    https://www.vox.com/cities-and-urban...housing-crisis

  6. #28531
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    Real Estate Crash thread

    That article is seven years old. There are eight hundred condos for sale in frisco. Probably thousands more for rent. If prices come down there’s your affordable housing. No need to build more. If there’s no demand you can’t fix it with supply.

    Although, the idea that prices come down and wages go up is pretty much fantasy. We need a complete reset like the Volker or even the GFC to help young people in the long run.

  7. #28532
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    All the folks who left California for Austin? lol. I know people that went there and bought multiple properties thinking it was the next boom.

  8. #28533
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    Quote Originally Posted by 4matic View Post
    All the folks who left California for Austin? lol. I know people that went there and bought multiple properties thinking it was the next boom.

  9. #28534
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    Quote Originally Posted by 4matic View Post
    That article is seven years old. There are eight hundred condos for sale in frisco. Probably thousands more for rent. If prices come down there’s your affordable housing. No need to build more. If there’s no demand you can’t fix it with supply. Although, the idea that prices come down and wages go up is pretty much fantasy. We need a complete reset like the Volker or even the GFC to help young people in the long run.
    And that article was using data from 2014, so yes, out of date. I should have used more current data. 2024 census showed California had 14,877,904 housing units, and a population of 39,431,263. That gives 377 units per 1000 people, which places California... 49th in the rankings still. But hey, we are closer to 48th!!!

    https://www.politifact.com/factcheck...ousing-supply/

    And there is net migration to other states from California (though international immigration has kept the overall CA population growing recently).

  10. #28535
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    Housing is very famously a frictionless market where prices instantly adjust to match supply and demand...

  11. #28536
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    Quote Originally Posted by nickwm21 View Post
    modern fire code

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    Genuinely curious, what parts specifically, are too strict/expensive?



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  12. #28537
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    Quote Originally Posted by zion zig zag View Post
    Genuinely curious, what parts specifically, are too strict/expensive?



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    IBC and NFPA have evolved over the years to treat small apartment buildings like large commercial buildings. They used to be hardly any different than residential construction.

    Today, a 10 unit apartment building vs a 3 unit townhome block would trigger:
    - semi-combustible construction vs combustible
    - Distributed fire alarm vs just local smokes
    - fire sprinks
    - multiple egress stairs
    - elevators
    - 2hr rated egress corridors vs just 1hr separation.

    Code councils are working on it - but there needs to be a middle ground.


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  13. #28538
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    nick has nailed it twice with his posts from yesterday

    building codes
    nimbys

    in colorado developers are refusing to build condos because the laws changed ten years ago and gave owners more power to sue

    and fuck fuck fuck insurance
    I just got ass raped this year on liablity the list of things I'm not allowed to do is just stupid
    I have no idea how tract home and multi family builders get insured my guess is they dump their company and form a new one every two years

  14. #28539
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    Insurance will cause the next bubble to burst, it kinda is already around here. People's condo HOA's are doubling due to rising insurance costs because the companies need to spread out the costs associated with rampant natural disasters caused by climate change. It would suck to be stuck in a 40-50 year old condo with a $1100 HOA and nobody wants to buy it from you at almost any price above what you owe.

  15. #28540
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    (not to get polyass) but I kinda think the states should let go of the reins and let the insurance companies freemarket that shit.

    If you build in an area that floods or burns - the insurance SHOULD be expensive as fuck.


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  16. #28541
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    Quote Originally Posted by 4matic
    All the folks who left California for Austin? lol. I know people that went there and bought multiple properties thinking it was the next boom.
    Two things are true about Austin. One, Austin, Texas is still experiencing population growth, though the rate of growth has slowed in recent years. While it's no longer the fastest-growing large metro area in the US, it remains one of the fastest-growing, and its population continues to increase. Second, the Austin housing market is currently experiencing falling prices, and a significant factor contributing to this is the substantial increase in housing construction. The city saw a surge in building, particularly of apartments, leading to a surplus of available housing:

    "The chief reason behind Austin’s falling rents, real estate experts and housing advocates said, is a massive apartment building boom unmatched by any other major city in Texas or in the rest of the country."

    https://www.texastribune.org/2025/01...rents-falling/

  17. #28542
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    Quote Originally Posted by nickwm21 View Post
    (not to get polyass) but I kinda think the states should let go of the reins and let the insurance companies freemarket that shit.

    If you build in an area that floods or burns - the insurance SHOULD be expensive as fuck.


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    I agree with this, doesn't make any sense to spend government money to prop up property values in flood plains. Shocking how Doge missed that opportunity to cut spending

  18. #28543
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    this just popped up in my feed, could have swore kevo posted about these a bit back. Surprised at how spacious they look on video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xTGgMhSvGi0

  19. #28544
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    Quote Originally Posted by nickwm21 View Post
    IBC and NFPA have evolved over the years to treat small apartment buildings like large commercial buildings. They used to be hardly any different than residential construction. Today, a 10 unit apartment building vs a 3 unit townhome block would trigger: - semi-combustible construction vs combustible - Distributed fire alarm vs just local smokes - fire sprinks - multiple egress stairs - elevators - 2hr rated egress corridors vs just 1hr separation. Code councils are working on it - but there needs to be a middle ground. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
    Having just vacated a 12 unit apartment building where we had multiple fire department visits to the building for fire alarms I'm personally glad there was a distributed fire alarm in the building to wake me and the family up so we could vacate from the 3rd floor without relying on my neighbors to go door knocking if somethign serious was going on. Most of it was false alarms due to kitchen type incidents, but still.

    Point taken on the reglatory burden, but lots of safety/fire code is written in blood.

  20. #28545
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    Quote Originally Posted by nickwm21 View Post
    (not to get polyass) but I kinda think the states should let go of the reins and let the insurance companies freemarket that shit. If you build in an area that floods or burns - the insurance SHOULD be expensive as fuck. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
    The wildfire one is particularly frustrating since people have been told for decades and decades that building in the WUI is risky and now it looks like we might be socializing the losses. I have to think that a sane government backed program would require aggressive Firewise type treatments to stay in the program.

    I am curious what the mortgage companies are going to do if a significant chunk of homeowners with loans suddenly can't get insurance as required by their mortgage contract.
    Does anyone know why widlfire insurance isn't an add on policy like flood, earthquake etc, but instead is attached to the general fire loss policy?

  21. #28546
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    Quote Originally Posted by civilcoconut View Post
    The wildfire one is particularly frustrating since people have been told for decades and decades that building in the WUI is risky and now it looks like we might be socializing the losses. I have to think that a sane government backed program would require aggressive Firewise type treatments to stay in the program.

    I am curious what the mortgage companies are going to do if a significant chunk of homeowners with loans suddenly can't get insurance as required by their mortgage contract.
    Does anyone know why widlfire insurance isn't an add on policy like flood, earthquake etc, but instead is attached to the general fire loss policy?
    Wildfire losses are really only being socialized for homeowners in that insurance carriers are only allowed to charge a maximum of X for premium. Flood insurance on the other hand is subsidized.

    Fire is always its own cause of loss, differentiating between a wildfire and standard fire loss would be a nightmare.

  22. #28547
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    Quote Originally Posted by nickwm21 View Post
    IBC and NFPA have evolved over the years to treat small apartment buildings like large commercial buildings. They used to be hardly any different than residential construction.

    Today, a 10 unit apartment building vs a 3 unit townhome block would trigger:
    - semi-combustible construction vs combustible
    - Distributed fire alarm vs just local smokes
    - fire sprinks
    - multiple egress stairs
    - elevators
    - 2hr rated egress corridors vs just 1hr separation.

    Code councils are working on it - but there needs to be a middle ground.


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
    Yeah a lot of things building code and you said fire code, but you knew that.

    Anyway…you want to tell me you should stack units on top of each other with out a fire suppression system and without alarm? If the unit below me is on fire I want to know (alarm) and I want a chance at egress (suppression).

    If you have a suppression system (13) you can do 1 hour rated corridors. Limited combustion construction comes into play at 5 stories, which seems reasonable.

  23. #28548
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    Quote Originally Posted by zion zig zag View Post
    If the unit below me is on fire I want to know...and I want a chance at egress...
    pfft. pussy

  24. #28549
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    Quote Originally Posted by zion zig zag View Post
    Yeah a lot of things building code and you said fire code, but you knew that.

    Anyway…you want to tell me you should stack units on top of each other with out a fire suppression system and without alarm? If the unit below me is on fire I want to know (alarm) and I want a chance at egress (suppression).

    If you have a suppression system (13) you can do 1 hour rated corridors. Limited combustion construction comes into play at 5 stories, which seems reasonable.
    No - maybe I misread your question. My original post was pointing out why those buildings aren’t built anymore and that if we can find a middle ground in code (and zoning, and defect litigation) then the market will build a ton of small multifamily and we have better housing affordability. Middle ground doesn’t mean walk everything back, but concessions need to be made. To your point, FLS is probably not the place to start… but it is certainly one of the pain points in making those developments pencil.


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  25. #28550
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    I don't think the point is that the fire code is bad, just that it adds cost that gets passed to the buyer. For example: Here a three story duplex has to be sprinkled. This is a fairly efficient design for infill on steep lots with a garage and 2 stories above on a tight lot that that is a bit difficult to build on.

    Its always finger pointing, but the powers that be have to be "right" and have no accountability. Two topics that I always bring up at the meetings are

    1. Build Cost. Everyone want to blame this mythical developer. Pro tip: unless its a custom, there is a developer. Capital has to get paid. Infrastructure is expensive. Materials are expensive. So municipalities think they can do better. But they just add layers of inefficiency. So how we tax payer subsidized "affordable" that is available to 140%AMI and for a 2bed on one resident has to work locally 1300 hours per year and you can have 2x purchase price in "assets". So who do you think will "buy" those units.

    2. Living Wage Jobs: fuck you is you are a small business owner (or corporate silent owner) or a government that want to pay $25/hr, no benefits a whine that you can't find help because of the housing issue. The working class tax base is paying the affordable housing taxes to support the shit bag chardonnay crowd. Got some balls, raise your prices, have staff that thive. At if that doesn't work, figure out a better way to have a $100k wake boat and 10weeks of vacation.

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