Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I dunno, I thought it would because so many dual-income govt workers would have to move out of the city. Maybe people are still hanging on somehow.
That's what my friend thought, too. She sold her second home in the Town of Vienna below asking price. Had she waited until this year, she probably would have gotten at least $200,000 more for it.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not a fed or fed adjacent, but I also thought the housing market would be hit hard. To be fair, it's not has hot as it was preTrump.
The houses in my DC suburb just outside the beltway are going for $1mil+, albeit sitting longer. The people I know who live in my neighborhood aren't feds, though some are fed adjacent. We have a lot of lawyers (non fed), health and IT workers in my area.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It was 2 type of people: 1) Those trying to convince themselves and make themselves feel better about sitting on the sidelines rather than buy good property that always goes up and 2) freaked out liberals that assume every single economic thing is tied to a decision made by Trump.
I say this as a liberal who cannot stand MAGA. But just calling balls and strikes.
Yup, I remember the risk-averse types calling everyone an idiot. They thought they were the smart ones, of well.
Anonymous wrote:It was 2 type of people: 1) Those trying to convince themselves and make themselves feel better about sitting on the sidelines rather than buy good property that always goes up and 2) freaked out liberals that assume every single economic thing is tied to a decision made by Trump.
I say this as a liberal who cannot stand MAGA. But just calling balls and strikes.
Anonymous wrote:It was 2 type of people: 1) Those trying to convince themselves and make themselves feel better about sitting on the sidelines rather than buy good property that always goes up and 2) freaked out liberals that assume every single economic thing is tied to a decision made by Trump.
I say this as a liberal who cannot stand MAGA. But just calling balls and strikes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I dunno, I thought it would because so many dual-income govt workers would have to move out of the city. Maybe people are still hanging on somehow.
How many feds did you think could afford those homes? Many rent, or own suburban townhouses, or commute from the exurbs. I know multiple feds who commute from WV or from places like Triangle.
The few who have homes close-in typically have a non-fed spouse who can support that payment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I dunno, I thought it would because so many dual-income govt workers would have to move out of the city. Maybe people are still hanging on somehow.
That's what my friend thought, too. She sold her second home in the Town of Vienna below asking price. Had she waited until this year, she probably would have gotten at least $200,000 more for it.
Anonymous wrote:I dunno, I thought it would because so many dual-income govt workers would have to move out of the city. Maybe people are still hanging on somehow.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone talking about MAGA on here is deluded. And I know this because I've been reading this forum ever since Trump was elected (and long before) and 99% of the sky is falling because of DOGE and DC real estate is going to take a massive hit were from anti-trump people. Give me a break.
And the MSN article is clickbait. 242 "cities" are going to be individual suburban towns that are classified as cities. Places like Piedmont, CA, Winnetka, IL, Bronxville, NY, you know, rich suburban towns. They're going to pack that list. Just like what they've always done. Here's a nice quote:
"The New York City metro area, which includes parts of New Jersey and Pennsylvania, leads all metro areas with 63 cities where a typical starter home costs $1 million or more. The San Francisco metro follows with 37, then Los Angeles (33), San Jose (13), Miami (8) and Seattle (8)."
D'oh. 63 cities in the tri-state, how is that even possible? Wait, oh, you mean rich suburbs in Westchester and Fairfield. Har har. "cities."
Great point. The vast majority of those "cities" are in the commuting range for Silicon Valley. Most of the rest are commuting to NYC. Even taking the report at face value, there is 1 such city in VA, 4 in MD, and I didn't see DC on the list.
That said, there absolutely were people on DCUM last year - not necessarily MAGA - hoping that fed layoffs would soften the real estate market so they could scoop something up. It was gross.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone talking about MAGA on here is deluded. And I know this because I've been reading this forum ever since Trump was elected (and long before) and 99% of the sky is falling because of DOGE and DC real estate is going to take a massive hit were from anti-trump people. Give me a break.
And the MSN article is clickbait. 242 "cities" are going to be individual suburban towns that are classified as cities. Places like Piedmont, CA, Winnetka, IL, Bronxville, NY, you know, rich suburban towns. They're going to pack that list. Just like what they've always done. Here's a nice quote:
"The New York City metro area, which includes parts of New Jersey and Pennsylvania, leads all metro areas with 63 cities where a typical starter home costs $1 million or more. The San Francisco metro follows with 37, then Los Angeles (33), San Jose (13), Miami (8) and Seattle (8)."
D'oh. 63 cities in the tri-state, how is that even possible? Wait, oh, you mean rich suburbs in Westchester and Fairfield. Har har. "cities."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I dunno, I thought it would because so many dual-income govt workers would have to move out of the city. Maybe people are still hanging on somehow.
How many feds did you think could afford those homes? Many rent, or own suburban townhouses, or commute from the exurbs. I know multiple feds who commute from WV or from places like Triangle.
The few who have homes close-in typically have a non-fed spouse who can support that payment.