Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A house in my hot PG county neighborhood went under contract in one weekend.
There’s a hot market in PG county? That’s a new one.
Anonymous wrote:There is very little inventory. Anything that's a SFH under $1m and inside the Beltway is under contract within days. I know multiple sets of DINKs and high income singles who are looking and just can't find anything decent. Even the crap is selling fast. Or, if the SFH is nice, there's six offers.
Condos are a different story. I know multiple people trying to selling their condos in DC and are seeing no interest. These same people wanted to take their equity and roll it into a SFH (for which there is no inventory!)
The system has come to a screeching halt. Bad for condo owners, bad for agents, bad for people who want to upgrade. Great for SFH owners who want to sell and then are willing to downsize or leave DC completely.
Anonymous wrote:There is very little inventory. Anything that's a SFH under $1m and inside the Beltway is under contract within days. I know multiple sets of DINKs and high income singles who are looking and just can't find anything decent. Even the crap is selling fast. Or, if the SFH is nice, there's six offers.
Condos are a different story. I know multiple people trying to selling their condos in DC and are seeing no interest. These same people wanted to take their equity and roll it into a SFH (for which there is no inventory!)
The system has come to a screeching halt. Bad for condo owners, bad for agents, bad for people who want to upgrade. Great for SFH owners who want to sell and then are willing to downsize or leave DC completely.
Anonymous wrote:There is very little inventory. Anything that's a SFH under $1m and inside the Beltway is under contract within days. I know multiple sets of DINKs and high income singles who are looking and just can't find anything decent. Even the crap is selling fast. Or, if the SFH is nice, there's six offers.
Condos are a different story. I know multiple people trying to selling their condos in DC and are seeing no interest. These same people wanted to take their equity and roll it into a SFH (for which there is no inventory!)
The system has come to a screeching halt. Bad for condo owners, bad for agents, bad for people who want to upgrade. Great for SFH owners who want to sell and then are willing to downsize or leave DC completely.
Anonymous wrote:What? Homes in our neighborhood in Vienna have sold record fast and no price drops!
Just be patient; the drop is coming. We are already seeing it in Arlington as the Amazon binge cools off. Houses in Pentagon City and Del Ray are selling for 10% less than they would have otherwise - check out sale prices in the last week in both neighborhoods compared to 6 weeks ago.
Anonymous wrote:In a country where 155,000,000 people are employed, 25,000 people losing their jobs is not even a ripple.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This point that people loosing theirs jobs are primarily waiters and bartenders, who are not relevant to the housing market for SFH strikes me as a very sheltered and naive view. What about the people who own the bars and restaurants where the laid off waiters and bartenders used to work? What about professionals who work in the travel and hospitality industries, for example? There are so many people who are impacted by the current crisis.
Just be patient; the drop is coming. We are already seeing it in Arlington as the Amazon binge cools off. Houses in Pentagon City and Del Ray are selling for 10% less than they would have otherwise - check out sale prices in the last week in both neighborhoods compared to 6 weeks ago.
We are in a situation where nationally we will likely have unemployment above 15% for the next 18 months and will potentially see a global depression into the late 2020s. I would not touch the DC housing market until at least this October. Having said that, I do not think we will see a genuine crash in real estate prices in this area given increased government spending on contractors, but I do believe we will see at least a 15% drop by next year.
Links please.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This point that people loosing theirs jobs are primarily waiters and bartenders, who are not relevant to the housing market for SFH strikes me as a very sheltered and naive view. What about the people who own the bars and restaurants where the laid off waiters and bartenders used to work? What about professionals who work in the travel and hospitality industries, for example? There are so many people who are impacted by the current crisis.
Just be patient; the drop is coming. We are already seeing it in Arlington as the Amazon binge cools off. Houses in Pentagon City and Del Ray are selling for 10% less than they would have otherwise - check out sale prices in the last week in both neighborhoods compared to 6 weeks ago.
We are in a situation where nationally we will likely have unemployment above 15% for the next 18 months and will potentially see a global depression into the late 2020s. I would not touch the DC housing market until at least this October. Having said that, I do not think we will see a genuine crash in real estate prices in this area given increased government spending on contractors, but I do believe we will see at least a 15% drop by next year.
Anonymous wrote:This point that people loosing theirs jobs are primarily waiters and bartenders, who are not relevant to the housing market for SFH strikes me as a very sheltered and naive view. What about the people who own the bars and restaurants where the laid off waiters and bartenders used to work? What about professionals who work in the travel and hospitality industries, for example? There are so many people who are impacted by the current crisis.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This point that people loosing theirs jobs are primarily waiters and bartenders, who are not relevant to the housing market for SFH strikes me as a very sheltered and naive view. What about the people who own the bars and restaurants where the laid off waiters and bartenders used to work? What about professionals who work in the travel and hospitality industries, for example? There are so many people who are impacted by the current crisis.
Just be patient; the drop is coming. We are already seeing it in Arlington as the Amazon binge cools off. Houses in Pentagon City and Del Ray are selling for 10% less than they would have otherwise - check out sale prices in the last week in both neighborhoods compared to 6 weeks ago.
We are in a situation where nationally we will likely have unemployment above 15% for the next 18 months and will potentially see a global depression into the late 2020s. I would not touch the DC housing market until at least this October. Having said that, I do not think we will see a genuine crash in real estate prices in this area given increased government spending on contractors, but I do believe we will see at least a 15% drop by next year.