Written by Jim the Realtor

May 31, 2012

Except for the five-second listing in the very beginning, six houses on this Carmel Valley street have sold for more than what the sellers paid at the peak (four closed, two pending):

17 Comments

  1. profhoff

    Unbelievable!

    I’m speechless.

  2. salsahead

    Are those jacaranda trees out front of every house on the block? Perhaps that is what is pumping up the sales price.

  3. Leucadia Joe

    I am speechless.

    Now that I actually work, I can see why people wouldn’t mind getting off right there at the 56! Once you hit split and going up to Del Mar Heights….that’s when you hit it. And I have all the way to La Costa to go!

    But it still is tract living. I’m glad to see people paying higher money for the homes that have better qualities…bigger lots, canyon settings….but not big square footage.

    Just because your home is big doesn’t mean the sales price will be and buyers and sellers have to be aware of that fact.

  4. Another Investor

    I’m curious about the buyer profiles. Lots of people in the Bay Area that buy in the best locations are either funneling money from overseas or have cash from participating in a successful start up or other business. They are less interested in price than in location. Is that true there as well?

  5. livinincali

    There will always be winners and losers in every type of economy. Even though the general state of the economy has been poor over the past 5 years doesn’t mean it’s been bad for everybody. I’m sure there’s pockets in the bay area that are well over peak pricing as well. 6 families had the wherewithal and desire to live in this particular community for the price they paid.

  6. Jim the Realtor

    The buyers:

    1 cash, 3 conventional financing.

    Judging from their last names:

    1 Asian, 2 Middle-Easterners, 1 Honkey

  7. Ocrenter

    Plus the interest rate is ridiculous at this point.

    Jumbo for 4.125 at zero point!

    At 30% down, you’ll be looking at $3300. Thats $40k in a year, adding in HOA and property tax, slightly over $50k per year would be the housing cost. what was it? Housing cost should be 1/3 of total income? So a household just need to make $150k annual.

  8. Booty Juice

    Money is flowing to hard assets. Where else would you put it now?

  9. Chuck Ponzi

    OCrenter,

    Just a couple numbers. Right now you can get Wells Fargo 3.875 jumbo to 2MM with zero points. That’s with 20% down.

    150K per year is not that much in income. Imagine 2 people working with 80K each… I don’t know about you, but most professional at manager or above are well above that number. Even if one of the couple members pulls in 120 and the othe 80… you’ve got sufficient income. Of course, it needs to be stable so you’re not forced to sell in a recession…

    Chuck

  10. madhatter

    And none of the bad job numbers has any bearing on the CV market. If the stock market keeps up the downward trend, then I don’t know.

  11. ocrenter

    Chuck, for some reason WellsFargo has a different rate for OC vs SD. 3.875 vs 4.00

  12. coronadoandre

    the Micro Bubbles continue- for how long – no one knows.

  13. James D

    vegasandre is right about the microbubbles.
    Did that state law ever make it to the floor about foreclosures that was similar to NV?

    I guess CV is like our version of Silicon Valley’s microbubble.

  14. GettinReady

    Unreal.

    Lots of action in CV lately. If it’s so great there, why so many sellers?

    Seems like another bubble to me. People never seem to learn. I’m sure the neighbors love seeing the comps going up.

  15. dacounselor

    “The buyers:

    1 cash, 3 conventional financing.

    Judging from their last names:

    1 Asian, 2 Middle-Easterners, 1 Honkey”
    _________________

    And herein lies the most significant data.

  16. dacounselor

    “I guess CV is like our version of Silicon Valley’s microbubble.”
    ____________________

    In general this appears true. I would look to Cupertino for guidance on where CV is headed.

  17. just sayin'

    Sellers still took it in the shorts. Prices for original sales exclude options ($50-$100k), flooring ($30-$50k), and landscaping ($50k-$150k). Then they had to pay 5-6% sales commision.

    Lots of foreign buyers. Derby Hills owners – MDs (doctors), JDs (lawyers), and PhD’s. Saratoga – professional/business people, Qualcomm employees.

    That area’s school is Ocean Air, but school district is opening up that area to Sage Canyon too. Both schools are highly rated. And that area does not have ridiculous HOA (“only” $100/mo) and Mello Roos (only $100/mo) that Pacific Highlands Ranch, so saving that extra $500/month PHR pays means an extra $100k of house buying power. And the freeway on/off is so much better, plus it is cooler/closer to ocean.

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