irvinehomeowner
Well-known member
So IHS' post today reminded me of something:
Back when I joined the IHB in 2008, there were many discussions about what was going to happen to Irvine real estate prices once the bubble pops.
I've pretty much held to my contention that while prices will drop in Irvine, they won't drop as fast or as far as surrounding cities due to multiple reasons (such as my half-joking FCB Theory). I've said that in the forums, I've said that on the blog. Each time I've been met with quite a bit of criticism.
Flash forward to 2009/10... and the excuse from the other side was the government intervention and credits... and while I understand that will have some effect... I still don't understand how they can use that as an excuse since it seemingly slowed down the drop in Irvine but not in the surrounding cities. And... for the most part, for the price point that Irvine SFRs were at (especially in the New Home Collection), some credits were not even applicable.
It's now 2012. Some areas, prices could be close to 40% or more down... other's are 20%... others are only 5%. But if you average them all together by categories, areas, etc... by and large... I'm not sure that Irvine as a whole is at 1999 pricing... or over 50% off. I'm thinking it's closer to 20%. Even Larry no longer thinks Irvine is going to see the big hit it was supposed to see (which I feel is partly why he had to expand outside of Irvine where the bubble effect is more noticeable).
So what happened? I understand where Irvine should be based on fundamentals... but as we know, real estate occasionally doesn't follow fundamental rules or bubbles wouldn't happen. There was even a long thread regarding homes in Turtle Rock and where they should be fundamentally priced yet they are still closing $100k over that.
Now... maybe this should be posted in OCReader where most of the detractors are... the problem is they are never there... and I'll put this out there... I HIGHLY DOUBT THEY WOULD RESPOND BECAUSE THEY CAN'T.
Sure... prices are lower... I know this because I'm actively house hunting. But I also know that in the range of homes that I'm looking at... many are not significantly lower than they were in 2005/6. Yet, in South County cities, prices there are lower by about $200k for similar homes in Irvine... when during the bubble... they were not that different in pricing.
So... for those who thought Irvine prices were supposed to drop "just like everywhere else"... why is it still so un-fundamentally overpriced here? It can't be the schools (supposedly they are just as good everywhere else), it can't be the safety (more icicle murders masked as suicides happen in Irvine than any of us know) and it can't be the FCBs (because Irvine doesn't have any more of an ethnic population than it had in the 80s, although the Census and every strip mall says otherwise). So we are sitting in the present-day reality of Irvine price-stickyness... there is no more loose credit, no more tax incentives, no more bubble... can all those people who bashed my opinions explain what is keeping prices relatively high now?
irvinehomeshopper said:So buying is Irvine has it's risk because prices do not always go up. I got to think those affluent in laws and money laundering FCBs eventually will diminish. Then unicorn land will have to sync with realistic income and what a typical family could really afford without resorting to the weekend feast at the local Costcos.
Back when I joined the IHB in 2008, there were many discussions about what was going to happen to Irvine real estate prices once the bubble pops.
I've pretty much held to my contention that while prices will drop in Irvine, they won't drop as fast or as far as surrounding cities due to multiple reasons (such as my half-joking FCB Theory). I've said that in the forums, I've said that on the blog. Each time I've been met with quite a bit of criticism.
Flash forward to 2009/10... and the excuse from the other side was the government intervention and credits... and while I understand that will have some effect... I still don't understand how they can use that as an excuse since it seemingly slowed down the drop in Irvine but not in the surrounding cities. And... for the most part, for the price point that Irvine SFRs were at (especially in the New Home Collection), some credits were not even applicable.
It's now 2012. Some areas, prices could be close to 40% or more down... other's are 20%... others are only 5%. But if you average them all together by categories, areas, etc... by and large... I'm not sure that Irvine as a whole is at 1999 pricing... or over 50% off. I'm thinking it's closer to 20%. Even Larry no longer thinks Irvine is going to see the big hit it was supposed to see (which I feel is partly why he had to expand outside of Irvine where the bubble effect is more noticeable).
So what happened? I understand where Irvine should be based on fundamentals... but as we know, real estate occasionally doesn't follow fundamental rules or bubbles wouldn't happen. There was even a long thread regarding homes in Turtle Rock and where they should be fundamentally priced yet they are still closing $100k over that.
Now... maybe this should be posted in OCReader where most of the detractors are... the problem is they are never there... and I'll put this out there... I HIGHLY DOUBT THEY WOULD RESPOND BECAUSE THEY CAN'T.
Sure... prices are lower... I know this because I'm actively house hunting. But I also know that in the range of homes that I'm looking at... many are not significantly lower than they were in 2005/6. Yet, in South County cities, prices there are lower by about $200k for similar homes in Irvine... when during the bubble... they were not that different in pricing.
So... for those who thought Irvine prices were supposed to drop "just like everywhere else"... why is it still so un-fundamentally overpriced here? It can't be the schools (supposedly they are just as good everywhere else), it can't be the safety (more icicle murders masked as suicides happen in Irvine than any of us know) and it can't be the FCBs (because Irvine doesn't have any more of an ethnic population than it had in the 80s, although the Census and every strip mall says otherwise). So we are sitting in the present-day reality of Irvine price-stickyness... there is no more loose credit, no more tax incentives, no more bubble... can all those people who bashed my opinions explain what is keeping prices relatively high now?