BoxheadTim said:docwyte said:Sure I do. I just don't have the money to execute right now. If you do, buy in San Francisco (almost anywhere in the city), Boulder Colorado (City has a no growth law in place) and the beach communities in San Diego. So La Jolla, Del Mar, Cardiff by the Sea, etc.
When the real estate market crashed, those areas sagged a percentage point or so. Then kept on blasting through the roof as things recovered.
If I were in the market for an investment property, I would not buy in San Francisco right now. It's a "past performance is no guarantee of future performance" thing - real estate there has had a massive runup in the last few years that looks awfully like the dot-com boom to me. Silly Valley and SF is a boom/bust cycle place and I don't see that boom going on for that much longer.
Companies have started relocating from the Bay, or didn't relocate to the Bay (which used to be a major requirement to get VC funding and to an extent, still is) in the first place.
Oh, and they've had a massive condo building boom with a lot of that inventory schedule to come on the market in the next couple of years. That should ease some of the supply pressures.
There are two approaches to investing, stocks or real estate
one is called market timing, where you try to time the market. The other is called dollar cost averaging. Where you buy steadily.
Most experts report that market timing attempts tend not to be as rewarding as dollar cost averaging.
Im inclined to agree with dollar cost averaging, except wow is it ever sweet when you can buy in a down market and sell at the peak.