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United States IT

High Housing Prices In Tech Cities Are Now Raising Home Prices In Other States (bloombergquint.com) 253

Tech cities and their high housing prices are apparently now driving up home prices in other states. An anonymous reader quotes Bloomberg: For some Californians, the state's punishing housing costs, high taxes, and constant threat of natural disaster have all become too much... In the second quarter, only 26 percent of homebuyers in the state could afford to purchase a median-price single-family house, which was almost $600,000, according to the California Association of Realtors... They're making their escape to areas such as Boise, Phoenix, and Reno, Nevada, fueling some of the biggest home-price gains in the country... Almost 143,000 more people left the state than arrived from elsewhere in the U.S. in 2016....

Boise is becoming an alternative to traditional havens for Californians such as Portland and Seattle that have also gotten too pricey, says Glenn Kelman, chief executive officer of Redfin Inc., a national real estate brokerage that recently opened a Boise outpost. About 29 percent of the Idaho capital's home-listing views are from Californians, according to Realtor.com... In Nevada, where Californians make up the largest share of arrivals, prices jumped 13 percent in August, the biggest increase for any state, according to CoreLogic Inc. data. It was followed closely by Idaho, with a 12 percent gain...

[Boise]'s been particularly attractive to Californians, who accounted for 85 percent of net domestic immigration to Idaho, according to Realtor.com's analysis of 2016 Census data... The median existing-home price in Boise's home of Ada County was $299,950 last month -- up almost 18 percent from a year earlier, but still about half California's. The influx is great news for people who already own homes in the area, says Danielle Hale, chief economist for Realtor.com. "But if you're a local aspiring to homeownership, it feels very much that Californians are bringing high prices with them."

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High Housing Prices In Tech Cities Are Now Raising Home Prices In Other States

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  • by ZorinLynx ( 31751 ) on Saturday October 27, 2018 @06:47PM (#57546835) Homepage

    We need higher density and more housing. The only way to solve this problem is to increase the supply; the ONLY reason this problem exists is because of lack of housing in places people want to live.

    We need to rezone R-1 areas for multiple unit housing. R-1 zonings are a massively inefficient use of space and are part of the reason we have so much traffic and sprawl.

    We need to give the NIMBY types the finger and BUILD MORE HOUSING. Especially in the Bay Area. It's the only thing that will solve this; even if you were to regulate prices, it'll just turn the problem into "nobody can FIND any housing."

    • by b0s0z0ku ( 752509 ) on Saturday October 27, 2018 @06:56PM (#57546869)
      Or just raise interest rates to pull the rug from under over-inflated markets that are being misused as investment casinos. That and tax vacant property at 1000% of the rate if it's lived in or rented.
      • by mentil ( 1748130 )

        You'll find that the vacant properties are now occupied in name only (e.g. someone's 2nd home, lent to them at 0% interest rate), or rendered temporarily uninhabitable.

        Changing capital gains tax law to kill 'flipping' and make real estate a place to sleep instead of a place to make a fortune would be far more effective, even for occupied properties.

      • Or just raise interest rates

        An action that disproportionately affects the lower-middle class mortgage owners while doing very little to actually fix the housing problem.

    • Absolutly (Score:3, Informative)

      by skam240 ( 789197 )

      Mod up a hundred times.

      Unfortunately our states Leftist have forgotten that being a leftist means first, second, and third, looking out for those with less money.

      Developers are evil (never mind all these people's homes were built by them). California will always be an attractive place to live so building more homes won't do anything (never mind the laws of supply and demand). We can't build upwards because we have to protect our community! (never mind that your community is full of working class people who

      • Re:Absolutly (Score:5, Insightful)

        by superdave80 ( 1226592 ) on Saturday October 27, 2018 @07:48PM (#57547031)

        It's all rent control and low income housing which do nothing to solve our massive housing shortage and in some ways exacerbates the problem.

        Amen. I'm always amazed every time rent control is brought up as some type of 'solution' to a housing shortage. Number of new housing units created by rent control? Zero. Absolutely NO new housing gets created. And in fact, it TAKES housing units off the market, because it just makes an incentive for people to never move from their rent controlled unit, even when it would make sense...

        • Comment removed based on user account deletion
          • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

            There's only one real way to solve the housing problem: Repeal Prop 13. Pass a new law that gives a deep tax break for low-income residents only, and makes that tax break not limited to a specific parcel. Right now, the poor are trapped in their existing homes, because they can't afford higher taxes to move whenever their job changes. And even the middle class often choose to live farther away rather than pay thousands of dollars more in property taxes.

            By eliminating that problem, many people will try t

            • by mikael ( 484 )

              Proposition 13 was intended to make sure retirees wouldn't be price out of their homes once they had retired, due to the fact they had a fixed income.
              It also helps low income workers afford to live close to work since they couldn't afford homes otherwise they would end up living in coffin apartments.

              To me, the dynamics of property prices and commutes seem to be no different from stellar dynamics. There is the gravitational pressure of workers wanting to live as close to work and other amenities like good s

              • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

                by Anonymous Coward

                "Proposition 13 was intended to make sure retirees wouldn't be price out of their homes once they had retired, due to the fact they had a fixed income."
                Bullshit. Prop 13 was intended to reduce and then keep _Commercial_ Property Taxes low. Commercial Property may not change hands for decades, so those jerks like Chevron and Wells Fargo made out like bandits, still paying assessments based on 1978 values. (The SF Chron estimates that California is losing ~$9B in funding due to this chicanery every year.)
                Priv

            • by djinn6 ( 1868030 )

              I don't see how your solution differs from the current state of things. Pricing in places like SF is already absurd, but businesses still want to stay there.

            • by q4Fry ( 1322209 )

              To save future readers from a quick trip to Wikipedia, [wikipedia.org] Prop 13 appears to be

              (1) a limit on recurring taxation of real estate to 1% of the property's value and
              (2) a limit on the year-on-year increase of recurring real estate taxation to 2%, in order to prevent retired people from needing to move when their nest egg can't support the taxation on their escalating home values.

              • by dryeo ( 100693 )

                Around here, property taxes can be deferred until the retiree dies, moves into assisted living or such and the property sells for a fantastic amount. The only losers are the kids who don't get quite as high of an inheritance for being smart enough to be born in the right place. I feel so sad that some people might have to work more for a living instead of getting basically a lottery win.

              • Slight correction. It is a limit on the increase in assessment of value of the property for tax purposes by 2%. Which in effect means 2% increase in taxes, but the subtle difference comes into play when you sell, the new owner gets to pay the taxes on the full assessed value, the benefit of the tax limiting is NOT portable, one of the chief complaints about it. Seniors now do get some portability.
          • And the last time California even hinted that they wanted to implement rent control ...

            Several cities in California have rent control, including Berkeley (of course), San Francisco, and my fair city, San Jose.

            Rent control is, of course, stupid and counterproductive. It is about as effective as trying to control food prices by legalizing shoplifting.

            Nevertheless, it provides short term benefits to people with no long term stake in the community. Students in Berkeley vote for rent control to save money until they graduate, and then they leave town. They don't suffer from the urban decay and e

          • by mentil ( 1748130 )

            So the solution is to implement condo/house price controls in tandem with rent control? I see...

        • by skam240 ( 789197 )

          It also discourages the construction of new rental properties as areas with high rents typically have high land values as well. High rents and property values typically go hand in hand.

          Given this, why would anyone buy land to build on if they couldn't charge market rates for rent? It would take far too long to earn back from rent what they spent (let alone make a profit), particularly with property taxes added it.

          • by dryeo ( 100693 )

            How do the rent controls work there? Here, it just limits how fast you can jack up the rents to the rate of inflation + a couple of percent (actually it was just changed to the rate of inflation). You can start at any number you want and the same when changing tenants. There are also workarounds involving upgrades to the building that allow faster rent increases.

            • by skam240 ( 789197 )

              It takes on a lot of different forms https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wik... [wikipedia.org] . In any context I've heard of though it seems to do the opposite it terms of solving a housing shortage. It just eases the symptoms for a minority of people.

              Where I'm at it's still mostly being discussed as out of control housing costs only started less than a decade ago. I'm in Sonoma County about an hour North of SF. It's always been a bit expensive here because of the climate but SF's housing problems are now bleeding off and dramtic

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          Rent control does encourage more housing to be built. Without rent control you get a lot of expensive housing that often sits empty for a long time waiting for someone willing to pay those sky high rents. Happens a lot in London, all they build are luxury flats.

          With rent control there is an incentive to build more affordable homes rather than big luxury apartments or McMansions.

          The other thing rent control helps with is ensuring that there are a mixture of people. In some European cities there are laws mand

          • by skam240 ( 789197 )

            "Without rent control you get a lot of expensive housing that often sits empty for a long time waiting for someone willing to pay those sky high rents."

            You very clearly don't live in California. The sky high rents are due to a housing shortage. People are lining up to pay these rates because they need a place to live and like living around here. I know renters, when they have to move to a new home they have to move fast on deals like $2,500 for a small 3 bedroom single family house because that's a really g

        • by Uberbah ( 647458 )

          I'm always amazed every time rent control is brought up as some type of 'solution' to a housing shortage. Number of new housing units created by rent control? Zero. Absolutely NO new housing gets created.

          I'm amazed you think rent control is supposed to create new housing directly. It's direct purpose is to keep people from being forced to move because they can't afford exploding rents while their paycheck stagnates. It's to prevent gentrification.

          Besides, how are bourgeois shitbags going to get their latt

      • by Uberbah ( 647458 )

        Unfortunately our states Leftist have forgotten that being a leftist means first, second, and third, looking out for those with less money.

        Unfortunately you wouldn't know a leftist if the entire Soviet Army bit you on the ass. Democrats dominate the state government in California - but they're just another party of right-wing asshole capitalists.

    • We need higher density and more housing. The only way to solve this problem is to increase the supply; the ONLY reason this problem exists is because of lack of housing in places people want to live.

      Indeed. Lack of housing in the most productive cities is a major drag on the economy, and also a major cause of inequality [economist.com].

      Lower income people are locked out of the cities with the best job opportunities and best pay. Meanwhile, soaring property values enrich the people who are already well off. Liberal NIMBYism may be responsible for even more of the growth in inequality than regressive conservative tax "reform".

      • Higher-density can help... but only to an extent.

        If you're talking about single-family homes on large lots vs 16-28 foot townhomes of comparable size, yes... it might increase availability and reduce costs.

        If you're talking about 50+ story skyscrapers, no... it won't. Skyscrapers are SO expensive to build (per square foot of habitable dwelling), the economics just aren't there to build anything less than luxury condos for the ultra-rich. If the developer is ALREADY spending $300/sf, adding $200/sf for prem

        • . It's the same reason why London's streets are a medieval rat's nest, even in areas that were bombed into oblivion by the Luftwaffe during WWII

          It's the same reason they're a medieval rats nest after the entire city burned down in 1666. The government started planning a new city with wide, straight roads but the populace rushed back and started to rebuild so they didn't lose their land. It was rebuilt along exactly the same lines as beforeb of course.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          High density housing brings social problems too.

          A better option is to build new towns and cities in underpopulated areas, and provide incentives for jobs to be located there, and decent public transport links.

          Japan did that recently. A new train line (the Tsukuba Express) was build, with new towns all along it. Each down has decent facilities on its own, plus the trains offer fast commuter access to central Tokyo. Office space is available too, attractively priced to help companies set up outside central To

      • NIMBYism is quite bipartisan. My hometown in California is very conservative (largely a byproduct of many of them coming from the defense industry and working for Hughes, Lockheed, Boeing, etc.). These people have very nice houses, some are retired, and they very much vote against any new housing.

        And as long as people can leverage their house for money, this is going to be a problem. You can see it here in these very comments, people who want to use houses as investment vehicles (flipping, asset store, HELO

    • by luther349 ( 645380 ) on Saturday October 27, 2018 @07:39PM (#57546983)
      you have any idea how many people live in the vans or rvs in that area because they cant afford or find housing. so lack of housing is a thing rite now. the city government stole billions that was giving them to build more housing. they have not green lit any new buildings in like 10 years. in short the bay area did it to themselves and are crying about it.
    • There is also the opposite, BETTER solution: Stop encouraging more people to be born and immigrating here. You can't keep building more homes forever. Even if you can, there are lots of other resources that are becoming scares. Water. Transportation (just try driving around almost any area of California now days). I know that older people want more younger people so that their Social Security and pension ponzi schemes will be solvent, but they are just sticking us (and future generations) with the bil
      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • There is also the opposite, BETTER solution: Stop encouraging more people to be born and immigrating here.

        That is a terrible idea. Americans are the most productive and innovative people in the world, and immigrants are able to unleash innovations, energy, and enterprise that were stifled in their homeland. We need more Americans, not fewer.

      • by dryeo ( 100693 )

        The whole system depends on growth. Businesses need an expanding consumer base, and an expanding labour force to keep wages low. Then there's the problem of the aging population. If the majority of the population is retired, who is going to do the work that needs doing, little well the work that would be nice to happen.

    • by mikael ( 484 )

      Families don't want to live in high rise blocks. What usually happens is that the more high-rise apartments you build, the more single couples you attract who then start looking for a "icing cake" home or a McMansion.

      But there is a great waste of space where there are single story strip malls. In Europe and Canada you will find that they will build shopping malls next to Metro stations, and apartment/office blocks above those. Even strip malls will have three or more levels of apartments above them. Then yo

      • by skam240 ( 789197 )

        Many families would love to live in high rise blocks in California. Working class people in silicon valley are living multiple families per single family home. Meanwhile, small single family homes are going for over a million there. How would either of those be better than an affordable high rise for a family?

        Most of the world's major first world cities have plenty of families in high rise housing. I think you're just expressing your own personal bias against such living situations.

        You do certainly have a p

      • Families don't want to live in high rise blocks.

        Bullcrap. If nobody wanted it, then governments wouldn't have pass laws to block it from happening.

        There is enormous demand for housing in city centers. In downtown San Francisco, even studio apartments can go for over $1M. Yet it is nearly impossible to build anything.

      • by Ichijo ( 607641 )

        Families don't want to live in high rise blocks.

        Actually they do. Proof of the fact is that city governments must transfer a lot of wealth from high rises to single-family homes [streetsblog.org] just to get people to live in the suburbs.

    • one of the dirty secrets of the housing market is that the government was paying for the hard party (prepping the land, grading it, running water, power and telecom lines, etc, etc). It was basically a trillion dollar subsidy program for home builders who reaped the rewards of cheap land they could throw a frame up on and sell for 5x times profit.

      That was all well and good until "Austerity" kicked in. We kept cutting taxes on the wealthy until we had to start cutting programs, and infrastructure spendin
    • by mysidia ( 191772 )

      the ONLY reason this problem exists is because of lack of housing in places people want to live.

      What "problem"? Prices are set by the market. They are what they are. If you don't like them, then find a competing option instead of buying in -- which is what some people are doing.

      Naw.... Limited supply AND demand exists AND people are willing to pay up for it. When one talks about housing -- the level of density is a fundamental PART of the product, so fewer people would be interested in a dens

    • > We need higher density and more housing.

      Nah. You just need to move to a saner part of the country.

      NIMBY has right to NIMBY.
    • What about the existing residents who paid good money to live in a less crowded area? Are you going to reimburse them for dumping huge condos and/or apartment building right next to their properties?
  • by nehumanuscrede ( 624750 ) on Saturday October 27, 2018 @07:24PM (#57546931)

    Long term residents of CA who purchased their homes long ago at a reasonable price can now sell said home for ludicrous amounts of money.

    This allows them to move out of State and easily pay cash ( far in excess of the asking price ) for homes where home prices haven't gone full stupid yet.

    As the number of homes in an area start selling for insane amounts of money, it drives the asking prices up for all the homes in the area.
    It also raises your tax appraisal values so you get to pay more in property taxes every year. Pretty soon, no one local can afford housing in the
    area because the asking prices and taxes are so inflated.

    Texas median household income is around the ~$60k mark yet, there is a new subdivision full of homes nearby that -start- at $500k.

    It's insanity.

    ** The amusing part is watching folks move into one of these $500k+ homes only to learn that Texas property taxes are uncapped and can
    increase by 10% every year. The State loves to advertise that we have no State Tax, but those property taxes more than make up for it. **

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by b0s0z0ku ( 752509 )
      High property taxes are WORSE than high income tax, since they're not tied to income. Lose your job, and at least you won't be paying much income tax. But you will be paying property tax regardless. The only good thing about this mess is that TX has reasonably strong protections against foreclosure of a primary residence. (Or maybe had, IDK about recent law changes.)
      • by nehumanuscrede ( 624750 ) on Saturday October 27, 2018 @08:48PM (#57547233)

        I agree with you.

        At least a State Income Tax is fixed to your income. The more you make, the more you're taxed.
        Whereas property taxes never seem to quit going up.

        Becomes a problem when you finally get to quit working and retire. That home you paid $75k for
        forty years ago is now tax appraised at $300k ( or more depending on where you live ).

        Gets rather tough to keep paying more and more in property taxes every year once you quit working.

        • by djinn6 ( 1868030 )

          On the other hand, now that you're retired, you can move somewhere even cheaper.

        • At least a State Income Tax is fixed to your income. The more you make, the more you're taxed

          At least until the point you need to hire an accountant and then the more you make the less tex you pay.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by Ichijo ( 607641 )
        Agreed. See the discussion above on land value taxes for a better solution.
    • with mixed results. He got a nice house... that he lost in the crash. His lower wages in the new state made it hard to keep even the relatively modest home he bought. If the economy had held out another few years he would have been Ok, but he was forced into retirement and lost it with the crash.
    • by novakyu ( 636495 )

      Yap. But can you blame us Californians for thinking that Prop 13 exists for every state? I mean, c'mon!

  • But remember - at the end of the day, you’ll be living in Boise.

    Parts of Idaho are quite lovely... but there’s also Boise.

  • Just wait for the Great AI Crash. AI co's are overvalued per actual revenue. Either they'll make bigass breakthroughs to get more revenue, or there's a reality crash coming.

  • Listening to a radio show for homeowners this morning, they were spouting off about climbing home prices and rising interest rates and isn't that terrible that it's depressing the market. What they were going for is why developers and builders aren't building what they consider affordable housing. Why would they? They have a piece of land of a fixed size and the local government dictates how many homes can be built on it. The builder isn't going to build 100 low-end homes when they can build 100 more ex

  • Companies now swoop down on Silicon Valley, buy houses, and flip them for a profit. This is not how you build communities!

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