Higher-income markets, such as New Jersey’s Morris and Bergen counties, will probably avoid the worst pain because there’s a shortage of homes and when distressed properties are listed, “the housing market will swallow them whole,” according to Jeffrey G. Otteau, president of Otteau Valuation Group Inc., in East Brunswick, New Jersey.
“In the employment-rich suburban submarkets, this will be much like the gulf oil spill,” Otteau said in an e-mail. “For the most part, it never happened. The foreclosure wave will be the same way.”
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Response by notadmin
over 13 years ago
Posts: 3835
Member since: Jul 2008
"Wendell and Margret Brady haven’t paid their mortgage in more than three years, withholding the money amid a foreclosure dispute on the couple’s 11-bedroom house in Morristown, New Jersey."
wow, it's great news for everybody that this charade doesn't go on forever. NYC metro area also got to freeze its REO pipeline for no reason, better to allow those who cannot pay to move on.
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Response by notadmin
over 13 years ago
Posts: 3835
Member since: Jul 2008
in a way, those of us that knew housing will suck for a decade or two have yet to play it optimally. we should purchase as much house as possible and don't make a single payment, living home payment free for at least 3 years. that's the biggest lesson from this bubble imho.
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Response by apt23
over 13 years ago
Posts: 2041
Member since: Jul 2009
By some estimates, the visible inventory of 2.4 million homes for sale nationwide is dwarfed by the hidden supply, which may number 5.7 million, according to a Morgan Stanley analysis.
Wow. And since so much of that shadow inventory in is in the Northeast, how could that not affect NYC prices.
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Response by marco_m
over 13 years ago
Posts: 2481
Member since: Dec 2008
weve been hearing the shadow inventory theory for quit a while and still nothing.
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Response by columbiacounty
over 13 years ago
Posts: 12708
Member since: Jan 2009
hey ... don't worry about it.
you're in great shape.
its only in the shadows.
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Response by huntersburg
over 13 years ago
Posts: 11329
Member since: Nov 2010
Do they have a Columbia County in New Jersey? What about in New Jersey?
From this article:
Higher-income markets, such as New Jersey’s Morris and Bergen counties, will probably avoid the worst pain because there’s a shortage of homes and when distressed properties are listed, “the housing market will swallow them whole,” according to Jeffrey G. Otteau, president of Otteau Valuation Group Inc., in East Brunswick, New Jersey.
“In the employment-rich suburban submarkets, this will be much like the gulf oil spill,” Otteau said in an e-mail. “For the most part, it never happened. The foreclosure wave will be the same way.”
"Wendell and Margret Brady haven’t paid their mortgage in more than three years, withholding the money amid a foreclosure dispute on the couple’s 11-bedroom house in Morristown, New Jersey."
wow, it's great news for everybody that this charade doesn't go on forever. NYC metro area also got to freeze its REO pipeline for no reason, better to allow those who cannot pay to move on.
in a way, those of us that knew housing will suck for a decade or two have yet to play it optimally. we should purchase as much house as possible and don't make a single payment, living home payment free for at least 3 years. that's the biggest lesson from this bubble imho.
By some estimates, the visible inventory of 2.4 million homes for sale nationwide is dwarfed by the hidden supply, which may number 5.7 million, according to a Morgan Stanley analysis.
Wow. And since so much of that shadow inventory in is in the Northeast, how could that not affect NYC prices.
weve been hearing the shadow inventory theory for quit a while and still nothing.
hey ... don't worry about it.
you're in great shape.
its only in the shadows.
Do they have a Columbia County in New Jersey? What about in New Jersey?
or Nevada