first of all, how DARE anyone suggest i enjoy wearing reyn spooner shirts, thanks for the pic ISB. Relationship you specifically have a question on, foreclosed peeps becoming renters is dubious. I doubt any of these foreclsed on people will be able to qualify for an IAC apt due to low credit scores, but i have heard that landlords are lowering their standards.
Eva, i wish i had an online buddy like you, that's willing to stand by their virtual man in the face of lies and sophomoric conclusions. I have noticed how territorial a group of the posters on this website are.
Speaking of sophomoric conclusions, blt,you can't compare the decline of the for-sale housing market to a future decline in the for-rent. As nude pointed out, apartments are tied to wages and employment not to the availability of credit. Furthermore, as nude also mentions, all the vacant for sale housing on the market will not turn to rents even at the REO price, they don't cashflow still, ave homeprice will need to be at $300K. Individual underwater owners attempting to flip aren't prepared to become prop managers neither are banks who would be the worst of all landlords. Tough to back up the comment that that IAC rentals are 20% over market given that there at least several other apartment communities (camden, avalon) in irvine are priced higher than IAC and, not to mention the fact that IAC is the market.
"So lets take a hypothetical situation. As housing prices in Irvine continue to decrease. Lets just take a flyer at another 25% so now we have about a 40% decrease from lets say the 2006 peak. And thats about when I started my lease. Again lets say now we have a Japan Like flattening of housing that sees prices slide for several years. So other Rentals that are not IAC could possibly be 30-40% from market. Do you think the law of supply and demand could make IAC change its policy when the vacancy rates start to move up and effect cash flow because you could get a non IAC place for 30-40% less?"
Did you even read over this paragraph? How does this make sense? "Japan Like"? Why not just say a "lets say we have decreasing home values for several years" and not try to prove you do have a degree from ITT Tech?