Two-Year Appreciation Rankings

Written by Jim the Realtor

March 8, 2022

Sure all the California-feeder towns have risen 40% to 50%, but look at those price points!  You don’t see any other city on this list with home prices as high as ours.

Of all the areas in the country, San Diego has to be one of the best places to live – and the affluent who can live anywhere have to be considering San Diego as one of their top choices.

But nobody wants to leave!  We are currently offering millions of dollars to long-time homeowners to get them to move, and it’s not working! The supply and demand has never been so out of balance.

Eventually, we could have the highest home prices in the country!

3 Comments

  1. Joe

    COVID-19 Pandemic has given people around the country an opportunity to evaluate what they value most in life. The Great Resignation and Work from Home have been significant outcomes during this time. Home price appreciation and lack of inventory in desirable areas are also signs that people value more than ever where they live and stability during uncertain times. When you add in low interest rates, all-time highs in stock market, high inflation concerns, etc. you know why prices have risen and will continue to rise in coastal SD county.

  2. Rob_Dawg

    Tampa?!? Uggg.

    Then again they didn’t just pass a $160b transit program with no way to fund it.

  3. Jim the Realtor

    Of the 100 wealthiest people in America, 26 live in California.

    That’s more than any other state, and not simply a byproduct of California’s large population. If the country’s 100 top billionaires were evenly distributed, we would expect just 12 of them to reside here.

    Yes, this is largely because of Silicon Valley. But it’s also a reflection of the fact that California has the fifth-largest economy in the world, said Richard Walker, an emeritus professor at U.C. Berkeley who studies economic geography.

    “California has been the main engine for American growth for the last 50 years,” Walker told me. “This is not sufficiently acknowledged — how immense the California economy is.”

    Now on to the good stuff. There are 724 billionaires in the United States, and California is home to 189 — roughly a quarter of the total, according to Forbes.

    The state’s “open, experimental culture” has long attracted entrepreneurs, Walker said. That’s contributed to the movie and aerospace industries flourishing here, and, of course, the tech industry.

    Forty-four percent of California’s billionaires made their fortunes in tech, followed by 23 percent in finance and 7 percent in real estate, according to Forbes.

    The three richest Californians are tech titans: The Facebook creator Mark Zuckerberg and the Google co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin.

    Zuckerberg invented Facebook while a student at Harvard, but then “he moves to Silicon Valley because that’s where the action is,” Walker told me. “That’s been going on for two, three, four generations now — you come to Silicon Valley if you’re in tech.”

    Silicon Valley’s tendency to mint billionaires has led to a startling trend: Of the 26 Californians who rank among America’s 100 richest people, 19 live in the Bay Area.

    (The wealthiest person in Southern California is Donald Bren, America’s richest real estate baron.)

    Perhaps you’re wondering about Elon Musk, who relocated Tesla headquarters to Texas, or Oracle’s Larry Ellison, who moved to Hawaii. But it turns out they’re outliers.

    Thirty-five people made California’s billionaire list for the first time in 2021, Forbes reported, and more than half of them had the tech industry to thank. California still has more billionaires than any other state; New York is second with 126.

    Adam Sterling, executive director for the Berkeley Center for Law and Business, said that people who’ve made their fortunes in California prefer to stay here, close to their professional and personal communities. The high cost of living and higher taxes probably aren’t much of a deterrent if you’re a billionaire, he said.

    Plus, the cachet of a California billionaire — think a wealthy techie in a hoodie — may not translate in a place like New York, where the rich are more likely to have inherited their wealth.

    “There’s a lot of stickiness in California,” Sterling told me. “This is where your billionaire community is.”

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Jim Klinge
Klinge Realty Group

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