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Tracking foreclosures in: Highland Park

April 30, 2008 |  4:34 pm

JjceawncI thought I'd give Redfin's new foreclosure listings database a spin, so I plugged in the ZIP for Highland Park (90042) to see what would pop up. It's good stuff — it shows six bank-owned properties, and the information on each listing is pretty extensive, especially for a free, no-registration service. Highlights:

4210 Via Arbolada #216
Last sale: June 2006, $460K.
Now listed: $329,900

6420 La Riba Way
Last sale: Oct. 2004, $325K
Now listed: $285K

6140 Mesa
Last sale: Sept. 2006, $525K
Now listed: $309K

719 Milo Terrace
Last sale: 1995, $160K
Now listed: $380K

5105 Stratford
Last sale: 2001, $170K
Now listed: $429,900

Put me down as a satisfied user. Would like to hear your thoughts on this one, and what other searches you like, and whether you have to pay for them or not.
Photo Credit: Street scene in Highland Park, L.A.Times


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http://www.latimes.com/news/local/
la-050108-me-gangs-g,0,5593375.graphic

This is a map of the areas which LAPD determined are the gang-infested zones of LA. Notice all the colored areas ringing downtown, such as Boyle hts, east LA, aScentral, rampart, northest LA including glassel, highland park, mt washington area, ect.

The inner ring crapped out districts ringing dwtn are some of the slummiest decayed 3rd-4th world tenement stews in America. And it gets better. The city and state are flat broke and cannot fund gang intervention programs, which means its' open season in LA for gangsta predators.

Good luck in highland park, which is right at the margin, if not within the colored targeted gang -infestation zone.
With the current nasty recession which is getting worse by the minite there will be property thefts galore, ecpecially auto thefts, muggings, home breakins burglaries, business robberies , ect.

I have experience with this stuff and know the streets. Know the gangbangers as well.

Nothing will prevent inner LA from re-ghettoizing, or degentrifying. 2 more years of max ghetto crime waves in the inner ring. Maybe even a riot or two for extra effect.

LA city and it's leaders are pure BS sham, only out for themselves and make headlines. LA is a nasty corrupt stew: better flee out of this third- world tijuana banana-tropolis

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-
gangs1-2008may01,0,1742910.story

Cal, check with all the renters. i'm sure they're rolling in dough now. it's not like their rents are rising or anything. i bet they'd take some off your hands.

These posts are GREAT!!! I don’t know when the bottom will hit. But I’m pretty certain that when it does hit, the bitter renters on this blog will miss it because of their hubris of how the bottom is “not low enough damn it!.” Then they’ll still be bitter renters that not only missed the run up of prices, but also the bottom. Now THAT would be funny! And it couldn't happen to a nicer group of people.

The Cal life size posters have been wildly popular with renters for some years now. Unfortunately this has given rise to the "Cal Clause" in standard leasing agreements banning life size posters of me.

leasing agreements with clauses? even more reason to own your own house.

and i couldn't agree with you more, puckhead. all i see around here is self-righteous anger directed at the flippers, the buyers, the sellers, the lenders, the government, even some couple in culver city looking to remodel their kitchen -- no one is spared! -- with all these complaints about everyone's unreasonable sense of entitlement.

but what of the entitlement inherit in screaming about prices HAVING to come down 60%, that santa monica beach house HAVING to drop $300K before it's worth buying, the government bailout that they're too responsible to qualify for. oh, the unfairness of life!! it saddens me so.

JK, Milla does *not* want to be left alone. She's enjoys being as much of a fixture as [fill in name of longtime lalandian here]. I'm worried though -- If we have the blog party at her house, she and Cal might get into some heavy kanoodling, and that could produce a child that someday would lead us into economic damnation while simultaneously running regression analysis on the sins that get us there.

In the end, per Keynes, we're all dead. Some of us just argue a lot more along the way. Ay dios mio.

Milla:"leasing agreements with clauses? even more reason to own your own house. "

Right, because everyone knows when you buy a house you don't sign a bunch of paperwork or anything.

Milla and Puckhead, while I don't own, I also don't consider myself a bitter renter. There was a time, around 2004-2005 when I was confused and bewildered about real estate prices and how my friends could possibly afford it, but not bitter towards the actual buyers, just towards the market. But your dismissal of the facts posted by all of the fairly thoughtful posters on this site seems to me to be an indulgence in self-justification on your point in order to avoid the cognitive dissonance that would set in if you actually realized that you purchased a small house in a less-than-average neighborhood for almost 400k. 10 years ago, you could have bought a house in the Hollywood Hills for that amount. And we are quickly getting back to pre-2000 prices. Incomes haven't increased in those 10 years. More people aren't making more money then they were then. Why should housing have tripled?

We housing bears look at history, data, the facts to come up with projections, while you simply dismiss them as the sour grapes of the plebian class of renters. That saddens me so.

Many of the bitter renters were owners at one time. They sold near the peak. They "shorted' the market with their primary residence. Talk about greed. They don't need to blame the flippers and speculators. All they have to do is look in the mirror.

Hey, Ellie at Redfin here. Glad you all like the new foreclosure data!

Just wanted to clarify that the foreclosures we show on our site exclude pre-foreclosures, where the owner is late on payments but is not yet in foreclosure. We did that because we don't believe those homes are really for sale, at least not yet. If you know of foreclosures in your neighborhood, that may be why they aren't showing up on Redfin. We also don't include auctions, but we might in the future.

To Peter M. I have news for you. Gangs are everywhere, not just in Los Angeles. There are Asian gangs, Russian gangs, even gangs of white supremists. They are not all gangs of blacks & hispanics.
I'm well aware of which neighborhoods close to downtown LA are entrenched. I disagree with your theory that gangs & a recession will further erode or degentrify the areas that have made significant progress over the past decade. Quite the contrary. Rising costs will force people away from the suburbs. High gasoline prices will have the worst effect on the bedroom communities like Santa Clarita & the Inland Empire, where it will no longer be economically feasible to commute such long distances. Look around. There are mixed use developments popping up all over Los Angeles in the areas close to public transportation. There's new apartments/condos being built in Hollywood near the red Line. Pasadena has opened similiar developments near the Gold Line. Today the Americana in Glendale opens, just down the road from the metro line. above the shops are condo's and apartments.

I grew up in NYC. I saw the exact same thing happen there in the late 1970's. The country was in a worse recession. Gas prices were high. regardless, property values skyrocketed in Manhattan, Queens & Brooklyn. They've never come down. Despite the urban blight in my former borough of Queens, due to it's close proximity to Manhattan Jobs, property there is still expensive. It's supply & demand. More & more people move to LA everyday. They have to live somewhere.

Shockg,

I don’t believe for a second that the bitter renters here sold at the peak. If they did, they should pat themselves on the back for making a good call instead of flaming other posters about losing their life savings and flaming others about living in a gang infested ghetto. How about a nice, “good luck with your purchase” post. Look, I use to work and play in the so called “Wall St Casino” and I ran across so many “bitter” people. People were bitter that the market went up and they were not on the train. Then the market went down and they were bitter that the economy was not good but gleeful that many people lost money. But you know what cracked me up about these bitter people? THEY DIDN’T DO A DAMN THING EXCEPT BEING BITTER!!! If they thought the market was overbought, they wouldn’t short it, they just complained. If they thought the market was oversold, they wouldn’t buy, they just complained while all the time saying that so and so was getting what they deserved. Amazing really. Just bitter people that won’t do crap except complain. I’ll take people like Mila anyday who rightfully or wrongfully made a call and actually did something except of just bitching all the time.

Shockg,

I don’t believe for a second that the bitter renters here sold at the peak. If they did, they should pat themselves on the back for making a good call instead of flaming other posters about losing their life savings and flaming others about living in a gang infested ghetto. How about a nice, “good luck with your purchase” post. Look, I use to work and play in the so called “Wall St Casino” and I ran across so many “bitter” people. People were bitter that the market went up and they were not on the train. Then the market went down and they were bitter that the economy was not good but gleeful that many people lost money. But you know what cracked me up about these bitter people? THEY DIDN’T DO A DAMN THING EXCEPT BEING BITTER!!! If they thought the market was overbought, they wouldn’t short it, they just complained. If they thought the market was oversold, they wouldn’t buy, they just complained while all the time saying that so and so was getting what they deserved. Amazing really. Just bitter people that won’t do crap except complain. I’ll take people like Mila anyday who rightfully or wrongfully made a call and actually did something except of just bitching all the time.

Longtime: there is no question that house prices are falling and will continue to fall. the enduring question of this blog is, of course, about how low prices will go, and we can debate that ad infinitum without any one person being right -- it's just too soon to tell.

the perspective that people like puckhead and myself bring to the discussion as folks who were/are out there is that it's not as dismal as your median data -- which is being skewed by the low end -- would have you believe. numerous times i was outbid by other buyers on good houses, which are still holding their value (somewhat).

will it be a good time to buy in a year from now? of course, but that doesn't mean there aren't good bargains to be found now. however anyone times the market is a personal choice. for me, it made sense as a single person who needed more write-offs to take the plunge now so i could enjoy the tax benefits of homeownership for the next few years, even though my house will likely lose value. for my situation, that made the most financial sense. for others, maybe not.

let me go on the record to say i don't think all renters are bitter. i know plenty of them, and i don't begrudge them or you for renting in a market when prices are falling. but i have faith that those prices will rebound as they have countless times before, which is why i became a buyer.

p.s. median incomes have increased in the past 10 years along with home prices, food prices, gas prices, etc.

speedie: YES! one of the reasons i chose to move to highland park, beyond just its affordability, was its proximity to the gold line. i work downtown and have to pay a monthly fee just to park at my job. i can't wait to start taking the train to work to save on gas, parking and car repairs.

as long as i've lived here (since i was 3), all i've heard about is how badly LA needs a metro. now it's finally happening.

MIlla, adjusted for inflation, median incomes have not increased. In 1999, the median household income for LA was $42,189, in 2004, it was $43,518. Not much different. If you adjust for inflation, median incomes across the country have basically been stagnant since the 1980's. The only significant increases have come at the very top of the income spectrum. I'm not trying to be overly critical of your decision to buy a house, but unfortunately you spout out facts and reasoning that doesn't make sense, opening yourself up to this type of criticism.

However, I sincerely hope you are happy in you home, as I one day hope to be happy in a home of my own. Just at about a 50% discount from what you paid.

To "Long Time Listener": When you finally buy a house (which probably will never happen; you'll be waiting for prices to keep dropping) I hope you'll be as brave as Milla and sign your real name and address, so we can make comments on what a wise or unwise decision you made.

LA Land Blog watcher, will do. But rest assured, I won't buy if I don't think its in my long term interest, even if prices don't keep dropping. I haven't bought into the hype that owning a home is the key to wealth, especially at these prices. The key to wealth is maximizing return on investment. If you think of owning a home as an investment, well, you are not very smart, because unless you time the market extremely well (as many people did the last few years) historical returns over the past two centuries on housing is about equal to the rate of inflation.

I think of a home as a place for my family, a roof over our heads. If its advantageous to own, then I'll buy. But when I can rent what people think is a million dollar house for 3500 in West LA, obviously renting is a much smarter choice. No reason to spend over 50% of my take home on a house I can rent and spend a much smaller percentage. That spread is also why I believe housing prices in LA have a long way down yet to go.

But thanks for coming to Milla's defense. I was just pointing out some statistics, you can keep up with the rhetoric, because that's about all the housing bulls have at this point.

Milla,
Incomes have increased at the rate of inflation. That means that house prices should have increased by the same rate of inflation. The thing that distorted that was record low interest rates and record crazy mortgage products. Since these crazy mortgage products are gone, you take away half of the buyers. Now, interest rates are just rising, the fed can't do sh** to stop that. They only have 2% left in the tank, and any lowering will push inflation high and long term mortgage rate high.
Also, any major bad news for stock market, and the fed is really running on fumes now....there is no gas in the tank...beware....

Plus LA Land Blog watcher, Milla never gave her address here so why you expect long time listener to do so. Although using public records you can find her exact address, that is none of you business.

thank you kindly, blog watcher. it's good to see that nice folks read this blog, too.

and reread your initial comment, Longtime. there was no mention of inflation, only the erroneous comment that median incomes haven't increased in 10 years, which is absurd. also absurd is your assertion that my reasoning to buy myself a house must be wrong just because you disagree with it for your personal situation. that's pretty short-sided.

as you said, homes are for shelter and security, not an investment. i agree with that, which is why i decided to buy now instead of waiting for some unknowable bottom to occur. when you make it entirely about money, you can disagree, but as i've said numerous times here, it's not strictly about money for me. prices may fall now but they will rise again. in the meantime, i will enjoy my home.

Can everyone just please stop making all of these idiotic generalizations about others, particularly "bitter renters"?

It's really tiring have to wade through these posts with nothing really worthwhile to say. Yeah that's directed at you shockg and puckhead... always the same old tired attacks aimed at "bitter renters". Talk about echo chambers, sheesh. So just stop the stupidity and grow up, okay?

"We housing bears look at history, data, the facts to come up with projections, while you simply dismiss them as the sour grapes of the plebian class of renters."
Well said, Long time listener. Thanks.

To Long Time Listener and Laker: Milla found and bought her key to happiness (and eventual wealth) and she's fine and happy in her new home. "Listener", I'm not full of rhetoric, you are, so get over your bad self. Laker - if you read all the blogs, you don't need public records, if you get my drift. Get over yourself also.

Question: anyone see the return of "rooming houses" yet? Any old timers know if these enjoyed any special distinction zoning-wise, or were they just regular houses?

I remember seeing an online rental listing in the valley. Someone had built a large new gated house and it was advertised as having 12 bedrooms, each with its own bathroom -- $1,000 to rent. I wonder if it was built ahead of time as a rooming house or maybe it was set up with some weird allowance for senior care, or perhaps meant to serve as an inexpensive way to house porn actors. What's the deal?

While I applaud Redfin for innovating in this space, please don't think this is anything close to a complete view of current foreclosure activity. These are just listings of bank owned properties pulled from the MLS or bank websites. It does not include bank owned properties that are not yet listed, or properties that are still in foreclosure.

Sean

 


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