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Who Will Buy Houses To Sustain the Housing Price Recovery?


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2014 Mar 20, 5:47am   20,293 views  64 comments

by smaulgld   ➕follow (4)   💰tip   ignore  

http://smaulgld.com/will-buy-homes-support-housing-recovery/

Blackstone has cut its home buying binge by 70% as home prices and mortgage rates have surged. The article also noted that American Homes 4 Rent,Colony Financial Inc. and American Residential Properties Inc. have also slowed their house acquisitions significantly. These companies will need to focus on improving the vacancy rates on the tens of thousands of homes that they bought and securitizing their rental income streams.

#housing

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19   corntrollio   2014 Mar 20, 7:57am  

jojo says

It's official: CalPERS loses $500 million on New York apartment deal

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/money_co/2010/01/money-cocalpers-loses-500-million-on-new-york-apartment-deal.html

Yes, I've mentioned Stuyvesant Town before -- one of greatest examples of a business walking away as a good business decision, but if you're an individual home owner and do this, somehow it becomes a moral issue to some people:

http://patrick.net/?p=1237559&c=1047837#comment-1047837

20   smaulgld   2014 Mar 20, 8:07am  

corntrollio says

jojo says

http://www.bloomberg.com/infographics/2013-12-20/blackstones-big-bet-on-rental-homes.html

Wow, people are accepting 3.8% on garbage (the F tranche). I'm assuming they found some nice Muppets for this one.

still better than the bank :-(

21   smaulgld   2014 Mar 20, 8:07am  

APOCALYPSEFUCKisShostikovitch says

Gay Chindian billionaires will end up at house auctions in free fire fights with gay platinum-shitting quadrillionaires from outer space and anyone not in this market today will be eaten alive by the GP-SQ pupas that they barph up to reproduce.

both of them?

22   corntrollio   2014 Mar 20, 8:08am  

smaulgld says

still better than the bank :-(

Yes, but at what risk? You can't analyze interest rate in a bubble. You have to compare it to the risk-free rate and other available investments.

It's stupid to take this rental home security in the F tranche, when there are other options that likely have lower risk and other options that better compensate you for the actual risk you're taking.

23   smaulgld   2014 Mar 20, 8:14am  

corntrollio says

It's stupid to take this rental home security in the F tranche, when there are other options that likely have lower risk and other options that better compensate you for the actual risk you're taking.

Yep when rates are artificially low people make bad decisions
http://smaulgld.com/the-dark-side-of-artificially-low-interest-rates/

26   corntrollio   2014 Mar 20, 9:10am  

jojo says

I've seen people say its because journalists are homeowners, the media owners like GE have a vested interest , etc. Any ideas?

I've mentioned this before -- GE no longer owns any piece of NBC:

http://patrick.net/?p=1238667&c=1056593#comment-1056593

27   smaulgld   2014 Mar 20, 9:13am  

jojo says

I've seen people say its because journalists are homeowners, the media owners like GE have a vested interest , etc. Any ideas?

The paid media no longer does real investigative journalism. Only the alternative media examines the way things are-and that gets labelled as "conspiracy theorizing"

28   corntrollio   2014 Mar 20, 9:20am  

smaulgld says

The paid media no longer does real investigative journalism.

Agree, there was a point when the media used to analyze things for the truth. Now it's he said/she said, and they report them at face value, even though the reports are full of shit. No critical analysis by these guys whatsoever. Cable news is such a cesspool and has dragged everything else down with it.

29   smaulgld   2014 Mar 20, 9:46am  

corntrollio says

No critical analysis by these guys whatsoever.

name calling, hyperbole, distraction- and now we break for an important story about Justin Beavers' DUI

30   Strategist   2014 Mar 20, 10:49am  

jojo says

smaulgld says

Call it Crazy says

Won't be First Time Home Buyers....

Was the topic of the very first smualgld.com post in april 2013

http://smaulgld.com/student-loans-and-unemployment-are-holding-back-the-economy-and-real-estate-market/

good headline:

"What’s the difference between a high school graduate and a college graduate? About $50,000 in debt."

College grads make more money. That is good debt.

31   New Renter   2014 Mar 20, 11:40am  

Strategist says

jojo says

smaulgld says

Call it Crazy says

Won't be First Time Home Buyers....

Was the topic of the very first smualgld.com post in april 2013

http://smaulgld.com/student-loans-and-unemployment-are-holding-back-the-economy-and-real-estate-market/

good headline:

"What’s the difference between a high school graduate and a college graduate? About $50,000 in debt."

College grads make more money. That is good debt.

Well that depends a lot on what major and field you are talking about doesn't it?

If a degree costs $100,000 but the graduate can only hope to earn and extra $5000k/yr is that worth it? Especially when the wages lost during the college years and interest on the loans are factored in?

Or worse what happens when the graduate finds their employment prospects are no better than someone with a high school degree? Lots of debt to pay off and it just grows in deferment.

32   Strategist   2014 Mar 20, 12:51pm  

Call it Crazy says

Strategist says

College grads make more money. That is good debt.

New Renter says

Well that depends a lot on what major and field you are talking about doesn't it?

If a degree costs $100,000 but the graduate can only hope to earn and extra $5000k/yr is that worth it? Especially when the wages lost during the college years and interest on the loans are factored in?

Or worse what happens when the graduate finds their employment prospects are no better than someone with a high school degree? Lots of debt to pay off and it just grows in deferment.

I was going to post that, but that sums it up pretty well....

I agree, in a way, with both of you. If you are gonna take on heavy debt for an education that just pays a little bit more, what use is it?
I have noticed, people with higher education make better financial decisions. It's not always what you make, but how much you keep. That has value too.

33   Analyzer   2014 Mar 20, 2:13pm  

You have not heard adjustable rate mortgages (including interest only) are coming back in full force, but this time the banks are saying they are lending carefully. This genious thinking will definitely expand the buyer pool...............

34   HydroCabron   2014 Mar 20, 2:55pm  

If the state were to seize the means of production on behalf of the workers, purging bourgeois saboteurs and wreckers, while exterminating the kulaks, we could collectivize both agriculture and industry. This would generate the necessary wealth for first-time home buyers to plunge in to the market.

Duh!

35   Analyzer   2014 Mar 20, 3:40pm  

jojo says

I'm not sure how it fits with the qualified mortgage standards and all that.

Waste of time trying to figure out how it fits with the qualified mortgage standards..................if you believe in mortgage standards then I have an island to sell you.

36   smaulgld   2014 Mar 20, 6:56pm  

Strategist says

jojo says

smaulgld says

Call it Crazy says

Won't be First Time Home Buyers....

Was the topic of the very first smualgld.com post in april 2013

http://smaulgld.com/student-loans-and-unemployment-are-holding-back-the-economy-and-real-estate-market/

good headline:

"What’s the difference between a high school graduate and a college graduate? About $50,000 in debt."

College grads make more money. That is good debt.

Depends- it may be debt you don't need to take on at all. http://smaulgld.com/is-college-worth-it/
While college grads may make more money if they are also more net indebted they are not really ahead.

37   smaulgld   2014 Mar 20, 7:08pm  

jojo says

@sbh

I agree with you completely. I am only explaining things and decisions from their point of view. I strongly advocate against this line of though and decisions. I'm merely explain I g what is going on inside the mind of a millennial.

They absolutely should not take the easy way and stay at home because they will never make up for the lost experience. However, they are young and don't know what they don't know.

Millennials have been told incessantly that going to college was their ticket to the future. Then they graduate without jobs or a part time job or a job that doesn't require their decree. They live at home because they can't afford to buy a home or rent. There are two main reasons for their inaction:
Cultural- it's no longer odd for a 24 year old to be living with his parent so there is no real peer pressure and given their economic circumstances staying at home is a rational move
Economic- as stated above it makes sense to stay at home but also the economic opportunities are not there today in the traditional ways for college grads.

Starting one's owns business is not how they think. They think job. The number of people working for themselves in the United States I read is at an all time low; I think low single digits. As sbh notes they need to break the mold and shake off their lethargy but with cultural forces telling them it's ok it's not their fault they are unemployed, it's the economy, the media telling them for five year things are improving (recovery!) and the availability of food stamps, they wait for the job market to improve.

38   smaulgld   2014 Mar 20, 7:10pm  

Analyzer says

You have not heard adjustable rate mortgages (including interest only) are coming back in full force, but this time the banks are saying they are lending carefully. This genious thinking will definitely expand the buyer pool...............

Clearly that is what is coming to try and boost the housing market. With rising interest rate banks will want to lend money more than when rates were low.

39   smaulgld   2014 Mar 20, 7:11pm  

jojo says

But I dont think it will go very far. Govt is already moving to get rid of Fannie and Freddie. And it banks can't get rid of the garbage they won't make the loans in size. They are only interested in subprime if its someone else's risk. If it stays on their balance sheet they won't do it.

"I'll take the risk if you'll take the blame"

40   smaulgld   2014 Mar 20, 7:13pm  

jojo says

sbh says

Apropos a larger issue: how should we consider them as the future of this fucked up country? Joshia Bartlet said: the future belongs to those who show up. Too many of these appear to have checked out already.

We will have to wait and see.

My prediction is nothing will change absent a major event, a collapse or calamity. After that the young people will be the ones who set about to rearrange things for the better. They are capable, just not motivated

41   smaulgld   2014 Mar 20, 11:16pm  

Typical housing recovery article

Reports that home sales down slightly from prior month but fails to mentions lowest homes sales in 19 months

http://www.nasdaq.com/article/us-existinghome-sales-fall-slightly-in-february-20140320-00649

42   Robber Baron Elite Scum   2014 Mar 20, 11:34pm  

Who will buy?

Gay Trillionaire Chinidians who shit gold and eat caviar off the asshole of their gay lover.

43   smaulgld   2014 Mar 21, 12:32am  

Higher interest rates will prompt banks to lend again perhaps creating some demand. They will make adjustable rate mortgages popular again

44   smaulgld   2014 Mar 21, 12:36am  

Call it Crazy says

A lot of that was drummed into their heads by their parents. A big piece of the blame rests on the parents. Many of these kids got degrees in useless majors, and now are wondering why they can't find work.

It worked for them and there were loan guarantees and everyone was doing it

Hard for parents to admit they made a mistake so they "live with them"!

45   smaulgld   2014 Mar 21, 12:40am  

Call it Crazy says

After that the young people will be the ones who set about to rearrange things for the better.

It will be in their hands.... (that's a scary thought)

I think millennials are no better or worse than any other generation. They just haven't been tested. I know that many congressional medal of honor winners were never considered leaders or heroes before they won their medal. They rose to the occasion in a crisis.

46   smaulgld   2014 Mar 21, 12:56am  

Call it Crazy says

smaulgld says

I think millennials are no better or worse than any other generation.

I don't know about that... I have 3 millennial kids and I've met a whole bunch of their friends. Over all, they seem to be generally smart and an intelligent bunch. But, as a whole, they lack any drive, ambition, have no goals, no plans, no dreams, lack personal responsibility, can't handle change, etc.

They are just happy "existing".... If we are betting the future of this country on them stepping up and taking control.... we're screwed...

Don't disagree but that is a product of their circumstances. If things change, a crisis or collapse they will have to rise to the ocassion

47   smaulgld   2014 Mar 21, 1:00am  

jojo says

Debt does not equal wealth. That is where people went wrong. Debt is a tool for building wealth, not a guarantee of wealth.

Debt for business or investment CAN be a product of building wealth.
Debt for consumption is never a tool for building wealth

48   smaulgld   2014 Mar 21, 1:15am  

Foreigners bought 58% of their properties in 4 states- Florida, Arizona, Texas and California.

Blackstone bought 88% of theirs in Arizona, California and Florida

http://www.bloomberg.com/infographics/2013-12-20/blackstones-big-bet-on-rental-homes.html

49   smaulgld   2014 Mar 21, 1:21am  

Call it Crazy says

I know my kids will, I don't have a lot of faith in the rest of that generation..

You kids and select others will lead, the rest will follow- no different than any other generation- their time hasn't come yet

50   smaulgld   2014 Mar 21, 1:38am  

Call it Crazy says

Ha ha... very true.... many times I think the ones who didn't have kids were the "smart" ones...

Certainly is cheaper not to have kids!

51   smaulgld   2014 Mar 21, 2:02am  

Call it Crazy says

smaulgld says

Call it Crazy says

Ha ha... very true.... many times I think the ones who didn't have kids were the "smart" ones...

Certainly is cheaper not to have kids!

Don't even go there.....

Kids used to be a financial asset- another set of hands to work the family farm. Today you have to invest in your kids with time, love, energy, teaching and tuition!

52   smaulgld   2014 Mar 21, 6:50am  

Here's one that blames low inventory not low demand as a reason why the housing "recovery" may not continue http://www.foxbusiness.com/personal-finance/2014/01/23/housing-biggest-obstacle-inventory/

53   Heraclitusstudent   2014 Mar 21, 7:06am  

jojo says

Debt is a tool for building wealth

Lol

54   smaulgld   2014 Mar 21, 7:21am  

Call it Crazy says

That "low inventory" chant is such a load of crap!!!

jojo says

Does that mean higher prices?

They love higher prices but bemoan low inventory. They think if there was more inventory it would create demand and prices would rise!

We'd be better off with lower home prices- they are trying to bailout the 40% underwater homeowners by pushing prices back to the prior fed induced bubble peak-and call that "back to normal"

55   smaulgld   2014 Mar 21, 7:32am  

jojo says

smaulgld says

They love higher prices but bemoan low inventory. They think if there was more inventory it would create demand and prices would rise!

So they are saying more supply will lead to higher prices? Whoever wrote this must not have taken Econ 101.

That is the way I interpret their reasoning. They believe that housing went down so it has to go up. And they believe that this "recovery" is just starting.
I've been tracking the non housing recovery for nearly a year.
Here is a summary up till last November
http://smaulgld.com/the-false-housing-recovery-of-2013-and-how-it-unraveled/

56   smaulgld   2014 Mar 21, 7:51am  

jojo says

smaulgld says

They think if there was more inventory it would create demand and prices would rise!

If that were true then home builders alone could build the way out of this recession! Why stop there, just keep building and the economy will experience infinite growth!

But they are NOT building-starts are down three months in a row and new home construction is at lows not seen since the 60's & 70's when there were far fewer people in the US

57   smaulgld   2014 Mar 21, 10:02am  

sbh says

"supply creates its own demand".

as seen in a movie- If you build them they will come and overpay

58   Reality   2014 Mar 21, 12:46pm  

sbh says

And their concept of debt baffles me. The great danger inherent in debt is that it turns time against you. The most fundamentally sensible way for normal people to accumulate wealth is to put time on your side such that when you get up in the morning or take a nap at noon your money is actually working while you are doing something else.

And I don't buy the "they can't afford rent" excuse. They can't afford the rent for the place they think they deserve. And then the rent they save by staying in the basement goes toward anything but their debt.

For once we have something to agree on.

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