2
0

Shiller explains why owner-occupied housing is a poor investment


 invite response                
2013 Feb 7, 11:23pm   58,562 views  127 comments

by golfplan18   ➕follow (1)   💰tip   ignore  

http://ochousingnews.com/news/shiller-explains-why-owner-occupied-housing-is-a-poor-investment?source=Patrick.net

Despite the fact that house prices crashed, wiped out millions of loanowners, and wiped out the illusory equity of an entire generation, people persist in believing owner-occupied housing is a good investment. Most people believe house prices appreciate 5% to 10% or more each year and by simply owning real estate they can become wealthy. It doesn’t work that way. Over the long term, house values increase with wage inflation as buyers bid up prices with their increasing incomes. An amortizing loan is a forced savings account — assuming the owner doesn’t refinance or HELOC this money out and piss...

#housing

« First        Comments 69 - 108 of 127       Last »     Search these comments

69   JodyChunder   2013 Feb 12, 11:50am  

FortWayne says

1920's, are you talking about Art Deco style?

I like Deco -- but no, his yen is for Spanish Colonial and Spanish Revival style bungalows. Those are some real houses, man.

70   JodyChunder   2013 Feb 12, 11:55am  

P N Dr Lo R says

Our town still has many of those beautiful homes in a particular area, still nicely maintained and just as beautiful as they were 85-90 years ago. They have a classic look that just doesn't grow old.

That's just it -- they age and wear down in a way that is so much more attractive than most of the contemporary designs and materials you see being chucked around building sites today.

Whereabouts in Texas are you?

71   NDrLoR   2013 Feb 12, 12:42pm  

JodyChunder says

Whereabouts in Texas are you?

Waco--on I-35 between Dallas and Austin.

72   JodyChunder   2013 Feb 12, 12:53pm  

P N Dr Lo R says

Waco--on I-35 between Dallas and Austin.

I know it well -- I've driven that stretch many times back 'n' forth from Dallas to San Antonio.

73   David Losh   2013 Feb 13, 1:33am  

tatupu70 says

Surely you can grasp that, right?

Taking on Hundreds of Thousands of Dollars in debt to save $300 on rent is hard to grasp, especially in a place like Chico California.

If you look at historical trends of property prices you can see that $200K for Chico, at the low end? is pretty high.

Just because we have a deep pocket Real Estate market today, doesn't translate into price appreciation of property. I can see property prices falling to 1998 levels.

74   David Losh   2013 Feb 13, 2:08am  

SFace says

the house price doubles?

Those days are done. It's over, stick a fork in it, whatever you think about past performance has changed forever.

BTW you pay twice the price for the property by having a mortgage so it's a wash.

75   David Losh   2013 Feb 13, 2:32am  

SFace says

Doubling over 30 years is the approximate rate of inflation

So those inflated dollars is still a wash. You pay twice the price by having a mortgage, and get the price of the property in inflated dollars.

This is the way it always has been. There is no economic reason to take on this debt. It's a personal choice.

76   JFP   2013 Feb 13, 2:41am  

David Losh says

SFace says

Doubling over 30 years is the approximate rate of inflation

So those inflated dollars is still a wash. You pay twice the price by having a mortgage, and get the price of the property in inflated dollars.

This is the way it always has been. There is no economic reason to take on this debt. It's a personal choice.

I don't think "economic" means what you think. You really haven't given one coherent reason why buying is a bad decision.

77   Tenpoundbass   2013 Feb 13, 2:57am  

JodyChunder says

BTW - is Lester's still a going concern?

Lesters is the shit. In a hipster good way.

78   David Losh   2013 Feb 13, 3:05am  

JFP says

You really haven't given one coherent reason why buying is a bad decision.

OK, I will, again. Let me Google economic for you: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economics

In 2008 we had the beginning of a housing market correction where prices fell. OMG!!!!

Then the government spent Trillions of Dollars propping up the banking industry, and the Fed advocated for much lower interest rates.

The price of property began to stabalize then creep up to 2004 levels. 2004 was a time of unsustainable economy, globally. That was proved in 2008.

So here we are debating the price of property?

If we take the period between 1998, and 2008 we can see massive appreciation. It wasn't inflation. It was a credit bubble, that burst, and is now reinflating.

We have an economy driven by speculation in commodities. Real Estate is just another one of those places to put money for short term gains.

You'll see banks especially dumping properties at these new prices. As a matter of fact if any of you has thought of selling, now would be the time.

I've been doing this for forty years. This Real Estate market, right now is ridiculous. I've never seen anything like it.

I will add a caveat that if you have property in a hot pocket of desirablity, like San Francisco, in a nicer part, then hold onto it.

Nice proerties still have value, but once we went out to Chico, using the same principles of value, you lost me.

79   Tenpoundbass   2013 Feb 13, 3:10am  

JodyChunder says

I've got a soft spot for the Spanish and Mediterranean styles you guys have in abundance in Florida.

There was a beautiful one I looked at when I was house shopping.
The only problem is, it was the only house built on the street when it was built. But since then that street has been zoned as commerce, and their are a row warehouses across the street, down the whole block and low income quadplexes on the remainder of lots on the same side of the street.

It was about a 3,000 sqft digs, the MIL quarters was bigger than my house, but was badly burned and the new owner would have been required to demo and remove the burned MIL structure in the back before the City would even deem the residence as a safe structure. It needed a lot of work but it had loads of potential. But at the end of the day the street just killed every ounce of Mojo that the house had.

The place was going for about $225K at the time I saw it.
Someone did buy it, for 105K and fixed it up nice. I ride by it often and just tell my self to bad it wasn't on another street.

Old Street view pic

80   JFP   2013 Feb 13, 3:19am  

David Losh says

Nice proerties still have value, but once we went out to Chico, using the same principles of value, you lost me.

The same economic choice apply in Chico as they do anywhere else. If you want to live somewhere and it's cheaper to rent: rent. If it is cheaper to buy: buy.

81   tatupu70   2013 Feb 13, 3:23am  

David Losh says

Taking on Hundreds of Thousands of Dollars in debt to save $300 on rent is
hard to grasp, especially in a place like Chico California.

You understand that you will have to pay for shelter for the rest of your life, right? You're not taking on debt to save $300/month. You are choosing to minimize your future shelter obligations.

82   David Losh   2013 Feb 13, 3:34am  

SFace says

The market is not David Losh and never will be.

Well my market is definately David Losh, and I'm not buying, because it makes no sense to buy right now. 2008, 2009 maybe was a good time to buy, we'll see,

83   tatupu70   2013 Feb 13, 3:36am  

David Losh says

So those inflated dollars is still a wash. You pay twice the price by having
a mortgage, and get the price of the property in inflated dollars.

SFAce is right--that logic is completely mistaken.

84   Mobi   2013 Feb 13, 3:45am  

SFace says

David Losh says




So those inflated dollars is still a wash. You pay twice the price by having
a mortgage, and get the price of the property in inflated dollars.

This is the way it always has been. There is no economic reason to take on
this debt. It's a personal choice.



Then your choice is wrong because your reasoning is flawed. The market is not David Losh and never will be.

If in the next 5-10 years, major deflation collapses set in (housing price, rent halve), then David Losh is right. I think there is a real possibility there. If the prices hover on the same height or strong inflation comes in, not a bad idea to rent the money at 3% rate. Depends on your crystal balls.

85   JFP   2013 Feb 13, 3:52am  

Mobi says

f in the next 5-10 years, major deflation collapses set in (housing price, rent halve), then David Losh is right. I think there is a real possibility there. If the prices hover on the same height or strong inflation comes in, not a bad idea to rent the money at 3% rate. Depends on your crystal balls.

That's the nub of the argument, but over time inflation tends to be a better bet than deflation

86   Mobi   2013 Feb 13, 4:06am  

robertoaribas says

Yes, make your life decisions based on paranoid delusional fantasies... good
thinking!

Not really. It is just the 2nd wave (1st in 2008.) If we go over the government debt capacity (if there is such one, see Japan), we are dead. BTW, I am buying a house for my primary residence anyway.

87   David Losh   2013 Feb 13, 3:36pm  

Mobi says

major deflation collapses

It's not a major collapse. It's a simple correction. People will forget about Real Estate. It will return to the very basic housing needs purchase people will bite the bullet to make.

Prices will just recede.

88   David Losh   2013 Feb 13, 3:56pm  

robertoaribas says

I'm quite sure you didn't buy in 2008 or 2009

I was poised to buy, and thought 2008 was going to be my spot in the sun, my really big score. I was thrilled with the collapse.

The problem was the story I have already related.

My company A Spring Cleaning was called in by Bank of America in early 2008 to clean out a bank owned property for sale. We are a preferred provider of Real Estate services. When we got there the place was already cleaned, badly, and all of the junk shoved into the garage.

We had to work through a third party provider called Omega Properties in North Carolina? I think.

We did the work, submitted the billing, photos, before, and after, the whole nine yards, and we didn't get paid. I called and was told payment could take up to ninety days. I said BS. I called the bank and told them we intended to lien the property.

Now for the good part; it turns out the property was already pending a sale for $225K. The bank was owed $430K.

The problem was the house is a blocker two blocks from the freeway. Blockers in Snomish county are bad, they mildew, there are thousands of them, and they were selling for $250K as building lots at the peak of the market.

We got paid out of escrow at a closing of $225K. For me that wasn't much of a discount.

After that I went to the Vestus meeting to see the financing program they were offering on foreclosure auction properties. They had hundreds of people signing up to get rich quick.

A guy I recognized from the Foreclosure auctions was there, and we both just shook our heads.

The major crash of Real Estate pricing never really happened, it just whimpered.

Now I know lots of guys who are beating the brush, kept buying, and are turning properties at lower margins than I'm comfortable with, and ending up with more rentals than they intended.

I buy to sell, so there was nothing in there for me, and other guys did end up renting out units they couldn't sell, and are hoping to sell now.

So you can go on, and on about how much rental income you get, but my cleaning business, with no debt, brings in much more. If I want to run my business up to a million dollars, and sell, I can do that also.

Hey, maybe I'll franchise.

Real Estate is more than residential housing units.

89   yup1   2013 Feb 13, 10:50pm  

robertoaribas says

Yes, make your life decisions based on paranoid delusional fantasies... good
thinking!

And if he is right who had the delusional fantasies? You are such a Dumbass!

90   yup1   2013 Feb 13, 11:10pm  

Getting a loan on a house is one of the only ways to get low cost money, that is the main reason for buying a house. You than use inflation to your advantage to pay back the loan. You get a raise each year for 30 years and at the end of the loan term you have a super low payment versus your current pay. The tax code also gives you incentive to buy a home by subsidizing your cost of ownership. It is also a place for you to live.

Now there is no question that the physical property has depreciated. If you have not spent any extra money you have a 30 year old shit box, with a leaky roof. You have also spent a ton of money on taxes and insurance.

Shiller is correct. I know that bothers many of you because you have your own thesis or personal beliefs and biases, but it does not change that fact.

91   David Losh   2013 Feb 13, 11:43pm  

robertoaribas says

BIIIIIG Mistake...

Not according to my buddies in the business. I make more than they do.

92   David Losh   2013 Feb 13, 11:47pm  

yup1 says

You than use inflation to your advantage to pay back the loan. You get a raise each year for 30 years and at the end of the loan term you have a super low payment versus your current pay.

There are two things about that, that I'm not convinced about. Number one is the inflation, or expansion of the economy being a good thing. Second it would be if, I mean if, rents increase, if your payment is much lower than the rent you would pay.

93   JFP   2013 Feb 14, 1:32am  

David Losh says

yup1 says

You than use inflation to your advantage to pay back the loan. You get a raise each year for 30 years and at the end of the loan term you have a super low payment versus your current pay.

There are two things about that, that I'm not convinced about. Number one is the inflation, or expansion of the economy being a good thing. Second it would be if, I mean if, rents increase, if your payment is much lower than the rent you would pay.

Who said inflation was a good thing? It's just what is inevitably occurring. Also, what do you mean "if rents increase?" Long term, rents always increase.

94   yup1   2013 Feb 14, 2:06am  

robertoaribas says

david, you are clearly a big liar on here.

Oh how we know how much Roberto hates being called a liar! He threatens lawsuits.

95   yup1   2013 Feb 14, 2:15am  

JFP says

Who said inflation was a good thing? It's just what is inevitably occurring.
Also, what do you mean "if rents increase?" Long term, rents always
increase.

Stop using the term always.

Do you not understand how horribly broken the entire financial system is for average Joe. Their entire paycheck is captured, rent or mortgage, food, energy, insurance. Food and energy costs climbing when they have no available disposable income.

With all these things happening you think that rents will always increase. The slumlords that think that they bought a SFH on the cheap and have super cheap financing and they are charging double the PITI in rent, do they actually think that they won't be lowering rents? Really. With all other costs now rising and some schmuck like roberto buying up 15 properties in one local area, I believe that rents will be coming down.

96   JFP   2013 Feb 14, 2:26am  

yup1 says

JFP says

Who said inflation was a good thing? It's just what is inevitably occurring.

Also, what do you mean "if rents increase?" Long term, rents always

increase.

Stop using the term always.

Do you not understand how horribly broken the entire financial system is for average Joe. Their entire paycheck is captured, rent or mortgage, food, energy, insurance. Food and energy costs climbing when they have no available disposable income.

With all these things happening you think that rents will always increase. The slumlords that think that they bought a SFH on the cheap and have super cheap financing and they are charging double the PITI in rent, do they actually think that they won't be lowering rents? Really. With all other costs now rising and some schmuck like roberto buying up 15 properties in one local area, I believe that rents will be coming down.

Believe what you want, but historically rents have risen in line with inflation just like house prices. It is incoherent to say that long term there will simultaneously be inflation and falling rents.

97   FunTime   2013 Feb 14, 2:45am  

KILLERJANE says

He owns 2 houses. Enough said. No excuses.

He has the money and it's convenient. He often states there are helpful reasons for buying a house, like that you get to live where you want or put your kids in a school where you want.

You just want to be careful, because the purchase is (typically, probably, statistically, usually-pick your favorite word) not an investment. Getting back equal or less money than you spent when adjusted for inflation is not investing.

98   FunTime   2013 Feb 14, 2:47am  

Raw says

I would like Shiller to explain why my house inspite of a housing crash is worth 4 times more than it was 25 years ago.

Tell him the total amount you've spent and he'll be able to tell you very well.

When you say "worth more" are you referring to the purchase price of the house?

99   David Losh   2013 Feb 14, 2:50am  

robertoaribas says

because you were late paid on a house cleaning job

No Roberto, it's because some idiot paid $225K for a property that at peak was selling for $250K. The buyer thought they were getting a bargain by comparing the $225K to the $430K the bank lent on the property.

Idiots are over paying for properties all over the place.

You brought up Chico then went along with your same tired stories about Phoenix Arizona as a comparison.

You're here blogging for business the same as I am. You have a worn out business model. Even you say you aren't buying today. Why? If buying more properties with cheap money is such a great thing, then you should still be buying. Right?

100   RentingForHalfTheCost   2013 Feb 14, 2:56am  

robertoaribas says

Mobi says

If in the next 5-10 years, major deflation collapses set in (housing price, rent halve), then David Losh is right.

Yes, make your life decisions based on paranoid delusional fantasies... good thinking!

Would have been great thinking to the SFBA folks that paid top dollar in 2007 don't you think? In SFBA things are just as bad now as they were then. Salary inflation is nill, but yet housing keeps rising. It'll only end bad again. I can rent two places now for the price of one ownership shack. Silly beyond reason.

101   FunTime   2013 Feb 14, 3:04am  

CaptainShuddup says

There's just no way in hell a house that is either cheaper or as much as the average rent goes for a house that is less or equal to the square footage of the purchased house could be a poor investment.

I question how many houses as you describe exist and whether I want to live there.

102   Tenpoundbass   2013 Feb 14, 3:07am  

Be honest want to live in, or want to live in the neighborhood?

103   JFP   2013 Feb 14, 3:09am  

RentingForHalfTheCost says

robertoaribas says

Mobi says

If in the next 5-10 years, major deflation collapses set in (housing price, rent halve), then David Losh is right.

Yes, make your life decisions based on paranoid delusional fantasies... good thinking!

Would have been great thinking to the SFBA folks that paid top dollar in 2007 don't you think? In SFBA things are just as bad now as they were then. Salary inflation is nill, but yet housing keeps rising. It'll only end bad again. I can rent two places now for the price of one ownership shack. Silly beyond reason.

No you can't.

104   FunTime   2013 Feb 14, 3:19am  

David Losh says

You think retirees are going to be living the high life like they did from the 1980s dot com, high return 401(k) days? They aren't.

Although, I don't think a hypothesis that a small percentage of people living in the San Francisco Bay Area will retire in Chico is a hypothesis that people will be living the high life.

105   FunTime   2013 Feb 14, 3:45am  

robertoaribas says

I need renters willing to pay too much for the property

Given the number of people who recently short-sold and got the government benefit of forgiven debt, you'll find them. A close buddy of mine did this recently and his credit situation now will keep him from being elibible to buy a house for a couple of years he says. He has some other debt, so not sure how much of a person's credit rating is changed by short sale versus other stats.

106   FunTime   2013 Feb 14, 3:52am  

CaptainShuddup says

Be honest want to live in, or want to live in the neighborhood?

Well, I wrote "live there" which seems to encompass both. I actually had "city" or "town" in my mind more than neighborhood. I have found places in which I would love to live built in neighborhoods in which I would not.

107   Tenpoundbass   2013 Feb 14, 5:33am  

Then you'll always be a victim of location.
Be prepared to pay up. But what you pay, is not based in the reality of the Median home price. At least they shouldn't.
That is what went wrong in the bubble years. They grouped all houses together which raised the median home price across the board in America.

108   dublin hillz   2013 Feb 14, 6:39am  

David Losh says

Mobi says



major deflation collapses


It's not a major collapse. It's a simple correction. People will forget about Real Estate. It will return to the very basic housing needs purchase people will bite the bullet to make.


Prices will just recede.

They can only "recede" if rents recede. If rents recede, that indicateS true weakness in the economy as it represents purchase power that day by the population. However, in Bay Area- the rents have anything but "receded." Over last 2.5 years, up by 25% easy.

« First        Comments 69 - 108 of 127       Last »     Search these comments

Please register to comment:

api   best comments   contact   latest images   memes   one year ago   random   suggestions