Loan mods, robo-signing, bulk sales, and other programs have helped reduce supply, but those programs alone don't explain why the difference from a year ago is so dramatic.
Social mood has quietly shifted. It's herd mentality, not economics.
http://bayarearealestatetrends.com/2012/08/27/why-is-housing-inventory-low/

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It may well be herd mentality. We are in historically uncharted territory in terms of the economy, and especially real estate. Combine that with the fact that this is an election year and that there is some likelihood of candidates offering free money for underwater folks, and it doesn't surprise me at all that Bay Area RE inventory has shrunk. Given the super high prices here, a lot of people are VERY underwater on their loans. In the rest of the country, being 20% underwater on your house might mean that you are out $40k. In the SFBA, 20% can easily put you out of $100k, and the chance of getting free money to cover that is probably more than enough toget an owner to hang on for another year.
Is this sustainable? I have no idea. My practical side says, "of course not." My cynical/realistic side says, "dude, this is CA, forget waiting for practical or rational outcomes in this place." There is more demand than supply in the SFBA, and clearly a lot more money than brains. That isn't a recipe for a good life-balance in terms of the cost of living. If you want a life-balance, you can either give it up in competition with hordes of people that don't understand the difference between "living" and "making money", or you can accept some other compromises and leave.
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Banks are holding back foreclosing properties in lis pendens until they are sure they will get 2x the note.
That's why the accounting rules were rewritten for them.
Otherwise it would be organized crime.
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Why is the interest rate so low?
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APOCALYPSEFUCK is Shostakovich says
Very true... I've seen a bunch that have lis pendens filed and after that a new assignment filed by MERS.... seems the banks are trying to clean up their "paperwork" due to the robosigning issues before they move to finalize the foreclosure.....
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everything says
Because few are buying or can afford to qualify for a mortgage. Last week it was posted that 80% of mortgage applications were for REFINANCING, not new purchases..... if only 20% of applications are from people who want to buy.... forget the recovery....
http://online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-20120815-704910.html
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It's a Realtor®. If it breaths, it lies.
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Call it Crazy says
WOAH! Can you step me through that? MERS is supposed to manage sale/transfer of lien of live notes. I wonder if you're seeing forced by-back action, you unruly gumshoe!
Can you run a full provenance review of ONE of those notes and see if it's returning back to a former holder?
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APOCALYPSEFUCK is Shostakovich says
I've been poking around looking for some deals and after doing detective work on what's filed at the county, I'm seeing new assignments filed by MERS AFTER the lis pendens has been filed..
You would think that the bank would have their "ducks in a row" and be the rightful owner of the live note BEFORE they file the lis pendens, but apparently not......
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I don't disagree with the premise that herd mentality is a factor, with potential sellers - especially those who are underwater or who want to 'move-up' to a bigger/nicer house - seeing prices go up and holding out in the hope that this will continue.
However, look at these numbers for SFRs in Oakland (all prices):
REOs: 1,164 (per realtytrac.com search, 8/27)
Foreclosed homes for sale: 39 (per Redfin search, 8/27)
So, only 3.3 percent of REOs in Oakland are on the market. This has been going on for months now - I check the numbers every few days.
What other explanation can there be for these not being on the market, except for the banks creating a false scarcity to drive up prices?
Realtytrac also shows 1,232 Preforeclosures and 772 scheduled for auction (again, Oakland SFRs, as of 8/27).
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everything says
Becuase of ultra easy monetary policies.
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uomo_senza_nome says
None.
The scam never ends.
The feds and the banks are determined that no American will go unraped.
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Greg,
I think next summer will be interesting. Looking at the huge drop in NOD filings recently compared to last year, I believe we will likely get more NOD filings after the November election, which translate to more inventory in spring and summer of next year. With a nice price spike this year, I expect a YoY price decline in the 2nd half of next year when comparing to this year. Could that translate to 3% @ 30-yr fixed interest rate?
The recently passed Homeowner Bill of Right, which will take effect in 1/1/2013, will slow down the foreclosure process again. However I'm optimistic that we will see price softness in the 1/2 half of 2013 and into 2014. A second chance to buy in my opinion.
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E-man. I agree. I think we will not see any more price gains and probably some moderate declines by this time next year. This works just fine for the banks. There are still a lot of people in underwater properties out there who are making payments on mortgages at 6%. With 10 year treasury at 1.6%, one of those people is easily subsidizing two others who are not making payments. That's why banks are playing this game. Another five years of this and they will be solvent.
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Time to force all the banks to foreclose everything in lis pedens immediately and let them fail. Their portfolios can be parted out to healthy credit unions and the executives of the dechartered institutions can go on TV and commit suicide like honorable people.
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APOCALYPSEFUCK is Shostakovich says
Why would you admit you're bankrupt when you can still pay yourself a bonus?
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Call it Crazy says
Now with standards going back to reality very few qualify for loans and I am not even taking into account those who have gone under they don't even play into the mix. So factor in the horrid job market, losses, uncertainty and that tells me how house prices are headed on a free fall South. There are NO buyers especially for 800K or 500K or even 300K little dumps, IMHO those days are long gone, thankfully.
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taxee says
Exactly. These people should all be jumping from bridges or throwing themselves in front of trains.
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APOCALYPSEFUCK is Shostakovich says
That's what should happen. But they didn't even do that in Japan, the home of Seppuku. Instead, they had a decade of "zombie banks."
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Hey everybody ... remember the "good old days" ? When this used to about communism?
"Somehow it seemed as though the farm had grown richer without making the animals themselves any richer — except, of course, for the pigs and the dogs." - George Orwell, Animal Farm
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APOCALYPSEFUCK is Shostakovich says
In the good old days they jumped off tall buildings. Now the cowards, they grab anything in your wallet and throw you off instead.
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DIE, BANKSTER FUCKS, DIE!
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E-man says
Maybe. I don't believe that this run-up in prices will hold, but they aren't going to start falling until we get a lot more supply.
And I don't believe that NOD's are related to the election.
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gregpfielding says
Prices will drop when rates go up. That's no rocket science. But I can guarantee nothing will happen until or short term after election. Long term yes, which is why residential RE is a horrible investment at this point. Because right now there is no such thing as a "buyer season", such thing doesn't really exist there.
Those who are buying it as a non investment, that's different.
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FortWayne says
If rates rise RIGHT NOW, yes prices will tank. Aside from people being able to afford less house, it may make cash savings accounts more attractive and could diminish demand for houses.
However...
Rates will not be raised until the economy is on solid footing and can support that. If the economy is healthy enough to support rising rates, chances are that people's purchasing power is also increasing and housing prices will also go up at the same time. There are some in here that avidly argue that rising interest rates = rising house prices, which sounds counter-intuitive. Taking a 50,000ft perspective on the economy though, it makes perfect sense. Low interest rates are a SYMPTOM of our economic malaise, not a cause! Rates cannot and will not go up unless the economy vastly improves, or some sort of really drastic measures are taken to do (something) to our ailing economy. Doing that right now would probably cause a depression though, since everything is predicated on conspicuous, credit-driven consumption. We sort of NEED to pull the plug on that, have some sort of collapse and then rebuild from the foundation-up, but we all know that will never happen (willingly anyway).
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bmwman91 says
Thank you for putting in your 2 cents. People keep on repeating this fallacy here on Patnet including Patrick himself. Common sense would suggest that's how it should work, but history has proven otherwise.
Wishing won't make it come true although I do wish sometimes. :)
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Hey e-man, sorry , I can't tell which position you are taking. Are you arguing that history shows that rising rates = lower prices, or that rising rates = healthier economy = rising house prices?
Obviously, I am not familiar with The History! ;)
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bmwman91 says
That's the answer. :)
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E-man says
Agreed. Yet, history shows us a different result:
In 1980, after prices shot up (nominally) to 75K, im sure there were alot of people saying "this is nuts, im gonna wait til interest rates spike and prices TANK". Yet, imagine their horror as interest rates doubled and prices continued to inch up higher and higher.
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bmwman91 says
That's the way I see it.... it will take a "reset" and some pain (voluntarily or forced) to turn this mess around. Everyone is so hooked on "credit" that it will take forced "cold turkey" to rehab from the binge!
The politicians won't step up to correct it, and the FED and policy makers have painted themselves into a corner with the current low rates. If they try and raise rates, it will send us into a deeper recession or depression, and they don't want to be blamed for that.
A "reset" is the only way to clear the table and start over......
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Its worth nothing BTW that this chart above is in nominal terms. In real terms, yes, as BMW man noted, the guy who waited probably got a better deal because his purchasing power was rising faster than nominal prices.
Still, the problem here is people are thinking nominally as in
"700K for this SHACK??? Wait til interest rates spike and prices tank to 550K!!!".
As the chart notes, paridoxically, what they should be saying is:
"700K for this SHACK??? Wait til interest rates spike and my purchasing power goes up and I get it for cheap at 710K!!!"
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bmwman91 says
Well said bmwman, well said.
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CDon says
Well said. I have nothing to add here other than I get it for cheap at $735k. :)