Ideas on how to use less energy (Advertisement)

Case-Shiller: Home Price declines widespread in August


By justme   Follow   Tue, 26 Oct 2010, 9:54am   2,629 views   31 comments
Watch (0)   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike  

Alright, I'll start the inevitable thread on this topic.

http://www.calculatedriskblog.com/2010/10/case-shiller-home-prices-declines.html

Calculated Risk has been saying for months that we had to wait for the Jun-Jul-Aug Case-Shiller numbers (released today October 26) to see home prices starting to fall as the effect of the $8k (et al) tax credit dissipates.

CR was right. The data is in. Seasonally adjusted house values are falling again, and broadly so.

More from CR:

Prices increased (SA) in only 1 of the 20 Case-Shiller cities in August seasonally adjusted. Only New York saw a price increase (SA) in August, and that was very small.

Prices are now falling - and falling just about everywhere. And it appears there are more price declines coming (based on inventory levels and anecdotal reports).

Viewing Comments 1-31 of 31     Last »     See most liked comments

  1. iwog


    Follow
    Befriend (48)
    274 threads
    12,546 comments
    47 male
    Lafayette, CA
    Premium

    1   10:48am Tue 26 Oct 2010   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (1)   Protected  

    The 10-city index was down .1%
    The 20-city index was down .2%

    The "widespread declines" are so small that they barely show up on a graph. A .1% decrease annualized is 1.2% and very probably within the margin of error.

    Anyway I'm on to Calculated Risk now. I know how they are arriving at their "brilliant" market predictions and I know WHY they have backed away from calling a severe market downturn. Here is their limp-wristed conclusion:

    The bottom line: Sales were weak in September - almost exactly at the levels I expected - and will continue to be weak for some time. Inventory is very high - and the significant year-over-year increase in inventory is very concerning. The high level of inventory and months-of-supply will put downward pressure on house prices.

    Like that? "Downward pressure", "very concerning", "weak for some time". It's enough to make someone slightly worried.

    The real question is why, and I can answer that question.

    - Inventory is dropping fast and hard. What CR calls "decreased slightly" I call a very significant drop. Not only did inventory drop from August to September, unmentioned is that it also dropped from July to August. Inventory levels are almost exactly what they were in September 2008. Y'all remember September 2008 right? The market turned around the following Spring.
    - Existing home sales are up 10%
    - Consumer confidence is up in September
    - Listing prices are SHARPLY higher in California and are a leading indicator of 2-3 months.
    - The stock market has had two extremely good months. (wealth effect)

    So although Calculated risk is predicting almost nothing, I will do much much more. Case-shiller numbers will report lower prices in their November, December, and January reports. (I said this in September) February things will turn around and by Spring we'll be seeing prices take off again.

    Anyone else care to make a specific prediction?

  2. HousingBoom


    Follow
    Befriend (1)
    48 threads
    172 comments

    2   10:52am Tue 26 Oct 2010   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (1)  
  3. justme


    Follow
    Befriend (2)
    33 threads
    3,458 comments

    3   10:55am Tue 26 Oct 2010   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike  

    iwog says

    So although Calculated risk is predicting almost nothing, I will do much much more. Case-shiller numbers will report lower prices in their November, December, and January reports.

    I would say that your prediction is not much braver than the whimpiness that you accuse CR of.

    By the way, is your prediction with or without government or Fed intervention, such as the much anticipated Fed QE2 (Quantitative Easing, round2)? Or further tax credits?

  4. iwog


    Follow
    Befriend (48)
    274 threads
    12,546 comments
    47 male
    Lafayette, CA
    Premium

    4   11:04am Tue 26 Oct 2010   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (1)   Protected  

    HousingBoom says

    iwog is the “Comical Ali” of housing

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IMqU8vE65g8&feature=related

    No, I just get tired of blogs like CR which sound more like a television psychic than an economic prognosticator.

    Instead of "The market is going down" as I wrote, they say "downward pressure on house prices". WTF is "downward pressure on house prices"? Instead of saying "YoY inventory is at record levels and will kill the market" they say "It's very concerning".

    They are predicting nothing. I know the next two or three reports are going to show a declining market because sales were down for those months, inventory was climbing, and listing prices were falling. CR mated their prediction to the expiration of the housing credit, but that's BS because if true it would show up as a very sharp decline in today's report. It did NOT show up in today's report which means it wasn't a significant factor.

    This is all water under the bridge caused by a CS report which lags 4 months. As of right now in October 2010 prices are heading higher although they will be moderated by the winter sales slump. Spring will surprise everyone.

  5. iwog


    Follow
    Befriend (48)
    274 threads
    12,546 comments
    47 male
    Lafayette, CA
    Premium

    5   11:06am Tue 26 Oct 2010   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like (1)   Dislike (1)   Protected  

    justme says

    I would say that your prediction is not much braver than the whimpiness that you accuse CR of.

    But you wont say why. I was VERY specific why.

    justme says

    By the way, is your prediction with or without government or Fed intervention, such as the much anticipated Fed QE2 (Quantitative Easing, round2)? Or further tax credits?

    Government intervention is a fact of life and will be applied if the market shows weakness. If the market grows stronger it will be withdrawn. My prediction is that whatever the government and fed does, it will support a recovery.

  6. bubblesitter


    Follow
    Befriend (5)
    10 threads
    2,329 comments

    6   11:23am Tue 26 Oct 2010   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike  

    Iwog,

    Bottom is falling under your bu$$. Why is today's sold $/sq.ft. lower than your 2009 bottom?

    http://www.redfin.com/city/9927/CA/Lafayette

  7. iwog


    Follow
    Befriend (48)
    274 threads
    12,546 comments
    47 male
    Lafayette, CA
    Premium

    7   11:42am Tue 26 Oct 2010   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (1)   Protected  

    Dude, Lafayette has a population of about 25,000 people. Your data consists of EXACTLY 24 homes.

    I'm not worried about it and you shouldn't be either.

  8. EBGuy


    Follow
    Befriend
    4 threads
    2,095 comments

    8   12:18pm Tue 26 Oct 2010   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (1)  

    Wow, looking at historic (C/S Index) data for the SF Bay Area, the July to August reversal (positive to negative) is unprecedented. I said in the previous months that it looked like we were around 1994 or 1995; the August numbers are so ugly that it looks more like 1992 or 1993. (All NSA, BTW. CR has posted previously about the dubious nature of SA, so I don't put much stock in them. One look at the spreadsheet will tell you why.) Will be interesting to see what September has in store.

  9. middleman


    Follow
    Befriend
    2 threads
    66 comments
    Poway, CA
    middleman's website

    9   12:31pm Tue 26 Oct 2010   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike  

    Brother iwog,

    Don't be so free with your financial/mortgage advice - especially when it's not appreciated. We have a very small window of opportunity to build wealth in this depressed housing market and if everyone was on board, the window wouldn't exist.

    I bought a house, that I call my home in June of this year (San Diego County). I started a compost system, dug some trenches and installed a sprinkler system, and enjoyed lots of gardening. My wife and two toddlers love to help out and run around OUR yard, chasing lizards, picking oranges, and making memories. We watch less TV then we did when we were in an apartment, which has improved the behaivor of my children immensely. I've lost weight and my health has improved because I'm off my arse and slowly working down my "honey-do list". I can honestly tell you I'm the happiest I've been in years! I'd hate to have put this off fo another 10-15 years out of fear my home value would go down. It makes me sad to even think about it.

    My house isn't going to make me a multi-millionaire....(or will it??!!?? j/k), but it is building my wealth of health, happiness, and pride.

    Case-Shiller?? They don't control my financial decisions or happiness.

    I'm glad for people who are fortunate enough for the oppotrunity to buy a home and wish them the same happiness.

  10. justme


    Follow
    Befriend (2)
    33 threads
    3,458 comments

    10   12:35pm Tue 26 Oct 2010   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (1)  

    EBGuy says

    Wow, looking at historic (C/S Index) data for the SF Bay Area, the July to August reversal (positive to negative) is unprecedented.

    EBGuy, that is a good point. That is a very bearish sign.

    Side note:

    Iwog was angling (on the other thread) to get people to agree that the tax break had no effect because, LOOK! , the drop in August was "so small", "after the tax break expired". Of course this is BS because there is a ton of tax-break-included closings in the Jun-Jul-Aug numbers.

  11. justme


    Follow
    Befriend (2)
    33 threads
    3,458 comments

    11   12:38pm Tue 26 Oct 2010   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike  

    middleman says

    Don’t be so free with your financial/mortgage advice - especially when it’s not appreciated. We have a very small window of opportunity to build wealth in this depressed housing market and if everyone was on board, the window wouldn’t exist.

    He is not trying to help us with advice, although he may think he is.

    The real motivation is to get enough sheeple onboard that the holes in the bottom of the ship are covered by the trampling feet of the herd.

  12. middleman


    Follow
    Befriend
    2 threads
    66 comments
    Poway, CA
    middleman's website

    12   12:40pm Tue 26 Oct 2010   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike  

    justme says

    The real motivation is to get enough sheeple onboard....

    It seems this may be the case for the doom and gloomers.

  13. tatupu70


    Follow
    Befriend (3)
    15 threads
    5,637 comments

    13   12:45pm Tue 26 Oct 2010   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (1)  

    justme says

    Iwog was angling (on the other thread) to get people to agree that the tax break had no effect because, LOOK! , the drop in August was “so small”, “after the tax break expired”. Of course this is BS because there is a ton of
    tax-break-included closings in the Jun-Jul-Aug numbers.

    OK--the end of the tax break effect keeps moving forward. For once and for all, when do you think the CS numbers won't have any effect from the tax break?

  14. robertoaribas


    Follow
    Befriend (23)
    55 threads
    3,795 comments
    Scottsdale, AZ
    robertoaribas's website

    14   1:09pm Tue 26 Oct 2010   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike  

    won't have any effect? who freaking knows that? did it pull forward buyers who would have bought in the next six months? next year? And compared to what, we had three separate types of credits from the original $7500 loan you had to pay back, to the first credit which was supposed to end in November...

    I would say a declining effect for the next year, but since precisely zero research has been done on the matter, that is a pure guess.

    today, home prices are being propped UP by the delay in foreclosures, due to various bank slowdowns, moratoria. How much of an effect and when will that end? Who knows that one either...

    Simple point is, without manipulation, we would have had more homes for sale, and fewer buyers... YOU do the econ 101 conclusion that follows.

  15. tatupu70


    Follow
    Befriend (3)
    15 threads
    5,637 comments

    15   1:11pm Tue 26 Oct 2010   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike  

    robertoaribas says

    won’t have any effect? who freaking knows that? did it pull forward buyers who would have bought in the next six months? next year?

    Good point. I should have asked--when will the CS numbers not be positively affected by the tax credit?

  16. bubblesitter


    Follow
    Befriend (5)
    10 threads
    2,329 comments

    16   1:31pm Tue 26 Oct 2010   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (1)  

    iwog says

    Dude, Lafayette has a population of about 25,000 people. Your data consists of EXACTLY 24 homes.
    I’m not worried about it and you shouldn’t be either.

    Okay then you gotta tell me what is your thresold. 200 houses? 500? So I won't bother you next time.

  17. justme


    Follow
    Befriend (2)
    33 threads
    3,458 comments

    17   2:00pm Tue 26 Oct 2010   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike  

    tatupu70 says

    robertoaribas says

    won’t have any effect? who freaking knows that? did it pull forward buyers who would have bought in the next six months? next year?

    Good point. I should have asked–when will the CS numbers not be positively affected by the tax credit?

    Your original question was likely more a rhetorical device than a real question, but AFAIK some of the deadlines for closings that can still include the tax credit have been extended into September.

  18. Done!


    Follow
    Befriend (4)
    159 threads
    2,826 comments

    18   2:20pm Tue 26 Oct 2010   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (1)  

    I was wondering what spin the Shiller the Schil would have on August market.

    I bought at the end of July beginning of August.
    With my Max I was willing to spend and criteria on space and home, I've had two or three hits in three years tops. July alone, I saw 10 houses, all of which were bellow $175 the house I bought was reduced from $199 to $170K I got it for $160. And all of those other houses under $175 I was looking at in July were down from as much as 229K.

  19. iwog


    Follow
    Befriend (48)
    274 threads
    12,546 comments
    47 male
    Lafayette, CA
    Premium

    19   2:20pm Tue 26 Oct 2010   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike   Protected  

    justme says

    there is a ton of tax-break-included closings in the Jun-Jul-Aug numbers. Your original question was likely more a rhetorical device than a real question, but AFAIK some of the deadlines for closings that can still include the tax credit have been extended into September.

    Yes of course. 90 day closings are a significant portion of the market and not 1 or 2%.....

  20. iwog


    Follow
    Befriend (48)
    274 threads
    12,546 comments
    47 male
    Lafayette, CA
    Premium

    20   2:22pm Tue 26 Oct 2010   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (1)   Protected  

    bubblesitter says

    iwog says

    Dude, Lafayette has a population of about 25,000 people. Your data consists of EXACTLY 24 homes.

    I’m not worried about it and you shouldn’t be either.

    Okay then you gotta tell me what is your thresold. 200 houses? 500? So I won’t bother you next time.

    You can bother me all you'd like. I'm just keeping perspective. The smaller your sample, the more chaotic it gets.

  21. iwog


    Follow
    Befriend (48)
    274 threads
    12,546 comments
    47 male
    Lafayette, CA
    Premium

    21   2:24pm Tue 26 Oct 2010   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike   Protected  

    middleman says

    justme says

    The real motivation is to get enough sheeple onboard….

    It seems this may be the case for the doom and gloomers.

    I don't think you're supposed to talk about that. ;)

  22. Bap33


    Follow
    Befriend (3)
    12 threads
    3,097 comments

    22   2:29pm Tue 26 Oct 2010   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike  

    middleman .... for which RE broker do you sling house-crack?

  23. TechGromit


    Follow
    Befriend (6)
    85 threads
    969 comments
    44 male
    Egg Harbor City, NJ

    23   5:08am Wed 27 Oct 2010   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like (1)   Dislike (1)  

    iwog says

    The “widespread declines” are so small that they barely show up on a graph. A .1% decrease annualized is 1.2% and very probably within the margin of error.

    I'll have to agree with IWOG on this one, the market may still be declining, but the rate of decline has slowed significantly. The biggest drop in prices occurred between 2007 and 2008, if I only had this graph to base my predictions on, then I would say the market has reached it's bottom. I am still concerned with the number of housing banks still have / and will get on there books, so I'm not calling the bottom yet.

  24. bubblesitter


    Follow
    Befriend (5)
    10 threads
    2,329 comments

    24   7:16am Wed 27 Oct 2010   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (1)  

    TechGromit says

    so I’m not calling the bottom yet.

    No one can ever call a bottom until businesses start hiring and spending. Until then it is all denial.

  25. middleman


    Follow
    Befriend
    2 threads
    66 comments
    Poway, CA
    middleman's website

    25   11:01am Wed 27 Oct 2010   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (1)  

    TechGromit says

    I’m not calling the bottom yet

    Everybody will be calling the bottom 2 years after housing prices drastically improve. Then the talk will be...."If I would've...", or "I wish I would've..."

  26. EBGuy


    Follow
    Befriend
    4 threads
    2,095 comments

    26   1:33pm Wed 27 Oct 2010   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (1)  

    For some context, here's a list of the past years where the C/S SF Bay Area Index has seen a drop from July to August: 1990 (-.2%), 1992 (-.5%), 1993 (-.03%), 2001 (1.4%), 2006 (-.2%), 2007 (-.2%), 2008 (-3.5%), 2010 (-.3%). Again, note that in all these years (save 2010), the July to August drop was preceded by a June to July drop. The 2010 anomaly could be the result of:
    1. Govt interface
    2. Pent up demand
    3. Availability of financing
    4. All of the above

  27. FunTime


    Follow
    Befriend (3)
    38 threads
    801 comments
    San Francisco, CA

    27   10:28am Tue 5 Jul 2011   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike  

    middleman says

    Everybody will be calling the bottom 2 years after housing prices drastically improve.

    That's not "calling the bottom." You're confused or confusing.

  28. Hysteresis


    Follow
    Befriend (2)
    14 threads
    648 comments

    28   10:30am Tue 5 Jul 2011   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike (1)  

    FunTime says

    middleman says

    Everybody will be calling the bottom 2 years after housing prices drastically improve.

    That's not "calling the bottom." You're confused or confusing.

    like many bulls. he's thoroughly confused.

  29. ¥


    Follow
    Befriend
    35 threads
    5,700 comments
    Bellingham, WA

    29   11:31am Tue 5 Jul 2011   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike  

    TechGromit says

    The biggest drop in prices occurred between 2007 and 2008, if I only had this graph to base my predictions on, then I would say the market has reached it's bottom. I am still concerned with the number of housing banks still have / and will get on there books, so I'm not calling the bottom yet.

    folks, IMHO this is going to be a very long and grinding process.

    Where's the reversal going to come from? The bon temps of 2002-2006 were utter bullshit and they actually damaged us economically.

    The 1990s gave us an employment boom, but that was the front-end of the benefits of globalization. Now we're looking at paying the piper for the gains we got then.

    People need to internalize what this graph:

    http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=103

    is telling them.

    We're fucked. Without that $5T boost in government debt 2008 to now we wouldn't even have an economy.

    The leading edge of the baby boom is turning 65 this year. Either we raise taxes or we print money to fund their retirement & medicare promises.

    The electorate in its infinite wisdom put the Republicans back in power last year, so the system is locked up.

    In 1995-2000 this was not such a crisis since the Dems had actually done the heavy lifting of reforms immediately prior to being booted.

    They didn't do that this time, so things are a lot more fragile now.

  30. E-man


    Follow
    Befriend (31)
    34 threads
    2,545 comments
    San Jose, CA
    Premium

    30   3:04pm Tue 5 Jul 2011   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike   Protected  

    EBGuy says

    the August numbers are so ugly that it looks more like 1992 or 1993.

    Weren't 1992 and 1993 the bottom of the last housing market? We're currently in a HOUSING DEPRESSION since home value dropped more than the Great Depression.

    justme says

    Prices are now falling - and falling just about everywhere. And it appears there are more price declines coming

    Nice. Bring it on. I've been waiting for it. It's a great opportunity to buy for those that follow history. Both home prices and interest rates are down since 2006. What's not to like?

    Well, maybe when home prices are 90% to 95% off from the peak and interest rates are at 2% for a 30-year fixed. That would be the ideal time to buy. Yep, don't be a loser and buy now. Renting is a smarter choice. ;)

  31. EBGuy


    Follow
    Befriend
    4 threads
    2,095 comments

    31   3:19pm Tue 5 Jul 2011   Share   Quote   Permalink   Like   Dislike  

    Weren't 1992 and 1993 the bottom of the last housing market?
    No, in the SF Bay Area we pushed sideways (and ultimately LOWER) for the next couple of years before finally turning the corner in March 1996 (65.92). In each year preceding 1996, there was, of course, a seasonal head fake. IMHO, turning negative earlier than the Sept. C/S report will be a very bad sign. To be fair, the absolute low in the previous downturn was 65.79 in March 1994.

justme is moderator of this thread.

Email

Username

Watch comments by email
Home   Tips and Tricks   Questions or suggestions? Mail p@patrick.net  

Page took 174 milliseconds to create.