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Excellent graph showing SF Bay Area still in housing bubble


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2012 Mar 6, 5:51am   80,512 views  138 comments

by Patrick   ➕follow (55)   💰tip   ignore  

Clearly prices can come down a lot more and still be above the inflation rate.

#housing

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1   freak80   2012 Mar 6, 5:53am  

It's different this time.

2   gregpfielding   2012 Mar 6, 6:10am  


Clearly prices can come down a lot more and still be above the inflation rate.

Or stay flat for another 20 years or so.

3   freak80   2012 Mar 6, 6:16am  

gregpfielding says

Or stay flat for another 20 years or so.

In nominal terms. What about after inflation?

My belief is that the Fed will keep trying to prop up housing by devaluing the dollar. The Fed is a private bank that was created to benefit the banks.

So it might be somewhat rational to buy rather than rent...as a hedge against inflation. But what if the Fed decides to tighten for whatever reason? We're at the mercy of the Fed.

4   SFace   2012 Mar 6, 6:21am  

The theory makes sense if there are no transformative changes between 1980 and now.

For starter, mortgage interest was around 12% in 1980 vs 4% now. There are other transformative changes (favorable and unfavorable) unaccounted for.

5   PockyClipsNow   2012 Mar 6, 6:27am  

Maybe we can predict what they will do by what will create maximum benefit for the banks. Keeping asset prices super high and interest rates super low seems to be the key.....ZIRP forevermore.

They arent actually trying to destroy people financially (it feels that way when u get 1% on a CD and used to get 6-7% a handful of years ago) but the people being destroyed (savers, first time buyers) are really just fuel in the fire to keep the banks warm and cozy.

Under which scenario will mortgage rates ever be >7% again? According to the default numbers being 4 to 10 times higher than pre 2007 mortgage rates should be in double digits and down payments shoule be 30%+ (basically thats private hard money rates). But taxpayers are giving loans to people with poor credit, 3.5% down or less at 3% - also mods at 2%. The cost must be enourmous to subsidize all these bad loans that were written and are continuing to be written. Expensive as in you can have free healthcare for all OR subsidize banks/asset holders..... #2 was chose for us.

6   freak80   2012 Mar 6, 6:34am  

PockyClipsNow says

Maybe we can predict what they will do by what will create maximum benefit for the banks. Keeping asset prices super high and interest rates super low seems to be the key.....ZIRP forevermore.
They arent actually trying to destroy people financially (it feels that way when u get 1% on a CD and used to get 6-7% a handful of years ago) but the people being destroyed (savers, first time buyers) are really just fuel in the fire to keep the banks warm and cozy.

That sums it up well.

7   rootvg   2012 Mar 6, 7:05am  

wthrfrk80 says

PockyClipsNow says

Maybe we can predict what they will do by what will create maximum benefit for the banks. Keeping asset prices super high and interest rates super low seems to be the key.....ZIRP forevermore.

They arent actually trying to destroy people financially (it feels that way when u get 1% on a CD and used to get 6-7% a handful of years ago) but the people being destroyed (savers, first time buyers) are really just fuel in the fire to keep the banks warm and cozy.

That sums it up well.

I'm thinking we have to have another 1980-1982 style recession to wring out all the inflationary pressures and set us up for the next growth spurt. This is what Volcker cooked up in 1979, sold it to Reagan because it was widely known he would be President (just as most people in the know agree that Romney will be President because of historical trends telling us Obama isn't electable with his polls the way they are) and they made it happen.

Let's dig into this. Government's two primary constituencies are old people and the military. We have retirees as a rapidly expanding demographic. They're earning 1-2 percent on their holdings when gasoline is three or four bucks and commodity prices are going crazy and less well off people are getting nailed at the grocery store. People out here talk about sustainability...well, guess what? THIS isn't sustainable economically speaking. We HAVE to get a new President and new party controlling the Senate and we HAVE to get a new Fed chief to help start the process of cleaning up the unholy mess (which everyone knew was coming) and moving us back to a point from which we can have a normal economy again.

Is there anything here I've missed?

8   Patrick   2012 Mar 6, 7:17am  

PockyClipsNow says

the people being destroyed (savers, first time buyers) are really just fuel in the fire to keep the banks warm and cozy.

Yes, that really is exactly what's going on.

Democracy? I don't think so. Just a myth to keep the banks in power.

rootvg says

Is there anything here I've missed?

Yes, Romney is just more of the same. Probably even worse.

9   rootvg   2012 Mar 6, 7:38am  

I don't know about worse.

Foreign policy will be better under the Republicans. It always is. It's what they do. Larry Eagleburger, Caspar Weinberger, Al Haig, Jimmy Baker...they were all conservative Republicans. These guys knew how to turn the screws. They were REALLY good at it.

I do know that rates have to go up. Bernanke knows it, too. He just won't talk about it.

10   REpro   2012 Mar 6, 8:14am  

wthrfrk80 says

The Fed is a private bank that was created to benefit the banks.

Actually banks are FED soldiers.

wthrfrk80 says

Or stay flat for another 20 years or so.
In nominal terms. What about after inflation?

What if devaluation of dollar (inflation) pop up house prices everywhere but BA will stay on same level?

11   EBGuy   2012 Mar 6, 9:07am  

What you have there... is a bankruptcy premium for Vallejo and Stockton.

12   uomo_senza_nome   2012 Mar 6, 9:19am  

rootvg says

Foreign policy will be better under the Republicans.

LOL How did that work out under Bush Jr?

rootvg says

I'm thinking we have to have another 1980-1982 style recession to wring out all the inflationary pressures and set us up for the next growth spurt.

Growth is dead, unless we can find oil that can feed the entire global demand and find people to take on more credit. Secular Deleveraging for a decade or more.

Inflationary pressures will die down because Bernanke just said he has no more plans to do further easing. That has made the market already uneasy about liquidity concerns and we are seeing the action over the past 2 days.

What we are more likely to see is a steady long-term decline , although choppy because of an uncertain Fed monetary policy and an even more uncertain and an irresponsible political gridlock.

PockyClipsNow says

Maybe we can predict what they will do by what will create maximum benefit for the banks. Keeping asset prices super high and interest rates super low seems to be the key.....ZIRP forevermore.

It's not just the banks at this point, it's the government in tandem with the banks as well. If banks a.k.a primary dealers won't buy Treasuries, how can they make sure interest rates stay low?

I think we have Zombie banks and a Zombie Government .
Not just here, same situation in Europe, Japan as well.


Clearly prices can come down a lot more and still be above the inflation rate.

I don't know if it makes sense to compare inflation rate with prices for a place like Bay Area where people ARE willing to pay a premium to live. I know -- they are overpaying, but the point is -- there's too much competition. Think of a place like North Hollywood for example, will prices measured in dollars ever come down? They can't purely because someone is willing to pay that high price. So may be the prices correlate more with income and/or wealth (because of the affordability factor of monthly mortgage payments or buying it outright).

Bay Area (Cupertino and other most desirable areas) is one place where rent vs. buy logic fails, miserably.

13   realitycheck   2012 Mar 6, 10:02am  

uomo_senza_nome says

Bay Area where people ARE willing to pay a premium to live. I know -- they are overpaying, but the point is -- there's too much competition.

Willing to pay is also linked to banks willing to lend! Anyways, too much competition to buy? In that case prices should be rising. Isn't it? I think "competition" appears to among sellers! :)

14   rootvg   2012 Mar 6, 11:10am  

Keep in mind, during the Great Depression (yes, I keep going back to it because you're all ignoring it) they said America was over and we emerged in the late forties as king of the hill. Europe is in worse shape than we are right now. China is another bubble waiting to burst and Japan is still in the process of emerging from its lost decade.

I also remember Carter saying at the end of the seventies that we needed to draw in our horns and accept there would be no more growth. You see what happened to him (and to Truman during a period of high unemployment in the early fifties) and that's what's gonna happen to Obama.

I just saw Santorum's speech in Steubenville. If he takes Ohio from Romney, Romney gets the nomination anyway and takes Ohio with Santorum as a running mate...whew, it'll be a wild four years with a Republican Congress. George Allen was saying it won't take much to win the Senate now. North Dakota, Nebraska, Ohio and Virginia are all Dem seats likely to flip next time around.

15   uomo_senza_nome   2012 Mar 6, 1:38pm  

realitycheck says

Willing to pay is also linked to banks willing to lend! Anyways, too much competition to buy? In that case prices should be rising.

Agreed. Credit is too loose, that's another problem. There are no repercussions for making bad financial decisions. That's also a problem.

16   rootvg   2012 Mar 6, 1:43pm  

uomo_senza_nome says

realitycheck says

Willing to pay is also linked to banks willing to lend! Anyways, too much competition to buy? In that case prices should be rising.

Agreed. Credit is too loose, that's another problem. There are no repercussions for making bad financial decisions. That's also a problem.

There ARE repercussions...but not in California or even in Texas.

Credit is plenty tight back in the Rust Belt.

17   uomo_senza_nome   2012 Mar 6, 1:51pm  

realitycheck says

Isn't it? I think "competition" appears to among sellers! :)

What I was alluding to was this: rents closely track income and job growth. If you have the same number of people in a locality but their income grows, so will their rent. If you have the same income for people but the number of jobs in the locality increased, then also rent will increase because of the premium to live close to your job.

I think it is a combination of things that support high prices in Bay area and it is hard to see how these things will all fall in place so that lower prices can be achieved.

I mean the whole system is rigged to support high prices.

18   uomo_senza_nome   2012 Mar 6, 1:57pm  

rootvg says

I also remember Carter saying at the end of the seventies that we needed to draw in our horns and accept there would be no more growth.

Carter was an intelligent guy, he was trying to reduce the addiction of America to cheap oil. Clearly that did not work.

Secondly, economic growth over last decade was predicated on cheap credit. To claim that that was real growth is BS.

19   rootvg   2012 Mar 6, 1:58pm  

uomo_senza_nome says

realitycheck says

Isn't it? I think "competition" appears to among sellers! :)

What I was alluding to was this: rents closely track income and job growth. If you have the same number of people in a locality but their income grows, so will their rent. If you have the same income for people but the number of jobs in the locality increased, then also rent will increase because of the premium to live close to your job.

I think it is a combination of things that support high prices in Bay area and it is hard to see how these things will all fall in place so that lower prices can be achieved.

I mean the whole system is rigged to support high prices.

There are jobs here that pay well, and people with cash flow and money saved to allow sellers in choice areas to ask ridiculous prices.

Game over, thank you for playing.

It's just as I said. Some people will not be able to afford to buy here. The same could be said for Arlington, VA or Chevy Chase, MD or Brookline, MA or Westchester, NY or Bedminster, NJ or Bellevue, WA.

This is what Michael Bloomberg was saying awhile back. There will be certain places that are no longer affordable for middle class people. Peter Schiff has been screaming about Chinese real estate speculators for several years. Judd Gregg said right after he left the Senate that it's very likely we would pass to our children a nation in which they could not afford to live.

There's nothing new here.

20   rootvg   2012 Mar 6, 2:01pm  

uomo_senza_nome says

rootvg says

I also remember Carter saying at the end of the seventies that we needed to draw in our horns and accept there would be no more growth.

Carter was an intelligent guy, he was trying to reduce the addiction of America to cheap oil. Clearly that did not work.

Secondly, economic growth over last decade was predicated on cheap credit. To claim that that was real growth is BS.

I would never denigrate Carter. He was an awful President but is arguably the best ex-President we've ever had.

They say he swings a mean hammer, too.

21   thomas.wong1986   2012 Mar 6, 2:17pm  

SFace says

The theory makes sense if there are no transformative changes between 1980 and now.
For starter, mortgage interest was around 12% in 1980 vs 4% now. There are other transformative changes (favorable and unfavorable) unaccounted for.

Transformative changes.. 1970 to 1990 lots of reasons prices should of skyrocketed as it did in the last 10 years. But that didnt happen.

Today, transformative changes are vanishing...yet the people who came here after 2000 are still expecting some kind of magical boom to happen fueled by myths and legends. But that isnt happening.. is it ?

Lower interest rates certainly dont explain higher prices since rates have fallen in the past along with prices..

Vanishing Public Companies Lead To The Incredible Shrinking Silicon Valley

http://www.siliconbeat.com/2010/02/17/vanishing-public-companies-lead-to-the-incredible-shrinking-silicon-valley/

One of the most significant trends I’ve been watching over the past decade is the dramatic drop in public companies in Silicon Valley. Naturally, that number was artificially inflated during the dot-com bubble when it reached 417 in 2000. For our purposes, Silicon Valley includes San Mateo and Santa Clara counties, and the southern half of Alameda County.

But the number of public companies has dropped for nine straight years now. Even when IPOs briefly reappeared in 2006 and 2007, they weren’t enough to overcome the net loss of public companies through acquisitions or bankruptcy.

In 2008, the number had fallen to 261. We just updated our records and the latest figure is 241.

That’s not just less than the dot-com era, that’s well below the 315 public companies the valley had in 1994 when the Mercury News started keeping track.

22   thomas.wong1986   2012 Mar 6, 3:51pm  

Helloeeze says

How many people in Ohio are working 80 hours a week?

In the 1970s and 80s yes we had factories in SV that ran 24/7 around 360 days a year. 3 Shifts daily rotation. It was the center of 70-80% of world semiconductor/harddrive/and other High Tech production. And since we had the global markets to supply... lots of jobs with skyrocketing growth.

So why didnt prices of RE skyrocket as it has in recent 10 years ?

Could it be people were more sensible about what they were willing to pay for homes ?

23   thomas.wong1986   2012 Mar 6, 3:56pm  

Helloeeze says

Could it be that salaries have gone up (for a talented few) higher than inflation would suggest wages should go up? The Bay Area is one of the most highly educated areas in the United States.

We must have been less educated, less paid and really lazy employees in decades prior to the year 2000...

24   JodyChunder   2012 Mar 6, 4:44pm  

uomo_senza_nome says

They can't purely because someone is willing to pay that high price. So may be the prices correlate more with income and/or wealth (because of the affordability factor of monthly mortgage payments or buying it outright).

Bay Area (Cupertino and other most desirable areas) is one place where rent vs. buy logic fails, miserably.

I think it's more a question of facility; as long as the debt is provided or otherwise underwritten by the GSE to allow speculation in housing, then you will see these areas stay puffed-up -- otherwise, most moneyed jerks know better than to sink such a chunk of their own capital into a dud asset like RRE. OPM!

25   JodyChunder   2012 Mar 6, 5:04pm  

Helloeeze says

the chart the housing bubble started in the 1987 and it continues today. Using inflation as a benchmark, we have been in the bubble for over 20 years. It appears it's the norm now for this area.

By its very definition, a bubble cannot continue in perpetuity. By calling this the "norm" you are suggesting a new, higher baseline for residential real estate. I don't think the fundamentals support this idea, unless we have even more government intervention in the housing market going forward.

26   freak80   2012 Mar 6, 10:45pm  

Helloeeze says

How many people in Ohio are working 80 hours a week?

Quite a few. 40 hours at each minimum-wage job.

27   bubblesitter   2012 Mar 6, 11:25pm  

BA is an exception - wait another 20 years,until the decimation of these high tech companies and no more lucrative companies replacing them. LOL.

28   SiO2   2012 Mar 6, 11:27pm  

I think the FHFA index only covers conforming loans:

"This information is obtained by reviewing repeat mortgage transactions on single-family properties whose mortgages have been purchased or securitized by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac since January 1975.
"
http://www.fhfa.gov/Default.aspx?Page=81

Also, it would probably not cover most subprime, since Fannie didn't get into that substantially until 06. Most subprimes were non-bank entities like Countrywide pre-BAC.

So what does it mean? This index might understate the bubble from 2003-2006 by excluding many subprimes. It might overstate the decline since then by excluding houses with mortgages >$729k. There's been some other graphs posting showing that the lower tier bubbled and popped more than the top tier.

Also, what about the common theory on this board that the government is understating inflation? with that, the green line should be higher, making it closer to the house prices.

Finally, the problem with this analysis is that it says one should buy in Vallejo or Stockton. However, given the choice, more people would prefer to buy in SJ area or SF. So there's something to a purchase besides the cost.

29   rootvg   2012 Mar 7, 12:28am  

wthrfrk80 says

Helloeeze says

How many people in Ohio are working 80 hours a week?

Quite a few. 40 hours at each minimum-wage job.

I saw a lot of that growing up. It's one of the reasons we left.

30   rootvg   2012 Mar 7, 12:32am  

JodyChunder says

Helloeeze says

the chart the housing bubble started in the 1987 and it continues today. Using inflation as a benchmark, we have been in the bubble for over 20 years. It appears it's the norm now for this area.

By its very definition, a bubble cannot continue in perpetuity. By calling this the "norm" you are suggesting a new, higher baseline for residential real estate. I don't think the fundamentals support this idea, unless we have even more government intervention in the housing market going forward.

It's true, and Greenspan admitted it in his book. The 1987 break created the foundation for the prices we see today.

31   rootvg   2012 Mar 7, 12:41am  

thomas.wong1986 says

Helloeeze says

How many people in Ohio are working 80 hours a week?

In the 1970s and 80s yes we had factories in SV that ran 24/7 around 360 days a year. 3 Shifts daily rotation. It was the center of 70-80% of world semiconductor/harddrive/and other High Tech production. And since we had the global markets to supply... lots of jobs with skyrocketing growth.

So why didnt prices of RE skyrocket as it has in recent 10 years ?

Could it be people were more sensible about what they were willing to pay for homes ?

Here again, it's about demographics and culture. They're straight down the middle people. Their world is not in a constant emotional fog or externally induced state of confusion. They are not governed and their agenda is not set by people with alternative lifestyles or who constantly have axes to grind or who are on the margins of society.

They also don't have the money or education we have out here.

32   dunnross   2012 Mar 7, 12:53am  

REpro says

What if devaluation of dollar (inflation) pop up house prices everywhere but BA will stay on same level?

That's highly unlikely. Recovery always starts at the high-end. Look at the '95 FHFA chart. The recovery in SF & SJ started almost 2 years before Valejo & Stockton. A more likely scenario is for fortress areas to continue falling for the next 10-20 years, suppressing the low end, even more.

33   bubblesitter   2012 Mar 7, 2:40am  

30 years later there will be a site similar to this site touting return of BA prices. :)

34   uomo_senza_nome   2012 Mar 7, 3:03am  

rootvg says

Game over, thank you for playing.

It's just as I said. Some people will not be able to afford to buy here. The same could be said for Arlington, VA or Chevy Chase, MD or Brookline, MA or Westchester, NY or Bedminster, NJ or Bellevue, WA.

I don't get it. are you agreeing with me or disagreeing with me?

You are comparing areas where there are people with a lot more net worth relative to other areas in the US. Obviously prices are high because such high prices can be supported because of the mere existence of these buyers at the margin.

Sure cheap loans are also a factor.

Good that you bring up Arlington,VA and MD into the picture. Those are some of the richest counties in the whole country and surprise, surprise -- located in close proximity to the power circles.

35   LAO   2012 Mar 7, 3:19am  

bubblesitter says

BA is an exception - wait another 20 years,until the decimation of these high tech companies and no more lucrative companies replacing them. LOL.

You could also be dead in 20 years.. we will probably have a major world war before then that changes the way we all live...so who cares.

I'm checking out... gonna concentrate on living my life rather than constantly circling the dead carcass of the housing market on a daily basis... while trying to determine if the meat is spoiled enough to feast.

36   rootvg   2012 Mar 7, 3:28am  

LAO says

bubblesitter says

BA is an exception - wait another 20 years,until the decimation of these high tech companies and no more lucrative companies replacing them. LOL.

You could also be dead in 20 years.. we will probably have a major world war before then that changes the way we all live...so who cares.

I'm checking out... gonna concentrate on living my life rather than constantly circling the dead carcass of the housing market on a daily basis... while trying to determine if the meat is spoiled enough to feast.

That's another one of the reasons we bought.

37   bubblesitter   2012 Mar 7, 3:28am  

LAO says

I'm checking out...

Please do yourself a favor. There is no reason for a person who bought recently to be on this site -unless he is here for a post purchase rationalization.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post-purchase_rationalization

PS: As I said before,I CAN RENT THE SAME PLACE THAT YOU LIVE IN AND NOT BUY IT. I AM LIVING THE SAME LIFE STYLE AS YOU DO BY RENTING A HOUSE.

38   rootvg   2012 Mar 7, 3:40am  

uomo_senza_nome says

rootvg says

Game over, thank you for playing.

It's just as I said. Some people will not be able to afford to buy here. The same could be said for Arlington, VA or Chevy Chase, MD or Brookline, MA or Westchester, NY or Bedminster, NJ or Bellevue, WA.

I don't get it. are you agreeing with me or disagreeing with me?

You are comparing areas where there are people with a lot more net worth relative to other areas in the US. Obviously prices are high because such high prices can be supported because of the mere existence of these buyers at the margin.

Sure cheap loans are also a factor.

Good that you bring up Arlington,VA and MD into the picture. Those are some of the richest counties in the whole country and surprise, surprise -- located in close proximity to the power circles.

A little of both.

These are ALL high income or high proximity to power areas.

The real issue here isn't real estate and I think most of us here understand that. It's about increasing income differential in the United States and (again) it's something Alan Greenspan spent time discussing in his book.

This isn't the fifties, as badly as my wife and I and others we know would want it to be. I think we can get there again and there are some very smart people who think we can as well but it's gonna take time and WORK.

I really think Tom Tancredo has it nailed. He said we need to close the borders (not permanently) to allow some assimilation and our economy and political culture to heal from the most recent wave of mass immigration. That won't go over well in politically correct California but then again, I'm not so sure we're going to be a state ten years from now. When the Republicans take control in January and start cutting off all that money for social engineering projects, all those lefties sitting at the table are likely to become mighty nervous about the dwindling supply of cash. This is what Starve the Beast is about.

We've been here before: economically, politically and socially. We've navigated these waters before (except for the debt) and we can do it again.

39   rootvg   2012 Mar 7, 3:53am  

bubblesitter says

LAO says

I'm checking out...

Please do yourself a favor. There is no reason for a person who bought recently to be on this site -unless he is here for a post purchase rationalization.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post-purchase_rationalization

PS: As I said before,I CAN RENT THE SAME PLACE THAT YOU LIVE IN AND NOT BUY IT. I AM LIVING THE SAME LIFE STYLE AS YOU DO BY RENTING A HOUSE.

Yes!

You can live the same life but without the tax advantages. We did it for eight years and that was enough.

Even my landlord (VP of a commercial real estate management company) and CPA both said at our income level, it made sense because of what we bought and where. When my wife gets promoted (or if I get promoted, my boss is retiring soon and I'm the only one on the team with a college degree) the IRS will send Guido and his buddy after us with a tire iron. I'm sick of it. I don't have to do this.

I'm here because I'm good at writing and enjoy seeing other opinions. My high school Government teacher almost thirty years ago literally begged (in front of the whole class, no less) me to go to law school because of my strong personality and high verbal but I thought technology offered me a better future. On balance, I think I made the right decision. If I had done law school, I'd be back in Ohio.

40   Terrabella   2012 Mar 7, 4:01am  

Well, one thing the Bay Area has that many other areas don't is jobs. Although the job market is not what it once was, compared to other parts of the country it is comparatively robust in certain segments. Between San Francisco, Silicon Valley and all the support jobs that feed off of both sectors, the Bay Area isn't all that bad. Housing has always been over price in this area but seems to have weather a bit better than say places like Florida, etc. The thing that will collapse the housing market nation wide is interest rates. If and when they start moving up, the housing market is in for far worse conditions than we seen so far. It is anyone guess as to when rates will climb but at some point the rates will move up and once again bring housing to its knees. My personal opinion is it will take at least ten years before we will have stable market which all depends on the political environment both here in the USA and worldwide.

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