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Recent Uprising Prices Is a Sucker's Rally?


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2012 Jul 28, 4:32am   20,026 views  57 comments

by Robber Baron Elite Scum   ➕follow (2)   💰tip   ignore  

All bubbles in ANY investment before completely crashing have a incomplete crash, denial, a false bottom, a sucker's rally & then finally a complete shit hit the fan crash into cannibal anarchy.

Who here thinks a false rally is happening due to low inventory from banks not listing & homeowners in denial; waiting for prices to go up, then planning on listing.

Thus, prices are only temporarily going up & a very short-term bubble is happening due to a larger ratio of demand going after a manipulated false ratio of actual inventory. This is why you have multiple offers & increased competition , thus increased prices...

Homeowners will then see the prices going up.... Millions of underwater homeowners will start listing & everybody will try selling including banks...

This will crash the market again like in 2008. I expect another crash in the end of 2012, this time much more severe & no more false rallies afterwards; just a rally of cannibals.

Do you guys agree? What do you predict? Do you think I'm right? Your thoughts?

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1   Another Miner   2012 Jul 28, 9:36am  

I sure hope so. Here is Petaluma/Sonoma county, with minimal to no employment growth, absolutely average homes are getting multiple offers in the $500k+ range. Same house in Vallejo 25 miles east is going for $100k. Frankly, as a person who is stuck here - spouse is a public employee and my children go to school here- this is really depressing. 3/2 bd/ba rentals of moderate quality get 100+ responses within listing on CL. This market is so screwed up it really confounds me.

2   dunnross   2012 Jul 28, 10:06am  

Robber Baron Elite Scum says

Do you guys agree? What do you predict? Do you think I'm right? Your thoughts?

You are 100% right. There is no question that this is exactly what's happening. A "true"/fundamental bottom, after such a huge run-up we've had prior to the crash, would be a slow/prolonged and agonizing crawl for at least a decade. This is not what we are seeing now. What we are seeing now is a resumption of the blow-off mania, we've seen in the period leading up to the crash. Look at the graph below of Phoenix market, and you can see that the slope of price ascent is exactly equal to that of the 2005 blow-off top. This is not the kind of a reaction you would see, if this was really a bottom. Fundamentally, the sucker's rally is very easy to argue. People are still crazy about real-estate. Most people (especially in california) still think that real-estate is a good investment. This kind of a perception CANNOT possible be true at the true bottom of the market.

3   Robber Baron Elite Scum   2012 Jul 28, 10:36am  

I think that chart says a lot about what seems to be happening. I figure it will go on for another 6-9 months of very big false gains in real estate prices....

Then the big crash!

4   Raw   2012 Jul 28, 10:48am  

Worst is over. We are in a sustained recovery.
This is an opportunity to buy real estate. An opportunity that will never be repeated in our lifetime.
A combination of such low prices, and low interest rates. WOW!
I'm all in.

5   KILLERJANE   2012 Jul 28, 10:51am  

The big crash has occurred in Nevada and Arizona and Florida. California is still high. I mean completely stoned.

6   dunnross   2012 Jul 28, 10:52am  

Raw says

A combination of such low prices, and low interest rates. WOW!
I'm all in.

Yes, this is exactly the kind of hyper-frenzy I was talking about, pertaining only to sucker's rallies and bacchanalian feasts.

7   Robber Baron Elite Scum   2012 Jul 28, 10:54am  

Raw says

Worst is over. We are in a sustained recovery.
This is an opportunity to buy real estate. An opportunity that will never be repeated in our lifetime.
A combination of such low prices, and low interest rates. WOW!
I'm all in.

Sorry but I disagree strongly.

You can't have low prices with low interest rates and FHA loans enabling reckless lending even today... Only it's now the government that is doing it.

That simply doesn't make it possible to buy at a low price.

With low interest rates and FHA reckless lending standards... Now is the opportunity to sell and cash out.

8   dunnross   2012 Jul 28, 10:54am  

KILLERJANE says

The big crash has occurred in Nevada and Arizona and Florida.

Yes, but that was only the 1st course. Bubble crash is usually a 3-course meal. We've only witnessed the 1st one, so far.

9   KILLERJANE   2012 Jul 28, 10:57am  

Yeah because all houses should sell for 75,000 and under.

10   dunnross   2012 Jul 28, 11:00am  

KILLERJANE says

Yeah because all houses should sell for 75,000 and under.

Why not? At least in Arizona, they should. Why would anybody want to pay more in AZ?

11   dunnross   2012 Jul 28, 11:01am  

dunnross says

KILLERJANE says

Yeah because all houses should sell for 75,000 and under.

Why not? At least in Arizona, they should. Why would anybody want to pay more in AZ?

And in the Bay Area, I don't see any house worth more than $1M. 99.9% of all houses in the Bay Area are architectural disasters.

12   Robber Baron Elite Scum   2012 Jul 28, 11:09am  

dunnross says

And in the Bay Area, I don't see any house worth more than $1M. 99.9% of all houses in the Bay Area are architectural disasters.

In Long Island, New York...

The overpriced areas are Great Neck, Roslyn, Manhasset, East Hills, Manhasset Hills, Searingtown, Greenvale, Glen Head, Sea Cliff, Port Washington, Sands Point, Old Brookville, Brookville, Upper Brookville, Jericho, Woodbury, Kings Point, Old Westbury, Muttontown, Syosset, East Williston, Williston Park, New Hyde Park & many more...

Basically in Long Island the entire area is a rip off and overpriced....

But the biggest rip off is Nassau county and the biggest rip off of all in Nassau County is the pretty much the entire North Shore & "Gold Coast".

13   Robber Baron Elite Scum   2012 Jul 28, 11:27am  

robertoaribas says

Similarly, in this ridiculous scenario, the 'genious banks' that engineer the crash suddenly turn into the 'stupid banks' that crash prices. Which is it? are they master manipulators or not? if they are so clever, why would they suddenly turn stupid? [hint: they are actually quite stupid! they loaned money to people who couldn't pay it back, did such shoddy paperwork they got thrown under the bus, and today are approving short sales at prices far under what the home would sell at auction for. Sorry to say, there is no way in hell the banks are cleverly engineering anything!]

They want to crash prices because they never even lent the money in the first place.

They practice "fractional reserve banking".

When people default, they get to seize an asset for which they never even really provided money for.

robertoaribas says

Simply put, nearly underwater homeowners can DAMPEN appreciation, but cannot start severe depreciation, without foreclosure or short sale.

All underwater homeowners will willfully give up their home to foreclosure or a short sale in the future eventually. If not willfully, the banks will repossess after they default which is very likely due to a contracting of the economy in all sectors.

Underwater homeowners WILL start severe depreciation.

robertoaribas says

Mr. X's value up $400K, so he decides to sell. Can he crash the market? NO!

Yes... Because he will be a part of the millions of others who will also be trying to sell once values jump 15-20%...

Too many sellers and too little buyers is a crash.

robertoaribas says

IF the value dropped down below $320K, he wouldn't make anything after transaction costs, so he would very likely give up and remove his home from the market.

No. He will very likely file bankruptcy. Default and let it foreclose or do a short sale.

And if another housing crash comes along... Unemployment will increase by many times and many people will go under foreclosure whether they did so willfully or not.

Banks will then either sell off to investors or hold on to properties. Most likely sell off to investors/big brokerages who are their business pals.

14   Raw   2012 Jul 28, 12:02pm  

robertoaribas says

They want to crash prices because they never even lent the money in the first place.

They practice "fractional reserve banking".

When people default, they get to seize an asset for which they never even really provided money for.

robertoaribas says

Robber Baron,
How do the the banks benefit by seizing an asset that is underwater? The value of Citibank stock had gone down to $1.00, down 98% because of the crisis, so where was the benefit? Banks make money by getting their loans paid back with interest, not by loaning money to people who default.
Raw truth

15   mell   2012 Jul 28, 12:05pm  

It's not "stupid" for a bank to loan out to people they know cannot pay back, it is criminal/fraudulent, but definitely not stupid. Most of the money they lend out is backed by nothing and most of the the involved parties get instant kickbacks. Then when they foreclose they get the home for free as they have not had the money on the books to begin with. Also if the bank ever folds - which is unlikely as they keep getting bailed out with taxpayer money - most have made enough money, far more in those "golden" years than they would have if they had to pay themselves "regular" salaries on a lifelong basis.

16   dunnross   2012 Jul 28, 12:13pm  

robertoaribas says

IF the value dropped down below $320K, he wouldn't make anything after transaction costs, so he would very likely give up and remove his home from the market.

That would already be too late, because prices would "gap down" like they did back in 2008. Houses are only worth this much, because people perceive their value to be this high. If everyone wakes up in the morning and realizes what some of us, on this blog, already realize now (that, basically, most RE in the country is still in the bubble valuation), there would be a huge stampede for the exit door, and prices will gap down, before the poor house owner has a chance to react.

17   Robber Baron Elite Scum   2012 Jul 28, 12:16pm  

Raw says

How do the the banks benefit by seizing an asset that is underwater?

Because they create money out of thin air through fractional reserve banking.

They lend out the bogus shadow money which doesn't even exist. Borrower buys an asset. Borrower fails to pay back lender money which was created out of nothing through fractional reserve banking...

And they then seize the asset... Unrightfully taking the asset.

Raw says

The value of Citibank stock had gone down to $1.00, down 98% because of the crisis,

Like any of that matters.

Raw says

Banks make money by getting their loans paid back with interest

That is only one way to make money for banks. But the best way and most profitable way to make money is through fractional reserve banking and then contracting the credit after making as many loans as possible.

This way you artificially create money yourself and then destroy that money. This allows you to take over an asset without the victims knowing you just basically robbed them blind.

18   Robber Baron Elite Scum   2012 Jul 28, 12:18pm  

mell says

It's not "stupid" for a bank to loan out to people they know cannot pay back, it is criminal/fraudulent, but definitely not stupid. Most of the money they lend out is backed by nothing and most of the the involved parties get instant kickbacks. Then when they foreclose they get the home for free as they have not had the money on the books to begin with. Also if the bank ever folds - which is unlikely as they keep getting bailed out with taxpayer money - most have made enough money, far more in those "golden" years than they would have if they had to pay themselves "regular" salaries on a lifelong basis.

+1

Mell has also explained another way that banks make money through defaults regardless of whether they even practice Fractional Reserve banking...

Which they do.

19   lostand confused   2012 Jul 28, 12:33pm  

Something is not right in this market. Prices of houses were much lower both in the bay area and socal, when the dot com boom was in full swing. Companies were fighting over employees and people had so much hope, confidence and money . Housing was much, much lower than now.

Since then we have had the dot com crash, housing bubble bust , offshoring of iT jobs and now back office jobs too and CA is broke and yet in many places, the prices are higher than before the dot com bust. Something ain't right.

20   dunnross   2012 Jul 28, 1:01pm  

lostand confused says

the prices are higher than before the dot com bust.

Some places like Palo Alto, Los Altos prices are even much higher than they were in 2007 at the peak of the frenzy.

21   thomaswong.1986   2012 Jul 28, 1:04pm  

Another Miner says

absolutely average homes are getting multiple offers in the $500k+ rang

Realtors have been saying that for the past several years and yet even with rates declining .. prices have also declined.

22   Another Miner   2012 Jul 28, 1:09pm  

Amen. I know of three homes that have sold in the more desirable side of Petaluma over the past couple of months. In all cases, the real-a-doors(tm) told me that they expected 10+ offers after the opening weekend. More than 45 days after the offers were accepted, only one of the three homes has a resident. The other two (both sold for north of 550 for 3/2 bd/ba's) have long browning grass, unraked yards and one still have a lock box on the front yard.

Supposedly, most accepted offers in the area are all cash. The (buffoon) mortgage broker I was using (until I confirmed he was sloppy and incompetent) said that 35% of the market was all cash, and the balance was 3.5% FHA. No place for prudent savers. I decided to sit this party out until at least Feb.

Like you said, something aint right.

23   Robber Baron Elite Scum   2012 Jul 28, 1:27pm  

lostand confused says

Something is not right in this market. Prices of houses were much lower both in the bay area and socal, when the dot com boom was in full swing. Companies were fighting over employees and people had so much hope, confidence and money . Housing was much, much lower than now.

Since then we have had the dot com crash, housing bubble bust , offshoring of iT jobs and now back office jobs too and CA is broke and yet in many places, the prices are higher than before the dot com bust. Something ain't right.

Perhaps people had lost all hope in the stock market, jobs, business start-ups & internet enterprises that their home is they only thing left for them to make money off...

Which is actually kind of sad.

24   jackdaw   2012 Jul 28, 1:36pm  

Well, iv'e been sitting on the sidelines for the past three years hoping prices will get into a realistic range so i can get into something(to live in, not invest). And i don't even know if that would be a wise thing based on the politico and economic realities that have developed.

I'm at a point in my life where i have stable employment and finances and am enjoying life now, but i don't know about the future of this country. Not sure i want to get invested in anything here anymore. Patrick has been an immeasurable resource for cutting through all the party line you get from the mainline media sources, and it makes you realize how controlled our country has become from these monied investment interests.

I think the baron is right; the market is going to go up in these cycles and then come down siginificantly in a matter of months.

25   Another Miner   2012 Jul 28, 1:36pm  

http://www.zillow.com/homedetails/315-12th-St-Petaluma-CA-94952/15755261_zpid/

thomaswong.1986 says

Realtors have been saying that for the past several years and yet even with rates declining .. prices have also declined.

This house was a time warp from middle class 1910. As in, there was not an updated system in the house in the last 100 years.

Real-door(tm) can say whatever they want, but someone paid 500+ for this and it needs another 200 to be brought into this century. This isn't Palo, but you wouldn't know it by the prices.

26   Eman   2012 Jul 28, 3:16pm  

KILLERJANE says

California is still high. I mean completely stoned.

Done stoning? :)

The central valley & inland empire of CA got decimated. The coastal neighborhoods are holding up better. The fortress is .......... well, still expensive as ever. :)

27   dunnross   2012 Jul 28, 5:09pm  

The fact that the fortress has cities with prices still higher than 2006, is a sure sign that the true RE bottom is nowhere close in sight. During the NASDAQ bubble collapse, the bell-weather cisco stock dropped from $80 to $10. The nifty-fifty stocks took a beating during the 70's downturn. From real estate, examples, we've had former fortress enclaves: Tokyo, Hong Kong, London and many others take brutal beating during their respective recessions. The Bay Area fortress will be no different. I expect to see a brutal crash, here, just because, prices have been going up for so long, that everyone, here, is blindly convinced that this area is truly invincible. Now, historically, it's always been the case, that after a bubble, the top-tiered places will see earlier appreciation. This happened back in 1970's and 1995 and many other examples of this. So, if we are seeing that cities like Phoenix going up before the fortress areas of the Bay Area, this cannot be a true recovery. Places like Phoenix and Las Vegas don't lead the RE market, they follow it, and only once other places have sufficiently appreciated, do places like Phoenix and Las Vegas start to rally. Places like Palo Alto and Santa Monica lead the prices action, and, since this is not happening this time around, it cannot be a true recovery.

28   Another Miner   2012 Jul 28, 5:11pm  

Since most loans are FHA these days and government backed, why would the lender even care if the borrower can repay the loan? As long are at the borrower qualifies based on income, they are good to loan (from what I have recently seen). Nothing fraudulent there...that is the way the government wants the game played.

I am not really sure why the government wants people in bubble real estate areas to go all in at 3.5% loans on $600,000 stater homes, since it will take very little to get them underwater, but that is not my problem. But it helps get the inventory off the banks foreclosure books.

You can trivialize it if you want, but fractional reserve lending is a big part of the problem, but that is not even worth discussing.

29   Robber Baron Elite Scum   2012 Jul 28, 6:53pm  

"whenever anyone says clearly demonstrating so little knowledge about finance or economics, it is best to just nod and smile. SImply put, they don't have either the education to bother talking to them..."

What a US President & a Founding Father has to say about Fractional Reserve Lending...

“No one has a natural right to the trade of money [loan money], but he who has money to lend.”
-Thomas Jefferson

I guess in your flawed estimation, Thomas Jefferson is also a dumb idiot who knew nothing about economics nor finance. His knowledge is also very poor. The only smart one is you.

30   lostand confused   2012 Jul 28, 8:52pm  

robertoaribas says

whenever anyone says clearly demonstrating so little knowledge about finance or economics, it is best to just nod and smile. SImply put, they don't have either the education to bother talking to them... mell says

Self professed experts are always entertaining. You must have heard about fiat currency?

31   futuresmc   2012 Jul 28, 9:46pm  

If markets were run by the free market, I'd agree, but government has been caputured by the corporatists and media is owned by them. The people are stressed to the limit, so they can't think for themselves and tons of misinformation is put in the public's line of sight, specifically for the few intrepid souls who want to try to wade through what is real and what is hype to get mired down in. And as a last line of defense, the means with which the market reports on itself is digital, which means open to hacking, and proprietarily complex, which means open to creative accounting. In short, the best illusionists and con men in history run the show, and prices will do what they tell them too, regardless of fundimental truths.

32   mell   2012 Jul 28, 11:15pm  

robertoaribas says

Robber Baron Elite Scum says

Because they create money out of thin air through fractional reserve banking.

whenever anyone says clearly demonstrating so little knowledge about finance or economics, it is best to just nod and smile. SImply put, they don't have either the education to bother talking to them... mell says

It's not "stupid" for a bank to loan out to people they know cannot pay back, it is criminal/fraudulent, but definitely not stupid. Most of the money they lend out is backed by nothing and most of the the involved parties get instant kickbacks.

ok, we have a society of the economically illiterate! have fun!

Look, I'm not trying to predict house prices (though I have a general direction), also I am generally happy for people who enjoy their home or can make decent rental income from their houses and the work they out in - IF I didn't have to substitute so many of the mortgages and zombie banks out there with my taxes time and time again. Debt should be treated equal without favoritism and rigged low interest rates at the expense of the saver. I trade stocks (besides having a full time job) - no bank crap though and not on margin - and maybe I am part of the system because of this, but at least I take full responsibility and all the risks for my investments. Also to simply deny that banks have not been using mark to market (thus inflating their value), hiding non-performing mortgages from their balance sheet, rigging interest rates (liebor), knowingly selling junk MBS for AAA and not practicing "one dollar spent/lent backed by one dollar of capital/collateral)" makes me wonder where you have been the last 5 years.

33   37108605   2012 Sep 28, 9:01pm  

Raw says

Worst is over. We are in a sustained recovery.

I hope you are being ironic, or heavily drinking.

34   barbaraG   2012 Sep 28, 10:27pm  

The only way new buyers in this economy can afford such prices is to be either the beneficiaries of rare circumstances (inheritance, lottery, being able to sell a similarly priced home, etc.), or via such exotic and unhistoric financing products that they are effectively renters whether they know it or not. The bottom is nowhere near here so long as prices remain so out of whack vs. incomes, and incomes are mostly going down or have been flat for the last decade with no end in sight. Prices will have to adjust to what people can afford, or else the property sits unsold, becomes derelict (Grey Gardens, anyone?), or gets eminent domained and turned into something else (like the way a lot of the mansions and near-mansions of old cities like Philly got chopped up and turned into apartments. This process will likely take decades to work out, because that's how long it took in times past.

35   jsmarket   2012 Sep 29, 2:45am  

The 'numbers' don't support the prices today, in aggregate. Isolated markets may have individual characteristics and home prices have plunged enough already...but, in aggregate US home prices seem richly valued.

Median household wages have declined 4% in the past 12 years...if the under reported official CPI numbers (relative to the model used prior to 1990) are used...inflation adjusted wages have declined over 30%. This is not a recipe for higher home prices going forward.

Our government now forcibly controls over 90% of the residential mortgage lending in the US - thru nothing down Fannie and Freddie and close to nothing down FHA. As recently as the late 90's one had to put 10% down...and either pay PMI for having under 20% equity or, dependent on income, it was sometimes a better deal to have a higher interest, 2nd mortgage on the balance. All of this has evaporated.

Government has simply stepped in and forced lower down payments and created lower mortgage interest rates to make the average US family more comfortable with higher levels of debt while real income declines.

One doesn't know the Minsky Moment when these government led subluxations of normal market actions cease to have positive effect...but when that debt load becomes too great for the average US family to bear will be the time home prices tumble again.

But, it surely will....

36   taxee   2012 Sep 29, 3:06am  

Robber Baron Elite Scum says

They want to crash prices because they never even lent the money in the first place.

They practice "fractional reserve banking".

When people default, they get to seize an asset for which they never even really provided money for.

Not to mention the losses they handed to the pension funds they sold the bogus MBS to, and the so called insurance, unregulated 'credit default swaps', they collected on that were paid by printing money that the banks paid to themselves. Now working people, especially you young folks, need to get back to work so you can pay the rent. Forget about owning. The stolen goods are not for sale.

37   rfsanders   2012 Sep 29, 3:20am  

KILLERJANE says

The big crash has occurred in Nevada and Arizona and Florida. California is still high. I mean completely stoned.

Just keep your blinders on! Common sense is a myth.

Seems like a fair assessment. Even if PHX, LVS, or MIA were to lose another 20% ... actually home prices would fall ... what? Another $500 apiece? haha j/k

CA doesn't make any sense. Have relatives who make around $50k renting what they can afford ... a small, dumpy apartment that doesn't even have a real front door. They'd love to buy but everything in LA County is priced at $400k+. And those aren't the nice houses.

And they are the lucky ones who have a job. At some point in the next 10-20 years, those houses are going to have to change hands. And if incomes aren't WAY up by then ... I expect a slow, gradual decline in LA RE prices over several decades, which will gobble 30%+ or more.

38   jsmarket   2012 Sep 29, 3:49am  

I wanted to add to my post, but it was already getting too long, there is in all likelihood higher taxes on the way at both state and local levels and the aging of Amerika(sic) is happening. 10,000 Baby Boomers per DAY retiring bodes not well for resale prospects of today's mini-mansions.

Further, with Mexico and Sourh American economies, as well as the VAST majority if Asia better poised for future success...I don't see the waves of immigrants coming to the US as in decades gone by competing for homes.

There will be blips and dips, government intervention and innate yearning for a home of your own all pulling prices all over the place...but for all reasons I listed, and probably more I haven't, home prices would seem to be trending down, not up, in the future.

39   taxee   2012 Sep 29, 9:40am  

APOCALYPSEFUCK is Shostakovich says

taxee says

The stolen goods are not for sale.

Oooooooooo.

America's Epitaph.

Royalty own all valuable land. The peasants rent the junk.

40   JodyChunder   2012 Sep 29, 10:05am  

Robber Baron Elite Scum says

o you guys agree? What do you predict? Do you think I'm right? Your thoughts?

I think there will not be a bubble reflation n housing, though there will be asset bubbles elsewhere in other commodities. Housing will over-correct past the mean just as all asset bubbles throughout human history have done, but at a much much slower rate, a la Japan, and with a few bumps and troughs along the way. IOW not a linear decay. Since time is an asset (hard to quantify) you need to do the personal math and decide whether the personal dividends are there for owning your primary as opposed to renting. It all depends. I know a guy who records music and wants a home studio, so a primary residence in his case might make more sense. Not in the Bay Area, though. Why would anyone buy in a hot market? That's just poor financial savvy.

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