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There is no "shadow inventory"


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2012 Aug 15, 9:03am   66,840 views  132 comments

by wave9x   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

According to Foreclosureradar.com, there is no shadow inventory, so good luck to those waiting for a flood of houses to go on the market...
http://www.contracostatimes.com/ci_21312143/bay-area-foreclosures-jump-july

#housing

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93   FuckTheMainstreamMedia   2012 Aug 23, 2:49am  

wave9x says

HUD chief confirms there is no "shadow inventory":

http://www.latimes.com/business/money/la-fi-mo-shaun-goes-west-20120822,0,2090315.story

But I suppose that won't convince the paranoid conspiracy theorists on here.

When new build commences, then I'll believe the short supply/no shadow inventory theories.

Rising prices + no inventory = a market ripe for new product.

That hasn't happened and I'm not sure if its the HUD Chief is stupid or if the HUD Chief is corrupt, but its probably both.

94   zesta   2012 Aug 23, 3:49am  

dodgerfanjohn says

When new build commences, then I'll believe the short supply/no shadow inventory theories.

In Los Angeles there aren't many more empty areas to build that are within an hour's drive of major employment centers.

Well, there are places to build if we can increase the density, but zoning regulations and NIMBYs it's hard to get that started.

and the exurbs that were popular for new tract housing builds in the last couple decades have been decimated by high gas prices.

95   taxee   2012 Aug 23, 3:55am  

The paychecks, bonuses, and campaign contributions continue to flow. As long as banks can borrow at negative real interest rates why screw up easy money by recognizing the losses and go bankrupt? Why not just stall and/or hoard properties and wait for home buyers with clean credit, mortgage insurance, and stars in their eyes? If you're a tbtf bank even being a slum landlord works to show a cash flow, launder new money, and qualify as a business in the eyes of the fed. The squatters are happy, the execs are happy, the corporations and their puppets are happy and the old folks with pensions are still getting checks. This could go on for a long time.

96   Homeboy   2012 Aug 23, 4:16am  

zesta says

In Los Angeles there aren't many more empty areas to build that are within an hour's drive of major employment centers.

Said everybody in 2006, right before the crash.

97   gregpfielding   2012 Aug 23, 4:23am  

E-man says

So Greg, where do you think we will go from here? Low inventory for years to come with home prices muddle along, or there will be a wave or waves of foreclosures hitting the market to drive prices lower, or foreclosures will be sold in bulk through the back door to institutional investors, or..........???

I'd love to see a wave of foreclosures come through so we can get all of this behind us, but the reality is that Uncle Sam and the big banks aren't going to let it happen. They can control the number of foreclosures and how many trickle onto the market at any given time. Some will be sold in bulk. But I believe the game plan for the next few years is the same as the last: slowly foreclose on the homes you have to, keep inventory low, and drag this mess out as long as it takes.

This is bad news for buyers, investors, everyone who works in the industry, and even for sellers.

It's depressing.

98   EBGuy   2012 Aug 23, 4:36am  

HEY YOU posted this link on a separate thread. Not sure what to call these folks (well, one word does come to mind), but 31% of mortgagors are underwater. Low interest rates and other extend and pretend measures keep these folks 'trapped forever' in a prison of their own making.
Greg, not sure about this being bad for investors -- if the bubble was about common folk losing their shirts, the downslope is about a massive wealth transfer to the rent seeking class.

99   Ceffer   2012 Aug 23, 5:03am  

All news is good news just before an election, remember the tradition of the Greeenspan put.

Wait until after the election, when the promises evaporate and the props fall out

100   FuckTheMainstreamMedia   2012 Aug 23, 5:29am  

zesta says

dodgerfanjohn says

When new build commences, then I'll believe the short supply/no shadow inventory theories.

In Los Angeles there aren't many more empty areas to build that are within an hour's drive of major employment centers.

Well, there are places to build if we can increase the density, but zoning regulations and NIMBYs it's hard to get that started.

and the exurbs that were popular for new tract housing builds in the last couple decades have been decimated by high gas prices.

That's not exactly true. When proper demand exists, the building WILL take place. Take for example NELA. Tons of building there transforming garbage homes into sanitized IKEA flips. What was once gang ridden wasteland is now being turned into a new bastion of upper middle classdom.

However, that's not happening in appreciably larger areas and it's because the demand doesn't exist. If it did, you'd see the same construction in Lincoln Heights, El Sereno, Boyle Heights, and Pico Union.

There's plenty of neighborhoods in LA ready to gentrify. And don't give me that nonsense about how no one wants to live in gang wasteland. People said the same thing about Silver Lake, Echo Park, Atwater Viliage, Altadena, and Highland Park.

101   freak80   2012 Aug 23, 6:06am  

dodgerfanjohn says

There's plenty of neighborhoods in LA ready to gentrify.

Isn't most of LA a gang wasteland?

102   Eman   2012 Aug 23, 10:36am  

EBGuy says

HEY YOU posted this link on a separate thread. Not sure what to call these folks (well, one word does come to mind), but 31% of mortgagors are underwater. Low interest rates and other extend and pretend measures keep these folks 'trapped forever' in a prison of their own making.

Greg, not sure about this being bad for investors -- if the bubble was about common folk losing their shirts, the downslope is about a massive wealth transfer to the rent seeking class.

If the government allows refinancing with no docs, it will bail out a lot of underwater homeowners. Basically, it would cut their monthly mortgage payment by 1/3 to 1/2. Loan modification was designed with this intention, but it hasn't worked very well due to the fact that you must provide financial docs.

If HARP 3.0 passes, expect the "shadow inventory" to be shrunk significantly.

103   thomaswong.1986   2012 Aug 23, 4:15pm  

dodgerfanjohn says

That's not exactly true. When proper demand exists, the building WILL take place. Take for example NELA. Tons of building there transforming garbage homes into sanitized IKEA flips. What was once gang ridden wasteland is now being turned into a new bastion of upper middle classdom.

However, that's not happening in appreciably larger areas and it's because the demand doesn't exist. If it did, you'd see the same construction in Lincoln Heights, El Sereno, Boyle Heights, and Pico Union.

or more noteable in limited lands of San Francisco .. buildings taken down or converted to livable towers and lofts. Its has happened alot over the last 10-12 yrs.

104   FamilyForce6   2012 Aug 24, 12:11am  

wave9x says

HUD chief confirms there is no "shadow inventory":

http://www.latimes.com/business/money/la-fi-mo-shaun-goes-west-20120822,0,2090315.story

But I suppose that won't convince the paranoid conspiracy theorists on here.

I've learned over the last several years that anything the federal government (and federal reserve) says, you can pretty much count on the exact opposite being closer to the truth.

105   FamilyForce6   2012 Aug 24, 12:19am  

taxee says

The paychecks, bonuses, and campaign contributions continue to flow. As long as banks can borrow at negative real interest rates why screw up easy money by recognizing the losses and go bankrupt? Why not just stall and/or hoard properties and wait for home buyers with clean credit, mortgage insurance, and stars in their eyes? If you're a tbtf bank even being a slum landlord works to show a cash flow, launder new money, and qualify as a business in the eyes of the fed. The squatters are happy, the execs are happy, the corporations and their puppets are happy and the old folks with pensions are still getting checks. This could go on for a long time.

As Keynes said, "markets can stay irrational longer than investors can stay solvent"- though it should be modified to say "markets can be rigged longer than economically sensible families looking to buy a house can hold out for sanity to return to the markets". I guess that doesn't flow as well- I'll have to work on that one.

106   tatupu70   2012 Aug 24, 1:07am  

Call it Crazy says

Sad isn't it that this is what it has come to..... we can't straight out believe the information the government tells us....

It is sad. Sad that you choose to believe what you want to be true and disregard all data that doesn't agree with you.

107   tatupu70   2012 Aug 24, 1:30am  

Call it Crazy says

tatupu70 says



It is sad. Sad that you choose to believe what you want to be true and disregard all data that doesn't agree with you.


Aaahhhh.... the Troll shows up on this nice Friday!!

lol--your definition of troll is someone who disagrees with you? Fits your profile pretty well.

108   Bigsby   2012 Aug 24, 1:41am  

Call it Crazy says

tatupu70 says

lol--your definition of troll is someone who disagrees with you? Fits your profile pretty well.

No just someone who disagrees but doesn't post any facts or data to support his claim..... just makes blind statements.... you're an expert at that!!

Pot, kettle...

109   tatupu70   2012 Aug 24, 1:42am  

Call it Crazy says

tatupu70 says



lol--your definition of troll is someone who disagrees with you? Fits your profile pretty well.


No just someone who disagrees but doesn't post any facts or data to support his claim..... just makes blind statements.... you're an expert at that!!

Nice try but I post links and data to back my claims. You always choose to counter that the data is suspect. So who's the real troll?

110   CDon   2012 Aug 24, 2:49am  

FamilyForce6 says

As Keynes said, "markets can stay irrational longer than investors can stay solvent"- though it should be modified to say "markets can be rigged longer than economically sensible families looking to buy a house can hold out for sanity to return to the markets". I guess that doesn't flow as well- I'll have to work on that one.

Try: "the government can play kick-the-can longer than you can stay alive".

111   anonymous   2012 Aug 24, 3:55am  

Homeboy says

zesta says

In Los Angeles there aren't many more empty areas to build that are within an hour's drive of major employment centers.

Said everybody in 2006, right before the crash.

It's easy to talk about this. Do you SEE any areas where you can build?? I don't.

Done.

112   zesta   2012 Aug 24, 4:12am  

dodgerfanjohn says

That's not exactly true. When proper demand exists, the building WILL take place.

There's plenty of neighborhoods in LA ready to gentrify. And don't give me that nonsense about how no one wants to live in gang wasteland. People said the same thing about Silver Lake, Echo Park, Atwater Viliage, Altadena, and Highland Park.

You're right about the neighborhoods ready to gentrify. There are plenty.

There's a big difference in buying 1000 acres of land and putting cookie-cutter housing tracts and scraping individual lots and putting up SFHs or mixed-used projects. The margins aren't the same and the additional red tape makes it exceptionally time-consuming.

Playa Vista was the last major residential development in LA's westside and it took them almost 30 years to build ~3k units.

There's probably more room to build Orange County, but gas prices are killing the exurbs and major development in LA.

113   Homeboy   2012 Aug 24, 5:00am  

SubOink says

Homeboy says

zesta says

In Los Angeles there aren't many more empty areas to build that are within an hour's drive of major employment centers.

Said everybody in 2006, right before the crash.

It's easy to talk about this. Do you SEE any areas where you can build?? I don't.

Done.

Miss the point much? I thought this was obvious, but:

Many people in 2006 said that L.A. was "built out", that there was a housing shortage, and that therefore prices would continue to rise.

Did prices continue to rise? No.

What can we learn from this? That it is a bogus argument. It was bogus then, and it is bogus now. I am not questioning whether there are places to build; I am saying it is not relevant.

DONE.

114   Homeboy   2012 Aug 24, 5:14am  

Oh, and to answer your question - Is there any vacant land within an hour of major employment centers in L.A.? Yes.

115   zesta   2012 Aug 25, 2:07am  

Homeboy says

SubOink says

Homeboy says

zesta says

In Los Angeles there aren't many more empty areas to build that are within an hour's drive of major employment centers.

Said everybody in 2006, right before the crash.

It's easy to talk about this. Do you SEE any areas where you can build?? I don't.

Done.

Miss the point much? I thought this was obvious, but:

Many people in 2006 said that L.A. was "built out", that there was a housing shortage, and that therefore prices would continue to rise.

Did prices continue to rise? No.

What can we learn from this? That it is a bogus argument. It was bogus then, and it is bogus now. I am not questioning whether there are places to build; I am saying it is not relevant.

DONE.

Gas prices during the boom years were about $2-$3/gallon.

In 2007/2008 gas prices spiked to above $4 and people realized that high gas prices were a strong possibility. There's been a change in where people are willing to live, and you can see it in the fall of housing prices in the exurbs. Santa Clarita, Riverside were places that you could build housing tracts. If nobody wants to live there anymore, where else will you build?

116   Homeboy   2012 Aug 25, 5:00am  

zesta says

Gas prices during the boom years were about $2-$3/gallon.

In 2007/2008 gas prices spiked to above $4 and people realized that high gas prices were a strong possibility. There's been a change in where people are willing to live, and you can see it in the fall of housing prices in the exurbs. Santa Clarita, Riverside were places that you could build housing tracts. If nobody wants to live there anymore, where else will you build?

Well, no - prices fell because they were unsustainable. We had a bubble, and then it burst. Gas prices had nothing to do with it.

If you don't believe people commute anymore, try getting on ANY freeway during commute hours.

117   Goran_K   2012 Aug 26, 3:42am  

zesta says

There's been a change in where people are willing to live, and you can see it in the fall of housing prices in the exurbs. Santa Clarita, Riverside were places that you could build housing tracts. If nobody wants to live there anymore, where else will you build?

Have you seen the 405, 91, 55, 57, 10, and 110 during rush hour? There are still a lot of people willing to commute from Santa Clarita, Corona, etc to get to job centers.

118   zesta   2012 Aug 26, 8:26am  

How far have housing prices fallen in the Central Valley compared to SF?

How far have housing prices fallen in the Inland Empire compared to LA?

Using traffic as a metric is ridiculous. Can I use that same metric and conclude that since there's a lot of traffic during rush hour unemployment is low?

119   Homeboy   2012 Aug 26, 2:35pm  

zesta says

How far have housing prices fallen in the Central Valley compared to SF?

How far have housing prices fallen in the Inland Empire compared to LA?

That will tell you nothing. You need to know how far prices ROSE during the bubble. Outlying areas are always more volatile. Prices rise AND fall more in outlying areas.

Using traffic as a metric is ridiculous. Can I use that same metric and conclude that since there's a lot of traffic during rush hour unemployment is low?

No, your analogy is ridiculous. The difference in unemployment statistics between good and bad times is going to be 5% or less. Are you telling me you think you can spot a 5% difference one way or another in traffic congestion just by looking? No, that is going to be a miniscule difference. But if people stopped commuting from outlying areas, the difference would not be miniscule.

120   Goran_K   2012 Aug 27, 1:01am  

zesta says

Using traffic as a metric is ridiculous. Can I use that same metric and conclude that since there's a lot of traffic during rush hour unemployment is low?

http://www.redfin.com/city/17676/CA/Santa-Clarita

Homes sales in Santa Clarita are up 16% YOY. Who is being ridiculous now?

121   nobaloney   2012 Sep 10, 11:33am  

There is much being made about the alleged “shadow inventory” of homes being held by banks that are in some stage of foreclosure. Advocates of the “the shadow inventory is ‘out-there-lurking-and-ready-to-dump-new-inventory-on-the-market’ obviously have no idea about the disincentives for banks to do that.

In addition to the mistake of perhaps selling too soon into a rising market, banks have a very important reason not to sell their property at a loss. If a bank sells a property at a loss, they must immediately show that loss on their books and every loss affects their stock, their loss ratio and their P&L sheets. Analysts of banks look very carefully at loan loss coverage ratios and it has a major effect on the market reputation of the bank as well as how the investor community sees that bank.

This issue was seen during the financial crisis of 2008/09 when many securities held on banks' balance sheets could not be valued efficiently as the markets had disappeared from them. In April of 2009, however, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) voted on and approved new guidelines that would allow for the valuation to be based on a price that would be received in an orderly market rather than a forced liquidation. Starting in the first quarter of 2009, banks were allowed to not “mark-to-market”. This ruling fixed an accounting problem which had been causing many banks to appear undercapitalized when in fact they were not.

When a bank has to write down an asset on its books, it not only has to take the loss, but also has to beef up its reserve of cash to cover its declining asset base. The net result is a black eye and less money to lend— even if the bank plans to hold the asset until indefinitely or until maturity. So basically, there is no incentive whatsoever for a bank to rush onto the market any properties subject to foreclosure. Those who fail to understand the internal workings of banks are still believing the myth of “shadow inventory” rather than the fact that the FASB accounting rules allow banks to hold troubled real estate assets without having to write down their value. Maybe these “believers” should come out of their own shadows and see the light of day.

122   doctorbee   2012 Oct 24, 1:37am  

Here's your shadow inventory. Take the average number of foreclosed homes before the robosigning settlement and compare it to the average number of forclosed homes after. The difference in those averages multiplied by the time since forclosuregate is where all your shadow inventory is.

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/foreclosure-stuffing

123   Beaconhis   2012 Dec 29, 12:24am  

There is in West Palm Beach. I see it almost everyday while doing home inspections. Homes that are vacant, haven't been sold in years and not for sale at the present time. I get calls all the time that have recently hit the market that have mold issues from sitting vacant and improperly air conditioned for so long.

124   RentingForHalfTheCost   2012 Dec 29, 1:05am  

zesta says

In Los Angeles there aren't many more empty areas to build that are within an hour's drive of major employment centers.

That has been always a gimmick of realtors for years. If you opened your eyes and looked around, even in L.A., you would see there is land everywhere. Yes, more than enough to meed the piddly demand that exists. Only one way to go with prices from here. Interest rates are half what they used to be in 2007 and prices are less. Not a good sign and that speaks the truth. People are extended to death and just barely hanging on. "No shadow inventory"? Reading thing like this means that the bang will then be even worst. Good luck out there.

125   nope   2012 Dec 29, 6:29am  

As someone who has been trying to find a good lot to build on for months, I'm going to have to disagree about land near big cities.

Every lot I've seen is either too many expensive to build on (half of my budget or more) or unsuitable for building (slopes, wetlands, protected species, etc.)

For subdivision builders, things are not even worse since they tend yo need good plots in the 10 acre+ variety.

New construction just can't be competitive with existing inventory in the present market. When you can buy a 3000 sf home with hardwoods, granite, high end appliances, Trippe paned windows, etc. For $500k, there's no way for new construction to be competitive.

Expect future builders to focus on smaller homes and quality design to be competitive. Either that or they wait until all the mcmansions start falling apart so that they can go back to vinyl and carpet and be competitive

126   HousingBoom   2012 Dec 29, 8:51am  

Maybe the govt invented an invisible cloak to cover the empty homes so nobody can see it.

127   RentingForHalfTheCost   2012 Dec 29, 5:20pm  

Kevin says

As someone who has been trying to find a good lot to build on for months, I'm going to have to disagree about land near big cities.

With cities poised to go bankrupt all through the U.S. you can bet that re-zoning will be done in metro areas. I didn't say the land was accessible right now, but it will be. Look around, it is everywhere. The one thing this country has is land.

128   David Losh   2012 Dec 31, 9:48am  

If you can see, and quantify the shadow inventory, it's no longer a shadow.

129   nope   2012 Dec 31, 12:12pm  

The Professor says

The investers are buying these up as fast as they can because they think that they can rent them back to the defaulters for more than the defaulters were paying in mortgage.

This makes roughly zero sense. If they can afford a higher rent payment, they wouldn't be in default on the loan.

130   nope   2012 Dec 31, 7:46pm  

I don't think anybody is that dumb. They're buying the properties because they can make a decent rental profit, not because they're delusional.

131   Goran_K   2013 Jan 1, 4:36am  

Even the biggest of Ponzi enablers, JP Morgan Chase, doesn't claim there isn't any "shadow inventory":

People just disagree on the numbers, and how it will have an effect on the market. But the homes aren't really in the shadows.

132   Goran_K   2013 Jan 1, 5:17am  

The Professor says

It looks like the outflow exceeds the inflow. We should be out of the housing mess within a couple of years.

I think at minimum, 3-4 years. That's assuming the fundementals such as unemployment, growth, etc correct as well.

If unemployment remains high, and we continually hit debt ceilings, I think all bets are off.

One thing is for sure, we're not out of the woods quite yet.

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