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Equity gains more than wiped out by equity loans


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2008 Apr 2, 1:20am   28,670 views  317 comments

by Patrick   ➕follow (59)   💰tip   ignore  

dodo

From a reader:

Americans now own less than 50% of their home for the first time in many years. What I did not hear in the press is that this percentage was reported AFTER home values had increased astronomically. That is, as home prices shot upward, many Americans chased those zooming home prices by adding debt, not by rejoicing that they now owned a larger fraction of their home. To me, the story is not that Americans now own less than 50% of their home, but that this is true after home prices have skyrocketed in recent years, outstripped by debt rising even more rapidly. Consider the implications to baby boomers who hoped to retire soon, but who have already extracted a large fraction of the true equity in their homes and spent it.

This is pretty amazing. After the biggest runup in prices ever, owners managed to blow all of that equity, and then some. And now they've got rapidly declining prices on top of that.

Patrick

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94   DinOR   2008 Apr 2, 11:46pm  

"Location is not about the name of the city"

Is that why every once in a while you'll see a home that sticks out like a sore thumb and wonder to yourself how a nice home like that wound up in a place like this?

Been there, done that. For all your best efforts you'll NEVER be able to elevate the "neighbors" to your standards.

95   FormerAptBroker   2008 Apr 3, 12:00am  

FuzzyMath Says:

> I’m pretty much convinced that the powers that be are
> going to find a way to take all of my generation’s money
> anyways.

I just found out that some of my former tenants in Sacramento are “victims” of the housing crash (and I’m sure that the government will find a way to “help” them with our tax money).

The “victims” were renting one of my apartments for $900 a month when they “bought” a home for about $300K with no money down and an option ARM. The low payment aka neg am payments were just about $1,000 a month.

When the home went up in value they got a HELOC and bough 24” rims for their truck and other stuff. Today they owe about $400K on a home worth about $200K and have no chance of making the payments since the “option” to make the neg am payment has gone away.

Their friends that still live in my building have been in a little apartment saving for a house the last couple years watching interest rates on savings drop while the “victims” that the government wants to bail out have been living in a big house spending thousands of HELOC cash…

96   Peter P   2008 Apr 3, 12:41am  

The only possible victim in any economic "crime" is the taxpayer.

While the government must serve to enforce contracts, it should not seek to "protect" losers.

There are *always* winners and losers, and people became "victims" on their own free will.

97   Peter P   2008 Apr 3, 12:47am  

We were listening to NPR yesterday and they had a debate on "torture" and interrogation.

All sensible and reasonable arguments came from those who support using stress in obtaining vital information. Yet the liberal audience would blindly oppose anything that benefits America. They would rather protect the metaphysical "rights" of a probable terrorist and the survival and well-being of innocent Americans.

98   Peter P   2008 Apr 3, 12:50am  

When the home went up in value they got a HELOC and bough 24” rims for their truck and other stuff.

You know who tend to be the perfect customers? Poor people on credit.

I think it is the moral duty of any capitalist to empty the wallets of these people (legally, of course). They have willingly chosen financial stupidity.

99   Randy H   2008 Apr 3, 1:03am  

Hey don’t do this to us… I used up my 5 free Property Shark reports trying to figure out which home you’re looking at.

We're looking at that one and a couple others as potentials to short, otherwise I'd give you the MLS#. Though I don't mind being non-anonymous, I'm not sure I'm prepared to tell everyone where I might end up living. Anyway, I don't want to invite competition...lol.

The problem is that the banks still aren't there yet. They're getting there, but so far they're not fully absorbing the market reality and dropping prices of their inventory (or the value of preventing foreclosures with shorts).

100   DinOR   2008 Apr 3, 1:04am  

24" rims aside I'm starting to think that using HELOC cash for any thing other than "my roof was leaking" or "my kid was facing a death sentence for drug smuggling in Malaysia" is pretty much indefensible.

101   empty houses   2008 Apr 3, 1:13am  

"You know who tend to be the perfect customers? Poor people on credit.

I think it is the moral duty of any capitalist to empty the wallets of these people (legally, of course). They have willingly chosen financial stupidity."

Sometimes you strike an almost poetic cord.

102   FuzzyMath   2008 Apr 3, 1:16am  

"24″ rims aside I’m starting to think that using HELOC cash for any thing other than “my roof was leaking” or “my kid was facing a death sentence for drug smuggling in Malaysia” is pretty much indefensible."

I'm still trying to figure out the thought process there... I have no problem taking on a debt. But once I do, it becomes my life mission to pay it off. In what world does it make sense to pay off most of a loan, then INCREASE the loan from the original all the way back up to some fragile bubble price?

I'd wager that even the really stupid people knew they couldn't get away with that forever.

103   DennisN   2008 Apr 3, 1:17am  

What, no jokes about HELOCopter Ben? :)

I guess they really are cracking open the mines up in Silver Valley.

www.nytimes.com/2008/04/03/us/03wallace.html?adxnnl=1&adxnnlx=1207239423-JWkG0/H3Sw72T27tHzq2sg

104   FuzzyMath   2008 Apr 3, 1:18am  

"The problem is that the banks still aren’t there yet. They’re getting there, but so far they’re not fully absorbing the market reality and dropping prices of their inventory (or the value of preventing foreclosures with shorts)."

One fun part of this whole thing for me is watching the banks squirm. Now that their own risk models have changed, their inability to offer lower interest rates to borrowers is decreasing the value of their exploding inventory of houses.

I love circles.

105   DinOR   2008 Apr 3, 1:27am  

Fuzzy Math,

I'm trying to figure it out too? The only case I can make for that is a senior on a reverse mortgage. Even then just b/c you've paid off the loan doesn't necessarily mean it's the right approach.

Other measures could/should have been taken.

106   Peter P   2008 Apr 3, 1:58am  

But once I do, it becomes my life mission to pay it off.

Why? If you have a low-interest fixed-rate loan, there is really no reason not to delay paying it off.

Debt is a form of leverage. It is just a tool. There is nothing scary about it.

Stigmatizing debt is no better than worshiping debt.

107   Peter P   2008 Apr 3, 2:01am  

24″ rims aside I’m starting to think that using HELOC cash for any thing other than “my roof was leaking” or “my kid was facing a death sentence for drug smuggling in Malaysia” is pretty much indefensible.

I wonder how much HELOC was involved in foreign real estate investment. Home prices in British Columbia are surreal.

A nice-ish condo in Victoria now costs CAD $2.5M.

108   FuzzyMath   2008 Apr 3, 2:05am  

"Why? If you have a low-interest fixed-rate loan, there is really no reason not to delay paying it off."

To me Peter, a low-interest loan is

109   DinOR   2008 Apr 3, 2:09am  

Peter P,

I can kind of agree with that but I think you'll agree there's a difference between using margin on a trade, owning a leveraged ETF and owing more than you can EVER possibly re-pay?

Here's the way "I've" come to look at things:

If you're... gosh I don't know, FIFTY years old and you plan on working another 10 years and you make 100K per year that's $1 mil. right? Maybe when you're younger you don't think about so much but when that's the extent of your REMAINING earning potential you had better start looking at how that $1 mil. is going to be spent.

If you're of a mind that RE will continue to appreciate (fat chance) then by all means "borrow as much money as you can get your hands on!". However if you believe as most here do that it will be down to flat for some time to come, well then your earning potential is better adjudicated elsewhere.

In short, you've got a mil. left. (How do you want to play this, kid?)

110   Peter P   2008 Apr 3, 2:12am  

DinOR, perhaps the homedebtors thought they could cry-baby out of this mess. :)

The scary thing is, they might be right.

111   sa   2008 Apr 3, 2:48am  

Now that everybody in bubble party is getting some kind of bailout, can people watching party get some kind of bailout too? like a check for missing on the party?

!! LOL!!

112   DinOR   2008 Apr 3, 2:51am  

My understanding is that the most recent legislation being kicked around atop the Hill is that there really isn't an FB Clause at all?

All kinds of goodies for the REIC but no relief for those actually in foreclosure. Did I hear that right?

113   EBGuy   2008 Apr 3, 3:12am  

Though I don’t mind being non-anonymous, I’m not sure I’m prepared to tell everyone where I might end up living.
Hey, I am just trying to figure out if I need to bring my swim trunks to the housewarming party. We are invited... right? ;-)

114   KurtS   2008 Apr 3, 3:14am  

"A nice-ish condo in Victoria now costs CAD $2.5M."

Yep, freakin' insane. Let's see how long that keeps up...people on Van Isle think foreigners, etc. will keep prices propped--sound familiar?

I see lots of stupid overbuilding on the island, but mostly "vacation properties" and not rentals needed by a good 80% of those who actually work there (ie. not retirees) Even N. in Nanaimo, which is essentially a lumber industry town, prices are hugely inflated too. Not just home prices but rentals are steep. Most likely because development has focused mainly on vacation housing--not terribly responsible planning, imo. Btw--everyone in Nanaimo got excited when there were rumors that Barbara Streisand would build a condo complex there...but this is a lumber town!

The irony is that there's been so much vacation property development going on, that there's now a large surplus of those rentals, forcing those "investors" in Vancouver and Victoria to price-to-market at dare-I-say, far below their PITI. Case in point is a the 2BR townhouse I've rented right on the best beach N. of Victoria for $1200/mo. 2BR, 1300 sqft, nicely appointed with hardwood, large step-in jacuzzi, marble floors, etc. It's only a few years old, so I'd be surprised the owners are breaking even. LOL

I think the prices on the island against fundamentals are even further displaced than SFBay.

So yeah...would be cool to do a S.Bay thing in Los Gatos.

115   StuckInBA   2008 Apr 3, 3:22am  

DinOR :

Long time ago when I started reading this blog, you had made a post very similar to one you made today. I loved it and remember it vividly. I would like to highlight it this one for lurkers as well.

If you’re… gosh I don’t know, FIFTY years old and you plan on working another 10 years and you make 100K per year that’s $1 mil. right? Maybe when you’re younger you don’t think about so much but when that’s the extent of your REMAINING earning potential you had better start looking at how that $1 mil. is going to be spent.

Lurkers, please read the above paragraph again and again till it sinks in and you get it.

And ask yourself this question : If you are nearing "that" age, are your investments working for you ? Or you are working for your "investments" - which includes primary residence for some people ?

116   Peter P   2008 Apr 3, 3:23am  

I think the prices on the island against fundamentals are even further displaced than SFBay.

Absolutely. Vancouver is nice, but it is not Monte Carlo. LOL!

Let's see how the Vanhousing bubble can hold air with our "subprime" mess.

117   DinOR   2008 Apr 3, 3:24am  

KurtS,

When we look back and see how much of our resources have been devoted to "vacation homes" it'll turn our stomachs. Especially when you consider that building material prices had reached insane highs even before Katrina.

How silly are these upscale places going to look when they're rented out to bike gangs?

118   DinOR   2008 Apr 3, 3:31am  

StuckInBA,

Thanks, sometimes that feels like broadcasting a radio beam out into space waiting for a response? (It's always on, but is anyone listening?) The math is pretty much the same if you're younger but it just doesn't carry the same sense of urgency.

If you're 50 years old and make 50k a year you'll have 500k to work with. If your mortgage is 750k... you may want to take a step back. I think a lot of people are doing that now.

119   DennisN   2008 Apr 3, 4:06am  

It's even worse than what DinOR says.

I was 52 and making a HAHA. But that broke down in my case to roughly $50K for taxes, $50K for living expenses, and $50K for savings. Note: most people don't save that much.

So I would have reached early 60's with maybe another $500K. Big whoop.

I had wanted to move up from my tiny Cambrian Park house to something nice in, say, Campbell. But in 2005 that would be moving from a paid-off $600K house to a $Million+ house, with a mortgage balance upwards of $400K. Had I done this, I would have reached my 60's with a house worth "maybe" $Million+ paid off but with few other savings. Those numbers just didn't add up to anything but nonsense.

So I bailed and moved someplace cheap. I now have a nice new paid-off house and the better part of $Million in cash and stocks. True, inflation and a battered dollar worry me but I'm in much better shape than had I "upgraded" in SJ.

120   DinOR   2008 Apr 3, 4:30am  

"Note: most people don't save that much"

No they do not. Had more BA people taken that route Boise would be a much more crowded place! Then the question is... why is it so easy to say "yes" to a nice house and so hard to say "yes" to saving?

Oh a house is just like a "savings account" r-i-g-h-t..? I suppose a lot of folks in the BA (and elsewhere) are finding out that's not exactly written in stone now aren't they!?

All I'm saying is, as long as we're aware there are consequences then I'm fine with it. But please don't come cry'n to us when you're upside down in your house w/ negligible savings and limited work years left. This is basic stuff.

121   sa   2008 Apr 3, 4:37am  

When we look back and see how much of our resources have been devoted to “vacation homes” it’ll turn our stomachs.

No kidding. I live in a small university town of 15000 people. When i came here like 8 years back, houses i saw were very old. Now, many of them have given way for expensive condos. Mostly as 2nd home or who knows 10th home for speculators. The median income for the town is around 28K and median price is around 280K. One of my friend started a restraunt here last year and he couldn't get a bid from any of the developers in town to get his interiors done. They were making so much money, they didn't even want to look at 150k work.

122   DennisN   2008 Apr 3, 4:47am  

Another concept for people to wrap their heads around.

There's a big difference between being able to qualify for a mortgage, and actually being able to afford it.

123   DennisN   2008 Apr 3, 4:50am  

Here's an interesting note from NRO on the fact that the liberals can't complain about the Fed since they are the ones who wanted one.

http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=NDNmMWFlMTZmNDdiYzRkZTk5NjY2ZTY0YWExYjNkMjY=

124   DinOR   2008 Apr 3, 4:52am  

sa,

Good point. With all that's been wasted on homes that barely see two weeks a year of actual use I'd forgotten about all the misallocated labor? All just to feed someones' vanity.

O.K I just came up with the definition of a vacation home!

"If you can't pee off the back porch without getting complaints, it ain't a vacation home, alright?" (It's a trophy home)

Enough already!

125   sa   2008 Apr 3, 5:46am  

two weeks sounds just about right. 6-8 football games.

126   Duke   2008 Apr 3, 6:16am  

The fact the market continues to rise on bad news just amazes me.

Here is my prediction:

In 6 weeks time (May 21) the Dow will drop below 11,500.
By years end it will drop Below 10,000.

127   sa   2008 Apr 3, 6:30am  

FED has been coming comes up with something, everytime DOW is around 12K. I don't know why they are so aggressive with equity prices.

128   northernvirginiarenter   2008 Apr 3, 6:35am  

Just today:

Google laying off 300.

ATA Airlines Bankrupt and shut, more airlines to follow.

CIT Group, one of the largest private student lenders, announces it is stopping student lending as of today.

Mortgage Rates creeping up, at 5.88% 30 FRM today.

Story in Reuters about homes being worth less than their copper pipes.

Fed players indicated a Bear collapse would have led to total finanical system meltdown.

Employment report expectations dismal, anticipated increase to 5% unemployed.

And yet, the stock market is climbing. Some might argue ugly has already been priced in; as transparency and unknowns become knowns confidence flows back in. I don't think so.

I completely agree Duke, we will be well below 10,000 Dow by end calendar year. Unless of course christmas season 2008 saves us all! The next holiday should be one for the books. Figure another 20% minimum median national RE price decline, another 15% off the stock market, maybe another 10% USD currency drop thrown in.

Public is already "reeling" from the whammy of equity and housing decline to date, along with soaring prices. Imagine what folks will be feeling when we finally hit those bottom numbers. Yikes.

We are witnessing nothing less than the most drastic standing of living decline in US history.

129   StuckInBA   2008 Apr 3, 6:42am  

I don’t know why they are so aggressive with equity prices.

To avoid cascading margin calls. All types of portfolios have been used as collateral. So a rapid decline in the value of the collateral can start a vicious circle pretty soon. For the same reason, Bernanke is appealing Congress to do something to stop the decline in house prices.

This is the problem with asset bubbles and their destruction.

130   sa   2008 Apr 3, 7:06am  

SIBA,

When things were blowing up in housing, fed came out and said things were contained. What i am trying to understand was, it didn't appear that fed was panicking when housing was deflating. They have been very agressive when the results started to show up in equities. If they understood the problem correctly, it should have been other way around.

131   OO   2008 Apr 3, 8:35am  

US is the world's 4th largest exporter of rice, after Thailand, Vietnam, India. However, recently Vietnam has put a ban on rice export due to shortage of supply internally, and India is having a serious crop failure.

The US ranks only 4th in rice export not because of supply constraints but because of competition from the other exporters. Most of the American rice is grown in California. If we don't have wacky weather leading to crop failure like India and Vietnam, this could be a very profitable year for American rice farmers because they can essentially charge whatever they want.

Just after the 30% rice hike about a week ago, there will be another co-ordinated 30% price hike on rice in China next month.

132   OO   2008 Apr 3, 8:37am  

Maybe we should stop thinking about buying a home, and pay more attention to Williamson Act land that is not being utilized for agriculture. Perhaps I can hire a few Latinos to grow rice for me :-)

133   OO   2008 Apr 3, 8:40am  

NVR,

Dow may not end up much lower because the massive printing action is about to start.

You ain't seen nothing yet when it comes to inflation. So far we are able to export our USD overseas, particularly to developing countries in Asia that are exchanging their work and raw materials for work, and eventually, food. When that link breaks, all the USD will come home to roost, plus the helicopter action of the Congress, not BB alone. So far it is only the beginning of monetary reflation, not at full scale yet. When we get to fiscal stimulus, that will be one hell of a reflationary effort.

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