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Collateral Damage


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2006 Aug 23, 2:26pm   18,019 views  166 comments

by Randy H   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

We've been called JBRs (jealous bitter renters). Once hurled at us by genuine real estate bulls and trolls, the term has faded as our collective perspective has gained mainstream recognition. But I see a risk. We risk being seen as cruel, ungracious winners, bad sports. Of course we will have our schadenfreude. But I ask you to reflect for just a moment about those who will become unfortunate collateral damage of the Bubble popping. The real estate boom has created many jobs. Not just for agents and mortgage brokers, but contractors, home builders, office workers, IT support techs, retail clerks, document couriers, janitors, etc. Directly and indirectly, as the residential real estate industry shrinks back to its normal size relative to the rest of the economy, many workers will likely lose their jobs. Sadly, those lowest on the totem pole will probably suffer the worst.

Many, if not most, of these people are just hard working, everyday folks who took jobs where they could find them. They didn't cause this mayhem, but they will get burned by it. As things unwind, I ask you to consider those who are the innocent casualties, while enjoying the fruits of your self discipline.

It's always better to be a gracious winner and a good sport.

--Randy H

#housing

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31   Peter P   2006 Aug 23, 6:18pm  

BTW, I am 73% less of a market fundamentalist in person. ;)

32   HARM   2006 Aug 23, 6:19pm  

HARM, will you and that hot young biscuit, aka Mrs. HARM be attending the “lets stop Peter P from eating all the food” party this coming labour day?

But of course. There's no way I'd miss an opportunity to meet the legendary Peter P --in person!!

33   HARM   2006 Aug 23, 6:24pm  

all others fuck off

Awww... c'mon now. What about our other Bay Aryan brothers and sisters? SF Woman, SHTF, skibum, Glen, Conor, etc. Can they at least stop by for cocktails?

34   Mike/a.k.a.Sage   2006 Aug 23, 6:46pm  

I am so very, very thankful that this mother of all housing bubbles has occurred at this point in my life at 45 years. Had it not, the economic catastrophe that will ensue, might have been put off for another ten or twenty years, at which point, I would not be able to make a decent living and prepare for my retirement.

I am so very, very grateful to all those that participated in driving housing prices into the stratosphere so that no normal working class people can afford to buy anything at this point in time. This will hasten the demise of our fake economy and will cause our trading partners to suspend trading with our debtor nation.

Only than can this nation secure our borders, and erect trade barriers against countries that compete unfairly with the working class in the US.
The working class wages have been undermined for decades by cheep wages from overseas, and the importation of cheep labor from south of the border. This practice must end if this nation is to survive. The working middle class must not be allowed to die. The cure that is coming will be like chemotherapy; not pleasant, but necessary.

I am a happy participant sitting on the sidelines, watching the economic disaster unfold in real time. As an experienced machinist, I have seen my prospects of a fruitful life eroded away by wage arbitrage, and the war against the working middle class in this country, for the gain of a few. That will end soon.

I thank you all, for causing the destruction of our current economy, sooner rather than later. I may be a BA (bitter American) for now, but hopefully that will change, when things change for the better, due to the meltdown currently underway.

35   Different Sean   2006 Aug 23, 9:03pm  

hang on, how many janitors jobs have been created by the housing boom? through land speculation, trading little pieces of paper?

all the little people at the bottom have been hurt by being priced out of the market, they will be grateful for a collapse...

36   Different Sean   2006 Aug 23, 9:11pm  

i saw david lereah on a newsfeed for the first time today, talking about the imminent US collapse. he seemed a nice, honest man... :) at the same time, the ABS here pronounced growth of about 2% over whatever period -- i don't get it... although the figures don't include the latest interest rate rise... the various people who compile the figures get them from different sources, so they say different things, and none of them are too accurate anyhow...

i wonder if the market here is just hanging before the fall, and the money is just about to run out... RE agents have been reporting a price slump, so don't know how the esteemed ABS gets 2% growth...

37   Randy H   2006 Aug 23, 11:30pm  

DS,

Quite a few jobs have been created by the growth of consumer credit spending in the US, largely supported by growing home equity "wealth effect". If you generalize that janitor into all the marginal working class jobs created in the economy, I've seen estimates that 6 in 10 up to 8 in 10 are attributable to the housing bubble, over the last 5 years.

38   Michael Holliday   2006 Aug 23, 11:49pm  

surfer-x Says:

"...all others fuck off."
_____

In God we trust "...all others fuck off."

Tell it to the mouse!

:o~~

39   Michael Holliday   2006 Aug 23, 11:49pm  

surfer-x Says:

"...all others fuck off."
_____

In God we trust, "...all others fuck off."

Tell it to the mouse!

:o~~

40   Michael Holliday   2006 Aug 23, 11:50pm  

surfer-x Says:

"...all others fuck off."
_____

In God we trust, "...all others fuck off."

Tell it to the mouse!

:o~~

41   DinOR   2006 Aug 24, 12:33am  

Unfortunately I will be forced into taking SQT's position on the matter.

The "public" and the "private" DinOR.

We have lifelong friends (yes, also clients) who's daughter is like our "third daughter". We have as much camcorder footage of her birthday parties and graduations as we do our own! Well she married a nice guy but regrettably he is originally from Sacramento. A few years ago they moved down there from OR and she took an accounting job w/major homebuilder! So there our "third daughter" is, in the epicenter of the crash (bought in 2005 before they were priced out) and employed directly in RE!

I talked like a "dutch uncle" to stop her mother from making a down payment and said I would manage an account for the kids until there was a better window. Mind you, all the while RE is going through the roof! So a lot of good that did. Now they're stuck, and may soon be stuck with a jumbo payment and no job with which to make it.

Like my old drinking buddy used to say:

The definition of "mixed feelings" is watching your mother-in-law drive off a cliff (in your brand new Corvette!)

42   DinOR   2006 Aug 24, 12:49am  

SFWoman,

I'll agree, but with conditions.

My wife's first job was at the Navy Exchange in San Diego and she said that officer's wives brought back a lot of apparel items on Monday, tags in tact and oddly smelling like perfume? Whatever.

More importantly though Americans are conditioned to believe "the time to buy a home is when you think you can least afford it"! Structure your finances around the home! But GET THAT HOUSE!

In truth though I think our elders were talking about 3/1 bungalows in Cicero, IL, NOT a McChateaux w/ an unworkable commute?

43   Different Sean   2006 Aug 24, 12:50am  

after that brilliant piece of socratic argument, i just read through the last 70 posts - i think people are in opposition from the same side - you're not french, are you? like that french john kerry, thanks rupert murdoch... points to anon tho for coming up with the most humourous plays on 'republican' in one thread...

44   Different Sean   2006 Aug 24, 12:52am  

drgoodword said:
With the housing crash goes not only the housing industry, but the unprecedented housing ATM economic driver. Right now the American economy is like Wile E. Coyote running off the edge of a cliff. For a brief moment, all seems fine…and then gravity kicks in.

i really wonder if this is what the oz market is doing, just before the fall -- the 'responsible' media are too afraid to report a drop -- even the supposedly responsible ABC quoted ABS statistics in the form of 'it always goes up' yesterday...

45   DinOR   2006 Aug 24, 1:02am  

Digger,

Not bad, not bad.

Regardless of party affiliation the very issue you bring up absolutely chaps my @ss! What exactly did you do now to warrant pocketing 200K Mr. Asshat? Oh, I see! You took out the garbage and hung Xmas lights.......

Just like any dad is EXPECTED to do!

Does that entitle you to a guaranteed 125% profit in 4 years?

NO!

46   Different Sean   2006 Aug 24, 1:07am  

i'm allergic to pate de fois gras :(

but brie and champagne are good... :)

i actually like the french, i suppose i was being wryly ironic about the boycott and common republican smear tactics all in one...

47   Different Sean   2006 Aug 24, 1:20am  

SFWoman Says:
I love fois gras, but hate pate de fois gras.

i wonder which part i'm allergic to, then... poor overfed ducks :(

as well as the neo-imperialists

hmm, which party do they belong to... the julius caesar party...

48   Different Sean   2006 Aug 24, 1:20am  

Fukuyama.

language!

49   Different Sean   2006 Aug 24, 1:25am  

i would hold my nose and vote for the dems even tho they're centre right and not liberal enough...

i would say the reps have only gotten it wrong with 1. foreign policy, and 2. domestic policy...

50   Different Sean   2006 Aug 24, 1:30am  

breathing problems... apparently 96% of french production is from ducks, only 4% from geese - altho the egyptians originally used geese etc. the rest of the duck is worth more, is why... chances are you would be served duck liver, i guess, as foie gras is technically only 'fattened liver'...

51   speedingpullet   2006 Aug 24, 1:48am  

@ Alien - thanks for the lowdown on Topanga!

We drive Topanga Canyon fairly reguarly to and from the SFV and my spirits always lift as we go through the lovely tree-lined valley. It has just the right mix of otherworldiness and dilapidation that I find so attractive.
I've been keeping an eye on Pacific Palisades and the more easterly part of Malibu too, but to be honest they're all a bit too toney and exclusive for me.
From what I can tell, there's been some fairly 'creative' financing for some of these places - $1.5 million places that cost 25% of that in 2000...keeping track of quite a few of these to see what happens.

I take it from your post that you're renting near/at Top 'O Topanga?
Lots and lots of places for sale up there, on the roads with the Native American names...;-)
I'd consider buying one at rock-bottom prices next year, except I have an allergy to gated communities (or compounds, as I prefer to call them) and the extra 10 miles up N Topanga Canyon make them impractical for the husband's commute to Santa Monica.

Re:schadenfreude/guilty gloating:

I'm also of the firm belief that karma will get you every time.
I believe that life doles out exactly the lessons you need , and that gloating on my part is just, well, tacky.
I know that the cosmos will eventually catch up to those that deserve it. No action on my part is needed.

Having said that - I do feel the same exasperation about underwater FBs as I feel towards people who sue tobacco companies after a lifetime of smoking. Despite there having been a warning label on the side of the pack for 30 years, it still comes as a 'surprise' to some that cigarettes will kill you...dammit, Janet, Litigation Time!!
I expect to see a lot of finger pointing in the next few months/years as people try to place the blame on anyone but themselves.

I want no part of the resulting carnage.
"Buyer Beware" and "Always Read the Label before Use" need to be tattooed somewhere discrete on every person over 18.

52   DinOR   2006 Aug 24, 2:09am  

SFWoman,

I don't know that there's anything necessarily "survivalist" with what some of your friends are doing. In Oregon those are pretty common practices and we derive a certain amount of joy from these things as well.

Now building an "ark" does sound a little weird b/c I don't see what it resolves? What can possibly be less efficient than a yacht?

53   DinOR   2006 Aug 24, 2:12am  

"These people are distorting markets"

Robert, that is so true! It's not just CA either. While I do have contempt for these people (privately) as an advisor making my personal views on this level of fraud really has no upside and that's why I share my opinions here. Thanks for saying it though.

54   DinOR   2006 Aug 24, 2:25am  

SQT,

Seriously? There are guys out there that actually do that? That is pathetic. I don't even go to "bowl parties" anymore. Too loud, too much indulgence, too big of a hangover on Monday. Now if they had them on SATURDAY!

55   salk   2006 Aug 24, 2:26am  

FB's? Je ris Tu ris Nous rion

56   DinOR   2006 Aug 24, 2:31am  

George,

It seems like every 3rd article over at Ben's pertains to the FL market, and it's not good as you well know.

The big difference that I see is realtors are allowed to take positions in the very product they are promoting. Stockbrokers on the other hand have to be the last to buy and the last to sell if they take a common position w/clients. (This way they are buying at the "top" and selling at the "bottom" so to speak, especially with thinly traded issues).

While this seems unfair on the surface it actually makes sense and usually prevents brokers from becoming entangled in their clients affairs. However realtors often own one or more homes in the very projects they are attempting to fill. If RESPA addresses some of these issues pain could be spared on both sides of the transaction.

57   astrid   2006 Aug 24, 2:33am  

I'll reserve my schaudenfraude for a very few demonstrably horrid people and in private. But by the same token, I'm not going to be very sympathetic to FBs and flippers.

58   DinOR   2006 Aug 24, 2:34am  

George,

What I should have said is that both NAR and RESPA need to draw a better defined line between a "broker or agent" and a "market maker".

59   Randy H   2006 Aug 24, 2:45am  

I am somewhat surprised that no one seems to have actually read this thread's initial post.

I was never talking about people who bought overpriced McMansions, designer handbags or Hummers with slot machine home equity. These people aren't collateral damage, by definition.

What no one seems to want to accept is that there are lots of people -- up to 60% of 1/3 of working Americans across the entire country regardless of the "color" of their state, that rent and are at some risk of losing their jobs because of all this.

And I am a bit surprised at the universal contempt that most everyone here seems to have towards everyday working folks who are guilty only of trying to make a living in an economy that offers them ever more McJobbed opportunities. Everyone seems to be locked into some kind of tunnel vision focusing only the enemy across the trench. Well, all those folks you can't or don't want to see will take the brunt of this; much more so than the FBs you have in your sights.

I think that healthy schadenfreude has become seething anger and outright hatred. Good luck with all that.

60   Peter P   2006 Aug 24, 2:57am  

I love fois gras, but hate pate de fois gras.

Particle board foie gras?

61   Peter P   2006 Aug 24, 3:00am  

And I am a bit surprised at the universal contempt that most everyone here seems to have towards everyday working folks who are guilty only of trying to make a living in an economy that offers them ever more McJobbed opportunities.

I have a universal comtempt towards humanity.

62   Peter P   2006 Aug 24, 3:07am  

I’ve been forced to change my plans because of this nonsense to protect myself and my family. How much anger at people who threaten your family is too much?

I share the same annoyance. When the fundamentals do not align, it takes too much faith (future price, future career, etc) to buy.

63   astrid   2006 Aug 24, 3:11am  

I'm a secular apocalyptist, so a little contempt for humanity comes rather naturally.

But more seriously. The primary reason the housing bubble worried me was its economic aftermath. I could live with renting all my life and I could even live with living in a 400 sq ft studio for the rest of my life. But I can't live without a job.

64   FRIFY   2006 Aug 24, 3:20am  

I think that healthy schadenfreude has become seething anger and outright hatred. Good luck with all that.

The old saw "Comedy is bad things happening to other people. Tragedy is bad things happening to yourself." is applicable to the bubble bursting. I see nothing wrong with drinking a beer and chuckling as the more farcical extremes of this bubble come crashing down. If it doesn’t come down, it will be truly tragic as I will have screwed my wife and little ones.

I agree that the hatred thing is bad Karma. Bad for your soul. Bad for the people around you. Chill, wait and chuckle. If it doesn’t pop, cry.

65   Peter P   2006 Aug 24, 3:33am  

But more seriously. The primary reason the housing bubble worried me was its economic aftermath. I could live with renting all my life and I could even live with living in a 400 sq ft studio for the rest of my life. But I can’t live without a job.

The bubble does not worry me. I worry myself.

66   skibum   2006 Aug 24, 3:49am  

SFWoman Says:

This is interesting, from Ben’s Blog. This Realtor seems to be able to hold contradictory notions in her head. Boston seems to be the second dead canary.

If not a canary in a proverbial coalmine, Boston is certainly one of the leading fronts of the bubble, along with FLA, NOVA, LV and perhaps SD. Our old neighborhood in Boston city proper (South End) has been dead in the water for over a year now. The change in sentiment that's occured amazes me still. When we listed our place a little over a year ago, most of the agents we talked to gave us very high comps for thinking about our listing price. I was honestly surprised. We eventually listed and sold slightly below comps at the time, and today's comps are at least $50k, sometimes over $100K below our SALE price! Besides, sales volume is seriously down there. The BA RE market looks and feels just like Boston's did last summer/fall.

67   skibum   2006 Aug 24, 3:50am  

SQT,
Thanks for the links. Isn't truly amazing how much the MSM have jumped on the RE downturn bandwagon? I'm a little surprised how they've embraced it so wholeheartedly. Like SF Woman points out, the WSJ literally has an article about the RE downturn every single day it seems. They at least have completely accepted it as reality.

68   DinOR   2006 Aug 24, 3:53am  

Randy H,

I'd hoped that I made clear that if for nothing more than my vocation I'm forced to straddle this issue. I'm one of a handful of planners here in the PNW (to my knowledge) that actually takes the pains to understand the IRC as it pertains to "self-directed" or RE IRA's. I can't be publicly critical of those that no longer have any desire to invest in the stock market and want to buy bricks and dirt. While not by any means a "licensed realtor" I will not hesitate to pull the plug if I suspect someone is flipping or in any way doing a "momentum play".

As I said our "third daughter" is in the belly of the beast by being employed directly through a major builder AND having just bought in Sacramento! I talked until I was blue in the face trying to prevent this transaction. I don't know there was anything more ANYONE could have done.

I've come to accept that you can't "save" everyone. Not even from themselves.

69   Peter P   2006 Aug 24, 3:54am  

But I can’t live without a job.

Cavepeople did not have jobs. Yet they lived.

70   Claire   2006 Aug 24, 3:59am  

So I'm the bubble sitter, my husband is the "we should have bought three years ago" - although he conveniently forgets that he was unsure about his new job and how long it would last and he didn't seriously want to buy a house then. Last night he tells me his work colleague who did buy a townhouse for 400,000 or so, says that it is now worth 600,000, and we should have bought one too (and it's all my fault because I din't want to buy a townhouse in a crappy school district) - meanwhile I'm quietly sitting there thinking - "but he hasn't sold his townhouse yet, has he? And he's not planning to at the minute, so by the time he does it won't be worth 600,000"

But for the sake of avoiding an argument I let it go, I will definitely remind him when everywhere is really crashing - I hope it crashes and quickly - I don't want this guys story shoved down my throat every 5 minutes if he does make a huge profit.

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