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Psychology of Fear


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2006 Aug 24, 9:00am   20,275 views  190 comments

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Is it me, or is there a lot of fear out there?

We've talked about the fear/greed cycle that drove the RE market for the last few years. The big fear, as discussed before, was usually about being priced out forever. People jumped into the market because they were afraid not to.

But now the fear is going in a different direction. People are afraid of losing their homes, their equity and their jobs. We're already seeing panic selling here in certain parts of Ca. And the news is offering up daily stories that stoke the fear of the FB's.

What affect do you think all this fear is going to have on the RE market in the near future? Are you afraid?

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109   Glen   2006 Aug 25, 6:34am  

FAB:

TICs are huge right now because no one wants to pay cap gains when they sell their old investment properties. Not all of the TICs are fraudulent, but they do tend to have high fees, are highly illiquid and subject to all kinds of fine print restrictions on transfer, etc...

110   Peter P   2006 Aug 25, 6:39am  

TICs are huge right now because no one wants to pay cap gains when they sell their old investment properties.

Cap-gain tax should really be abolished. I think it will be eliminated when boomers have to sell their highly-appreciated stocks for their retirements.

I think income tax will be raised accordingly.

111   Glen   2006 Aug 25, 6:40am  

If I owned highly appreciated income property that I could sell at a 3% cap rate, I would 1031 into a REIT.* I'm pretty sure you can do this now. Gets you out of active management and gives you a higher yield. But for some reason, a lot of these folks like the idea of buying into a TIC promoted by a smooth salesperson. Kind of reminds me of the hedge fund phenomenon. It can't end well.

*Not real estate advice

112   Glen   2006 Aug 25, 6:47am  

Cap-gain tax should really be abolished. I think it will be eliminated when boomers have to sell their highly-appreciated stocks for their retirements.

What stocks? Most boomers have smallish 401ks and virtually nothing in taxable accounts. They are planning to "retire on the house." I seriously doubt that Cap gains will ever be eliminated, given the gov'ts massive debt and total lack of spending discipline. If anything, the pendulum might swing in the other direction if angry FBs vote for populist anti-rich politicians.

113   HARM   2006 Aug 25, 7:11am  

If anything, the pendulum might swing in the other direction if angry FBs vote for populist anti-rich politicians.

Exactly. Personally, I don't see how eliminating all cap gains tax would result in a net positive for either the National Debt or society. It would in fact be incredibly regressive, as most securities are owned by a relatively small % of rich families.

Why should I see income tax on my modest salary (which is already inadequate for CA cost of living) shoot up, while Bill Gates, Warren Buffet, George Soros, etc. get to sit and watch their passive riches multiply tax-free?

How about a flat tax that taxes all forms of income (including capital gains) at the same rate? Truly asset-class neutral.

114   Randy H   2006 Aug 25, 7:22am  

s most securities are owned by a relatively small % of rich families.

And here I thought it was public pension funds and institutionals. Learn something new every day.

115   Peter P   2006 Aug 25, 7:23am  

How about a flat tax that taxes all forms of income (including capital gains) at the same rate? Truly asset-class neutral.

But capital gains are not really income. Pure consumption-based taxation can be the answer. But that would disincentivize spending...

116   Randy H   2006 Aug 25, 7:26am  

Peter P,

Correct

Incorrect. We already have a ridiculously complex web of consumption and use taxation, and consumption plods along stubbornly. A pure consumption tax would result in many sales/use taxes being lowered.

117   DinOR   2006 Aug 25, 7:29am  

Glen,

There was a time when mature RE holdings could readily be converted into REIT's via 1031. Since so many of the smaller shops that would normally be open to this have either been bought out or dried up it's getting tougher. There was a time not all that long ago where you'd have a "brick kicker" client who was getting too old to manage his own holdings. Call the REIT guys upstairs, bada bing, he's now a REIT holder.

Now with HUGE AUM (assets under management) it just doesn't make as much sense anymore, especially with the costs of appraisals etc.

THAT SAID, there are still a few shops that will perform this service, but get prepared for a "hair cut".

118   Peter P   2006 Aug 25, 7:30am  

I think it can start with the privatization of most public services. This should keep costs down, improve productivity, and improve quality of service all at once.

119   e   2006 Aug 25, 7:33am  

I think it can start with the privatization of most public services. This should keep costs down, improve productivity, and improve quality of service all at once.

Like PGE? :(

120   Glen   2006 Aug 25, 7:36am  

How about a flat tax that taxes all forms of income (including capital gains) at the same rate? Truly asset-class neutral.

HARM,

It's a nice dream. It would work best if accompanied by the elimination of the estate tax; provided that any inherited assets would immediately be taxable as income to the recipient, using the dead person's cap gains tax basis. This would solve a lot of the current abuses and distortions of the current system:
1. Owners of appreciated assets would be indifferent as between selling or holding an asset, so they would allocate their capital in the way that makes the most sense from an investment perspective. Plus, they could safely sell their business when they retire, instead of letting it wither and die before passing it to their kids. Then they could use the money to buy investments that make sense for their kids.
2. Eliminate the entire estate tax. Finished. Kaput. It is a bizarre, extremely inefficient and distortive tax anyways.
3. No more complicated 1031 rules, etc... If you sell it, you pay tax. Period.
4. Eliminate all 401ks, 403bs, IRAs, SEP IRAs, Roth IRAs, SIMPLE IRAs, Keoughs, etc., etc..
5. No more cap gains exclusion on home sales.
7. Less work for accountants, lawyers, financial planners, etc. Much more simple and transparent tax system for taxpayers. Lower rates (and broader base) for all.

121   Peter P   2006 Aug 25, 7:36am  

Like PGE?

I thought it failed in 2000 because it was not allowed to pass costs directly onto consumers.

122   DinOR   2006 Aug 25, 7:36am  

"Clients are pulling listings and selling privately"

Well I can't lose too much sleep over that one. With a 6% comm. and a declining market evidently a lot of sellers simply can not afford to be generous. (Especially in Sacramento).

Then again we've said for some time that if realtors (TM) brought their comm. in line with virtually every other tangent of financial services there would be enough volume to off set the reduction.

I'm very happy to get 1% (and that's on avg.)

123   Glen   2006 Aug 25, 7:49am  

And here I thought it was public pension funds and institutionals. Learn something new every day.

If you "look through" the pension funds and institutions the beneficial owners of those securities tend to be teachers, stewardesses, etc., with pension plans. Pension benefits are already taxed at high ordinary income tax rates.

Who would be adversely affected if cap gains was taxed the same as income? Bill Gates, Buffett, Michael Dell, the Walton family, etc...

As for "disincentivizing savings," I don't think this is a problem. Couldn't you argue that the current system "disincentivizes work"?

I agree that a pure consumption tax might be preferable, as it would not dinsincentivize work *or* savings. But it would require such a massive overhaul of the existing tax code that I just can't see it happening.

124   DinOR   2006 Aug 25, 7:49am  

Glen,

I can (and will) go along with everything except #4.

If anything (and I know Peter doesn't believe in them) we should be shoring up 401K's etc. We've all seen the disparity between the growth in a taxable acct. and tax deferred acct. until our eyes are bleeding. We've also seen that our employers can not really be relied on. SS is already at the breaking point. Properly done there's absolutely NO reason a JBR can't find him/herself every bit as comfortable in retirement as the "landed gentry". Take away this pillar and we really will revert back to a land owner run society.

Tax advantages aside, it motivates people! We didn't go through the industrial revolution just so we could "pass the hat" for your widow when the mine collapsed.

I CERTAINLY think we can make them more simple! Right now we have ERISA, EBSA, DOL and the IRS regulating this thing into the ground. Now that I'll definitely agree on!

125   Peter P   2006 Aug 25, 8:04am  

I can (and will) go along with everything except #4.

If anything (and I know Peter doesn’t believe in them) we should be shoring up 401K’s etc.

But if cap-gain tax is abolished we would not need #4.

126   FRIFY   2006 Aug 25, 8:09am  

As for “disincentivizing savings,” I don’t think this is a problem. Couldn’t you argue that the current system “disincentivizes work”?

The biggest disincentivizing of savings is inflation. If I throw $100K in the bank and it returns $5K, barely matching official inflation, I'm then expected to pay taxes on that? Now I'm behind the inflation curve.

Allow everyone to write off their first $20K of cap gains / interest from their 1040 and you might see an increase in the savings rate.

Flat taxation is the biggest sucker punch the rich ever came up with (excluding the push to eliminate the "death tax"). "But it's simpler" Wazza matter? You can't use a lookup table?

127   Glen   2006 Aug 25, 8:10am  

DinOR,

Ok, fine. But the system is so ridiculously cumbersome as it is. How about two kinds of accounts:
1. IRA (pay taxes later, not now)
2. Roth (pay taxes now, not later)

(I would say just Roth accounts, but I'm not sure I trust future governments not to default on the implied promise of no taxes on withdrawal.) Employees could split their annual contribution limit into both kinds of accounts in order to diversify their exposure to future changes in tax policy.

If employers want to help you set it up and make direct deposits, great. But they should have no fiduciary responsibility or discretion in selecting investments. They can have a "default option" if they want, but they will have no liability if they mismanage it. There should be some regulation of "default funds" to avoid kickbacks, etc., from financial institutions. And they should not be able to restrict anyone from buying anything--peso bonds, sugar futures, options, midcap utility funds....whatever. They also clearly should not be able to force or direct employees into buying employee stock. Totally up to the employee. I could live with a system like this.

128   Randy H   2006 Aug 25, 8:13am  

I'm not going along with anything that eliminates my cushy SEP with it's special small biz perks.

129   DinOR   2006 Aug 25, 8:13am  

Peter P,

The idea here is that not only does it grow tax deferred it reduces your pre-tax income as well.

We really have two seperate tax codes in this country. One for W-2 wage earners (which get payroll taxed to death) and the 1099 crowd that pick up reciepts blowing across the parking lot.

If it can be legally written off, I'm all over it! Without AT LEAST an avenue for tax deferred saving (hopefully w/employer match) we don't have anything resembling a level playing field.

I'm all for simplifying this, but doing away with ret. accounts altogether? Peter do they have a restroom where you work?

130   Glen   2006 Aug 25, 8:20am  

But if cap-gain tax is abolished we would not need #4.

Well, depends what you mean by "abolished." If we just tax cap gains at the same rates as other forms of income (abolishing the distinction in rates, but not the tax itself), then there is still a reason for these accounts.

Example:

Employee #1 earns $10K and puts it into a 401K which doubles to $20K, then withdraws the money, which is taxed entirely at 20%. Net result = $16K of retirement consumption and $4K of tax to the gov't when employee retires.

Employee #2 earns $10K and pays immediate $2K of immediate income tax, leaving $8K for retirement savings. Again, the money doubles, giving them $16K, but they still need to pay the flat 20% tax on their gains. 20% tax x $8K gain = $1,600 tax, leaving them with $14,400 of retirement money after paying a total of $3,600 in taxes. The other $2K disappeared because it is the lost hypothetical gain that the employee *would have* gotten if they had deferred their taxes. Instead, the government got the money sooner to do whatever it is they do with tax money. (Suffice it to say, it is unlikely that they invested it and doubled their money.)

131   Joe Schmoe   2006 Aug 25, 8:24am  

I will be in SF next thursday. Would anyone be up for an early dinner of sushi?

132   Glen   2006 Aug 25, 8:25am  

Allow everyone to write off their first $20K of cap gains / interest from their 1040 and you might see an increase in the savings rate.

Good idea. Works sort of like an IRA with a high contribution limit--except that you should be able to get the money back out (if you so choose) before you are 59 1/2! And instead of tax deferral you actually avoid the tax altogether. This way, you could save for a downpayment on a house while waiting out the bubble... 401ks are fine, but no good for housing-crash savings accounts.

133   Peter P   2006 Aug 25, 8:26am  

The idea here is that not only does it grow tax deferred it reduces your pre-tax income as well.

But if income tax is replaced by consumption tax we would not have to worry about that as well. :)

134   Peter P   2006 Aug 25, 8:29am  

I will be in SF next thursday. Would anyone be up for an early dinner of sushi?

Will you be in the blog party on the 3rd? :)

135   Peter P   2006 Aug 25, 8:31am  

Well, depends what you mean by “abolished.” If we just tax cap gains at the same rates as other forms of income (abolishing the distinction in rates, but not the tax itself), then there is still a reason for these accounts.

I still think it is best not to tax cap-gains at all. This should lead to more efficient capital allocation.

136   HARM   2006 Aug 25, 8:33am  

most securities are owned by a relatively small % of rich families.

And here I thought it was public pension funds and institutionals. Learn something new every day.

Perhaps I'm missing something, but I thought it was generally understood that the top quintile of HHs in the U.S. own the majority of securities & income producing assets:

http://www.pcf.org/venture_philanthropy/pdfs/ida_research.pdf#search=%22asset%20distribution%20U.S.%22

--The top 20% of all American households earn over 43% of all income but hold over 68% of net worth (all assets less all liabilities) and almost 87% of net financial assets.
--Ten percent of America‘s families control two-thirds of the wealth.
--The top 1% collected over four times their proportionate share of income, but hold over 11 times their share of net worth.
--The richest 1% possesses at least $763,000 in net worth, an amount 22 times greater than the median of the remaining 99%

137   Glen   2006 Aug 25, 8:37am  

I’m not going along with anything that eliminates my cushy SEP with it’s special small biz perks.

This is why tax reform is so hard to accomplish. Everybody has some piece of turf to protect.

Nevertheless, I would not be surprised to see some sweeping tax reforms in '07 (or at least an attempt to pass something). There have some rumblings about this, starting with the president's tax reform panel. But I think Bush probably blew it. The time to pass rational tax reform would have been when they passed the '01 and/or '03 tax cuts. It is much easier to swallow changes in the tax code when the taxes, overall, are being reduced.

It will be very hard, if not impossible, to sell changes to the tax code which negatively impact some taxpayers and do not benefit others during a recession with a lame duck President, a recession and an imploding housing market. Typical Bush, though, he left the hard work and heavy lifting for his successors.

138   FRIFY   2006 Aug 25, 8:37am  

I’m not going along with anything that eliminates my cushy SEP with it’s special small biz perks.

...and don't think about touching my kiddie tax credit. :-) Special interests forever.

Found Roubini's Blog (Krugman's reference):

http://www.rgemonitor.com/blog/roubini

139   Peter P   2006 Aug 25, 8:37am  

Philosophical question:

Should we aim to improve social equity or should we improve overall standard of living?

On the other hand, eliminating cap-gain tax may incentivize everyone to save and invest.

140   Joe Schmoe   2006 Aug 25, 8:40am  

Peter P-

I am not sure about the blog party on the 3rd, it depends on what my in-laws are up to. Right now it looks as if we will not be there.

However, I, am certain to be in SF on the 31st. If anyone is interested in sushi, I would be interested too.

141   HARM   2006 Aug 25, 8:43am  

Glen,

I see you're logic with the "double-taxation" on retirement savings cap. gains, though of couse NOT eliminating the tax write-off for IRA/401k/401b/SEPs would eliminate that problem.

Completely abolishing capital gains --while nice for those who get more income from investments than wages-- would perversely make the wealth disparity in the U.S. even worse than it already is. I don't see why Mr. Trustafarian should get a tax "pass" on his unearned passive gains, while I get hit for 30% a year on my meager earnings from actual work.

Just seems regressive, a poor incentive structure, unfair and bad tax policy IMHO.

142   Glen   2006 Aug 25, 8:44am  

Should we aim to improve social equity or should we improve overall standard of living?

If you mean through the tax code, then neither should be the goal. Taxes should be raised in order to fund government spending. The simpler and more transparent the system for doing so, the better.

If the government wants to support a particular activity, then they should subsidize it. If they want to disincentivize some activity, they should impose fines or criminal penalties. Other than that, let people decide how to spend their own money. Monkeying with the tax code just gives politicians cover for discretely funding favored special interests, which requires everyone else to pay higher taxes to fund these interests.

143   surfer-x   2006 Aug 25, 8:45am  

Mr. Schmoe, a word of advice, don't pick Peter P's sushi bill :)

It is typically larger than the GDP of Angola. He is rumored to have eaten an entire blue fin tuna himself.

144   surfer-x   2006 Aug 25, 8:46am  

"pick up"

145   Peter P   2006 Aug 25, 8:46am  

Completely abolishing capital gains –while nice for those who get more income from investments than wages– would perversely make the wealth disparity in the U.S. even worse than it already is.

But the investments were already taxed at the corporate level.

146   Peter P   2006 Aug 25, 8:49am  

He is rumored to have eaten an entire blue fin tuna himself.

The rumor is greatly exaggerated. :)

It is typically larger than the GDP of Angola.

Not really. But the bill is usually much higher than the net worth of many FBs. :)

147   Peter P   2006 Aug 25, 8:52am  

But a Big Mac costs more than the net worth of many FBs.

148   Peter P   2006 Aug 25, 8:53am  

Taxes should be raised in order to fund government spending.

It can also be argued that government speding to be reduced in order to lower taxes. Spending is a means, not an end.

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