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DavidLereahWatch almost makes DL's mom cry


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2007 Mar 1, 8:52am   23,551 views  196 comments

by HARM   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

artist's depiction of David Lereah's mom

CNN Money/Fortune Interview with David Lereah:
"Mr. Real Estate: 'All systems go, pockets of pain'"

Q: You've been accused by the blog David Lereah Watch of being too bullish. What's it like to have an online antagonist?

A: [DL]"At first I was kind of laughing. And now, it's enough already. This is a 26-year old that could not afford a townhouse and blamed it on the boom. And then he said, Who's talking about the boom and my name kept coming up. So I became Satan to him.

"The worst was that my mother read one of those things, and she almost started crying. And I had to say, Mom, you have to have thick skin. I'm going to be in the public and make statements about real estate, and if someone doesn't like what I'm saying, they have every right to say something opposing me.

"Now should they go so far as to call me Satan? I don't understand where that's coming from. That's just weird."

Now, I don't know about the rest of you, but this makes my blood boil! Comparing America's favorite Champion of the American Dream and recipient of the... uh, Homeownerhip trophy thingy... to the Devil!! And practically making his grey-haired mom almost cry (while she was probably baking some fresh cupcakes for one of Dave's many open houses)! This is simply uncalled for... cruel, disgusting.

I've long suspected that these Bubbleheads are jealous, angry bitter trolls who derive sustenance from the tears of kindly old grandmothers --and now we have the PROOF!

Discuss, enjoy...
HARM

#housing

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120   Peter P   2007 Mar 2, 6:32am  

If we stop blogging the bubble will collapse? Well, that’s easy.

Not that easy... :)

The thread bubble will collapse though.

121   lunarpark   2007 Mar 2, 6:36am  

FAB - Thanks, I like that menu.

I'll check out the other suggestions too. Much appreciated.

122   SFWoman   2007 Mar 2, 6:42am  

CB,

Standardized scores don't mean too too much. I do very well on standardized tests, but I am not necessarily good at the subjects. The answers on the tests seem obvious to me, so my talent is in the test, not the subject.

I did very well on my GRE math (790, great score). I am not mathematical at all. I did one year of calculus, that was absolutely as far as my brain could stretch mathematically. I had trouble keeping up with some simple econometrics in an econ class that I took, but I should have whizzed through it if you just looked at my test score.

I am also not computer literate, but you would probably expect that too from my math score.

123   Peter P   2007 Mar 2, 6:44am  

I am also not computer literate

Did you use an abacus to blog here?

124   SFWoman   2007 Mar 2, 6:44am  

watchful,

I guess I am amazed that other people are still buying! We know it will go down, Schiller knows it will go down, I'm just amazed that there are so many other people who have faith in the market.

OK, I am really avoiding getting my names database updated. Talking to most of you is much, much more interesting.

125   SFWoman   2007 Mar 2, 6:46am  

Peter P.,

I can use my computer to do a word processor, do email, look at internet sites, but that's about it.

It is like my car. I can drive, but under the hood, who knows what goes on?

126   Peter P   2007 Mar 2, 6:48am  

CB, perhaps they said you were too good for them. Admitting you would make their existing students feel bad.

127   Peter P   2007 Mar 2, 6:49am  

I can use my computer to do a word processor, do email, look at internet sites, but that’s about it.

I don't think I can do much more than that.

128   SFWoman   2007 Mar 2, 6:50am  

CB,

Your scores were great, but the problem with those tests is they could end up taking a person like me over someone who actually understands math because of the tests. Oh well, they served me well and I never have to take one again. I hope my kids are good at them when the time comes.

I had a really smart friend who used to color in designs on the bubbles in her Iowa tests. The teachers would go nuts because her cretin-like scores would be averaged into their class.

129   SFWoman   2007 Mar 2, 7:01am  

Peter P.,

Back to macroeconomics:

You don't suppose the Swiss invading Lichtenstein had anything to do with markets jitters, do you?

(That was very, very funny. Maybe we need to go take care of Switzerland for those Lichtenstinians?)

130   Randy H   2007 Mar 2, 7:03am  

Usually at the better schools standardized tests are just a weed out, not a final discriminator for acceptance. The schools that summarily dismiss people for merely having above average scores are probably not schools you'd want to attend anyway. They tend to be big employee factories, not the types of schools that produce lots of Nobel winners.

131   SFWoman   2007 Mar 2, 7:10am  

"Under her breath, the newly minted Washington real estate agent sarcastically mutters a mantra.

"It's real easy. Just show a few houses. Six percent. It's real easy. Just show a few houses. Six percent." She's midway through her third or fourth repetition of the chant when the door to the four-bedroom, two-bathroom house finally opens. Butler, an agent in Re/Max's Rockville office, and her client, Eulalia Baptista, had arrived with high hopes..."

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/02/27/AR2007022701472.html

132   Peter P   2007 Mar 2, 7:14am  

You don’t suppose the Swiss invading Lichtenstein had anything to do with markets jitters, do you?

Huh?

Usually at the better schools standardized tests are just a weed out, not a final discriminator for acceptance.

I doubt even good engineering schools look at GRE verbal scores too much.

133   SFWoman   2007 Mar 2, 7:14am  

http://www.slate.com/id/2160973/

"Echoes from 2000 can also be heard in the continual false calls of a market bottom. The Web site Minyanville has documented the repeated bottom-calling attempts by National Association of Realtors economist David Lereah. Lereah believed the housing market had stabilized in March 2006 and again in April, June, October, and November."

134   Peter P   2007 Mar 2, 7:17am  

Huh 2.0?

Yes. Let's double the comment count. The goal will be 5200!

135   Peter P   2007 Mar 2, 7:22am  

CB, it may also be fate.

My wife got rejected by UC Davis although she was accepted by UCLA. She appealed and got into Davis.

I did not get into UCB, which I would have gone to if I were admitted.

Events lead to events. Obviously, things played out according to fate.

136   SFWoman   2007 Mar 2, 7:22am  

CB,

If you spend every waking moment of your life practicing for the tests, taking practice tests, and looking at any you got wrong you too will ace the tests.

When I was interviewing kids for my college I had several kids who had taken the SATs perhaps 10 times or so. They had started with good scores, but them just kept taking them and taking them until they either figured out the tests or lucked out and cracked the 1500 barrier (or whatever it is now, it is different than when I was in school).

137   SFWoman   2007 Mar 2, 7:25am  

newsfreak,

I forgot about mental health support! My kids would drive me nuts if we were stuck somewhere with nothing to do. I'll throw a pack in the back of the car, so if we ever have to go someplace during an emergency I can't forget them.

138   Peter P   2007 Mar 2, 7:29am  

There is a lunar eclipse tomorrow night.

lunar eclipse = Sun opposition Moon + Moon occultation, right?

139   SFWoman   2007 Mar 2, 7:31am  

GC,

I found it more disturbing. What a waste of time and money. I always asked the kids how many times they took the tests, I figured I'd find out if I really wanted to and that most kids wouldn't lie knowing that. Half took them once or twice and the rest more.

Dating myself, when I was in school you took them once, unless you were sick or really tanked them. I didn't know people who took them repeatedly.

140   SFWoman   2007 Mar 2, 7:32am  

"Poker, they can learn how to lose money."

Or they could buy SF real estate right now and learn the same lesson.

141   EBGuy   2007 Mar 2, 7:33am  

As a reminder for those of you keeping track at home, the SF Bay Area S&P Case-Shiller Home Index peaked at 218.37 in May, 2006 and has continued declining in subsequent months. It currently stands at 212.13 (Dec. 2006). The SF Index is composed of SF, Marin, San Mateo, Alameda, and Contra Costa counties. While I consider this index to be the gold standard, it does, like all other metrics, have its limitations. New homes are not considered (until it is sold by the first homeowner) and it does not take into account home improvements. A seven year downward/sideways slide similar to the last bubble would put us into 2013 to reach parity with the current peak (in nominal terms). This is hard to fathom (as I'm sure it was from 1990-97). SF proper may hold up better than, say, Antioch. Not advice to rent, buy, sell or flip real estate.

142   Peter P   2007 Mar 2, 7:39am  

Years ago, we took the SATs twice at most, and 1200 was considered good.

That was before score/grade inflation.

143   SFWoman   2007 Mar 2, 7:42am  

newsfreak,

True, but until very recently my kids may have been able to 'buy' a house here for pennies down. And with the lending standards the way they were, being seven probably wouldn't be an issue.

144   SFWoman   2007 Mar 2, 7:44am  

newsfreak,

I too am anti-Hillary. I think she'd morph into whatever it takes to get elected. She seems to be some sort of a pro-choice war hawk to me.

145   Peter P   2007 Mar 2, 7:46am  

I rather have Gore, even though I do not believe in the Global Warming hoax.

146   Peter P   2007 Mar 2, 7:54am  

When I look for interns, I pay little attention to their GPA’s. All I care about is whether the person has raw smarts, genuine interest in the subject area and trustworthiness. In reverse order of importance.

I rely mostly on intuition.

147   Peter P   2007 Mar 2, 8:08am  

My passenger might not be, because I saw some blood on his forehead, and, hear this, he didn’t get 800 on the Analysticals.

You stole his karma! :)

Not karmic advice

148   FormerAptBroker   2007 Mar 2, 8:09am  

newsfreak Says:

> Years ago, we took the SATs twice at most, and 1200

Then Peter P Says:

> That was before score/grade inflation.

Thirty years ago a 3.5 GPA and 1200 SAT would get you in to Cal or Stanford...

149   Peter P   2007 Mar 2, 8:13am  

Have you ever been in an actual jungle?

Well, Adrian Monk says that it is a jungle out there. So SF is a jungle, I guess. :)

150   Peter P   2007 Mar 2, 8:23am  

The sad reality is that the character flaws that make them a loser under normal circumstances will still apply in case anarchy actually breaks loose.

I think the "sad" reality is that in any society most people will have to be losers.

151   Bruce   2007 Mar 2, 8:32am  

I always enjoyed what were called 'objective' tests. They were generally better-written than course-related exams and were often interesting in and of themselves. I suspect liking them skewed scoring to the positive side.

I wish I could believe oceanic acidification and the current thaws in permafrost were temporary oddities, Peter. MSM have delivered their usual buffet of distortions on the subject. It's just not that hard to look up MIT Technology Review - is there a CalTech equivalent? - and get a look at the research absent most of the sensational journalese.

152   SFWoman   2007 Mar 2, 8:53am  

SP,

I was stopped by one airline, and at the other two pulled aside, pat/partial strip searched, they went through my Palm and looked at the names, went through my calendar, turned on my camera and looked at the photos on it, and looked through my contacts list on my phone, then asked me extremely detailed questions about who I would be seeing, where would I stay, have I been to this place or that place before? They asked me these questions while seperated from my kids and were asking the kids the questions seperately.

I had a friend who was formerly in the State Dept. who told me I was on a list, and I was accidentally told that I came up "S1" by a clerk at USAIR. (I asked about S1 and he said 'forget that') I have spoken with the airline people and they all said 'We can not discuss this' when I ask about it. They won't say I am or am not on a list, but last year United refused to sell me a ticket. I then started a correspondence and call marathon with them (still getting 'We can't discuss this with you" after 2 1/2 hours on the phone with them), but I was told later that they would sell me the ticket. We'll see if I can get on the plane next month!

I met another preppy woman who had the exact problems I have with the airlines. Perhaps our names are a little too white bread?

Strangely, I have no problem coming back in at customs. They always smile, ask how my vacation was and wave me through.

Look at the four most recent headlines on Bllomberg:

* U.S. Stocks Finish Worst Week in Four Years as Global Investors Avoid Risk

* New Century Faces Criminal Accounting Probe; Fremont Quits Subprime Market

* Subprime Mortgage Market Needs Closer Scrutiny as Defaults Rise, Fed Says

* Consumer Confidence in U.S. Falls From Two-Year High on Rising Fuel Prices

153   SFWoman   2007 Mar 2, 8:58am  

PAR,

Thank you. Do you know how quickly prices stalled/dropped in the '89 housing bust here? Was there the long lag like now?

SP,

I should clarify that former State Dept friend was guessing I was on a list, he didn't have a list in front of him, it just sounded like it to him.

154   SFWoman   2007 Mar 2, 9:08am  

PAR,

Thanks. It could be much uglier this time, with the run up and the subprime issue. No Loma Prieta, but many 4.0s might make people a bit jittery without actually taking housing off the market...

155   SFWoman   2007 Mar 2, 9:18am  

PAR,

Then I guess it's a Great Time To Buy (TM).

156   SFWoman   2007 Mar 2, 9:30am  

Why Peter P will never be an astronaut (don't worry, involves no donkeys)

http://www.networkworld.com/community/?q=node/11999

157   Peter P   2007 Mar 2, 9:31am  

Why Peter P will never be an astronaut (don’t worry, involves no donkeys)

No sushi in space?

158   FormerAptBroker   2007 Mar 2, 9:44am  

SFWoman Says:

> PAR, Thank you. Do you know how quickly prices stalled/
> dropped in the ‘89 housing bust here? Was there the
> long lag like now?

Things were still booming in CA in 1989 slowed in 1990 and as I have said in the past I did not see anything start to drop until after “Operation Desert Shield” became “Operation Desert Storm” in early 1991. It was a slow drop in 1992 with not many foreclosures until 1993…

P.S. There was a "Loma Prieta" impact in 1989 on a small number of areas (like 94123 landfill and Foster City/Redwood Shores)...

159   SFWoman   2007 Mar 2, 9:53am  

FAB,

The reports I have seen show the peak in Q4 1989.

I saw the earthquake damage insurance maps of SF before I bought my place. (No ABAG online to research at the time) Surprisingly there was damage in several neighborhoods. There were a lot of chimneys that fell off of houses in the Haight and Mission. I had a friend who's Noe Valley house suffered a lot of damage (and she had closed on it three weeks earlier! Ouch!)

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