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Patrick.net threatened with "Irrelevance"


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2007 Jun 12, 7:29am   16,027 views  85 comments

by HARM   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

Patrick.net's housing bubble blog today faced perhaps the greatest threat in its 2+ year existence when a newcomer named "Busted" posted the following:

Busted Says:

June 12th, 2007 at 2:04 pm
I apologize for being so blunt, but I say change the thread or risk this blog becoming [sic] irrelavant.

Threadmaster and regular contributor, HARM, responded quickly, posting this thread in a last-ditch effort to stave off impending "irrelevance." At a hastily convened press conference, HARM declared:

"The last thing any of us here wants is to become the blog equivalent of Jimmy Carter, Yassir Arafat, or --God forbid-- the U.N. I have decided to take immediate and unilateral action, and I hope others will support me in the Coalition to Defeat Irrelevance. Thank you and God Bless!"

#housing

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9   e   2007 Jun 12, 9:22am  

Hell, the boom in prices was the result of cheap rates, now we’re at 5-year highs in rates, it’s time for prices to drop.

I just watch 2 condos across the street from my rental sell in the last month. In the 2 years I've lived in this rental, I don't think I've ever seen a condo take longer than 2 months to sell in this complex.

I guess I'll find out what prices they sold at in a few months, but for now - it's pretty disturbing how fast they're selling at.

And meanwhile, my rent will have gone up 12% at the end of the 2 year mark. Cripes.

Frickin Fortress.

10   StuckInBA   2007 Jun 12, 9:23am  

ptiemann :

I posted a link to a study where someone had analyzed prices in Manhattan and compared them to interest rates, and he could find no correlation.

The conclusion is quite incorrect. It is as incorrect as saying the exact opposite - "Real estate values drop when interest rates rise". Both are wrong.

Interest rate is ONE factor. Income might play a bigger role, although I have no data to show that. If incomes are rising and keeping pace with interest rates, prices will not fall.

Other factors, such as demographic change, regional economic boom, change in perceptions of desirability and many other factors will also play role. Those would be very area specific.

Few things to note for this time. The rate increases are happening for the worst time for ARM reset. It's hard to predict the exact amount of effect of it. One thing is sure, it will be negative for RE prices.

People are already maxing out on housing expenses. There is no cushion to absorb additional increases. And not everyone works in Web2.0.

To say that rate increases would not have much effect is premature. We will see.

11   skibum   2007 Jun 12, 9:33am  

eburbed,

I appreciate your comments on the blog, as they are informative, but I must ask - do you ever say anything positive? Man, you sound seriously glum and depressed.

Maybe you should change your handle to "eeyore-burbed"...

12   lunarpark   2007 Jun 12, 9:34am  

Yeah, I'm worried about eburbed. He may need to seek counseling if prices don't fall soon.

13   OO   2007 Jun 12, 9:42am  

eburbed,

as long as their PITI+property tax+insurance+depreciation and maintenance is much higher than your rent, consider yourself lucky because you are being subsidized by the landlord.

Housing bubble is very difficult to deflate, look at Japan, it took them 16 freaking years. But the good news for us all is, Americans are pretty much broke, most Americans don't have that kind of savings to last 16 years, not even 16 months :-) :-)

When the job market turns, the correction will be pretty swift and sharp. But, job market must turn first.

14   e   2007 Jun 12, 9:52am  

do you ever say anything positive?

Well, sort of - there's the sarcastic positiveness on burbed.com, does that count? :)

15   OO   2007 Jun 12, 10:04am  

Let me make a wild prediction.

I believe the housing price of the fortress BA will continue heading up till late 2008 at an escalated pace, not because of BA jobs, but because of money from China.

China will crash hard, all the factors for a perfect storm are well in place and brewing strong. But like all bubbles in the world, the last leg up will be the most spectacular. Lots of Chinese are making USD like mad over there now, due to the twin bubble of housing and stock market. Fortress price to these people look very reasonable compared to Shanghai or Beijing. When China crashes, there will be an exodus of wealthy emigrants along with their money coming to the coveted havens like Palo Alto, Cupertino and Saratoga (ranked in terms of prestige based on Chinese perception). Most of them actually will head for the SoCal fortress (Palos Verdes, San Marino, Arcadia). Chinese won't be able to hold back the tide of housing depression, but after all it is a big country with very skewed distribution of wealth. So the Chinese money will be able to delay and soften the landing of few select burbs.

I don't know much about India, but I sense that there is a risk of India crash landing as well, maybe not as bad as China.

16   Busted   2007 Jun 12, 10:04am  

I am well aware of the various factors that effect the value of real estate. But, in such a short period of time, I ask someone to point out what other value factor has had a significant change over the course of the past month to justify the increase in the cost of home ownership that has come as a result of the rate increases. I'm willing single-mindedly to say none other over that time. Hence, for the cost of ownership to stay the same during the past month, there needs to be a corresponding decrease in prices.

17   astrid   2007 Jun 12, 10:11am  

Arafat is dead. I won't comment on the effectiveness of the UN. But Jimmy Carter had a very distinguished post-presidential career.

18   astrid   2007 Jun 12, 10:20am  

Maybe this blog could turn into a book club...

19   StuckInBA   2007 Jun 12, 10:20am  

Hence, for the cost of ownership to stay the same during the past month, there needs to be a corresponding decrease in prices.

I don't think it works that way. Last few years, people have been either paying more of their paycheck towards housing, or buying nominally cheaper houses (which are really more expensive in terms of $$/SQFT etc). The logic was, if the house you like is 1.2M and you cannot buy it, buy anything that is for 800K. A lot of crappy houses got sold for obscene amounts.

So buyers adjust their expectations about the house they can afford, more than the sellers adjust their expectations of how much their house is worth.

Although, the rate increase will help bubblesitters via another dimension. Now ARM resets will have even more adverse effect on prices.

Ultimately it's the psychology that will have a far bigger impact. This was a mania fueled by panic buying and speculation. Once that psychology changes - because of jobs, rates whatever - then real fun will start.

20   Carl in Berkeley   2007 Jun 12, 10:32am  

I dont remember a stock market bubble blog in 2000

No blogs then, but there was this.

21   sfbubblebuyer   2007 Jun 12, 10:37am  

Another year or two, and f'd company website should be revived and rarin' to go!

22   HARM   2007 Jun 12, 10:44am  

Most of them actually will head for the SoCal fortress (Palos Verdes, San Marino, Arcadia).

Good start, but you forgot to mention Monterey Park, Alhambra and San Gabriel.

23   HARM   2007 Jun 12, 10:49am  

astrid,

I was being facetious. I named only people or institutions that have been publicly declared "irrelevant" by the current Administration.

24   OO   2007 Jun 12, 11:09am  

ptiemann,

I think the lack of correlation can be easily explained by time lag.

Unlike stock market, housing market takes time to adjust. When I do stock trading, I adjust my limit price 5 times a day if I want the transaction to clear. It is not the case for housing. Even the most aggressive sellers only adjust their price monthly. By the time that transaction price is recorded at the county and NAR, the market has long moved ahead.

If he does a T+X timeline plotting between housing price and interest rate, he probably would have gotten a graph with more visible pattern.

25   B.A.C.A.H.   2007 Jun 12, 12:09pm  

OO didn't like it when I was writing it here, but the past few days he has been writing nearly the same remarks as me:

"Prime" neighborhoods in Santa Clara County are being help up rich Asians, mainly Chinese.

But Indians too. I can't tell you how many Indian H1's I know who went "back home" within hours of getting their green cards, come back with an Indian bride and suddenly purchase a home in a neighborhood of the Bay Area that was off limits to blue collar locals like me.

During the dot-com there was a tongue-in-cheek editorial in a one of those free job listing tabloids about the pricing of dowries vs. Silicon Valley job status, US residency, type of degree, degree field and the like. A very intricate spreadsheet.

It'll be interesting times if OO's prediction about the Chinese bubble unfolds the way he said it might.

26   EBGuy   2007 Jun 12, 12:18pm  

Maybe this blog could turn into a book club…
How about Edgar Allan Poe's short story The Masque of Red Death. Maybe Fortress BA can take a lesson from Prince Prospero. I don't think even good school systems will be able to fend off the Red Death (but maybe a good economy?).

27   GammaRaze   2007 Jun 12, 1:55pm  

Speaking for the Indian community in the bay area, I don't see any awareness about the bubble or the fact that it is bursting.

There is a dim awareness that things have "slowed down" or that houses are cheaper "for now" but beyond that, I haven't seen any greater awareness.

Of course, I don't speak for the entire community - my sample space is quite limited.

There are many reasons for this, but one big reason is that real estate has been on the rise in India for a generation or more (much of it is due to inflation and the devaluation of the rupee). Essentially, we have a people who have not seen real estate values go down. So it is never considered a bad idea.

Hopefully, there will be easily observed, hard evidence in the bay area soon. If the immigrant community starts believing in a bubble, it is pretty much over.

28   StuckInBA   2007 Jun 12, 1:58pm  

ptiemann :

I did read the document. And I was referring to his conclusions. He took 2 data points and tried to find correlation only between them. I noted that this is an incomplete analysis.

If incomes rise along with rates, during an inflationary environment, real estate prices will at least hold nominally. But they are falling in real terms.

Such kind of analysis (including effect of other factors) is absent. Simply taking 2 variables and trying to find correlation tells only part of the story. The finding - either way - whether there is correlation or not - is grossly incomplete.

I am not arguing FOR a correlation. I have stated in my other posts, that incomes are more important.

But rate IS is factor. So the only discussion is how important it is FOR THIS bubble. I argue it is very important. Maybe even more than income this time. So even is BA job market remains strong, a higher rate of something like 8 will have a very negative effect on RE prices.

29   Zephyr   2007 Jun 12, 2:34pm  

Because interest rates are a fundamental factor affecting housing affordability it is logical to expect interest rates to be a prime mover of the housing markets. However, history does not support this view. Over the last 40 years, interest rates and home prices have moved together in the same direction as often as they have moved in opposite directions. Essentially, there is no significant correlation.

Interest rates do affect housing demand, but other factors are much more powerful. Prior bull markets have occurred while mortgage rates were high and rising. Mortgage rates declined during much of the bear-market years of the early '80s and '90s.

When interest rates rise it is generally in response to inflation and/or a stronger economy. Both of these elements will increase the demand for assets and drive prices upward. Eventually the market gets far ahead of its normal long-term trend and a slowdown or decline will occur to bring it back on trend (often temporarily below trend). This will happen with or without higher interest rates.

The point is that while interest rates are an important factor, they are overpowered by other economic forces. If you think you can forecast the direction of housing prices based on the direction of interest rates you are ignoring history.

30   Zephyr   2007 Jun 12, 2:48pm  

The one fundamental that drives long term housing price trends more than anything else is the affluence of the upper 50% of the households.

The lag in supply adjustments, combined with market psychology drive the cyclical fluctuations around the long term trend.

We see an overshooting of the top because of momentum driven by buyer psychology, including exuberance and the twin demons of greed and fear. These become the two most powerful forces in the market and their best accomplice is foolishness.

31   Ozman   2007 Jun 12, 5:29pm  

Don't forget the market can stay stupid longer than we can blog.
The fact that there is still this obsessive interest in RE reinforces my feeling that this stupidity is going to last for a very long time. I'm talking about 10 years. There is no shortage of stupid money chasing RE. It is everywhere globally.

There is nothing worse in life than someone else paying more than the fair value for an asset you want to purchase.
It will be a long journey to the promised land and in the process this blog might become irrelevant indeed. Becoming irrelevant is part of the lifecycle, nothing to fear.

Be patient and have fun while waiting :).

32   Bruce   2007 Jun 12, 8:02pm  

A quote from a recent Paul Kasriel article:

Households' single largest asset, their houses, is carrying record debt relative to its market value. I can't confirm it, but conventional wisdom has it that about one third of all owner-occupied housing has no debt associated with it. If that's the case, then with record leverage in housing today, the two thirds of houses with debt associated with them must have an incredibly high debt-to-value ratio.

...which is why I - neophyte that I am - am not married to historical models as they relate to the relationship between interest rates and the market value (not asking price) of housing. There may be a few past instances of similar debt loads, but probably very few which coincide with a consumer-driven economy.

33   DinOR   2007 Jun 12, 11:28pm  

"There is nothing worse in life than someone else paying more than the fair value for an asset you want to purchase"

Did Ben Franklin say that? Is that a quote from Ben Franklin? It should have been! Oh I'm there Ozman, I'm there. Especially when that "someone" is a realtor!

34   DinOR   2007 Jun 12, 11:41pm  

I'm in the middle of a continuing ed. course (with an exam on Thursday) so I don't have all the time I'd like right now but this recent debate on the relationship between int. rates and RE prices is intriguing. I've never really heard this challenged before?

(And they say we're getting "over the hill"!)

I don't think anyone can be blamed for making that assumption. Particularly in the mainstream. After years of DL harping on the "boom" being sustainable as long as "rates remain low" and then imploring the Fed to LOWER rates we've all become focused on that as an all important factor.

Taken to extremes I don't suppose it would bode well for RE prices if the 30 yr. fixed was @ 1% if none of us had jobs? Just as being willing to pay nosebleed prices @ 15% wouldn't be a factor if no one qualified.

35   Michael Holliday   2007 Jun 12, 11:57pm  

Busted Says:

"I damn well hope this rate increase translates into a significant price drop. Hell, the boom in prices was the result of cheap rates, now we’re at 5-year highs in rates, it’s time for prices to drop."
_____

I'm sorry Busted but you forgot one thing: it's the Bay Area.

You see, the Bay Area is very, very special. It defies all logic and even the laws of economic physics itself, for it is the land of milk, honey and great weather.

Any piece of crap shack in the Bay Area--from Morgan Hill to Napa Valley-- is a priceless jewel that commands a high price. You will be fortunate that housing prices only climb 5-7% per year before they take off like a bat out of hell for their usual 10-15% increase every year.

Didn't a realtor tell you that prices in the BA only go up?

So, my hard-won advice to you is to buy anything at any price any way that you can or be left behind groveling like a rat in the dust.

Just do it!

NOW! (just ask Surfer-x, he'll tell you!)

;-)

36   astrid   2007 Jun 13, 12:30am  

I thought young Indian women didn't want to marry H1B or GC holders because they can't get dirt cheap servants in America. What's so great about having more greenbacks if they have to trade a upper class existence for second class citizenship?

37   Bruce   2007 Jun 13, 12:32am  

OT, but I thought you all might enjoy this - just reading the circular which accompanies UBS's statement.

On page three is 'Increase Your Borrowing Power', suggesting securities-backed lines of credit or equity extraction for UBS clients planning summer travel, a new car, home improvements or launching a new business venture.

How's that for advice?

38   DinOR   2007 Jun 13, 1:01am  

"or equity extraction"

You mean there IS some still out there that HASN'T been tapped?

39   DinOR   2007 Jun 13, 1:13am  

KT,

O.K, so they did look a little goofy, but what is up with the earlier buyers!? The one gal said "the developers promised us (as she fights back tears) they wouldn't sell below the market value!" Lady! Half of what you paid IS market value!

40   patseajul   2007 Jun 13, 3:31am  

Instead of a book club, you guys could write a book. Patrick could write the first chapter, followed by harm, randy, etc. etc. Surfer-x and DinOr write about buying when they did. Peter P could have a food chapter. You could even have a just for fun chapter all about trolls.

41   patseajul   2007 Jun 13, 3:38am  

dcfemme-I have the same problem, Brother in Santa Clarita, not here, friend in Willow Glen, not here, mother in law in San Jose, not here. I have decided to stop talking about it to them, and then they ask me Why are you not buying a house? It's annoying.

42   Claire   2007 Jun 13, 3:51am  

OT - had leaflet distributed round our neighborhood, realtor looking for sellers - offering 1% comission only - full service. They are based in Cupertino, we are in Mountain View.

43   DinOR   2007 Jun 13, 3:59am  

@patseajul,

Hey thanks! If I ever get out from under the relentless (and redundant) "continuing ed." courses I'd love to be a part of that!

For the working title I was thinking something like....

"How I DID my homework, timed the market and STILL took it in the shorts!"

I certainly hope no one here takes my actions as a "capitulation" b/c it certainly isn't. I would take serious exception to any troll contorting this "purchase of convenience" into a sign that the ranks are thinning! I'm as bearish as ever and am fully anticipating a major correction from coast to coast. I still have a firm conviction there will be ample bottom feeding opportunities and in the grand scheme of things having taken a path that ensures I won't have minimalist shelter sold out from under me (yet again) seems a small price to pay to "keep your powder dry".

I'm hardly saddled with a McAlbaross I can't get rid of and the nominal payments shouldn't preclude me from getting the place we'd ultimately like to have down the road. Still a bear,

DinOR

44   HARM   2007 Jun 13, 4:03am  

I know bears will say that the crash is still coming. It’s always just around the corner for them, but it never comes.

Yup, ignore all those nasty news reports of falling prices and underwater borrowers and repeat after me: "there is no crash, there is no crash, there is no..." Not working? Ok, try covering your ears and yelling "LA-LA-LA-LA-LA-LA...!", while thinking happy, happy thoughts.

As an aside: I know that many here have contempt for RE flippers, speculators, investors, etc.

Another "Face Reality" trademark: if outright lying/denial fails, resort to the straw man argument. Like deliberately conflating our contempt for lazy, parasitic Casey Serin fliptards, who drive up prices but add ZERO value to the properties they try to flip, with old-fashioned long-term investors and professional housing renovators (OO, FAB, etc.).

Who here hates people who fix-up distressed properties and work hard to earn a fair profit? A: nobody.

45   lunarpark   2007 Jun 13, 4:38am  

http://www.dqnews.com/RRSCA0607.shtm

Continued slow for Southland home sales

46   StuckInBA   2007 Jun 13, 5:24am  

Face Reality is just shifting the argument.
By changing the subject area from "BA" to "Fortress".

There is no more denial in the BA. The slowdown has arrived is generally accepted. The only debate is
1. Magnitude
2. Which communities.

Go check out fringe areas and you will know that downturn is getting stronger. But the bulls like FR will talk only about the Fortress. And we here are also way too fixated on the Fortress. That may be the most important area for many, but that doesn't change the fact the RE is in downturn in BA.

Doesn't anyone realize that the tune has changed from "BA is special" to "BUT Cupertino is STILL strong" ? Don't forget that the sentence has a "BUT" and "STILL". To me that speaks volumes.

47   sfbubblebuyer   2007 Jun 13, 6:29am  

Everyone predicted that the 'fortress' areas would be the last to fall, and really what you see is 15-20% yoy gains there down to 1-5% yoy gains while the rest of the BA went from 10-15% yoy gains to -5-0% yoy losses.

It's FRUSTRATING to see the fortress still holding, but not unexpected. And the gains are median masked losses, anyway. Since I managed to find a place my wife is happy to rent and wait out the collapse (and one that we can afford on a single salary, no less) I am no longer stressing about when the fortress areas go down, or if they just stagnate until rents/salaries catch up. Tokyo did that, so it's not inconceivable that it'll happen to the BA.

The biggest support of housing prices is salaries. And salaries don't support current house prices. Prices down, salaries up, inflation/deflation, one way or another it will work itself out. I believe it will be prices down as it becomes more and more obvious that hyperinflation is the only way to keep the credit bubble alive, and I think we'll let the housing market tank and take the economic hit first. Although, hyperinflation might actually be a better long-term solution as we can then pay back our pissed off creditor nations in worthless greenbacks.

48   Patrick   2007 Jun 13, 6:31am  

I'm not worried about irrelevance. When this blog is irrelevant, I'll be pretty happy.

But a food blog or book club would be great too.

BTW, sorry about the database issues today. The spammers are hitting me pretty hard recently.

Patrick

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