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Patrick.net threatened with "Irrelevance"


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2007 Jun 12, 7:29am   16,053 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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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

49   sfbubblebuyer   2007 Jun 13, 6:59am  

It creeps in SJR. Look at east SJ prices. Look at south SJ prices. Those were holding when Gilroy/BC/sundry SCMountain places started sliding.

It's gonna be a long, slow slide. And given that you've got a good deal going where you are, why worry for now?

50   sfbubblebuyer   2007 Jun 13, 7:38am  

Go to The Housing Bubble Blog, Site Future. You'll get two ear fulls and a sack left over in case you want more later. :)

Seriously, good stuff over there.

51   FormerAptBroker   2007 Jun 13, 7:51am  

Face Reality Says:

> I’ve been away from this blog for many months. I promised
> to drop by once every few months to see if people are adjusting
crash in the Bay Area.

Mortgage interest rates up over 50 bps in the last couple months will only increase the slowdown…

> As an aside: I know that many here have contempt for RE
> flippers, speculators, investors, etc. Folks here think that
> these guys don’t know what they’re doing, they’ll go broke
> in this market, etc.

True “flippers” (and “day traders”) always go broke (with the exception of very short periods of massive appreciation)…

> Again, this doesn’t correspond to the reality that I see.
> People who act in a naive or stupid way typically get into
> trouble eventually; that’s pretty clear. However, the sophisticated
> ones tend to do well. I mentioned a while ago that a couple
> of friends of mine were getting into this business in the Bay
> Area, and I’ve been following their progress. They are both
> doing very well, making much more money than they were making
> in their regular jobs. The way they do it is to have a collaboration
> between a guy scouting for promising properties, a general contractor,
> and an RE agent. They buy houses in the fortress, renovate
> them nicely, sell them, and divide the profits. They’ve been
> making around $400K/year each flipping about 8 houses a
> year.

This is not flipping since the people could make as much or more (without the risk) working for others finding real estate deals, renovating property and selling homes (I know many contractors that make over $400K a year working for others)…

> They pay the RE agent about $100K for the 8 deals.

You first say they make $400K each, now the RE agent only makes $100K?? If you figure that the average home in the “fortress” is over $1mm the agent is only making a 1% fee selling 8 houses for $100K (or less than they would make selling two homes for others at a 6% fee). Making $100K of 1099 money after paying out of pocket expenses to sell 8 homes is not good money…

> The rest of the money goes to the scout who arranges, manages,
> and supervises the deals, and the contractor. I was pretty sceptical
> about this “business plan” when I first heard it, but it seems to work
> well for these guys. I guess this is another case where I was
> over-pessimistic.

It is a horrible business plan since there is limited upside and a huge downside. If a politically connected neighbor slows the renovation (or limits the scope of the renovation) you can lose a ton of money.

How about giving us the address of just one of the deals they have sold (or are you just making this up?)…

52   FormerAptBroker   2007 Jun 13, 7:56am  

The next NY Times best seller?

http://www.foreclosurecode.com/

If you are not stupid enought to "loose" millions on your own you need to read this book...

53   Randy H   2007 Jun 13, 8:49am  

What FAB said. Especially the Making $100K of 1099 money after paying out of pocket expenses part.

I love the bulls 'round here. They make market agnostics like me fell bearish.

I listened to a presentation from the head of AllianceBernstein recently talk about residential real-estate returns in various US markets. These guys have done a ton of actual quantitative research. The conclusion for SF, which was among one of the absolute *best* RE markets in the country over the past 7 decades by the way, has returned just under 3% *real* returns. And that is extraordinary by historical standards.

Just keep that in mind when comparing to the 100+% returns people have boasted in the past 5 years.

54   hayleymarie   2007 Jun 13, 9:20am  

Got to chime in on the discussion between Stuckinba and Ptiemann -

Stuckinba comments are closer to the truth and here's why. It's down to econometrics, specifically multi-variate analysis. I looked at the "paper" and basically it is only based on secondary data, and you don't even know the data he is using for his correlation is harmonized or can be compared in time-series modeling fashion. Also, "correlation" done on excell is not in any way, shape, or form compex enough to make conclusions for this sort of research question.

Let me simplify, to make the kind of conclusions the writer of the article came to, you need 1. clean data points, 2. multiple relevant factors, 3. the correct model equation ,4. an R2 (stat that tells how well your model fits the data, or how much variance is explained away by the model) that is very high or + 80% - which basically tells you if your hypothesis is right, 4. to conclude WHICH variables are significant, there is something called a P value, and it has to be "significant" and there are degrees of significance..... (plus lots of other statistical stuff I am not including in this post)

So, to conclude that interest rates do not affect prices that variable would have to have an insignifican P value, which I'm sure is not the case. There may be OTHER variables that are ALSO significant, but I'm sure interest rates are one of them.

Hope you enjoyed the stats lesson, ptiemann - consider the source before you assume the conclusions are correct. Even Schiller (who is FAR more qualified that the guy who wrote that article) will not even make concrete conclusions or predictions.

55   HARM   2007 Jun 13, 9:50am  

@SP,

But to be "happy", the Amerikan consumer "needs" to have 5,000 sft per person, miles of polished granite & Travertine, gold-plated commodes, 50" plasmas in every room, and a pair of current-model leased Hummers in the garage. Don'tcha' know?

On the other hand, I think Ha Ha's intended point was, $250K is the minimum HH income needed to service the mortgage on an average median-priced McShitbox in the Fortre$$. On that point, he is probably correct.

56   Jimbo   2007 Jun 13, 10:11am  

incidentally the national peak ended up occuring in the 4th quarter of 2006

Where do you get that factoid from? I would like to share it with others.

RandyH, why do you think that the Bay Area is *not* going to have a 3% real average appreciation rate, going forward long term. You have to admit that 7 decades is pretty darn long.

If prices go up 3%/yr, they double every 14 years, by the rule of 72. We have had nominal prices double in 5 years, then real prices must be up about 80%. So in the next 9 years, we can expect prices to go up 20% in real term, to return to mean average appreciation rates right?

This would mean 20/9 + inflation (let's use 3) = ~5%/yr increase in real estate values. This is actually more optimistic than my prediction, since I am expecting 5-7 years of 0% nominal gain and a slight real loss from inflation.

Also, I think we should be tracking home price values vs. income gains for the top 5%, at least in the Fortress. Since it takes that kind of money to buy a home here, it is gain in income for the top 5% that is driving home prices. I am having a tough time finding what income gains have been like for the top 5%, but I know for the top 1%, it has been impressive, at 16%/yr lately.

57   Jimbo   2007 Jun 13, 10:17am  

If prices go up 3%/yr, they double every 14 years, by the rule of 72.

Um, crap. I can't divide 72 by 3. I blame my Berkeley public school education. That should be 24 years, which makes the rest of the analysis kind of stupid. Sorry.

58   skibum   2007 Jun 13, 10:17am  

If it takes a quarter-million dollars a year to achieve peace, something else needs to be addressed first. I doubt that 250K/year will help in that case.

It's true. In the end, we on this board are for the most part all a bunch of materialistic f#ckwads. Including me.

59   skibum   2007 Jun 13, 10:23am  

Um, crap. I can’t divide 72 by 3. I blame my Berkeley public school education. That should be 24 years, which makes the rest of the analysis kind of stupid. Sorry.

Jimbo,
Not only is your self-correction true, but the statement that if appreciation went up 80% for some period, it must go up another 20% to reach the full doubling of prices is wrong. Just think about it: 15% or so appreciation for the last 5 years, followed by (what you suggested) another 5% per year for 9 years? How does that EVER average out to 3% per year?

You're right - must be the Berkeley public school education! :)

60   HARM   2007 Jun 13, 10:29am  

FYI: Foreclosures now greatly outnumber sales in San Bernardino & Riverside Counties. But no worries, this is just a figment of my warped bearish imagination. Permabulls carry on like nothing's happening, as always.

Foreclosure rate spikes in region

Riverside County recorded 4,550 foreclosure filings last month, which was more than four times the 1,066 filings recorded in May 2006.

San Bernardino County was the seventh-ranked county in foreclosure activity, with one foreclosure last month for every 166 households, or a total of 3,633 filings, up more than seven-fold from 513 a year earlier

Southland home sales hit 12-year low

Most of the erosion in May's sales appeared in the lower-priced regions, particularly the Inland Empire. In Riverside County, sales fell 45.4% to 3,307 year over year, while in neighboring San Bernardino County, sales plunged 46.5% to 2,220.

61   FormerAptBroker   2007 Jun 13, 10:35am  

Randy H Says:

> I listened to a presentation from the head of AllianceBernstein
> recently talk about residential real-estate returns in various US
> markets. These guys have done a ton of actual quantitative
> research. The conclusion for SF, which was among one of the
> absolute *best* RE markets in the country over the past 7 decades
> by the way, has returned just under 3% *real* returns. And that is
> extraordinary by historical standards.

By “real” returns are they talking “returns after inflation”?

Any reason that AllianceBernstein went back “7 decades” (before most of us were born and my Dad and Warren Buffett were little kids) other than to pick up the “Great Depression” and depress the overall numbers?

I would be interested in what they are tracking in SF that only beat inflation by 3%. We were just talking about an apartment in Cow Hollow that a cousin built in the 1920’s with a $2,000 cash down payment and a loan from the Bank of Italy. The property had a positive cash flow from day one (not even counting any income from the wine they were making in the basement and selling at a huge profit during prohibition). The construction loan was paid off in the 1950’s and the property has been debt free since then. Thanks to low Prop 13 taxes the property has been throwing off piles of cash every month for decades (with over $10K almost every MONTH positive cash flow after expenses every month for the past decade when rents ran up in the early days of the dot com boom). I don’t have time to put the numbers in to Excel and dig up 70 years of inflation numbers but I’m betting that this $2K investment in the 1920’s has beat inflation by way more than 3% even if my cousins give it away today (vs. sell it to TICs for about $10mm)…

62   Peter P   2007 Jun 13, 10:42am  

If it takes a quarter-million dollars a year to achieve peace, something else needs to be addressed first. I doubt that 250K/year will help in that case.

250K/yr will not buy you peace. At that rate you will still have to fly airlines.

63   FormerAptBroker   2007 Jun 13, 10:50am  

HARM Says:

> FYI: Foreclosures now greatly outnumber sales in
> San Bernardino & Riverside Counties.

Keep in mind that Realtors do not count forclosures as "sales". The Realtors do not count Bank REO Sales or Short Sales as "sales" either. Back in the early 90's when all S. Cal prices and high end N. Cal prices dropped by ~50% the Realtors kept reporting that the "median prices are up"...

64   gavinln   2007 Jun 13, 11:02am  

FormerAptBroker: A figure of 3% real price growth per year for 80 years sounds reasonable for San Francisco. It is likely to be one of the highest in the U.S. I have heard in the 1950s Pittsburg, PA and San Francisco had similar home prices.

Why do I say 3% real per year sounds reasonable?

If home prices in the 1920s were 3 times family income and house prices grew by 3% per year while incomes grew by 2% real per year, current home prices would be 6.5 times household income

If you assume home prices grow by 4% real per year while incomes grew by 2% real per year, current home prices would be 13.5 times household income.

Even San Francisco is not that overpriced!

65   HARM   2007 Jun 13, 11:11am  

FAB,

Thanks for that reminder. While that probably means sales are somewhat larger than reported, it ALSO means that the CAR/NAR reported median is pure Bull$hit (as if we already didn't know).

66   sfbubblebuyer   2007 Jun 13, 11:31am  

It would be trivially easy to replace the MLS with a national database in which all sales must be recorded as part of a 'transparency in transaction' reform for housing. If foreclosures and REO sales were counted in there, you might actually get some useful statistics.

67   Ozman   2007 Jun 13, 12:25pm  


“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?

No, I think it was Warren Buffet.

68   StuckInBA   2007 Jun 13, 12:33pm  

HARM :

Before you gloat over the foreclosures, please read the latest DQ report. It clearly states ...

Foreclosure activity is high, although foreclosure properties are not yet a drag on home values in most markets.

Nothing ... I mean NOTHING ... not even facts will change RE perma-bulls.

69   Brand165   2007 Jun 13, 1:10pm  

You know, I'm pretty damn sick of average and median prices. Could data companies just post a f---ing pareto already? Number of homes sold vs. price range. A graph in $25K to $50K increments would be just fine. Perhaps the granularity could get smaller on a scale adjusted for individual markets.

I mean, how hard could that possibly be? And then line up the graphs month after month, so people can see how the mix changes and what's selling. Yeesh...

70   StuckInBA   2007 Jun 13, 1:21pm  

Brand :

It is pretty hard to produce that kind of data. The housing tracker site at
http://www.housingtracker.net/askingprices/California/SanJose-Sunnyvale-SantaClara/

does that only because it is easy to do that analysis for asking price. For selling price, man, the algorithm is yet to be invented.

71   Randy H   2007 Jun 13, 1:33pm  

Gavin

Thanks for the concise explanation. Much shorter than my rambling would have been.

The other reason for going back 70 years was in order (because of the nature of the presentation) to compare adjusted real estate returns to adjusted stock market returns. The point was that the stock market generally beats real estate in most residential markets, but there are some markets that are roughly equivalent or better, over the very long run. I think he was also trying to factor out cycle timing issues, at least on a horizon we can all understand. No coincidence he went back far enough that your father was too young to be an investor himself. That's the point of the exercise.

And remember, these are very general figures. It has nothing to do with Cow Hollow. It has to do with "in general, at random, the mythical average SF house..." Your father could have just as easily bought a building in SF that sank into the fill, which also wouldn't prove that all SF land sinks into the bay and becomes worthless.

72   B.A.C.A.H.   2007 Jun 13, 2:36pm  

Lessee, in normal times, a small premium is paid over renting. So considering the "investment' is so highly leveraged, 3% real appreciation is spectacular.

But these are not normal times.

Oh yeah, and someone here pointed out to me last week that leverage can work the other way, too.

73   StuckInBA   2007 Jun 13, 2:37pm  

Mr Perfect,

Dude, you are still trying to talk about median and averages ? Did you read DQ's press release carefully ? Not just they but even RE agents are admitting the problem with the median and how it is not representing the reality. If you are trying to prove a point about your knowledge of statistics, please be assured, you have.

And we bears have been putting our money where our mouth is. That is not in RE. Right or wrong, time will tell. But at least we are honest and consistent.

74   FormerAptBroker   2007 Jun 13, 3:08pm  

Gavin Says:

> FormerAptBroker: A figure of 3% real price growth per
> year for 80 years sounds reasonable for San Francisco.

Randy didn’t say “price growth” (or increase in value) he said “real-estate returns” (and he said 7 not 8 decades)…

> If home prices in the 1920s were 3 times family income
> and house prices grew by 3% per year while incomes
> grew by 2% real per year, current home prices would be
> 6.5 times household income.

In the 1930’s my Grandfather made $20 a week ($1,040 a year) and bought a home in San Francisco for $3,065 (2.95x his income)… Today that home is worth a little over $1mm. My other Grandfather bought a home in a nicer part of SF for closer to $4K (I never heard what he made back then) and it is worth a little under $2mm today. The house I grew up in on the Peninsula would have sold for about $9K in the 30’s and it is worth about $5mm today.

> If you assume home prices grow by 4% real per year while
> incomes grew by 2% real per year, current home prices
> would be 13.5 times household income.

I just ran the numbers (over 70 years) and a 6% a year annual increases my Grandfather would have gone from just over $1K a year to just over $60K a year (about what people doing his old union job make today). The home of one Grandfather’s home has gone up 8.75% on average and the home of the other Grandfather (in the nicer area) went up on average of 9.25% while my parents house (in an even nicer area) went up 9.50 per year on average%.

Since few people “pay cash” for homes and pay over 30 or more years their “real-estate returns” are far higher than the “price growth” (or increase in value). If someone bought a home like the one I grew up in 10 years ago with no money down and an IO loan their return over the last 10 years would increase to about 55% per year. Over 70 years the increase is not as dramatic since if you bought the home 70 years ago with 20% down and paid it off (with interest) over 30 years the average return would “only” increase by about .5% (keeping in mind that $1,000 will grow to over $500K at 9.5% over 70 years and will grow to over $1mm at 10.5% over 70 years)…

Most people need a place to live so to compare “real-estate returns” of a SFH to another investment over a long term you should adjust the annual “investment” to take in to account the extra cost (or savings) vs. renting a similar home. Doing a quick back of the napkin taking extra cost early on and rent savings in later years in to account more than doubles the annual return over the 70 year period pushing it up to well over 20%...

As Randy said I’m Bearish on Housing in the Bay Area “right now” (since most values have tripled in the past 10 years), but over the long term housing (that you live in so you don’t have to rent) and housing (that you rent to others) beats almost any other investment class…

75   surfer-x   2007 Jun 13, 3:16pm  

(just ask Surfer-x, he’ll tell you!)
I'm a whore. I'll only tell you for money.

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