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Welcome To The Bottom: Housing Begins Slow Rebound (AP)


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2009 Aug 1, 1:42am   58,120 views  286 comments

by WillyWanker   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

"It was — note the past tense — the worst housing recession anyone but survivors of the Great Depression can remember.

From the frenzied peak of the real estate boom in 2005-2006 to the recession's trough earlier this year, home resales fell 38 percent and sales of new homes tumbled 76 percent. Construction of homes and apartments skidded 79 percent. And for the first time in more than four decades of record keeping, home prices posted consecutive annual declines.

A staggering $4 trillion in home equity was wiped out, and millions of Americans lost their homes through foreclosure.

Now take a deep breath and exhale. The worst is over."

Read the rest here:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090801/ap_on_bi_ge/us_housing_mid_year_outlook

This was on Yahoo! News.  You know people are reading it and gobbling it up.  I know the market will remain flat and on the bottom for some time to come, at least here in Southern California.  But, I bet some fence sitters are going to start jumping into the housing market sometime soon.

This does not bode well for those who are calling a return to 80's prices in the Westside of Los Angeles, you know the one's who say that $400 will get you a 3000 square foot house on a 15000 square foot lot in Santa Monica, north of Montana.  :P


#housing

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99   Austinhousingbubble   2009 Aug 6, 11:08am  

Thank~you Barack Obama.

Regardless of what side of the street you're on politically, drastic tax measures were going to be an inevitability. I have to think that even the biggest Obama proponents are feeling a little unimpressed by this administration/congress. They should be. Other than maybe the increase to the GI Bill and anti-usury policies, it seems like more of the same.

100   WillyWanker   2009 Aug 7, 12:35am  

jabailo says

Housing inflation started in the 80s and ran for 3 decades. Why would you expect for housing deflation to only last a year and then suddenly “recover”?

You forgot the early to mid 90's~~~you know when the real~estate market was in the toilet.

101   WillyWanker   2009 Aug 7, 1:08am  

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Stock-futures-moderately-apf-2848453904.html?x=0&sec=topStories&pos=main&asset=&ccode=

"ap
Investors finally find good news on unemployment
Better-than-expected jobs report pushes stocks higher, feeds hopes for economic recovery"

Stock market rally this morning. We shall see if it holds on. Nevertheless, good news for the economy. Should make all those of you who voted for Obama very pleased that he is pulling this country out of the recession and lifting markets from their lows.

102   KurtS   2009 Aug 7, 3:17am  

I've been seeing this "rebound" BS in the news the past few weeks, and just dropped by to comment. Good to see people aren't buying it--but what do you suppose is the motivation here--to fuel another mini-bubble in the markets, to inject some optimism in consumer spending, or some other bubble is in the works?

I find all this "rebound" talk ominous, because it suggests that big business thinks it can keep things afloat without anybody seriously questioning their business models, especially those who rely heavily on the retail end. IMO, we won't see a real rebound until defunct business models crash and burn, the banks finally open their books, and housing prices return to fundamentals. In other words--wages get in line with a real money supply, and housing follows that. We have a long way to go, and it will be a painful return to reality for overleveraged America.

103   justme   2009 Aug 7, 3:40am  

Nice to see you again.

104   pinnacle   2009 Aug 7, 9:59am  

The big stock market rebound has pushed up interest rates on 10 year treasuries.
That will really help the mortgage market.
I am hearing from a source inside a foreclosure prevention organization that the next dump of properties by the banks in Southern California is likely to happen in about 6 to 8 weeks. Right as the prime home buying season and the moratorium are both coming to an end.
He also thinks that higher rates and the supposedly "improving economy" will cause the Alt-A resets to be
much larger than current payments.

105   WillyWanker   2009 Aug 7, 11:38am  

chrisborden says

When will some of you learn that when you have a mortgage, YOU OWN DEBT. Net worth consists of ASSETS (savings, etc., if you have any) MINUS LIABILITIES (a mortgage, credit card debt, etc., etc.). If you believe debt=wealth, you are a fool. Why don’t they teach this in schools anymore? Oh, sorry, housing ALWAYS APPRECIATES, THEREFORE EVERYONE IS GUARANTEED OF WEALTH. Forgive me for being the stupid one.

Who here believes that debt=wealth? I certainly don't. I doubt that anyone here does. No one here believes that housing 'always appreciates'. At least no one that I can tell.

106   WillyWanker   2009 Aug 7, 11:40am  

pinnacle says

The big stock market rebound has pushed up interest rates on 10 year treasuries.

That will really help the mortgage market.

I am hearing from a source inside a foreclosure prevention organization that the next dump of properties by the banks in Southern California is likely to happen in about 6 to 8 weeks. Right as the prime home buying season and the moratorium are both coming to an end.

He also thinks that higher rates and the supposedly “improving economy” will cause the Alt-A resets to be

much larger than current payments.

Can we know who this 'source' is?

107   grefra   2009 Aug 7, 1:39pm  

It is very interesting reading all the varied opinions here. I realize no one has a crystal ball, but since foreclosures seem to be a problem, commercial RE problems on the horizon and mortgages harder to get, what does the mortgage rate future look like in your opinions.

I know mortgage rates are tied to the 10 year treasury and the have shot up recently. Rates are almost 6% for a conventional 30 yr. full documentation.

If rates continue up it may kill the foreclosure purchases etc.

Where do you think rates will go in the next 30 to 45 days????

108   grefra   2009 Aug 8, 2:30pm  

Bap33 you got a great rate. I am buying a new build. Opted to use Pulte Mortgage via the builder to get the incentives which total over $6000. Now sort of at their mercy. I could get financed elsewhere, but do not want to give up the incentives. They seem to be 1/4 to 1/2 higher than others, but the additional cost is $45 a month which would take about 12 years to break even.
I will just follow the MBS and try to get the best rate available in the next 35 days which is when I have to lock the rate.

109   knightparzival   2009 Aug 9, 11:35am  

Bap33 says

I was wrote a 4.75 30yr fixed on Thursday ….. 6% is for suckers … as is thinking there is a reason to over-pay for a stucco-wrapped POS in mexifornia. Wages X 2 folks, max.

What do you mean wrote up? Do you have a signed lock in at 4.75? If so did you have to pay any points or hidden back end fees, ie YSP? I do not know about the city you are in but the very best rates in my area with no points are around 5.3. Average is in the upper 5's

110   justme   2009 Aug 10, 1:06am  

The free fall has stopped:

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/10/opinion/10krugman.html?ref=opinion

Select quote:

And aren’t you glad that right now the government is being run by people who don’t hate government?

111   justme   2009 Aug 10, 3:56am  

>>they can simply say, “Um, it would have been worse if we hadn’t done anything.

And they would be correct, so why quibble?

112   whitneyross   2009 Aug 10, 4:33am  

"They would be correct, so why quibble?"

Just like the Government's response to the Stock Market crash of 1929? The economic downturn of the 1930s only persisted because of misguided Government intervention. Politicians created the Great Depression and risk repeating the feat with stupid and damaging public policy today.

It would have been better and much shorter had the Government not created the problem to begin with or lengthened the downturn by not allowing the markets to clear.

113   justme   2009 Aug 10, 5:05am  

whitneyross,

>>Just like the Government’s response to the Stock Market crash of 1929?

The government response was to increase interest rates (too late), which then plunged the country into the great depression.

>>by not allowing the markets to clear.

"Allowing markets to clear" would cause ALL banks to go under , and all savers to lose all of their deposits. It seems rather obvious to me that such an outcome would NOT be a good thing.

Even FDIC (which did not exist yet in 1929) could not withstand massive bank failures. (in 2007).

I understand that Market Fundamentalism is appealing to a lot of people, but I do not think that they have understood the consequences.

114   WillyWanker   2009 Aug 10, 10:04am  

Some Guy says

knightparzival says

What do you mean wrote up? Do you have a signed lock in at 4.75? If so did you have to pay any points or hidden back end fees, ie YSP? I do not know about the city you are in but the very best rates in my area with no points are around 5.3. Average is in the upper 5’s

You are correct. Bap33 is obviously just talking out his ass.

I, too, find it a bit suspicious.

115   homeowner_for ever_san jose   2009 Aug 10, 10:58am  

looks like lot of old timers who were whistle blowers for housing bubble are now pulling the trigger.

116   justme   2009 Aug 10, 5:05pm  

>>I’d rather have the government cover depositors losses directly than give trillions of dollars to insolvent banks

I think you have missed the point. The accumulated cost of liquidating the banks would be many times the cost of the current bailouts. That's the whole point of doing the bailouts in the first place.

I agree that the bailouts are distasteful, and have also been to lax (I think in particular that we should put a major hurt on the bank upper management and risky traders). But it is still cheaper than letting everything unravel. This idea that we could somehow let Citi (say) fail without taking everything else with it is just a pipe dream of the libertarians.

117   justme   2009 Aug 11, 7:13am  

Someguy,

>>Bear Stearns and Countrywide failed. Did they take everything else with them?

You've got your facts wrong. Bear Stearns was on the brink of failure, but was bailed/bought by JP Morgan.
Countrywide was also on the brink of failure, and they were bailed/bought by by BofA.

But back to the big picture:

It was Lehman Brothers that was actually "allowed" to fail (go bankrupt). The bankruptcy announcement of Lehman on 2009-09-14 created a full scale panic in the financial markets, and people lost real money in their money market funds. The Reserve money market fund still has only paid out about 80% of what was invested in their money market fund, and it is almost one year since the Lehman incident.

Are you sure you understand what would happen to us all if Citibank would have to file for bankruptcy? Citi had 1930B in assets in 2008. Lehman had $275B in assets (including all the BAD ones) at the time it went bankrupt.

Do you understand what would happen to the world if Citibank went under? Can you understand how gigantic the realized losses would be during the ensuing panic liquidation of everything from bonds to buildings to factories to farms to houses?

I can't help but think that the crowd that chants no-bailouts-under-any-circumstances just od not realize the incredibly bad consequences of their positions, and the immensely high self-cost of instant punishment for the bankers.

YES, I want to put a major hurt on the bank managers and traders. NO, I don't think it is worth worldwide panic, destruction and losses to accomplish it. There is a better way, and I think in due time we will get to it. But fer gods sake, don't be so blood-thirsty that you must have revenge at ANY cost!

118   justme   2009 Aug 11, 8:31am  

Some Guy,

>>I don’t think YOU understand. Countrywide certainly had a similar amount in assets.

Wrong again. Countrywide had 211B in assets at the end of 2007. That is ~1/9th the size of Citi.
There *is* no bank big enough to absorb Citi. And the buyouts of Countrywide, Bear, and
Merill Lynch has already stretched the healthier banks to the limit. BofA needed a bailout itself
in order to absorb ML.

I'll try to stop there -- I do not care all that much that you cannot be convinced otherwise.
I'm only posting to correct the misconceptions, and hoping that others that have been fooled
by the no-bailouts-under-any-circumstances fundamentalist mantra will realize that their is a
good reason to do this.

And yes, I AM holding my nose all the way to the bank. And I want the Bankers to get their
punishment in due time. And I want housing prices to be 3x income.

119   WillyWanker   2009 Aug 12, 2:18am  

http://blogs.wsj.com/deals/2009/08/07/taking-wall-streets-pulse-dawn-of-an-economic-recovery-is-here/#mod=yahoo_hs

'It's Official~ish: Whole World Calls Market BOTTOM'

I really am starting to like reading some of these sunnier stories. They seem to be appearing more and more each and every day. I had the same feeling when I started reading Patrick.net years ago: each day~~~little by little~~~more stories began to appear about the 'bubble' then, of course, the 'bubble' exploded and an onslaught of 'bubble' news appeared each and every day and all positive news stories faded away. The opposite is beginning to happen now.

Perhaps Obama and the stimulus package are good for America? We will find out soon enough.

120   justme   2009 Aug 12, 3:04am  

TOB,

make the taxpayer buy *what* things? I cannot respond unless you are specific.

121   homeowner_for ever_san jose   2009 Aug 12, 3:57am  

what TOB and the likes are cribbing about is that some people made bad choices and are not paying for it.
I would say , Life is not perfect ..just get over with it and move on.

BTW, I never made any bad choices during the bubble and always saved...

122   justme   2009 Aug 12, 5:21am  

SG,

Your arguments are so full of errors that it is hard to take them seriously. And then of top of that you distort what I am saying. For posterity, here are two more errors:

Error 1: >>Wrong. The head of BofA said that they did not need bailout money, but were forced to take it.

That was *before* Ken Lewis understood that ML has $21.5B in losses in 2008/Q4. After he realized, he was happy to take not only the $20B money the "forced" upon him (poor baby), but also another $25B in 2009/Q1.

Error 2: >>There are other options besides giving away trillions of dollars of taxpayer money.

Again you are severely mistaken. Neither Treasury nor FED has "given away" trillions of dollars. What they did was to (1) buy preferred shares in the Banks and (2) lend the banks cash against toxic collateral (MBS and the like). Item (1) is less than 700B. Item (2) *is* in the trillions, but they are LOANS, not giveaways.

If you insist on being disingenuous, there is not much I can do about, but for everyone else I will try and set the facts straight, as I have done above.

Now, I never used the phrase "too big to fail", those are your words, but I will nevertheless explain what it means:

It means that eventual cost of failure (to the taxpayer) will be much larger than the cost of shoring the bank up and then letting it earn itself out of the hole over a longer period of time.

Do you get it, or do you insist on sticking your head in the sand and/or be a complete financial Luddite?

WE HAVE CHOSEN THE LESSER OF TWO EVILS.

It is not palatable, but it is what needs to be done. Now, can I count in your support for REAL regulation so that this does not happen again??

123   justme   2009 Aug 12, 6:06am  

Jesus Christ man, you cannot be saved. Forget it. In your imaginary world, you win. In the real world, everybody loses, including you.

124   homeowner_for ever_san jose   2009 Aug 12, 7:49am  

agree with TOB aka thunderlips11

125   justme   2009 Aug 13, 6:25am  

thunderlips11,

>>Why was only the Gov’t willing to buy them?

Well, according to SG, the problem was that the banks were unwilling to SELL. And you say nobody were willing to BUY except Gov. The truth must be somewhere in between.

Why does SG (correction: RFESJ) say that TL11 is TOB? Is there some secret text web-alyzer one can run?

126   justme   2009 Aug 13, 8:31am  

Some people just cannot be bothered with facts, and will deny them until their last gasp. There's not much I can do about that.

127   srla   2009 Aug 13, 9:22am  

Yes, the Fed has been buying over a trillion in mortgage backed securities from the banks. Here is info on the program on the NY Fed's site: http://www.newyorkfed.org/markets/mbs_FAQ.HTML

The Fed's stated goal for this program is to "The goal of the program is to provide support to mortgage and housing markets and to foster improved conditions in financial markets more generally."

The program began in January, arguably well after the "credit crunch" had eased a bit. Given that other Fed and government policies have been aimed at propping up the value of these toxic assets (PPIP, removing the mark to market requirement, etc), we can only assume that the Fed paid at or near top dollar for these assets. At discount prices, there would have likely been ample private buyers.

128   homeowner_for ever_san jose   2009 Aug 13, 9:38am  

No matter how you cut it...this is what the FED has being doing : providing capital for an entity which otherwise will go broke. You and me will never get a loan form govt if we screw up but the banks have been getting free capital even though they have been screwing up big time. But banks always had access to capital from govt.the only difference is that they get it now based on thier toxic assets...but does it really matter ? free access to govt money is not new for banks.

129   srla   2009 Aug 13, 9:39am  

PS, if you haven't seen this interview with William K. Black, the senior regulator who cracked the the S&L scandal, it's worth the watch: http://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/04032009/watch.html. It's a pretty scathing critique of the banking system and of Paulson/Geithner's handling of the bailouts.

130   homeowner_for ever_san jose   2009 Aug 13, 9:41am  

also , can someone tell me how much we (GOVT) actually lost ( dollars) during the bank bailout ?
I am not talking about the loans...etc. just give me the actual cash equivalent that we will never get back.

131   srla   2009 Aug 13, 9:45am  

renter for ever_san jose - what matters is that this time, banks and bank bond and shareholders are being funneled huge profits directly from government coffers. In the past (S&L crisis, etc), bailouts merely went to depositors, and the banks/bondholders/shareholders were left with nothing.

The question wasn't whether the government would be stuck paying for the bank screwups, it was how much they would pay and whether that payment would include handouts to the very same people that caused the problem in the first place through their incompetence and malfeasance.

132   srla   2009 Aug 13, 9:49am  

renter for ever_san jose - it's hard to pin down since the bailout is still in progress. And it depends on what the Fed and others can eventually get for all the mortgage backed securities they purchased. If you assume 50 cents on the dollar (they currently would be lucky to get 30 cents on the dollar), then they would "lose" 600 or 700 billion from the MBS purchases alone. Estimates for PPIP run the gamut from an actual modest profit to 1-2 trillion losses.

So who knows. That's why it's all so scary.

133   rational1   2009 Aug 13, 10:07am  

Hey Wanker...anyone point out to you that the clip that you posted was about national prices? As for the Westside of LA? Prices are falling and will continue to fall. Up until a short time ago the requirements to get a loan for a $4M house was $200K down with $400K in income. Now it is $1.2M down with $700K in income. That's going to affect prices.

Just because people have delusions about the value of their property doesn't make it true.

http://www.redfin.com/CA/Los-Angeles/120-S-Anita-Ave-90049/home/6838669

The people who own the house above seem to believe that it has increased in value by $499K since they bought it in 2005. The fact that it has been on the market for 218 days shows that they are delusional.

Oh, and the house right next door, same McMansion style, slightly smaller, is has been on the market for 24 days and is listed at $2.985K.

At the height of the boom, houses on Anita sold the day they went on the market (including the first one I listed). If you want to belive that the bust is over on the westside of LA, go right ahead. But you are also...delusional.

134   srla   2009 Aug 13, 10:19am  

No way, the Westside is immune. Prices never drop here. We're sprinkled in magical pixie dust. We have lots of "entertainment" types, and you KNOW they're all rolling in money. Things are different here. It's always sunny and warm! (Except at the beach in the summer... and spring... and winter.) Did I mention the pixie dust already?

135   homeowner_for ever_san jose   2009 Aug 13, 10:35am  

guys...what is the expectation on this board.
What would make you guys happy ??

1) prices 50% less than long term trend of case shiller index
2) prices 20% less than long term trend of case shiller index
3) prices in line with long term trend of case shiller index

I am getting sick of the pessimism here..you guys are sounding like the same bunch of irrational people who use to believe that housing will go up for ever during housing bubble.

Please do me and others a favor and look at the graphs :http://www.recharts.com/cme.html (scroll to the bottom)

136   WillyWanker   2009 Aug 13, 10:43am  

rational1 says

Hey Wanker…anyone point out to you that the clip that you posted was about national prices? As for the Westside of LA? Prices are falling and will continue to fall. Up until a short time ago the requirements to get a loan for a $4M house was $200K down with $400K in income. Now it is $1.2M down with $700K in income. That’s going to affect prices.
Just because people have delusions about the value of their property doesn’t make it true.
http://www.redfin.com/CA/Los-Angeles/120-S-Anita-Ave-90049/home/6838669
The people who own the house above seem to believe that it has increased in value by $499K since they bought it in 2005. The fact that it has been on the market for 218 days shows that they are delusional.
Oh, and the house right next door, same McMansion style, slightly smaller, is has been on the market for 24 days and is listed at $2.985K.
At the height of the boom, houses on Anita sold the day they went on the market (including the first one I listed). If you want to belive that the bust is over on the westside of LA, go right ahead. But you are also…delusional.

irrational1, I realize the article was written regarding national prices. Thanks for pointing out the obvious. Secondly, let me know when the houses in Brentwood are available for $400K. I'll pick up a baker's dozen.

137   WillyWanker   2009 Aug 13, 10:45am  

renter for ever_san jose says

guys…what is the expectation on this board.

What would make you guys happy ??
1) prices 50% less than long term trend of case shiller index

2) prices 20% less than long term trend of case shiller index

3) prices in line with long term trend of case shiller index
I am getting sick of the pessimism here..you guys are sounding like the same bunch of irrational people who use to believe that housing will go up for ever during housing bubble.
Please do me and others a favor and look at the graphs :http://www.recharts.com/cme.html (scroll to the bottom)

My sentiments, exactly.

138   srla   2009 Aug 13, 11:01am  

I don't believe it's that difficult to guess where prices might bottom. Check out the price in a given area in 1999, then adjust for inflation. Since prices tracked inflation for the prior 100 years, there's good reason to assume they will revert to that trend. In fact, I would say, any argument that prices will NOT revert to the 100 year trend should include substantial data to back up such a claim, as it would represent a complete break from established market history.

We know why prices bubbled, and most of the forces that led to the bubble are now absent. Given that it took a rather unique confluence of events to cause such an extreme diversion from trend levels in the first place, what do you believe could potentially cause prices to keep from reverting?

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