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Troy,
It is interesting to put dollar figures on disasters, on argument there.
I was more addressing about the human cost, how many lives have been Wrecked all over the USA and other parts of the world like the UK by the fallout of that Wreckless ignition of the credit bubble, in order to create an OwnerShip Society theme for federal elections.
E-man,
>>If I read your comments correctly, we agree that the bottom was already established for the low-end market.
No, I am not claiming that. All I am saying is that the low end has fallen more than the high end, and that further dips will be more significant at the high end.
I'm not calling the bottom of ANYTHING at this point.
the time when most people were negative on housing was probably middle of 2009.
I could be wrong but I just dont see us going back to a point where the majority of people are saying it's a bad time to buy a house.
I completely disagree. 2010 will see EPIC foreclosures in the Bay area. 2009 was a start to the pricing correction, not housing crisis. This is a market that needs to correct itself before it can stabalize.
Buyers, Investors, and Leasors, beware of believing anyone who's income is based upon the profit of whether you believe their lie or not.
Values in the Bay area have dropped in 2009 and are expected to drop more in 2010 and 2011. There is a huge amount of hidden inventory and distressed homes in San Ramon, Windemere, Danville, Livermore, Dublin, Pleasanton and Alamo. Banks have been sitting on homes.
www.cyberhomes.com
www.forbes.com
www.marketwatch.com
www.patrick.net
The Northern California real estate market (values and loans) was the biigest lie, scam, fraud, scheme of the decade. Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me.
Gina, for the most part I agree.
There have been up till now, though, some enclaves like The Fortress where money was no object because prices were set by wealthy people, mainly elite immigrants concentrating some repatriated American capital collected from WalMart-type shoppers all over the USA, into a handful of places like The Fortress zipcodes in the Bay Area. But recent figures suggest that the flow of those huddled masses is declining so it sounds like maybe the stream of such wealthy immigrant buyers has trickled. And if money is no object buying in, then losses on selling on the way out aren't a catastrophe either; and there has been a buzz about some of those folks going back home where they can make even more money. If there's not another rich immigrant buyer to replace that seller, then it means the new buyer will also be a borrower, which probably means a lower sales price.
So it seems like, even in The Fortress, maybe at least for awhile the jig is up.
It appears some want to control the blog well as real estate prices.
Absolute power= absolute corruption= California Real Estate Values (Time to correct the problem and not continue it.)
The facts are the facts. Prices have dropped state wide approximately 20% in 2009, and are expected to drop again in 2010.
I don't need a fancy chart or flim flam diagram to show me how less money I have and how much I continue to lose on my investments. Real estate (in most areas) values and prices continue to decline in the bay area and it is predicted they will continue to decline further in 2010...
This is the ugly reality of the biggest lie of the decade. People are enduring substantial financial loses everyday.
Real Estate values have to correct them selves in proportion to the average income of it's population. No other way around it.
I stand by my previous opinion and agree with the experts cited at FORBES, MARKET WATCH, ABC, NBC, Patrick.net, and others.
Sorry but I no longer trust realtors, property mangers, or mortgage brokers as they have been proven wrong, personal lied to me, and continue to perpetuate the biggest fraud of the decade by keeping prices and profit over inflated to generate personal income and profit for themselves.
Those are the facts, believe as you choose.
I completely disagree. I believe the experts cited that in 2010 we will see EPIC foreclosures in the Bay area. 2009 was a start to the pricing correction, not housing crisis. This is a market that needs to correct itself before it can stabalize.
Buyers, Investors, and Leasors, beware of believing anyone who’s income is based upon the profit of whether you believe their lie or not.
Values in the Bay area have dropped in 2009 and are expected to drop more in 2010. There is a huge amount of hidden inventory and distressed homes in San Ramon, Windemere, Danville, Livermore, Dublin, Pleasanton and Alamo. Banks have been sitting on homes.
www.cyberhomes.com
www.forbes.com
www.marketwatch.com
www.patrick.net
The Northern California real estate market (values and loans) was the biggest lie, scam, fraud, scheme of the decade. Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me.
Put your own address in www.cyber homes.com
See what your home was worth in 2008 and see what it is worth now. The -20% is a state wide, some areas as high as 40% others less. Depends where you live.
If you like, I can sell you my home today, for its 2006, 2007, or 2008 value?
I didn't think so.
I'm going to be nice too, so have a Happy Valantines Day!
housing price doesn't move overnight like stocks. I'm surprised at the current pace of price declines, especially on the low end. The bubble took a long time to inflate and I've always expected it to to take a long time to deflate. Just look at Japan to see how government intervention affect the decline.
Some people have short attention spans and little patience. Just because its "only" dropped 15% (whats 15% of $600k? ouch!) doesn't mean we have bottomed, or the worst is not yet to come, or it will go back to bubble evaluations anytime soon.
Some people seem to dismiss the possibility of an overshoot below historic valuations. Just give it a few years or 10.
If major global cities such as London, Paris, Zurich, etc can sustain real estate prices that far exceed the median wages of its residents for prolonged periods of time, it can happen in the SF Bay Area too. There is just such a global demand for these cities that great drops in prices are unlikely.
If major global cities such as London, Paris, Zurich, etc can sustain real estate prices that far exceed the median wages of its residents for prolonged periods of time, it can happen in the SF Bay Area too. There is just such a global demand for these cities that great drops in prices are unlikely.
Unlike the global cities you listed which has a diverse economy, eveyone has penned SF Bay Area (esp the south bay) as Tech Mecca, as such they ignored the deflationary economy. We are more like Tokyo, fast booming technology economy with dreadful downturn.
Also keep in mind that the US has lax immigration laws compared to Japan.
Yep,
cheaper than London Paris now as it was before those bubbles, when we were still more expensive than flyover land, but nowhere near out of whack like now.
Some of us in the Bay Area can be a little bit too Bay Area Centric for our own Hip Cool and Beautiful good.
It is great that you and E-man are putting dissenting points of view on Patrick's blog, a good exchange of ideas. But putting so much energy into arguments for folks who have made up their minds to be skeptical, who are you really spending so much energy into trying to convince? Could it be yourself?
Hey Wong,
You thought cleantech was funny? - I have another one for you.
Question: (sybrib) Please paint the rosy scenario for how the Bay Area economy will prop up or even according to your forecast increase the high cost of home ownership and propup/boost the rents.
Answer: (Guess who) I think the answer is health care.
LOL! thats good one sybrib.
I guess if i get a hernia thats somehow translates to a higher GDP.
1) Home prices double from 1976 to 1980.
Job expansion! Growth in Tech industries like PC/Semiconductor/Software. By mid 80s SV had 70% of world wide semi production. There was lots of demand for skilled tech employees. A very young demand driven economy which allowed high salaries to grow.
2) We had 100% inflation from 1980 to 1995, but 50% inflation from 1995 to 2010.
Yes, and thats were prices indeed doubled based on inflation line but after the correction due to job losses. Much of the manufacturing was wipped out. PC/Semi manufacturing was closed down and moved out of the valley. Others like Microsoft pretty much killed off their competition , our local software makers. Others fell due to fierce price competition.
3) We had 30% inflation during the recession from 1989 to 1995, but we’re in a deflation stage since mid 2008.
What cost $100 in 1989 would cost $122.53 in 1995.. more like 20-25%.... 30% is passable.
Deflation is factored in based on published results.
4) Shouldn’t the graph be plotted on log scale?
Yes you can certainly do that... try excel or open office... its free.
1) Home prices double from 1976 to 1980.
Job expansion! Growth in Tech industries like PC/Semiconductor/Software. By mid 80s SV had 70% of world wide semi production. There was lots of demand for skilled tech employees. A very young demand driven economy which allowed high salaries to grow
Which part dont you get ? See above....
How do you explain the median household income of $175k with a median home price of $2.4mil?
The same way I explain Yahoo Stock with price of $350/share with PE of 200x earnings back in 1999.
Irrational Exhuberance!
The fact is we hardly had $1M homes before the bubble years with the same 5% makeing $170K a year. Irrational Exhuberance (second edition).
Prices will eventual fall back to pre-bubble plus inflation (30-35%)
http://www.redfin.com/CA/Campbell/1212-Capri-Dr-95008/home/997015
Date Event Price Appreciation Source
Mar 08, 2001 Sold (Public Records) $731,818 26.3%/yr Public Records
Apr 16, 1997 Sold (Public Records) $295,000 - - Public Records
Date Event Price Appreciation Source
Mar 08, 2001 Sold (Public Records) $731,818 26.3%/yr Public Records
Apr 16, 1997 Sold (Public Records) $295,000 - - Public Records
BTW, similary homes by year 2000 went to $500K... long before any easy lending or evil bankers
even created the toxic loans.......
The census data says in 1950 the median home value adjusted for inflation was $44,600. It also says the median home value adjusted for inflation in the year 2000 was $119,600.
Median, Ha, ha... that's a good one. The reason many of us live and breathe Shiller is that he uses ACTUAL home sales data pairs -- looking at what a house sells for and comparing it to when it was last sold. He's able to aggregate all the sales pairs and construct a comprehensive picture of how the market behaves over time. There are limitations to this approach, but I'll take it any day over medians.
@ camping,
I don’t think the Bay Area is special like everyone elses. However, you cannot compare the Bay Area to TX or AZ. It has always been expensive to live in the Bay Area. When was the last time that RE could cash flow positive in the Bay Area?
I haven't been here that long - were good parts of the Bay Area not cash flow positive in the 90's?
The census data says in 1950 the median home value adjusted for inflation was $44,600. It also says the median home value adjusted for inflation in the year 2000 was $119,600
Along the same lines as what EBGuy says, have you considered that newly constructed houses have been increasing in size every year for a long time? You cannot directly compare a 1950 house to a 2000 house. Again, this is why Case-Schiller exists!
>>I love accuracy. I hate propaganda. I don’t get upset, but I do like to set the record straight.
I'm busy right now, but will respond in due time
>> Who wants a discussion where everyone agrees with each other anyway?
The purpose of discussion is to FIND THE RIGHT ANSWER. Discussion for the sake of disagreement is just a waste of time.
The purpose of discussion is to FIND THE RIGHT ANSWER. Discussion for the sake of disagreement is just a waste of time.
You won't find the right answer if everyone agrees with each other. It's called groupthink...
According to Patrick’s formula, this is borderline for buying in both the early 90’s and now. I consider South and East San Jose to be the working class neighborhood. The better part of San Jose, Santa Clara and Sunnyvale are the professional working class neighborhoods.
Perhaps one should define what working class is. I hardly think Silver Creek or Alamden Valley as working class and plenty of tech workers come from So. San Jose. Its not hard to see the heavy commute to/from that region. Friends of mine, wife is a manager at Ebay and husband is also a manager at Intel live off 7th Street down in Central San Jose about 3-4 blocks from San Jose State University campus. They dont seem to have any plans on moving. And there seems to be plenty of tech workers living in East Side. I would say a large percentage of homes in SCC are working class built type homes.
The purpose of discussion is to FIND THE RIGHT ANSWER. Discussion for the sake of disagreement is just a waste of time.
You won’t find the right answer if everyone agrees with each other. It’s called groupthink…
Well, guess what. Nowhere did I say that everyone should agree with each other. I simply stated what the OBJECTIVE of the discussion should be. Discussion includes disagreement.
justme,
give it up. S/he is spending an inordinate amount of time piddling over all sorts of figures, accusing others of lying or citing lies and distorting facts, accusing Prof. Shiller of being dishonest, in effort of trying to "prove the housing bears wrong" on a blog that is entitled "Housing Crash Forum". Maybe s/he hasn't figured out yet that s/he is in buyers' remorse. Or maybe bears here are a straw man for a partner or spouse, or maybe s/he has such a type-A mentality that s/he "just can't stand it"... "gotta prove them wrong."
Or maybe s/he is writing it all in jest, to buttress the arguments Patrick has in the sidebar on the main page, because that is the effect that all those rants looks like.
Who knows?
Does it matter? Is it important?
S/he is spending an inordinate amount of time piddling over all sorts of figures
Yes, I agree. Let's not let data get in the way of a good story... If everyone here wants to reassure each other that housing will continue to decline forever, far be it for someone to get in the way.
As someone with an open mind, I enjoy looking at both sides of the argument.
Sybrib,
agreed. The only reason one needs to speak up is that if nobody does, then the propagandist wins by default. And that would be bad.
tatapu,
>>As someone with an open mind, I enjoy looking at both sides of the argument.
You mean both the dishonest side and the honest side?
The purpose of discussion is to FIND THE RIGHT ANSWER. Discussion for the sake of disagreement is just a waste of time
What you meant was "the purpose of the discussion is to FIND THE ANSWER THAT AGREES WITH MY OPINION"
just me,
I don't think such ranting is going to "win" anything on a web page called "Housing Crash Forum" except possibly win some legitimacy away from the housing bulls side.
Stream of consciousness, all we need now is some rap music and a good rapper and we've got a superstar
Please don’t lie about what I say here.
I consider their data useless now
decline is so small that it can hardly be seen on the graph
10 year data is flawed?
Unfortunately you failed to take the opportunity
to make any point whatsoever.
I proved Case-Shiller data must be wrong.
totally and irrefutably useless. A 50% deviation is
shocking result
deviation is a joke
data shouldn’t be taken seriously.
I offered you opportunity for redemption.
almost totally devoid of any support
for any of your assertions
on the housing market.
What exactly can you present ?
The purpose of discussion is to FIND THE RIGHT ANSWER. Discussion for the sake of disagreement is just a waste of time
What you meant was “the purpose of the discussion is to FIND THE ANSWER THAT AGREES WITH MY OPINIONâ€
It might possibly be a good time to go and look up the term "psychological projection" on wikipedia.
justme--
My point was that you are a little presumptous to think that you KNOW the RIGHT answer to an unanswerable question. Will house prices continue to drop? You can have your opinion, but it's not "right" or "wrong", it's just your best guess.
It may be right--time will tell...
http://www.mercurynews.com/ci_14413694?source=patrick.net&nclick_check=1
After taking a break for the holidays, foreclosures spiked in Santa Clara and San Mateo counties in January.
Despite efforts by the federal government and lenders to help people stay in their homes, foreclosures rose 37 percent in Santa Clara County last month from December, and 71 percent in San Mateo County, according to a report Tuesday from ForeclosureRadar.
azrob,
I think that here in the Bay Area, except for an enclave called The Fortress where wealthy immigrants use cash, most homes are bought with borrowed money. That would include, even speculators who call themselves "investors" (actually, I suppose the lender is the "investor" in those cases).
Well you will probably not be surprised to read in Evans-Pritchard's article in today's Telegraph that borrowing is drying up in the USA, here is the link
@E-man,
Setting aside my disagreement on some opinions in this tread, I am kind of wondering where those data in the article come from since CNN does not specify anything about it.
To me, the numbers are median home price of those cities and the percentages are price level dropped from the peak years. You may able to see the same too.
If so, this article is just showing us what city got hit hard and what city is doing ok. It can not be used to determine if a certain area undervalued or overvalued. Thus, it is silly for us to debate on that article from the begining.
What do you think?
Why is my still having one rental property a joke? i had six properties, and sold 4 of them. Its called hedging, you never know, the US could throw the dollar completely under the bus instead, and not let prices fall due to rampant inflation
You completely missed his point. 1 property doesn't prove any theory. It's a sample size issue--that's why he referenced you using statistics before using your 1 rental as evidence.
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According to this report from CNNMoney, homes in the Bay Area are undervalued. Did someone make a mistake or the bottom of the housing market was in early 2009? The first column of the report is for overvalued cities. The second column is for undervalued cities. Please weigh in your opinion.
http://money.cnn.com/real_estate/storysupplement/overvalued_cities/
#housing