« First « Previous Comments 14 - 34 of 34 Search these comments
imo, with government intervention, manipulation, and support of the housing market, artificial values on the coasts will continue indefinitely.
Sorry to say, but its not politically popular among homeowners for politicians to allow home prices to fall.
The majority of homeowners (boomers in particular) have made themselves dependent upon their house as their largest financial asset and politicians are going to prop this up with voter blessing even if our nation goes bankrupt and we lose our freedom.
Politicians are not known for doing the right thing. They do what's expedient and what will help them get re-elected.
The only thing renters can take heart in is that most homeowners are not going to be able to get credit or loans as in the past. Many of them are in severe financial distress and will be for the foreseeable future.
Only when prices bottom and foreclosures decline will you see new jobs being created.
Oh..really, would you care to explain? Housing has nothing to do with the economy. If the 780bn has been spent on something useful, like infrastructure, nuclear power, R&D, we would've had much more jobs.
RE is the single biggest investment people own. WHen peopel see the value of their house go down, they feel poorer so they cut back on spending. Consumer speding is 70% of the economy. You do the math.
RE is the single biggest investment people own. WHen peopel see the value of their house go down, they feel poorer so they cut back on spending. Consumer speding is 70% of the economy. You do the math.
No, actually, I would argue otherwise. Now, these people are so stuck in deep water, they are not going to spend anything. It will be painful to let the house go down, but the people who get foreclosed will move on to rent, and new prudent buyers will buy home, which in turn will start the spending cycle.
Only when prices bottom and foreclosures decline will you see new jobs being created.
I think you've got a cart/horse problem here.
Low Interest rates and credit fund jobs. High rates, less credit, less monetary expansion, less economic activity.
Low Interest rates also drive home prices. All things equal, higher rates will eventually drive excess valuation (above what they cashflow now) out of home prices.
Can rates go any lower from here? Nobody knows.
Unemployment might start to reverse but this is still the mother of all job recessions right now.
Rising interest rates also increase the cost of money that the government is rolling over. AFAIK the Chinese have kept us on a tight leash, rolling over their $800B in bills not bonds, essentially giving us a free ride on that part of the debt. The interest paid on the debt could easily double to $300B, or quadruple if things start spinning out of control.
We need wage inflation, but it's tough to get that when 20% or more of the labor force is underemployed.
I don't have any solutions, but I certainly admire the problem.
and new prudent buyers will buy home, which in turn will start the spending cycle
Don't new, prudent buyers already HAVE their homes?
Renting is not positive economic activity, it is simply wealth transfer from laborer to rentier. Completely zero-sum.
RE is the single biggest investment people own. WHen peopel see the value of their house go down, they feel poorer so they cut back on spending. Consumer speding is 70% of the economy. You do the math.
That is why this nations is so financially illiterate.
Actually, housing was very affordable price-wise until 1970 or so. That is mostly because banks only used strict standards for qualifying and down payments. 20% down and to qualify no the house could cost more than 3 times income, period. Most people could afford to buy something. My dad was in auto repair and mom was a waitress together making $250 a week in 1965. They bought a brand new 4 bd 2 ba 1800 sq ft Shapell home for 21000. Lots of older homes could be bought for 5 to 10 thousand dollars. Houses WERE cheap relative to income then because there were no "innovative mortgage products" then. Up until the late 90s qualifying wasn't a major obsticle for most of us. As far as making monthly payments 'affordable' this is basically what caused the high prices and the current financial mess we're in to begin with. How can we make the payments more affordable- 40 year loans? how about 50? Hell, if you went 100 years maybe you could buy that million dollar place on your 70k salary. No, I think price is the most important and unless I see a house in decent shape in a decent neighborhood at a price I legitimatey qualify for I'm just not interested. I'm just not going to stretch for an overpriced brokendown crackerbox. It just really isn't all that important.
I don’t reavall a single point in time where houses were super cheap. I have never heard soemone say “They are practically giving away houses†or “At these prices we can buy 2 houses.†A house is always going to be somewhat expensive because they cost a ton of money to build. If home values fall 50%, construction costs will not do the same.
What? The house costs the same to build whether you're buying or renting. And construction costs have fallen w/ the downturn. And in expensive areas the land is much more of a factor than the house (just look at what 60-year-old falling down shacks in the Bay Area go for. The house is worth almost nothing.
As late as the mid-90's it was equal or cheaper to buy than rent. This is because owning has costs that renting doesn't (taxes, repairs, transaction costs to buy/sell, etc.). It's only this recent change from "housing is shelter" to "housing is an investment" did the paradigm change. We won't be at the bottom until people go back to buying a house as a place to live instead of an "investment".
We won’t be at the bottom until people go back to buying a house as a place to live instead of an “investmentâ€.
Never gonna happen unless we get Japan's deflationary spiral. Entirely possible, but in my 40 years each decade has seen housing go up to the next $100K level.
"It will be painful to let the house go down, but the people who get foreclosed will move on to rent, and new prudent buyers will buy home, which in turn will start the spending cycle."
If all these houses go into foreclosure, nobody will be buying aything since the banks won't lend since they will suffer massive losses.
If all these houses go into foreclosure, nobody will be buying aything since the banks won’t lend since they will suffer massive losses
If a homeprisoner pays almost 3/4th of his earnings like here in bay area, how do you think he will have money to spend in discretionary spending. OTOH, if he finds a rental home in half that cost, now he has suddenly has a bounty of cash, he can save 70% and still it would be a lot left to spend.
Our laws are most complex in the world. Most laws are made to override the prior laws. At some time in future we will hit a dead end where we have to start reducing number of laws.
I still think housing is overpriced in many parts of the bay area, but my hope that prices will drop to 2000 prices in desirable areas is all but gone.
There is no income support for high prices.
When you say this do you base your comment on stats, theory or just hope? I wish it were true, but someone keeps offering list or above list on the houses we are looking at. Most houses we've looked at recently haven't lasted 2 weeks on the market.
Most houses we’ve looked at recently haven’t lasted 2 weeks on the market.
There may be no income support for high prices but there is certainly low cost-of-money support.
I was the biggest housing bear around in 2006 but I think we're in a bottoming pattern now.
Here's a house I'm pretty familiar with:
http://www.redfin.com/CA/Santa-Cruz/1215-Sanders-Ct-95062/home/2256235
It's basically representative of the median for this nice-ish area and now it's back to its pre-bubble pricing of 2002 or so, and that's WITH the $8000 tax credit and still real low interest rates.
With the money supply DOUBLE what it was in 2001-2002 it's really quite astounding that home prices are fully back there, now.
If & when interest rates go back to 2000 levels (7%), we'll see 2000 prices again, unless we get a job recovery in the interim.
Most houses we’ve looked at recently haven’t lasted 2 weeks on the market.
There may be no income support for high prices but there is certainly low cost-of-money support.
Yes, you are right.
I'm not confident in the precipitous drop with higher interest rates though. I think if there are signs of trouble when rates get to 6%, the gov't/fed will step in again.
The Fed has already stated they will go back to buying MBS if rates spike.
If & when interest rates go back to 2000 levels (7%), we’ll see 2000 prices again, unless we get a job recovery in the interim.
But why would rates ever go up to 7% if the US economy isn't recovering and adding jobs? I don't see how that could happen...
For those of us interested in Sunnyvale:
http://realestate.yahoo.com/promo/where-home-prices-are-rising
Greaaaaat!
I just checked the shadow inventory on Foreclosureradar.com in my target areas of Tiburon, Lamorinda, Alamo, and Mill Valley. Each of these areas has over 3 pages of preforclosure, auction, and bank owned properties with the majority being auction. This is between 60-80 homes per area...which is almost as many homes that are actually for sale in each area currently.
What is going on with all these homes going up for auction? Does anyone know?? I doubt someone with a 900-1M loan on a house would qualify for any government sponsored program or do these people get bailed out too?
I don’t see how that could happen…
If we need to attract global capital into the USD we need to raise the rates we pay for it.
There's actually some slack between the 10-year treasury and interest rates -- 200 basis points -- but once that goes higher over 5% it will push up mortgage rates unless there is some sort of government intervention.
http://www.businessweek.com/news/2010-02-25/obama-may-prohibit-home-loan-foreclosures-without-hamp-review.html
Feb. 25 (Bloomberg) -- The Obama administration may expand efforts to ease the housing crisis by banning all foreclosures on home loans unless they have been screened and rejected by the government’s Home Affordable Modification Program.
The proposal, reviewed by lenders last week on a White House conference call, “prohibits referral to foreclosure until borrower is evaluated and found ineligible for HAMP or reasonable contact efforts have failed,†according to a Treasury Department document outlining the plan.
“It is one of the many ideas under consideration in the administration’s ongoing housing stabilization efforts,†Treasury spokeswoman Meg Reilly said in an e-mail. “This proposal has not been approved and there are no immediate planned announcements on the issue.â€
She confirmed the authenticity of the document, which hasn’t been made public.
=====
Just when you think what else can the govt do to prop this market up, here it is. Ladies and gentleman, we know what it means when every foreclosure had to go through HAMP. Already a foreclosure takes months if not years, this will make sure it takes years. Every day I think not to buy, it makes me sick to see these tactics.
#politics