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2171   Leigh   2010 Apr 9, 1:46am  

Please tell me this person was denied!

2172   bubblesitter   2010 Apr 9, 2:38am  

*Lots of economic news today. Stock market up. Gold up. Interest rates up. Employment up. Home sales WAY up.*

These are all the news that are reported in media. You should verify and back it up with legit numbers.

2173   tatupu70   2010 Apr 9, 2:40am  

thomas.wong1986 says

Today we have government interference inflating prices, yet prices still unaffordable based on incomes and certainly well off the inflation trends. Yes things are pretty clear to me.

I agree with some of the others here--housing should track incomes more than inflation, but either way it's going to be local. You're probably looking at your particular local market. I think Shiller was referring to the US in general. There will most certainly be local markets that lag the market and continue to decline even after the rest of the country has begun to recover.

The analogy to Yahoo is not a good one.

2174   thomas.wong1986   2010 Apr 9, 2:50am  

tatupu70 says

The analogy to Yahoo is not a good one.

We can switch to RE, and look from 1989 to 92. Did we see direct goverment interference in the RE market, trying to stop prices from falling by giving out tax refunds/rebates/loan modifications/GSE bailouts? No! and therefore didnt see any double dip in RE prices. In fact we saw some pretty heft price declines to a point where the market prices met incomes. Shiller wrote in his book, Irrational Exhuberance, that asset bubbles do pause when you have external forces at work. But like he said above, it cant last.

2175   anonymous   2010 Apr 9, 3:31am  

azrob00 says

Stock market is having it’s strongest rally since 1930… what could possibly go wrong?

funny guy!

2176   anonymous   2010 Apr 9, 3:32am  

2177   elliemae   2010 Apr 9, 3:36am  

http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2010/apr/09/residents-lake-las-vegas-told-recovery-way/ "During the two-hour meeting at Loews Lake Las Vegas, residents aired grievances with city officials and asked questions about the future of their lakeside community. "Many complained about landscaping and zoning issues, while others expressed concern that their home values are plummeting and asked what the city was doing to help. "Casino Montelago closed March 14, and The Ritz-Carlton will close May 2. Combined, more than 500 workers will lose their jobs. “I can tell you from a business point of view, that hotel is worth a lot more open than it is closed,” Sisolak said. “Those golf courses will again be green.” "Lake Las Vegas Chief Operating Officer Jim Coyne said the development should emerge from bankruptcy by the end of June. "But attendees challenged officials to provide concrete signs that the situation is improving." ---------------------------- As mentioned in the OP, this development was extremely high-end and the empty lots sold for more than $1 million during the height of the bubble. They've plummeted, some condos well below $100k with higher HOA fees - some as high as $700/month. (http://www.trulia.com/voices/Home_Buying/IS_the_Lake_Las_Vegas_area_good_area_to_purchase_a-85926) The area is beautiful and was the brainchild of several optimistic developers, but it's in bk and there are so many foreclosures it's unbelievable. So what do the homedebtors do? They blame the govt and ask what more they're doing for the community. Sure, there are people who are hurting there - but many of them are outrageously wealthy and can sell at a loss, still remaining solvent. There are more people in trouble in other areas, and the govt ain't doing much for them. Why are these people special? They're not.
2178   elliemae   2010 Apr 9, 4:17am  

Absolutely - this area is gorgeous and an oasis in the desert. There are few places that you can go in the vegas valley that isn't heavy with traffic and smells of exhaust. But is it the county's & city's fault that RE tanked? I think not. I know a homeowner who built in the late 90's; he used the LLV builder, paid about $800k at the time. It's now worth about $250k, according to his wife. He's disappointed, but he can afford it. His HOA fees are over $700/mo as well, and says right now he gets nothing for the money.
2179   elliemae   2010 Apr 9, 4:21am  

Reminds me of a guy I know - he can't pay his rent and applied for rental assistance; on his checking acct statement there are monthly withdrawals for a big screen tv, computer & living room set from Rent-to-own. They were turned down and he was mad.

He also went to a car lot & bought a new car, drove it home and never made a payment. They had to sue him to get it back 'cause he hid it. The local law enforcement (DA) is overwhelmed and chose not to prosecute. What a POS.

2180   seaside   2010 Apr 9, 4:27am  

tatupu70 says

I agree with some of the others here–housing should track incomes more than inflation, but either way it’s going to be local. You’re probably looking at your particular local market. I think Shiller was referring to the US in general. There will most certainly be local markets that lag the market and continue to decline even after the rest of the country has begun to recover.
The analogy to Yahoo is not a good one.

I somewhat agree w/ the idea of housing should track incomes more than inflation, and either way it's going to be local. So, let's do simple math for the sake of fun. ;)

If we say 4% annual inflation for 10 years, housing price of 2010 would be about 145% of 2000, which I think is reasonable. If we go for income basis, it's pretty much the same. For instance, fairfax county VA, one of wealthiet and very robust county, median house hold income at 2000 was 82K, 2010 will be about 110K since 2008 was 107K. That comes out to be 134% and is roughly in track with 3.5% inflation. The house price in fairfax VA is still holding at 200~250% of 2000 level.

Situation in your local may vary, but you surely can figure out the percentage. So, I'd say 2010 home price in your local should be somewhere near that percentage of 2000 price, if there was no bubble. And I guess those people living in the area where home price got slahed down close to that level may see stabilization. Otherwise, there still is a room for fluctuation.

As for stock market, I am not sure this is sign of recovery or a sign of stagflation. The reason stock market alone has been shooting up while all other markets like job, housing, loan etc has been frozen, since last fall is the liquidity aka bail out money that rushed into the stock market. Those bailed out f--kcats are alive and well, and playing messive amount of taxpayers money again in the market. Dow now is about 11000 points and that's the Dow point a day before Lehman collapsed in Sep 2008. That's the fear I got.

Anyway, I think its too early to talk about recovery. We'll see.

2181   NagaEater   2010 Apr 9, 4:33am  

I post in trulia since we look at houses so much. Several agents have bragged that 2009 was their best year in three years and 2010 is set to be even better. I have to wonder what qualifies as best. Most profit? Agents dropping out of the business creating more for everyone?

I wonder if we'll see interest rates impacting price at all. How high will they have to go before things drop? When is the rate too high to be succulent? The recent 4% rates may have otherwise casual buyers thinking twice since 5 to 6% is considered high interest rates for recent memories.

2182   grywlfbg   2010 Apr 9, 4:39am  

NagaEater says

I wonder if we’ll see interest rates impacting price at all. How high will they have to go before things drop? When is the rate too high to be succulent? The recent 4% rates may have otherwise casual buyers thinking twice since 5 to 6% is considered high interest rates for recent memories.

If interest rates go from 5%-7% that equates to ~20% less borrowing power for the same monthly payment (ie you can afford a $200k house at %5 but only a $160k house at 7%). No way that's good for house prices.

2183   ch_tah2   2010 Apr 9, 4:41am  

grywlfbg says

NagaEater says


I wonder if we’ll see interest rates impacting price at all. How high will they have to go before things drop? When is the rate too high to be succulent? The recent 4% rates may have otherwise casual buyers thinking twice since 5 to 6% is considered high interest rates for recent memories.

If interest rates go from 5%-7% that equates to ~20% less borrowing power for the same monthly payment (ie you can afford a $200k house at %5 but only a $160k house at 7%). No way that’s good for house prices.

But do you honestly think the gov't is going to let that happen?

2184   thomas.wong1986   2010 Apr 9, 4:53am  

grywlfbg says

If interest rates go from 5%-7% that equates to ~20% less borrowing power for the same monthly payment (ie you can afford a $200k house at %5 but only a $160k house at 7%). No way that’s good for house prices.

With prices still in the stratosphere, interest rate changes will not have much of an impact.

2185   Tude   2010 Apr 9, 5:24am  

BUY BUY BUY
http://www.redfin.com/CA/Concord/1151-Carey-Dr-94520/home/1609878

How long until we are in the lower 200ks?

2186   tatupu70   2010 Apr 9, 5:32am  

thomas.wong1986 says

With prices still in the stratosphere, interest rate changes will not have much of an impact.

Where are you referring to with prices still in the stratosphere?

2187   pkennedy   2010 Apr 9, 5:46am  

@thomas

You posted an interview which clearly states momentum is the most important factor. That other factors such as the government might come into play, but momentum is still the strongest factor.

Then you ignore momentum completely and only pull out double dip + government interference. He clearly states momentum is the largest factor, we're heading up. That is momentum UP. The largest factor is UP, how did you just remove that and replace it with your own largest factor and declare double dip down... ?

2188   grywlfbg   2010 Apr 9, 5:50am  

camping says

grywlfbg says

If interest rates go from 5%-7% that equates to ~20% less borrowing power for the same monthly payment (ie you can afford a $200k house at %5 but only a $160k house at 7%). No way that’s good for house prices.

But do you honestly think the gov’t is going to let that happen?

Well, the question is, do they have any choice? The Fed has already bought $1.25T in MBS. Plus TARP and all the other bailouts.... The Fed's balance sheet is a disaster area. The people in govt know that hyperinflation will destroy the govt... will destroy them. It will also destroy the Fed because their "assets" are Treasury bond/notes denominated in USD that would become worthless right along w/ the dollar. If there's one thing you can count on is that the people in power will try to hold onto that which means they will try and avoid hyperinflation. This means keeping up "borrowing" funds instead of "printing" them, keeping mortgage rates tied to T-bills or LIBOR, etc. As total govt debt creeps up investors are going to demand higher rates which will trickle down to mortgages.

2189   ch_tah2   2010 Apr 9, 5:51am  

"And now that [the market is trending] up, you know, it’s perfectly plausible to think we’ll have three years or more of increases. But I’m not so sure. We don’t know how much of this is transitory because of the government support. We’re in such an unusual economy now that [a double dip] has substantial probability. "

2190   ch_tah2   2010 Apr 9, 5:57am  

grywlfbg says

camping says


grywlfbg says

If interest rates go from 5%-7% that equates to ~20% less borrowing power for the same monthly payment (ie you can afford a $200k house at %5 but only a $160k house at 7%). No way that’s good for house prices.

But do you honestly think the gov’t is going to let that happen?

Well, the question is, do they have any choice? The Fed has already bought $1.25T in MBS. Plus TARP and all the other bailouts…. The Fed’s balance sheet is a disaster area. The people in govt know that hyperinflation will destroy the govt… will destroy them. It will also destroy the Fed because their “assets” are Treasury bond/notes denominated in USD that would become worthless right along w/ the dollar. If there’s one thing you can count on is that the people in power will try to hold onto that which means they will try and avoid hyperinflation. This means keeping up “borrowing” funds instead of “printing” them, keeping mortgage rates tied to T-bills or LIBOR, etc. As total govt debt creeps up investors are going to demand higher rates which will trickle down to mortgages.

I don't know if they have a choice. I didn't know them buying MBSs was a choice until they started doing it until they did (and $1.25T worth). With the people we've had in charge over the past few years, I don't put anything past them. I just know that I don't know enough to be confident that rates are going to go up significantly in the near term without some knee-jerk reaction by the gov't to get them down again if there are signs of trouble in housing.

2191   ch_tah2   2010 Apr 9, 6:01am  

Tude says

BUY BUY BUY
http://www.redfin.com/CA/Concord/1151-Carey-Dr-94520/home/1609878
How long until we are in the lower 200ks?

I'll bet you it's "sale pending" within a week - my guess is next Tues.

2192   seaside   2010 Apr 9, 6:10am  

pkennedy says

@thomas
You posted an interview which clearly states momentum is the most important factor. That other factors such as the government might come into play, but momentum is still the strongest factor.
Then you ignore momentum completely and only pull out double dip + government interference. He clearly states momentum is the largest factor, we’re heading up. That is momentum UP. The largest factor is UP, how did you just remove that and replace it with your own largest factor and declare double dip down… ?

Don't know what thomas think though.

There certainly is a momentum. In fact, it's been there since last fall and that's quite visible now. And I also agree that the momentum is the biggest factor.

Something I cannot be sure is where this momentum is coming from. Is it the result of fantastic works they did so far for last two years, or is it the artificial one driven by trillion dollors of government money that's been poured into.

The question is, Have they've been doing well enough to get this much momentum w/o government money?

If yes, then it's not 50/50 thing. It's 99% all righty and rosy. We're heading to recovery for sure.

If no, it's liquidity injection that pushes stock market up, which is another bubble in stock market waiting to be popped.

I think Mr. Shiller himself is not sure about which is the case at this moment, otherwise he didn't say anything like 50/50.

2193   tatupu70   2010 Apr 9, 6:59am  

seaside says

The question is, Have they’ve been doing well enough to get this much momentum w/o government money?

I think that's the point. The government money helped build the momentum until the recovery had enough steam to survive without it. At which point the liquidity is removed. Momentum implies that it will keep going without any force behind it...

2194   StillLooking   2010 Apr 9, 7:12am  

seaside says

The question is, Have they’ve been doing well enough to get this much momentum w/o government money?

I think the Federal reserve is giving green light to make risky investments in everything, gold, oil, silver stocks and of course when these things go up it gives a lift to housing. And the government and the Fed are handing trillions straight to the housing market.

As I see it, it is safe to make risky investments even when the Fed starts raising rates as they will have to do. But real estate can't be a good investment now. How does one get out when the fed is forced to defend the buck?

2195   pkennedy   2010 Apr 9, 7:26am  

There is momentum from people having a desire to buy again and make a change/move. Many people who normally would have sold, had to hold off, due to a large dip and inventory glut. They want to get out there and buy/sell their homes.

Essentially he says momentum is normally the largest factor, right now he's unsure and points to one of different factors. Essentially it comes down to momentum vs other factors, and how well they can be controlled.

*If* the government is the cause of this momentum, then they will slowly back out, and ensure that natural momentum eventually does take over. They haven't done *ALL* this work, only to drop the ball completely.

My best is that other countries, china included, would rather take a loss on their dollar positions, than allow the dollar to collapse. So they'll keep buying, no matter how much damage the government is doing to the dollar in the world sense.

2196   thomas.wong1986   2010 Apr 9, 7:42am  

You need to reread Shillers comments

2197   thomas.wong1986   2010 Apr 9, 7:58am  

tatupu70 says

thomas.wong1986 says
With prices still in the stratosphere, interest rate changes will not have much of an impact.
Where are you referring to with prices still in the stratosphere?

Excuse my comments, I didnt realize some still believed a $1M shack in BA is really worth $1M
up from mid $300K in 10 years, never mind it took historically over 15 years for prices to double.
LOL! just comical !!!

2198   thomas.wong1986   2010 Apr 9, 8:01am  

I think that’s the point. The government money helped build the momentum until the recovery had enough steam to survive without it. At which point the liquidity is removed. Momentum implies that it will keep going without any force behind it…

And where are the fundementals like incomes to home prices ? Unless the public somehow believes we doubled or even tripled our salaries somehow?

2199   thomas.wong1986   2010 Apr 9, 8:12am  

pkennedy says

You posted an interview which clearly states momentum is the most important factor. That other factors such as the government might come into play, but momentum is still the strongest factor.

No, Shiller said he had a model for Wall Street back in the '90s, he did not mention it was the strongest or most important factor. His model from the 90s wouldnt work because of government interfence, that is why he is unsure.

2200   tatupu70   2010 Apr 9, 8:14am  

thomas.wong1986 says

And where are the fundementals like incomes to home prices ? Unless the public somehow believes we doubled or even tripled our salaries somehow?

I would agree with this comment if it were 2006, but many, many places have already corrected. Perhaps not where you are looking... That's why I asked to where are you referring with your comments.

2201   tatupu70   2010 Apr 9, 8:18am  

thomas.wong1986 says

No, Shiller said he had a model for Wall Street back in the ’90s, he did not mention it was the strongest or most important factor. His model from the 90s wouldnt work because of government interfence, that is why he is unsure.

That's not at all what he said. He said the model emphasizes momentum over everything else. Then he went on to say that the government intervention is somewhat unique to this housing market so he's not sure how that will affect the market when it is removed. He in no way said that the model wouldn't work. He said that the conditions are different this go around--but they always are. No two situations are exactly the same.

2202   thomas.wong1986   2010 Apr 9, 8:19am  

Down the street where I purchased my home in Los Gatos went from low 300s to well over $1M by the end of the decade in 2000.

2203   justme   2010 Apr 9, 8:21am  

Jim Klinge thinks the spring selling season is all but done, and prices will be heading lower again (San Diego).

http://www.bubbleinfo.com/2010/04/09/random-observations/

2204   thomas.wong1986   2010 Apr 9, 8:25am  

tatupu70 says

That’s not at all what he said. He said the model emphasizes momentum over everything else. Then he went on to say that the government intervention is somewhat unique to this housing market so he’s not sure how that will affect the market when it is removed. He in no way said that the model wouldn’t work. He said that the conditions are different this go around–but they always are. No two situations are exactly the same.

Unless you have solid fundementals no government intervention will stop further corrections. What we have from the Government is a political move, based on assistance so people keep their homes, it isnt built on solid grounds of income to prices. If you dont have enough income, we will politically force the banks to forgive part of your mortgages. Are your going to do this for everyone ?

2205   EBGuy   2010 Apr 9, 8:32am  

BUY BUY BUY
http://www.redfin.com/CA/Concord/1151-Carey-Dr-94520/home/1609878
How long until we are in the lower 200ks?

Always heartening to see FEDERAL DEPOSIT INS CORP RECVR on the Trustee Deed. The bank took it back for less than $200k, so it could get interesting. That neighborhood is a disaster zone. I noticed 1130 Carey Drive (1380 sq.ft. 4/2) is also headed for the auction block soon; bought in 2000 for $233,500 with a FHA loan -- with perpetual refies from World Savings Bank starting in 2002 through 2006. This is what we're up against folks...

2206   tatupu70   2010 Apr 9, 8:42am  

thomas.wong1986 says

Unless you have solid fundementals no government intervention will stop further corrections. What we have from the Government is a political move, based on assistance so people keep their homes, it isnt built on solid grounds of income to prices. If you dont have enough income, we will politically force the banks to forgive part of your mortgages. Are your going to do this for everyone ?

Of course not. The government's assistance really isn't to help people, anyway. It's to help the banks and the broader economy. Stopping the economic freefall was the primary motivation behind the intervention.

Remember also that the 3x income is a broad guideline and doesn't necessarily apply to more expensive houses. Most other expenses don't increase linearly with income, so the 3x rule underestimates what you can afford

Like I said earlier, I would have agreed with you in 2006, but not now.

2207   thomas.wong1986   2010 Apr 9, 8:46am  

E-man says

thomas.wong1986 says
Down the street where I purchased my home in Los Gatos went from low 300s to well over $1M by the end of the decade in 2000.
Interesting. Can you give us just one address of any home in the Bay Area that was bought in the low $300k in 2000 and recently sold, 2009 or 2010, for $1mil?

End of the decade, as in the year 2000.

2208   thomas.wong1986   2010 Apr 9, 8:53am  

tatupu70 says

Remember also that the 3x income is a broad guideline and doesn’t necessarily apply to more expensive houses.

Its was very broad when it came to safe lending standards. The higher the x the higher the risk. Without real incomes, you get what we just saw happen, people buying homes they otherwise were unable to afford. It may have taken 3 years for home prices in 89-92 to declline, but we are in a much bigger bubble today. Perhaps mediams at 300-400K is too much to ask for?

2209   EBGuy   2010 Apr 9, 9:46am  

It still has positive cash flow if you rent it out for $1,500.
That certainly is a safety margin. Just for kicks, though, I found this 3/2 renting for $1500. The landlord's tax basis (according to PS) is $69,024. He's the SOB that determines the market rate if things get ugly. How low can you go...

2210   Austinhousingbubble   2010 Apr 9, 12:35pm  

There may well be a dearth of renters going into the future, if the government has anything to say about it.

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