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2848   elliemae   2010 Jun 27, 3:00pm  

robertoaribas says

USSA: don’t confuse them with facts, they have their minds made up already! Even after prices resume the very likely downward trek, they will post long tortured explanations why:
1. their state is different.
2. Their state is dropping? well, their city is different.
3. Their city is dropping? well, not their part of the city, that part is different.
4. Well, their are some cheaper homes in their part of the city, but only ugly foreclosures, their home is not dropping, its going up!

Really? Wow, we must really be uneducated, unlike you. Thank godess you're here to save us all, 'cause you're so smart.

We must be reading different boards, because many, many people have posted that property values have dropped and the only question is whether they'll continue to do so, or whether the worst is over. Some feel one way, others the opposite.

USSR - why are you yelling at me? I thought you wanted to slip me the tongue.

2849   elliemae   2010 Jun 27, 3:02pm  

Roberto -
We don't live in the Arizona area, which was devastated by the RE market and continues to lose ground. There are many areas that didn't have huge jumps in property values, and haven't experienced the losses that surround you.

There are other places in the country besides the big cities, you know...

2850   vain   2010 Jun 28, 2:38am  

At no point was I referring that you should be segregated from others in terms of conversation. But regardless if you venting, I was actually thinking about myself. I vent alot and am just trying to think of a solution to protect others from me. But sounds like you are saying you're like me.
2851   tatupu70   2010 Jun 28, 7:07am  

thomas.wong1986 says
Thanks for pointing out that the phantom multiple bids charades are still practiced by REA. We wont be at any bottom until these REA practices are eliminated and made illegal.
Should we make it illegal for the car salesman to say that he has another interested party in the car you're looking at? How about the guy selling on craigslist saying that he has someone coming at 6pm to look at it?
2852   thomas.wong1986   2010 Jun 28, 7:13am  

tatupu70 says
Should we make it illegal for the car salesman to say that he has another interested party in the car you’re looking at? How about the guy selling on craigslist saying that he has someone coming at 6pm to look at it?
Lucky for the car buyer, you will never hear that from car salesman. Its first come first served.
2853   Goatkick   2010 Jun 28, 7:28am  

I think it could be time to sell then for a swing trade...no ?

2854   tatupu70   2010 Jun 28, 7:30am  

thomas.wong1986 says
Lucky for the car buyer, you will never hear that from car salesman. Its first come first served.
Not sure what you mean about first come, first served. I guess if you offer full sticker price, then he might be obligated to sell to you--I'm not sure about the rules on that. But if you are offering less than sticker, then the car dealer can always say that he has another customer interested and decline your offer. You can either raise your offer or walk away--just like you can with a house.
2855   marcus   2010 Jun 28, 9:15am  

Makes sense that China and others would use gold and other hard assets to hedge their currency risk (especially dollar risk).

We are in such uncharted territory. The "crash course" that Patrick posted for today is pretty interesting, although I have yet to watch it in its entirety.

2856   anonymous   2010 Jun 28, 4:22pm  

Nomograph says
They are well-located, relatively inexpensive, easy to rent, and a 3/2 SFH cosmetic fixer can be found in the high 3’s to low 4’s.
ok, thx. 2k per month is a reasonable rent price for clairemont 3/2. ok, maybe 2250... still, for purchase price of 400k, how does 2k per month in rent income equate unless you paid cash or substantial down payment? i'm seeing a loss or at least a razor-thin margin if holding an average mortgage. If paid up in full, is it true that "income" will not appear until the rent payments exceed what your initial investment was, plus any follow-on costs? maybe it's true that in X number of years you will be making profit, but right now, aren't you in the hole for a great deal of money? are you at all concerned that if a price adjustment occurs in the next year, that rent will decrease or that renters will simply buy another property for the same, or less, monthly payment? worst case, if you were to sell the property under those conditions, that you would take a significant loss?
2857   anonymous   2010 Jun 28, 4:35pm  

also, i truly don't care what any of you do with your money - i'm just interested in the theory/strategy behind the moves. i would REALLY like to know about the risk mitigations...
2858   SFace   2010 Jun 28, 5:11pm  

landtof If 100% cash paid. 24k in annual rent vs. 400K house is about 6% yield. Less property tax, insurance and maintenance, the net yield is closer to 4%. Then there is the benefit of cash flow through tax deferral of depreciation and ability to pretax expense. An equilvalent investment may need to return 6% to be comparable from a cash flow perspective. With an average mortgage, it depends on interest rate. A 320K mortgage @4.625%, interest, tax and insurance is around 1800, with tax benefits, ITI may be as low as 1400. that's a 7200 return on 80000 investment, A ROI of 9%. Leverage increase margins. It really depends on a lot of other factors including tax bracket, AGI, and other passive income. If paid in full. Income will be net rent less interest, tax, insurance and deduction, direct expense and the non cash expense like depreciation. With investment properties, you do want to account for a margin of safety but rents are pretty stable. For the most part, the best yields are also the worst place so I don't overweigh yields. When I read financial statements of a REIT, I start with cash flow, balance sheet than income/loss. Cash flow in rental property is the key metric. Most renters are renters because majority of them are check to check and are really stuck. If they can get a loan, they will surely buy in this environment. The big drawback is housing is not very liquid currently. It is hard to undo a transaction. That is essentially why most people put down as little as possible to secure the best rates. If you invest for cash flow, the capital will take care of itself. As rob points out there are risks involved and that is why it is not a good idea to go "all in", but there are plenty of rewards as well.
2859   anonymous   2010 Jun 28, 6:09pm  

SF ace says
If 100% cash paid. 24k in annual rent vs. 400K house is about 6% yield. Less property tax, insurance and maintenance, the net yield is closer to 4%. Then there is the benefit of cash flow through tax deferral of depreciation and ability to pretax expense. An equilvalent investment may need to return 6% to be comparable from a cash flow perspective. With an average mortgage, it depends on interest rate. A 320K mortgage @4.625%, interest, tax and insurance is around 1800, with tax benefits, ITI may be as low as 1400. that’s a 7200 return on 80000 investment, A ROI of 9%. Leverage increase margins. It really depends on a lot of other factors including tax bracket, AGI, and other passive income.
you're basing almost every positive on tax benefits. need to investigate further. at face value, the perspective doesn't entice on it's own (without the tax code loopholes), and still appears to leave little room for error, like a major price adjustment. SF ace says violently disagree that renters of 3/2 homes in decent neighborhoods are stuck.
Most renters are renters because majority of them are check to check and are really stuck
2860   inflection point   2010 Jun 29, 12:26am  

More mice taking the bait. Tax credits and false consumer confidence. We will see how the story holds up next month.

2861   inflection point   2010 Jun 29, 1:12am  

I always like to see three data points before I call a trend.

2862   tatupu70   2010 Jun 29, 1:18am  

I agree---there will be a few months of weak housing numbers. The government $8K certainly pulled ahead some demand. The question is really--what will happen 6 months from now?

2863   inflection point   2010 Jun 29, 1:35am  

I think the answer to that depends on what other government actions are put in place to prop the market up further. Without additional incentives or delaying tactics the trend should be clear.

2864   Philistine   2010 Jun 29, 2:31am  

tatupu70 says
thomas.wong1986 says
Lucky for the car buyer, you will never hear that from car salesman. Its first come first served.
Not sure what you mean about first come, first served [. . .] if you are offering less than sticker, then the car dealer can always say that he has another customer interested and decline your offer. You can either raise your offer or walk away–just like you can with a house.
Actually, cars are not like houses in this scenario. There's always 5 more Dodge Watermelons in Sensible Silver coming on the trailer tomorrow, so bidding wars do not happen on a dealer lot. You can't have bidding wars on an item that is mass produced and instantly available in multiple quantities. A dealership'll take any reasonable offer, and usually pad the backend on the payments and financing to make up the differeance--not to mentinon screwing you on the trade-in for good measure. Believe me, car salesmen *are* first come, first served, as they are trained not to let you off the lot without buying. Like used-home salesmen, car salesmen have their own tricks and games, but bidding wars is not one of them. Tenouncetrout says
There was big Tropical landscape culture here, with old growth. It was for a reason many of these houses were built before Air conditioning, so the Royal Poinciana, Black Olive Trees, Boogan Villa on the side of the house, and general Yard and Roof Canopy kept these houses cool in the summer. Probably lost now, is land scape crews that were custom to Sofl local plants, and knew how to care for them. For ten years the way they’ve dealt with them was with a chain saw and wood chipper.
TPB, I am a native Floridian and this makes me teary for a Land Remembered. Don't forget some of the worlds most beautiful beaches from St. Petersburg up to Mobile, AL that are also going to be lost--in Pensacola, the sand would squeak when you walked on it, so powdery fine it was. I've been looking at moving back to south or central Florida, but the scenario you describe is what I see getting worse and worse every year I visit friends back there. The houses get cheaper both in price and "remodels". Many of my favorite neighborhoods have lost their character.
2865   CrazyMan   2010 Jun 29, 2:42am  

tatupu70 says

The question is really–what will happen 6 months from now?

The next leg down will become even more obvious?

2866   HousingWatcher   2010 Jun 29, 3:04am  

Interesting article about many buyers being unable to close in time to get the credit. I don't think this will result in a waive of cancellations because unless the buyers included a contingency in their contract in that they would only close if they got the tax credit, they will lose their deposit if they walk.

http://www.northjersey.com/realestate/97366859_It_s_crunch_time_to_qualify_for_tax_credit.html

2867   MarkInSF   2010 Jun 29, 3:04am  

inflection point says

More mice taking the bait. Tax credits and false consumer confidence. We will see how the story holds up next month.

Keep in mind C/S is 3 month smoothed, so "April" numbers reflect sales in feb/march/april. If there is a double dip due to expiring tax credit + expiring Fed purchase of MBS, it will not show in full until the July report, which will reflect sales in may/june/july.

There clearly was a "pull-forward" of demand effect of the tax credit, given how sales plunged after April, so it would surprise me if the upward trend holds in the overall C/S index. But if the overall index does go to a new low, I doubt it will be a whole lot lower.

What I find most interesting is the disconnect between the different market segments. Prebubble they tracked each other well. Post bubble more expensive market segments are still being stubborn, with about a 25% disconnect.

2868   Â¥   2010 Jun 29, 3:14am  

San Francisco is up big time showing a 2.2% gain between March and April and increasing the one year gain to 18%.

Again, C-S's own non-adjusted numbers don't show that.

Low Tier is up 12% YOY and down 1% YTD, and down .3% for the month.
Middle Tier is up 11% YOY and even YTD, and up 1.1% for the month.
High Tier is up 10.7% YOY and up 2.6% YTD, up 2.5% for the month.

SF's "big time" gain is only evident in the upper tier, which currently starts at $600,000.

2869   tatupu70   2010 Jun 29, 3:16am  

Philistine says
Actually, cars are not like houses in this scenario. There’s always 5 more Dodge Watermelons in Sensible Silver coming on the trailer tomorrow, so bidding wars do not happen on a dealer lot. You can’t have bidding wars on an item that is mass produced and instantly available in multiple quantities
In most cases I agree, but keep in mind there are many new car models that sell for over list price. Dealers add a surcharge because they are in high demand. In any event, it was a mediocre analogy at best, just meant to show that real estate agents behave exactly like other salespeople...
2870   maxweber   2010 Jun 29, 3:47am  

Tenouncetrout says
.... I guess I’m saying the Charm and local identity sold South Florida. Charm that took years of cultivation to achieve. It’s gone, people are more emotionally detached from probably not just my town, but I suspect most towns, that have gone through the bubble cycle.
tenouncetrout, That's the same things I see too. City people are detached. This includes Americans in general more and more with respect to the USA. Sure, momentum keeps them in place but uprooting takes a long time. I'll go out on a limb here and extend my Silicon Valley is Detroit hypothesis to USA is Detroit. If you think about what happened to Detroit then you'll be able to apply it to the USA. I haven't done the macro analysis of these theories but common sense tells me its true. Sure, some people still do very well in Detroit. A very important theme of this thread is cheer leaders who are wrong. The LV RE agent was. The "cheerful" leaders who say "print more money, spend our way to happiness" are. And people who thing the USA is not Detroit are probably wrong too. The reality I see from the people I know is the USA will not survive a few more years of this recession/whatever its called. In my neighborhood at least, prices fell and now look to start to accelerate downward. I heard of one house which was $264K and just taken back by the bank for $104K. Nobody is waiting in line to buy it. In contrast, a house which was $220K was listed on res.net for $150K and looks like it did sell 4-5 months ago. So, I guess we won't know until Nov timeframe. My hunch, however, and what the elders tell me is now is the time to store. Not buy.
2871   thomas.wong1986   2010 Jun 29, 4:21am  

landtof says
you’re basing almost every positive on tax benefits.
Tax laws change at the whim of Congress. If anything decisions are left without tax impact.
2872   thomas.wong1986   2010 Jun 29, 4:33am  

Philistine says
A dealership’ll take any reasonable offer, and usually pad the backend on the payments and financing to make up the differeance–not to mentinon screwing you on the trade-in for good measure. Believe me, car salesmen *are* first come, first served, as they are trained not to let you off the lot without buying. Like used-home salesmen, car salesmen have their own tricks and games, but bidding wars is not one of them.
Dittio! tatupu70 says
In most cases I agree, but keep in mind there are many new car models that sell for over list price. Dealers add a surcharge because they are in high demand. In any event, it was a mediocre analogy at best, just meant to show that real estate agents behave exactly like other salespeople…
A new car has already been marked up for the authorized dealer by the factory. They buy at 15-17K, which you dont see, and sell it at list price 20K. The additional "marketing" surcharges mean very little. New cars purchases are often ordered weeks ahead and not delivered off lot inventory, and therefore any surcharges disappear. No, we been down this road before, REA do NOT behave like other salespeople. Far from it.
2873   thomas.wong1986   2010 Jun 29, 4:46am  

maxweber says
I’ll go out on a limb here and extend my Silicon Valley is Detroit hypothesis to USA is Detroit. If you think about what happened to Detroit then you’ll be able to apply it to the USA. I haven’t done the macro analysis of these theories but common sense tells me its true. Sure, some people still do very well in Detroit
You can ask Silicon Valley maverick Oracle founder Larry Ellison and he would agree with you. Dwindling public companies means big changes in the valley http://www.siliconvalley.com/ci_12110548?source=rss_emailed&nclick_check=1 Tucked into the annual Mercury News data-palooza known as the Silicon Valley 150, there's one nugget of information that I think tells us more than all the other lists and numbers about the profound changes in store for this region: The number of public companies in Silicon Valley fell for the eighth consecutive year in 2008, to 261. Forget the inflated dot-com peak of 417 in 2000. It's also below the 315 the valley had in 1994, when the Mercury News started keeping track. This is no longer a simple correction following a period of excess. This is now an unmistakable trend that represents the end of an era defined by a grand partnership between Silicon Valley and Wall Street. That alliance fueled a model for funding innovation that became the envy of the world. And now we have to come up with a new one. Why is this happening? There are several factors at work. The technology industry is maturing, much as Oracle CEO Larry Ellison foresaw several years ago, and that means slower growth rates. To find new sources of revenue, Oracle and many others have gone on acquisition binges, taking numerous ...
2874   thomas.wong1986   2010 Jun 29, 4:50am  

LOL! plenty of people "smoking medicine" in SF.

2875   tatupu70   2010 Jun 29, 4:56am  

thomas.wong1986 says
A new car has already been marked up for the authorized dealer by the factory. They buy at 15-17K, which you dont see, and sell it at list price 20K. The additional “marketing” surcharges mean very little. New cars purchases are often ordered weeks ahead and not delivered off lot inventory, and therefore any surcharges disappear.
OK--we are headed way off topic here and running quickly into the realm of idiocy, but you completely missed the point of my post. There are cars that are marked up over and above factory markups because they are "hot". Usually new models. RE agents are salespeople. Caveat Emptor. If you let them fool you, shame on you.
2877   toothfairy   2010 Jun 29, 6:26am  

San Fran up 16% last month 18% this month..

I'd like to hears the bears explanation for this.
I suppose it's all due to the tax credit?

2878   tatupu70   2010 Jun 29, 6:37am  

UnitedSocialistStatesofAmerica says

What do you want data for?
Every time I post reference links you and your buddy Numbograph choose to completely IGNORE them and prefer to move on to ANOTHER topic. Which is why I think it was VERY apropo for you to choose a SILLY GOOSE as your icon.
PS: Munch on THIS awhile MF: 14 Scary Facts About The The US Real Estate Nightmare

A link to an opinion piece is NOT data. (note I capitalized that because I know you like that)

2879   LAO   2010 Jun 29, 7:12am  

toothfairy says

San Fran up 16% last month 18% this month..

I’d like to hears the bears explanation for this.
I suppose it’s all due to the tax credit?

Rich people are still RICH.. and in fact, smart rich people probably doubled /tripled their wealth since the March 2009 stock market lows. All this buying is coming from the investor/wealthy class. I don't know a single working class american that has bought a home in the past 2 years... They are all scared to death to dip their toes in the water.. and rightfully so.

The wealthy are just gambling on housing.. They might be right... they might be wrong. It won't change their lifestyles either way... If you have 100 million in the bank and you gamble on some million dollar properties and they all go underwater... You'll be fine.

It's the average americans that can't afford homes... Wealthy areas will probably rebound for now.. But if you are in the market for a "starter" home you'd be pretty stupid to buy in this market.

Are their any statistics on first time home buyers... that compares their incomes to the purchase prices? That would be a more accurate representation of what's really going on in this housing market.

2880   Â¥   2010 Jun 29, 7:14am  

^ wut he said : )

2881   mthom   2010 Jun 29, 7:17am  

But if the methodology of C-S is flawed, why would you believe the month-to-month to be accurate? It seems like you believe it to be accurate just because it fits your view of the situation. And you conveniently leave out parts of the article that conflict with your view of housing going up nationally.

2882   mthom   2010 Jun 29, 7:20am  

rmm221 says

All this buying is coming from the investor/wealthy class. I don’t know a single working class american that has bought a home in the past 2 years… They are all scared to death to dip their toes in the water.. and rightfully so.

I have to disagree with you on this one from my personal experience. I know of several working class people who bought within the past year in the BA. They viewed the low mortgage rates as making it a time to buy.

2883   inflection point   2010 Jun 29, 7:26am  

The low mortage rates and low prices (lol, by comparison to the bubble peak) make buying attractive. At least they know they are not buying at the top.

I am sure people buying at the peak thought they were doing the right thing too.

2884   SFace   2010 Jun 29, 9:22am  

thomas.wong1986 says
landtof says
you’re basing almost every positive on tax benefits.
Tax laws change at the whim of Congress. If anything decisions are left without tax impact.
Here's a recent history of major tax changes for non-entities. Corporate tax changes quite a bit but personal income tax have not changed that much over 30 years. 1981 Reagan tax cut. Lowered tax rate and introduced accelerated depreciation. 1986 tax reform act. lowered tax rates 1990's. tax brackets raised. Pre-tax programs started, effectively lowering tax rates. 1997. introduced earned income credit, negative tax for low income family with kids. 2001. Bush tax cuts, lowered bracket to current levels. preferential treatment to qualified dividends As you can see, our government has basically given: *Accelerated depreciation *hosts of pre-tax like 401K, 529plans, pretax health, depedant care and commute. *earned income tax credit *generally lowered tax bracket across the board *preferential treatment of certain class of income. *new credits like monster SUV (qualified by weight) then hybrids, now energy efficient window, water heater and doors. our governement over the last 30 years took: *raised the tax bracket occasionally. *let the tax bracket and phase-in and limitations lag. Based on this history, tax laws change, but they almost always change to the benefit at the federal level. I don't think we need to worry about our goverment taking away. If so, the 2001 bush tax cut is the obvious one to reverse.
2885   Patrick   2010 Jun 29, 9:26am  

I just don't see any price rise. Here's craigslist average asking price data, collected every day for about four years. OK, it's an average and it's the whole Bay Area with all kinds of housing lumped together, but there's just no real rise visible.

The gap in 2008 was when craigslist changed format and my scraper broke for a while.

2886   EBGuy   2010 Jun 29, 9:54am  

Let's just hope its not a repeat of 1992 or 1993

2887   tatupu70   2010 Jun 29, 10:00am  

UnitedSocialistStatesofAmerica says
Shame on YOU for trying to argue that fooling clients is an integral and acceptable part of a salesperson’s job and that the ’shame’ of being RIPPED-OFF should justifiably always fall on the innocent BUYER and NOT on the person doing the MISREPRESENTATION. No wonder your country is COLLAPSING.
Please don't put words in my mouth. I don't recall using the word integral or acceptable. It just cracks me up that so many here talk about personal responsibility--I guess that resonsibility ends when you try to buy a house.

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