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Double Dip


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2010 Oct 4, 4:07pm   56,867 views  239 comments

by HousingBoom   ➕follow (1)   💰tip   ignore  

So did the double dip in housing begin? Why is everyone still bullish on housing?

#housing

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118   dunnross   2011 Mar 19, 1:06pm  

ChrisLA says

mthom says

And it certainly doesn’t seem to be crashing down to the 97 price

Peoples incomes dropped to the 1997 ranges. Prices will follow. It will take several years, it always does.

Minimum wage is higher so it looks like average income is higher, but all it did is move the low end ceiling up a bit. from 4.75 to 8something.
There are almost no first time home buyers out there. Out of all the sales, which are not many, only 6% are FTHB. Prices are too high, and I think an average person is not interested in indentured servitude so that some ahole flipper can make his easy retirement at the expense of another citizen.

There has never been a genuine bull market carried by speculator-only buying. That's what we are seeing now in housing, and very soon, all these speculators will find out that there will be no people willing to live in their newly acquired investment.

119   B.A.C.A.H.   2011 Mar 19, 1:50pm  

This thread is hilarious, good comic relief entertainment for a rainy weekend.

You guys can probably cherry pick all the data you want to for making the cases for your arguments.

In the broader context one would question the spin from anyone who would claim to pay $3500 per month for a rental with a gardner and a pool in Willow Glen (where we don't have real summers to enjoy the pool like they do in places like Chicago).

But then nor should we take too seriously the spin from who too often refers to some he disagrees with "liar" or "lying" even though he boasted that he and his lawyer spouse fibbed on a legal document about their intention to be owner occupants, except, to consider the source of the argument.

120   MarkInSF   2011 Mar 19, 2:42pm  

I don't get why asking prices predicting the short term direction of closing prices, or visa versa, is even relevant.

They say nothing about the long term trend.

121   B.A.C.A.H.   2011 Mar 19, 2:48pm  

MarkInSF says

They say nothing about the long term trend.

Here is my prediction for the long term trend: in the aggregate, for the (materialistic) way that many of us think of as standard of living and quality of life, it is in for continuation of a long trend decline.

122   thomas.wong1986   2011 Mar 19, 5:54pm  

Your right dunnross, '89 was a trap. Even though prices did go up but so, did jobs, new industries and incomes in BA. That unfortunatly changed and took prices down. It certainly was a bubble looking back. Todays massive bubble saw prices double and triple. Its going to be a long one if it doesnt correct swiftly and deep.

123   thomas.wong1986   2011 Mar 19, 6:05pm  

gameisrigged says

Wishful thinking. The bulls all own homes and are frightened of losing equity, so they remain in denial.

I been a homeowner since 92 but even these high prices will impact job creation/growth.

You cant have it both ways.. high prices/equity and expect jobs and careers to stick around.
Anyone who lived and worked in SV high techland 80s-90s, knows high home prices
dont mix well in the long run. It just doesnt work!
I value my career and not more equity/debt.

Most of these "bulls" are realtors since only high home prices ensure higher commissions.
Equity is a mear instrument to get more debt. Equity isnt anykind of wealth or forced savings.
Its sad to see people dont know how to save or have counted on higher debt as form of savings. Its insane!

124   tatupu70   2011 Mar 20, 12:36am  

klarek says

It’s exactly what I knew was going to happen, and the numbers confirm this more with each passing month

We'll see. I've seen several reports stating that housing acivity strengthened in February. I think it's still too early to tell. If prices are still falling month over month in July, then I will agree that you are correct.

125   B.A.C.A.H.   2011 Mar 20, 8:01am  

Nobody's gonna take your arguments seriously, even if your right.

126   OO   2011 Mar 20, 4:43pm  

Haven't been back for a long time, wondering how the old pals are doing?

HARM, astrid, FAB, Peter P, Randy H, skibum, SP, EBGuy, SFWoman, etc, are you guys still lurking around? Does everything work out as you have envisioned? Is MarinaPrime still around?

Seriously, I am so beyond buying or remodeling or trading up or building from scratch. Me thinks that we are in so much sh*t that I would hesitate to invest a dime more in something so immobile as real estate. Gotta stay nimble.

127   alga   2011 Mar 21, 2:41am  

vain says

Put 20% down ($90k). ... San Francisco minimum wage is nearly $10/hour. A couple earning minimum wage has a household income of $41k.

Any useful tips on saving $90k reasonably fast while living on a minimum wage in SF?

128   dunnross   2011 Mar 21, 3:41am  

gameisrigged says

We’re on to you, bub.

Yes, we're on to you, bub!

129   schmitz_kris   2011 Mar 21, 5:32am  

From Bloomberg:

SFBA home/house prices/values fall for FIVE MONTHS STRAIGHT - now nearing NEGATIVE 5% y-o-y. The dead cat bounce facilitated by knife catchers/investors chasing yesterday's news ended half a year ago or so.

http://www.businessweek.com/news/2011-03-17/san-francisco-bay-area-home-prices-fall-for-fifth-month.html

Several counties in your metro area ARE DOWN significant double digits Y-O-Y - more leveraged losses for mainstreamers - how nice.

130   schmitz_kris   2011 Mar 21, 9:30am  

Just out a few minutes ago:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20110321/ts_nm/us_usa_economy_housing

Housing/real estate IS TANKING - prices are at 9 YEAR LOWS, WHICH ARE BRAND-NEW LOWS BY THE WAY, and sales of existing homes are just plain collapsing / in the gutter.

131   junkmail   2011 Mar 21, 10:50am  

One point of view that hasn't been addressed that of cultural psychology. It doesn't take a brain surgeon to realize there's a shift in the wind. I'm talking about the buyers and the buyers to come. Seems most folk here are from the Bay Area or California in general, so there's no excuse...

If you pay attention to the next gen coming up into the work force, it's a completely different animal. Tomorrow's buyer WILL NOT BE THE SAME AS YESTERDAY'S. All the charts posted here about the housing boom-fall-rebound fail to take that into account. All charts should say "ALL THINGS BEING EQUAL". There's a serious movement away from status symbols. This will affect THE most important factor on home prices... Demand. When that drops, it's goodnight sweet prince. And it has. Those throwing up graphs I ask you to honestly try find a reliable graph showing the negative effects of the technological revolution and the aftermath, then plot the return where we become the power-house in manufacturing we once were. No? Because you're not stupid. You know it's over in manufacturing for this country. Why can't it be the same for housing? Don't give me that malarky about "Everyone needs somewhere to live."

If it is true (as I claim) that the US is metamorphosing into a leaner, environmentally aware, coffee drinking, live/work, shared-space, bicycle riding, low key, urban dweller... who doesn't have a dirt-bike and a boat and a jet ski and all the other trappings that hobbled the baby-boomers and Gen-Xers. Todays buyers don't sense a stigma attached to having little to no belongings, living in an 800 sq ft apartment... they don't give a shit and the machine that used to convince them to buy into the American Dream broke down a few years ago.

What I've described above are not a bunch of listless teenagers who will 'grow-out-of-it'... this isn't a fad. They are changing like this out of necessity. Adapt or die. Job opportunities not looking good for them, so they have to keep it tight. Gas prices high? Public transport or bicycle for you my friend. Where does a house fit into all this again?

If you think I've lost my mind... and you haven't been on a plane in recent memory I advise you to go to Barcelona, London, Paris... any large metropolitan city and see how families live all their lives in tiny apartment. No biggie... we're talking middle class. Notice I didn't mention Asia where EVERYONE lives in a shoebox, and they don't even feel bad about it. Their minds are on other things, so are their values.

So if you own a big house, or just bought a big house... you're a dying breed and the meteor just hit.

132   toothfairy   2011 Mar 21, 11:28am  

Theres no fundamental change other than our standard of living going down.

Its been going on for a while. People who got in early have houses with yards, its a real luxury
now pretty soon the majority of people buying will settle for a condo.
owning or even renting your own house is becoming a luxury that not many people can afford.

133   B.A.C.A.H.   2011 Mar 21, 11:52am  

junkmail says

If it is true (as I claim) that the US is metamorphosing into a leaner, environmentally aware, coffee drinking, live/work, shared-space, bicycle riding, low key, urban dweller… who doesn’t have a dirt-bike and a boat and a jet ski and all the other trappings that hobbled the baby-boomers and Gen-Xers. Todays buyers don’t sense a stigma attached to having little to no belongings, living in an 800 sq ft apartment…

I agree that there ought not to be any stigma about where we live. But the other part, there is a whole lot of the USA between The Left Coast and NYC/DC. I don't think so many of those folks are ready for the metamorphosis we're observing in the Cool and Hip Coastal areas. If anything, as their standard of living declines in proportion to their dependence on gasoline for their Red State lives, they will get angry and start to look for scapegoats. Like us.

134   klarek   2011 Mar 21, 11:04pm  

schmitz_kris says

Just out a few minutes ago:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20110321/ts_nm/us_usa_economy_housing
Housing/real estate IS TANKING - prices are at 9 YEAR LOWS, WHICH ARE BRAND-NEW LOWS BY THE WAY, and sales of existing homes are just plain collapsing / in the gutter.

But the bulls have said that prices were UP! Er, or was that flat? Both apparently.

135   thomas.wong1986   2011 Mar 21, 11:18pm  

klarek says

schmitz_kris says


Just out a few minutes ago:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20110321/ts_nm/us_usa_economy_housing
Housing/real estate IS TANKING - prices are at 9 YEAR LOWS, WHICH ARE BRAND-NEW LOWS BY THE WAY, and sales of existing homes are just plain collapsing / in the gutter.

But the bulls have said that prices were UP! Er, or was that flat? Both apparently.

OK 9 years ago...All that is left is the correction for prices doubling between 1998-2000.

136   klarek   2011 Mar 21, 11:48pm  

thomas.wong1986 says

OK 9 years ago…All that is left is the correction for prices doubling between 1998-2000.

Don't think they doubled in that time period in any market.

137   zzyzzx   2011 Mar 22, 1:08am  

Tude says

Vain says


I think prices are correct in my area.
Let’s look at a typical lower end home in San Francisco.
You should be able to get one for $450k or so in the south eastern neighborhoods.
Put 20% down ($90k). You will need a loan of $360k. The mortgage for that is around $1800/month. Income requirement for a safe mortgage is $5400/month, or $65k/year. That’s couple earning $32500/year. San Francisco minimum wage is nearly $10/hour. A couple earning minimum wage has a household income of $41k. If prices go any lower, you will soon be competing with minimum wage earners. Do you guys realistically think market conditions will allow minimum wage earners to be able to afford a home?

Your fuzzy math is what got us into this problem in the first place. You act as if taxes don’t exist!

I really don't see very many minimum wage earners having 90K laying around to put down as a down payment either.

138   American in Japan   2011 Mar 22, 4:16am  

I don't know if Gary Shilling is very accurate in past predictions, but here are his claims for what they are worth...
Who knows much about this guy? He claims another 20% drop nationally in housing will be coming.

http://finance.yahoo.com/tech-ticker/gary-shillings-5-things-to-worry-about-yftt_536059.html

139   American in Japan   2011 Mar 22, 4:18am  

About housing in Japan-- as far as I know, home mortgages are very "recourse". One more reason why a few of the people underwater just commit suicide.

140   chip_designer   2011 Mar 22, 8:16am  

junkmail says

Public transport or bicycle for you my friend. Where does a house fit into all this again?

If you think I’ve lost my mind… and you haven’t been on a plane in recent memory I advise you to go to Barcelona, London, Paris… any large metropolitan city and see how families live all their lives in tiny apartment. No biggie…

Interesting looking ahead.
But there is enough land in USA. USA is a big open space, house with driveways, wide streets, big cars, big american ego. History repeats itself, it is human nature. And Americans have short memory. Without efficient public transport such as found in Europe/Asia, cannot compare with them. When will we see shinkansen corridor SF LA Boston NY or even a bart extension to san jose? The fact of the matter is nobody knows what the future lies ahead.

141   FunTime   2011 Mar 22, 8:59am  

I've been really surprised not to see more information about ARM terms during the last year. Since the peak of the housing market is generally agreed to be April 2006, this April marks five years since the peak. ARMs generally come in three and five year terms. A very large percentage of mortgages taken in California were necessarily ARMS due to the incredible differences between sales prices and income. This was often reported during the bubble.

So have they all been refinanced? Considering the dollar amounts involved according to articles in all the major newspapers(WSJ, NYT, WashPost), I'd expect more attention to the April milestone.

If a big number of those ARMs are in place, I expect some of the largest price adjustments in California to occur.

142   FunTime   2011 Mar 22, 9:37am  

uni6jon2 says

So have they all been refinanced? Considering the dollar amounts involved according to articles in all the major newspapers(WSJ, NYT, WashPost), I’d expect more attention to the April milestone.

So here's part of the answer. Interest rates have stayed low and the indexes to which the ARMs are tied stayed low. So no large defaults. Seems the interest rates must go up as prices fall, so loan agents balance their returns.

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/realestate/2014325127_realarms27.html

143   thomas.wong1986   2011 Mar 22, 10:10am  

Zlxr says

And Thomas - what about the tripling of house prices between 1975 and 1985?

More like doubled from what saw I from 1998-2000 due to easy lotto winning from stock options/tech bubble.

I would say from 1980 - 1989 there was good reason why prices went up. The birth and expansion of local tech companies. Boom in industries led to boom in hiring and incomes with near zero global competition. We are talking about not only professional salary jobs but also hourly wage earners. So it effected all income brackets. We had plants working 3 shifts daily 6-7 days a week. Yes we had that here in Silicon Valley. Yes that maid/janitor would have made more if they worked in tech mfg and many did.

Overall back in the '80s we didnt see the tech stock and than housing speculation as we seen 1998 to present. It was more reasonable era back than.

144   thomas.wong1986   2011 Mar 22, 10:20am  

klarek says

thomas.wong1986 says


OK 9 years ago…All that is left is the correction for prices doubling between 1998-2000.

Don’t think they doubled in that time period in any market.

Like dunken sailors, some who cashed out their stock options could and did pay any amount.
Plenty of uncashed stock options left, so lets party. Except the party ended back in Q1 of 2000.

It was very common to hear.. "its free money anyway, i never really earned it".

145   klarek   2011 Mar 22, 11:22pm  

vain says

Put 20% down ($90k). You will need a loan of $360k. The mortgage for that is around $1800/month. Income requirement for a safe mortgage is $5400/month, or $65k/year.

Somebody is having nostalgia from the housing bubble, where people could magically afford a house 5.5 times their annual salary. And your assumption that someone at that income level would typically have $90k saved up is outrageous.

edit: that is an old post, I know, but the outlandish math being used to justify SF prices shows just how desperate people are to make themselves believe that it's anywhere near sustainable.

146   bubblesitter   2011 Mar 23, 4:13am  

klarek says

vain says

Put 20% down ($90k). You will need a loan of $360k. The mortgage for that is around $1800/month. Income requirement for a safe mortgage is $5400/month, or $65k/year.

Somebody is having nostalgia from the housing bubble, where people could magically afford a house 5.5 times their annual salary. And your assumption that someone at that income level would typically have $90k saved up is outrageous.
edit: that is an old post, I know, but the outlandish math being used to justify SF prices shows just how desperate people are to make themselves believe that it’s anywhere near sustainable.

Few top reasons why home prices will not go up any time soon:

1) UE rare. Lack of abundant high paying jobs.
2) Zero chance of using HELOC to cover the not affordable mortgage in first place.
3) No more loans without that hefty 20% down payment, certainly not for the 20% of the current home prices.

147   klarek   2011 Mar 23, 4:54am  

SF ace says

A actually know someone recently, just got the keys, 20% with a 360K or so loan. It’s a little house on silver (800+ square feet with potential to spend 20K and add 400 Sq Ft) terrace. Small family with combined income around 90K and passed the underwriting test. Saved over 100K over tens years, 75% of it came from the stock market.

Saving $100k != Saving $25k + profiting $75k from stocks.

I was talking about people making $65k, not $90k, and the ability to pay a mortgage at 5.5 times their annual salary.

Thank you for the anecdotal story though. Hope your friends don't notice when their investment money goes up in smoke.

148   klarek   2011 Mar 23, 5:16am  

SF ace says

I agree, 65K is not doable normally.
But, if they made 65K, they are mostly likely looking at below market purchase program. (around 25% of market price) There must be about 10K of such units.
You see a major tower going up with 1.5M dollar penthhouse. Well, 15% is set aside for mandatory Below Market Program. In a housing project of 300 units, 45 will get in at 65K salary with the help of the city.

Follow the conversation back to vain's point.

149   thomas.wong1986   2011 Mar 23, 7:55am  

klarek says

edit: that is an old post, I know, but the outlandish math being used to justify SF prices shows just how desperate people are to make themselves believe that it’s anywhere near sustainable.

It has amazed many how twisted the thinking/justification over RE prices has become over the past 10 years.

150   thomas.wong1986   2011 Mar 24, 4:14am  

gameisrigged says

Are you for real? This is a joke, right? I mean, it’s hard to believe anybody is really that stupid.

Delusional, more like it.

151   bubblesitter   2011 Mar 24, 5:08am  

thomas.wong1986 says

gameisrigged says

Are you for real? This is a joke, right? I mean, it’s hard to believe anybody is really that stupid.

Delusional, more like it.

or simply childish argument as he made to the redfin home sold price chart I presented to him, " not enough sales data to gauge the price decline since 2009" - ghost bottom.

152   Shawn   2011 Mar 24, 7:18am  

There's a lot of debate in this thread as to how bubble should look on a chart, and I'm not really sure why. It's as though you're expecting to figure out where prices are going to go next year as soon as you can solve the puzzle on the chart and mark the 'X' at the bottom. It just doesn't work that way. It's true that market movements have certain tendencies and that over time patterns emerge. But you can't expect those patterns to generate predictions with any timing or accuracy. There are no 10/3 year rules, and there is no guarantee of symmetry in the markets. The best you can do read the picture price movement is painting and combine that with the fundamental information on hand.
Is the collapse over? I don't think so. The big panic has passed us, but the repercussions of the bubble haven’t worked their way out of the market. There is a massive amount of shadow inventory out there, and this is in no way a normal market. And there are still a lot of people in various types of option arm loans that are not going to be able to pay their mortgages when the payments reset, a lot of those houses will soon join that inventory. As these houses are leaked into the market how is that going to affect the charts? I don’t know, I don’t think anyone can. It’s not happening in a normal way, the gov’t and FED are pumping money into banks so that the banks can keep toxic assets on their balance sheets and still pretend they have reserves to lend against. And to keep their balance sheets up banks are being slow to reclaim nonperforming loans, thanks to recent laws they don’t have to claim the losses until the houses have been foreclosed on.
And even if you want to say that “the collapse is over” and technically we are done with the bubble cycle, where does that leave us? Look at the fundamentals. Wages are down, unemployment is up. Inventory is high, demand is down. There are no logical reasons to be optimistic about the housing market anytime soon, especially here in California.
In fact, here in California is where I’m most concerned. Prices in San Diego are still close to 160% of their 2000 price, according to the latest Case Shiller data. I look at the houses on the market and I just don’t like what, and with the fundamentals where they are right now it just looks insane. I can't imagine these prices holding over the next few years.

153   tatupu70   2011 Mar 24, 7:22am  

klarek says

All recent news is pointing exactly opposite of what you’re saying. Tanking prices, tanking sales, dogshit market, etc.

I guess to you everything is negative. If you find a $20 bill on the ground, that's bad because it should have been a $100 bill...

The last couple clear capital reports posted on various threads here have been very careful to say that there is evidence that the market appears to be turning around. That the data is older so it doesn't show it, but recent evidence shows the market strengthening. Not sure if it will turn out to be true, but there is certainly news out there that says the opposite of what you say.

154   joshuatrio   2011 Mar 24, 7:59am  

tatupu70 says

I guess to you everything is negative. If you find a $20 bill on the ground, that’s bad because it should have been a $100 bill…

Tatupu - the ship is sinking.

The more time that passes, the bulls look more and more desperate. We've broken 2009 lows (yes, even for concord) and it's headed lower.

The only reason we had a headfake in RE is because of the tax credit. Too many are in denial that the tax credit pumped up prices, but the verdict is in.

155   gameisrigged   2011 Mar 24, 8:11am  

O.K., fair enough.

156   tatupu70   2011 Mar 24, 9:08am  

joshuatrio says

tatupu70 says


I guess to you everything is negative. If you find a $20 bill on the ground, that’s bad because it should have been a $100 bill…

Tatupu - the ship is sinking.
The more time that passes, the bulls look more and more desperate. We’ve broken 2009 lows (yes, even for concord) and it’s headed lower.
The only reason we had a headfake in RE is because of the tax credit. Too many are in denial that the tax credit pumped up prices, but the verdict is in.

We shall see. You bears have a pretty solid record of gloating long before the verdict is in.

You might be right, but it's way too early to call it. Get back to me in July...

157   terriDeaner   2011 Mar 24, 2:46pm  

sybrib says

I agree that there ought not to be any stigma about where we live. But the other part, there is a whole lot of the USA between The Left Coast and NYC/DC. I don’t think so many of those folks are ready for the metamorphosis we’re observing in the Cool and Hip Coastal areas. If anything, as their standard of living declines in proportion to their dependence on gasoline for their Red State lives, they will get angry and start to look for scapegoats. Like us.

Agreed. Although somewhat thinly spread, there are a lot of people (and registered voters) in between the coasts. And neither Wall Street or Silicon Valley is generating jobs, wealth or stability for them.

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