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If the housing bubble began in 1998...


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2011 May 8, 11:35am   3,824 views  26 comments

by LAO   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

Most charts i look at show the housing bubble starting in 1998... So most assume we will hit or dip just below 1998 home prices before we bottom.... Im starting to believe you need to also take into account interest rates in 1998 along with adding a 1-2% increase in value from 1998 prices to 2011 prices.

So take a $300k home in 1998 at 7% interest rates... The monthly mortgage would just under $1600 a month. Say in 2011 the home is back on the market for $400k at 4.75% rate the monthly mortgage is around $1670... $100k more house for $80-90 more a month.

Some will say to wait for that home to drop back to 1998 affordability... When on a monthly basis the mortgage is basically already there. If u take into account a mere 1% increase per year in that 1998 prices over 13 years.... By 2011 that home by the most conservative standard should have gained in value of $3000 a year or $39k from 1998-2011... So u should safely be able to assume that 1998 home has a floor price of $339k in 2011. All this taken into account with monthly affordability should mean $400k in 2011 for a home priced at $300k in 1998 appears to be pretty fair.

#housing

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1   thomas.wong1986   2011 May 8, 1:13pm  

In the case of SFBA 98 prices plus rate of inflation. Robert Shiller pretty much covered this in his studies of housing markets. Therefore what cost 300K in 1998 would be 400K in end of 2011.

Los Angeles Renter says

Im starting to believe you need to also take into account interest rates in 1998 along with adding a 1-2% increase in value from 1998 prices to 2011 prices.

Then prices would have not fallen. Clearly many were wrong about lower interest rates and home prices. But even lower rates dont make a crusty house worth a million.
If your payment is lower today vs 1998 due to int% rates, that saving should be put into your pocket for the future, and not in the sellers pockets.

2   klarek   2011 May 8, 11:06pm  

Los Angeles Renter says

Most charts i look at show the housing bubble starting in 1998… So most assume we will hit or dip just below 1998 home prices before we bottom….

That's not how I see it. Assuming normal appreciation and assuming a nominal household GDP increase of 25%-35% since that time, I would expect (all things being equal) that houses would be worth roughly that much more. Again, that's all else being equal and doesn't take into account excess inventories from the construction boom, low interest rates, retiring boomers, etc.

3   FNWGMOBDVZXDNW   2011 May 8, 11:24pm  

When I tried valuing houses, I started with 1998 and drew two lines, one for 3% inflation and one for 5% inflation. The CPI line is very close to 3% over that time period. Most townhouses in the area that I was looking had fallen to below the 5% line but were close to it. This was a good 15 to 20% above the 3% line, which I was hoping for. Local wage increases/decreases from 1998 to now for the type of people buying at that price point would be another good thing to use for valuation.
I do think that the low interest rates are stimulating demand, and think that is the reason that prices have not yet fallen closer to the 1998 + 3% line. However, it seems that a lot of people trying to buy at this price point are getting turned down for financing. So, looking forward, if borrowing costs rise dramatically or availability of loans decreases, I would guess that there would be a 15% or so drop here.

4   klarek   2011 May 8, 11:35pm  

YesYNot says

Local wage increases/decreases from 1998 to now for the type of people buying at that price point would be another good thing to use for valuation.

I try to base the fundamental appreciation on local incomes, at least as much as possible. City-data.com has some good stats, but usually the details are hidden in local county/municipality web sites.

5   FortWayne   2011 May 9, 1:28am  

Los Angeles Renter says

So take a $300k home in 1998 at 7% interest rates… The monthly mortgage would just under $1600 a month. Say in 2011 the home is back on the market for $400k at 4.75% rate the monthly mortgage is around $1670… $100k more house for $80-90 more a month.

Huge glaring problem with this part is that buying at low interest rates is a double whammy. Once interest rates go up a buyer is upside down and cannot refinance. While buying during high interest rates you get more of a tax deduction and later refinance making it even better.

Of course some areas are still heavily ballooned, mainly in CA and NY is what I hear.

6   LAO   2011 May 9, 1:56am  

ChrisLA says

Huge glaring problem with this part is that buying at low interest rates is a double whammy. Once interest rates go up a buyer is upside down and cannot refinance. While buying during high interest rates you get more of a tax deduction and later refinance making it even better.
Of course some areas are still heavily ballooned, mainly in CA and NY is what I hear.

Not if u have an FHA loan.. FHA loans are assumable and in 5 years they can sell their house along with that 4.75% interest rate to the next buyer. What is kinda messed up is those buying with 20% down traditional loans today, may have less "marketable" homes in 5-10 years than all the 3.5% down FHA buyers. Assuming interest rates are at 10% in 5 years... Im betting you will see alot of FHA loans on the market advertising their "assumability" as a big selling feature. Pay half the monthly mortgage of your neighbor.. Assume my low interest loan!

7   tatupu70   2011 May 9, 2:19am  

ChrisLA says

Once interest rates go up a buyer is upside down and cannot refinance

Why would you ever refinance when interest rates go up??? You are hoping to increase your payment?

8   klarek   2011 May 9, 2:44am  

tatupu70 says

ChrisLA says

Once interest rates go up a buyer is upside down and cannot refinance

Why would you ever refinance when interest rates go up??? You are hoping to increase your payment?

Your payment is increasing if you have an ARM, in which case, you're totally fucked. I'd rather buy a $300k house at 8% than a $400k house at 5% which will fall in value to $300k.

9   vain   2011 May 9, 3:02am  

klarek says

Your payment is increasing if you have an ARM, in which case, you’re totally fucked. I’d rather buy a $300k house at 8% than a $400k house at 5% which will fall in value to $300k.

But if interest rates stay low as long as Japan's has, then you will have all waited in vain.

10   LAO   2011 May 9, 3:03am  

klarek says

Your payment is increasing if you have an ARM

I haven't heard of a single sane person getting an ARM loan in the last 3 years.... Banks still offer them.. sure... But it's pretty risky. Still, historically... Interest rates have never risen more than 1% in a single year... So for interest rates to get really out of hand... It would take 5 years minimum to be approaching 10% interest rates.

I'm starting to believe the low interest rate trend may be a permanent trend in our society. At least until our society creates some sort of energy breakthrough and starts growing GDP by leaps and bounds.

I think it's years away... But i find it very promising the idea of solar power in the U.S. deserts eventually powering the entire west coast. If we could ever get the proper technological breakthroughs to make solar power viable and less costly... Clean energy could be the next industrial revolution of our time... Which would eventually drive home prices and our economy to prosperity again.

11   klarek   2011 May 9, 3:06am  

Los Angeles Renter says

I haven’t heard of a single sane person getting an ARM loan in the last 3 years…

My mortgage broker was trying to push one on me a few weeks ago. Trust me, they are still making them.

12   tatupu70   2011 May 9, 3:15am  

klarek says

Your payment is increasing if you have an ARM, in which case, you’re totally fucked. I’d rather buy a $300k house at 8% than a $400k house at 5% which will fall in value to $300k.

Of course. But historically, houses haven't fallen 25% when interest rates rise 3% so it's not really a true choice..

13   toothfairy   2011 May 9, 3:32am  

I have a hard time using that as a general rule since it doesn't take into account supply and demand. which is what ultimately determines prices.
Using some year plus inflation tells me that a house in San Jose should be the same price as a house in Detroit.

if you use something like price/rent ratios in area like Detroit where industry has dried up. rents go down along with prices. Possibly far below 1998 plus inflation. Looking at that alone doesn't tell me if it's a good price.

14   klarek   2011 May 9, 3:32am  

tatupu70 says

Of course. But historically, houses haven’t fallen 25% when interest rates rise 3% so it’s not really a true choice..

Leveraged demand will decrease by that amount. Sure it won't impact things like cash-only purchases, but in a purely leveraged and flexible market, that's where prices would go.

15   tatupu70   2011 May 9, 3:46am  

klarek says

tatupu70 says


Of course. But historically, houses haven’t fallen 25% when interest rates rise 3% so it’s not really a true choice..

Leveraged demand will decrease by that amount. Sure it won’t impact things like cash-only purchases, but in a purely leveraged and flexible market, that’s where prices would go.

History proves otherwise. I'm sure you understand why that is--interest rates don't rise in a vacuum. Other factors affect home prices more than interest rates, and they affect them in the opposite direction.

16   tts   2011 May 9, 12:08pm  

vain says

But if interest rates stay low as long as Japan’s has, then you will have all waited in vain.

The gov. can't keep rates that low for that long. They're already talking up raising them a bit to defend the dollar. Only reason Japan was able to pull it off was because they conned most of their citizens into buying up the debt for retirement purposes (so very little is foreign held) and their economy is heavily export based.

Their economy has also never recovered either BTW. You don't want the US to be like Japan.

17   tts   2011 May 9, 12:20pm  

Los Angeles Renter says

I’m starting to believe the low interest rate trend may be a permanent trend in our society. At least until our society creates some sort of energy breakthrough and starts growing GDP by leaps and bounds.

Inflation can occur for reasons other than wage and economic growth, for instance if your gov. heavily deficit spends while printing trillions of cash... Also recent history (ie. 1980's) has shown that rates can rise very high indeed in a modern and powerful economy like the US.

Los Angeles Renter says

I think it’s years away… But i find it very promising the idea of solar power in the U.S. deserts eventually powering the entire west coast. If we could ever get the proper technological breakthroughs to make solar power viable and less costly… Clean energy could be the next industrial revolution of our time… Which would eventually drive home prices and our economy to prosperity again.

You mean decades away if ever right? Short of getting cheap mass produced super conductors working AND fixing the load balancing issues of solar you will never see mass solar fields in the deserts like you're describing. They're like barely in the super expensive lab toy phase of developing that stuff and even the guys working on it aren't very optimistic about getting ANYTHING working at all much less something that is cheap and mass producible. They're estimating 50 years or more at this point before they can even being to pull it off.

18   thomas.wong1986   2011 May 9, 12:24pm  

tts says

Their economy has also never recovered either BTW

Sure would be nice we had most of THEIR export market, auto/truck, heavy equipment, high tech, electronics, shipping, and much much more. As FU'ed their economy may seem to you, they still manage to dominate all global markets. Have any of these industies even skipped a beat. It may not seem like it, but they pretty much wiped us out US mfg/producers in major global industries and markets. How many Honda, Toyota, Yamaha, Toshiba, etc etc.. do we see... not bad!
And they have as much US debt as the Chinese.

19   Future Cash Buyer   2011 May 9, 12:38pm  

thomas.wong1986 says

tts says

Their economy has also never recovered either BTW

Sure would be nice we had most of THEIR export market, auto/truck, heavy equipment, high tech, electronics, shipping, and much much more. As FU’ed their economy may seem to you, they still manage to dominate all global markets. Have any of these industies even skipped a beat. It may not seem like it, but they pretty much wiped us out US mfg/producers in major global industries and markets. How many Honda, Toyota, Yamaha, Toshiba, etc etc.. do we see… not bad!

And they have as much US debt as the Chinese.

Apple, Facebook and Google >> Japan

20   tts   2011 May 9, 12:50pm  

thomas.wong1986 says

tts says

Their economy has also never recovered either BTW

Sure would be nice we had most of THEIR export market

Their export market without the depression would be nice but won't happen. You could shit can all unions and cut all workers wages in half in the US and we still wouldn't be competitive on labor costs with China.

21   thomas.wong1986   2011 May 9, 1:04pm  

Future Cash Buyer says

Apple, Facebook and Google >> Japan

You going to compare all these dinky advertising/media companies to all the massive goods and products controlled by Japanese industries. Most of the components/parts that go into IPods are from Japanese companies anyway. Open an Apple product one day.. read whats on the chip and storage device.

The world business doesnt run on advertisng and ipods... LOL!

We are really FU'ed when people think like this.

22   thomas.wong1986   2011 May 9, 1:11pm  

tts says

You could shit can all unions and cut all workers wages in half in the US and we still wouldn’t be competitive on labor costs with China.

Cause no one wants to do it. No back bone. I think there is plenty of talent in the US and plenty of people who would be more than willing.

23   tts   2011 May 9, 2:35pm  

thomas.wong1986 says

tts says

You could shit can all unions and cut all workers wages in half in the US and we still wouldn’t be competitive on labor costs with China.

Cause no one wants to do it. No back bone. I think there is plenty of talent in the US and plenty of people who would be more than willing.

They could have all the talent and will in the world and it wouldn't matter if it doesn't make financial sense, which it won't. BTW even if you did succeed in bringing in lots of manufacturing back to the US by cutting wages in half you'd just end up ruining the standard of living for the country, which is counter productive to say the very least. We need more middle class blue collar jobs. Not heaps of shitty minimum wage at best jobs, which BTW is what most Chinese effectively have.

24   LAO   2011 May 9, 3:37pm  

thomas.wong1986 says

You going to compare all these dinky advertising/media companies to all the massive goods and products controlled by Japanese industries. Most of the components/parts that go into IPods are from Japanese companies anyway. Open an Apple product one day.. read whats on the chip and storage device.
The world business doesnt run on advertisng and ipods… LOL!

Who cares if the guts of apple products are made overseas... Those memory chip profit margins and touchscreen profit margins are TINY... Apple is all about the power of the brand and marketing and most of all Design....America still has the market cornered on creativity. Id take Apples profit margins over its chip supplier anyday!

Would you invest in the frying oil company that supplies McDonalds french fry grease? Or McDonalds the brand!?

25   tts   2011 May 9, 4:57pm  

Dude what are you talking about? Most design is being done over seas too these days, not just in the electronics but cosmetically too. Whatever edge the US had in these areas is tenuous or rapidly slipping these days. Looking at what sort of students the colleges are churning out (finance and statistic oriented rather than engineering and R&D) and the eagerness of our industries in outsourcing everything they can to save a penny somewhere and there no reason at all to be optimistic about even the possibility of the US maintaining a lead or even tie in these fields.

I'd rather invest in the guys who supply McD with cooking oil and chicken than McD themselves since the cost of commodities is still trending up while McD will be stuck trying to sell to a population with less and less to spend on fast food. Further shrinking profits.

26   david1   2011 May 10, 5:00am  

on the ARM vs. fixed debate....it depends on the spread...frankly, the spread was about 2% for me since I got a discount on the ARM product...so a 5/1 at 2.75 with a max of 7.75 (not until year 10) seemed less risky to me than fixed at 4.75....

I plan on playing what the 4.75 payment would have been....even assuming worst case scenario of 3.75 in year 6, 4.75 in year 7, 5.75 in year 8, 6.75 in year nine and 7.75 in years 10-30 my P&I will never be higher than what fixed would have been (due to faster retirement of principal) plus it is paid off more than a few years early.

Higher interest rates are priced into the market in these fixed products...that's what people don't understand...most everyone expects interest rates to rise....if my ARM was fully indexed right now it would be 1.75%....so I'm taking a gamble that on the average, over the next 30 years, interest rates will be somewhere less than 3% (or nearly triple) higher than they are now. Maybe I am right, and maybe I am wrong...but if I hedge my bet by paying principal down quicker...then I don't lose at all...and have the potential to retire the debt very early.

If fixed vs. ARM was a closer spread...then its a debate, risk vs. reward. YMMV.

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