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What Now?258


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2006 Jul 3, 8:01am   27,348 views  202 comments

by SQT15   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

If there's one thing Patrick.net readers seem to agree on, is the current level of discontent. Threads seldom seem to stay on housing anymore while politics and religion become staple topics.

So what now? Have we reached a general level of irritability that we may not recover from? Or are we just bored?

If you think we can find our way back to housing, what topics have we missed?

Ideas anyone?

#housing

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1   astrid   2006 Jul 3, 9:27am  

I really don't mind straying from exclusively housing related topics. To me, the housing bubble is already established and there's tons of better formatted information about it elsewhere. I come here for discussions about the economic repercussions of the bubble burst, economic survival strategies, and the interesting discussions on whatever.

What drew me to this site are the active participation of some very sharp and interesting people. I'm afraid the collegial atmosphere that existed for the last year or so may be coming to an end, regardless of what we do. The chemistry of what makes a website great is pretty fragile, and it's particularly difficult to maintain without constant supervision. I've seen it happen to Washington Monthly's blog. It was really great for the first 6 months, but then more and more troll went to it and now I hardly ever read it, and I never bother to read the comments.

If this site goes further downhill, I'll probably spend more time participating in Randy H and Brad Delong's websites.

2   astrid   2006 Jul 3, 9:34am  

As for buying real estate. I don't even think about buying for the next 5 to 10 years. Renting is not only cheaper, but more economically efficient and has a more economically transparent structure. If I rent, I sign a lease and I know that's how much my rent will be for the remainder of the lease and I know how much it'll cost to break the lease.

That's the sort of flexibility and certainty I'll need to survive the hard economic adjustments I see ahead of us. The next 10 years will be very punishing for any family or individual who is trapped in a high cost and inflexible lifestyle.

3   astrid   2006 Jul 3, 10:12am  

doodler,

I agree with you, but $100K bought a lot more than $700K today. Furthermore, the problems of buying 25 years ago was centered on high interest rates, which then proceeded to go down. The prices themselves weren't all that high and taking a percentage loss on the principal is easier.

4   Michael Holliday   2006 Jul 3, 10:35am  

I'm burnt on this housing insanity.

I'm confident that what goes up must come down.
The salaries and jobs just aren't there to sustain this
kind of BA insanity.

Just when you think prices will stay high forever, just when you're about
to collapse from exhaustion and disbelief...the wave will crash...
BLAM!

It's pure economic physics.

And don't this new market paradigm sh-t. There ain't nothin' new under the sun. A San Jose sh-tbox is all it will ever be. Just that: an SJSB.

5   astrid   2006 Jul 3, 10:38am  

"there was panic over getting “in” before rates got even higher!!"

I though buyers had adjustable rate mortgages during that time period.

Lower principals and higher nominal interest rates are very important. Even if they stayed the same, wages would go up. Thus, the mortgage payment and taxes would go down in real terms five or ten years onward. The lower principal means, as I've already mentioned, that selling for a percentage loss is not nearly as huge of a cost as it is nowadays.

6   Joe Schmoe   2006 Jul 3, 10:42am  

Agree that a lot of the irratability is due to our dawning realization that the crash will take a long time.

The market has pretty much been flat for a whole year now. Declines are just around the corner, but MEANINGFUL declines appear to be quite a ways away. I don't know about you, but a 5-10% reduction isn't exactly going to make me run out and start placing bids.

Some of us don't want to wait another 5-10 years just to get a middle class house. The pace of our lives may not coincide with the pace of the market. I know that my eldest will be ready for school in two years, and I want to be out of this apartment by then.

That is what is making me grumpy, anyway. But it's a good thing, too. I have to make decisions instead of simply sitting and waiting for the market to change. It feels good to make a decision and take action. For example, I will be getting my Texas professional license in September. I am excited about looking for a job there. TX will have its share of drawbacks I'm sure, but I am CERTAIN that I can afford a decent house there. Right now, today. And as I begin to make preparations, the day when we will own a house seems to draw closer. That feels good.

7   astrid   2006 Jul 3, 11:04am  

Joe Schmoe,

Can you get a decent long term rental in LA at a reasonable price? I know you're concerned about being close to your parents-in-law so maybe a compromise short term solution would make more sense than a move to Texas. If housing is your primary concern with living in California, then I'd urge you to consider staying. Renting is not so bad and lots of kids grow up just fine in apartments and lots of kids in upscale subdivisions get into trouble. Parenting and the right school will matter more.

I'm not pointing this comment towards you, but I do think too many young people here are too eager to buy. Being stuck underwater on an expensive house is a terrible drain on one's life. Renting nowadays doesn't involve sharing walls or living in a bad neighborhood. Overall, I don't understand the need to "own" rather than to rent.

8   ric   2006 Jul 3, 11:21am  

I've read this blog for a long time, and once in a while, contributed, and once in a while, asked for advice. Given the rather pessimistic tone lately, I would like to say this.

My brother recently moved from Long Island NY to SAC. The process started in the fall of last year. He wanted to buy a house, so bad. He wanted so bad to set up security for a new family. I told him no no no. I told him why, I told him it's gonna suck for the next few years. I asked for advice on this blog.

SQT gave me great advice on where to live, which I passed on. He's got plenty of $. Not an issue at all. Anyway, he now rents somewhere in Rocklin (I think). He just got married. The wedding was last weekend. He moved his wife and 3 kids age 6 to 10 there from LI. He's got a nice place, with a pool, that will do for the time being. He pays less than half what he would to buy. He is really amazed at how different it is, and how constrained LI was, and how much opportunity there is for the kids in SAC.

He's happy, his wife is happy although it sucked leaving her friends and extended family, but she did it, and he did it, because they love each other. The kids have NO idea, they don't care, they just love them both.
They have a nice place, a nice home. Everyone's really happy, starting out on a new adventure.

My point is this... A "purchased" house is not a home, it is the people in it, the relationships, the pursuit of happiness, that makes life. It is decidedly NOT a mortgage, or "asset appreciation", or anything else.

Be happy, keep smiling. Rent or own, it has no, and I mean NO, consequence. Both renting and owning have given me happiness. By no means, are they, will they be, or should they be, the the driving force.

In conclusion, thanks to all the regular contributors, the bloggers

And particurly to SQT. You made a difference.

RIC

9   OO   2006 Jul 3, 11:33am  

Guys,

the first tranche of meaningful scale of ARM reset begins in May/June this year. Have a bit more patience please, the biggest reset will begin mid 2008 - 2009. From what I see, banks are still giving out toxic ARM/I/O/neg-am loans left and right manufacturing NEOs as we speak. So the decline will be meaningful by year end.

Most people on this site are not targeting the beginner homes, so you need to wait out a bit. The multi-million trophy home aside, all homebuyers rely on the lower strata to cash out on their current homes to move up, if the beginner homebuyers bail out, the mid to higher end homebuyers will definitely feel the pain, just a bit later. There aren't that many people with more than $300K DP and $300K household income to put down on a 1.2M home and haven't bought yet.

You have to at least wait out till 2007/2008 to cast your verdict because the reset of this period will affect the homebuyers who jumped in at the top in 2004/2005, pretty much the most marginal buyers you can find, and they account for 65% of the purchase in 2004/2005. They are already upside down as we speak. Now we are just waiting for them to turn over the keys, which won't take long, because such homebuyers typically have little financial resources to last, if they did, they would have bought much earlier in 2002 or 2003.

Give it another 6 months, 2006 winter will start to become very rewarding for those who waited.

10   OO   2006 Jul 3, 11:41am  

If I were a fresh grad, I'd be thrilled at the supply of so many homes on the market. If you can delay your homesownership urge for about 10 years, you have sooooo many choices.

Seriously, when I was renting back then, I didn't have half the choice. The rental homes in the Bay Area were run-down, downright ugly, dirty, and the landlords didn't care. Never have I seen such a big stock of nicely updated houses / new condos available at less than half of the ownership cost. I'd be nuts not to rent if I had to make the choice today. Trust me, 15 years ago, even if you were willing to pay 200-500 more for a nicer SFH or condo, the options were NOT there. Today, the options are plenty.

I think the younger folks will have a better lifestyle than us if they didn't hurry into buying. Subsidized housing really takes on a new meaning in the Bay Area.

11   ric   2006 Jul 3, 11:55am  

OO,

I agree wholeheatedly. I've rented plenty, good and bad. We found a great house to rent in Boston in 1991. It was like going to an interview; we wanted it so bad. We knew it was gold. We rented it; a really nice house for $1,000 a month, from a guy that moved up in life but no way could get the money he put into the house out of it. We were good tenants, he was a good LL. We lived there for 3 years.

Then we moved, out of MA. To more sane places (yes, this economic bubble and crash shit has happened before)

We could have bought the place for 160K. It sold several times since then. 160K, 220K, 330K, 550K. Just for fun, I track it on domania.com.

I have no, and I mean, no, regrets about not buying that house.

Money, equity, etc is not that important. Really. I mean it.

12   Michael Holliday   2006 Jul 3, 11:56am  

Joe Schmoe Says:

"...I will be getting my Texas professional license in September. I am excited about looking for a job there. TX will have its share of drawbacks I’m sure, but I am CERTAIN that I can afford a decent house there. Right now, today. And as I begin to make preparations, the day when we will own a house seems to draw closer. That feels good."
_____

Hey Schmoe, Nice!

I used to live in Arlington, Texas. It's between Dallas & Ft. Worth.
It has some small rolling hills...very nice!

I liked Arlington. Of course the population went from 100K to, I think, 400K now!

Anyway, Texas was fun as a kid from San Jose. I did a lot of fishing and mini bike riding and thuderstorm watching.

There's a lot going on in the Dallas Ft. Worth area. Big, nice houses, big spreads. Brick homes. Pretty cheap. Go for it. It's hot & humid in the summer and sometimes snows/sleets in the winter, but WTF. Beats living under a bridge in San Jose. At least you'll have some pride etc.

That's the problem with the Bay Area. It's hard to make it through the day with any sense of pride since you're getting fricken' raped every which way you turn.

Go to Texas young man. You'll have some pride of ownership and pride of personal progress.

Just my 2 cents.

13   B.A.C.A.H.   2006 Jul 3, 12:18pm  

Then vs now

I was in college in the South Bay in the early 1980's, when the prime rate was near 20%. Lived in the same neighborhood I have always lived in. Same neighborhood inside of East S.J.

Even though I was a teenager at the time, I was fascinated by the local real estate market. I used to read the classified ads a lot.

What I remember was that the mortgage rates were prohibitively high at the time. It was just about impossible to borrow at those rates, and it made construction go on pause for a few years. I also remember that just about every listing included the terms of the seller's mortgage. This was because at the time, the loans were assumed by the buyer. It was kind of like, taking over the payments. The difference between the mortgage balance and the sales price would be financed at market rates. The terms of the assumable mortgage were detailed right along with the descriptions of the property. I don't remember or maybe never knew who would finance the second mortgage, - if it was the seller or if it was a third party or S&L or whatever.

The consequence was that this made some liquidity in the market, and the amount borrowed at those extreme rates was a relatively smaller amount.

It's funny, whenever I read stuff in the popular media about real estate trends and what happened in the Volker years, I don't ever find any mention of the mortgage assumptions.

14   ric   2006 Jul 3, 12:33pm  

Joe Schmoe,

My advice, having done this. Expand your horizons and remain flexible, particularly at first. But if you like TX, go for it.

When we moved from Boston in '94 (I was 33 at the time), the biggest thing was COL escape. We targeted small or second tier cities close to big metro areas, with reasonable weather (preferably not COLD). We were both "east of Mississippi river" people with family in NY and DC. We targeted Charlotte, Richmond VA, and Pittsburgh PA. Mr. Gore's now ubiquitous innernet being virtually non-existent, I subscribed to Sunday newspapers and had them sent to Boston. As my handle suggests, I found a job in Richmond.

We rented for the first six months - mind you this was at the bottom of the last cycle - but Richmond is not exactly bubble territory - bubble yes (as is the world), extreme bubble no.

We bought a 4 br POS fixer in a nice neighborhood no one else would touch for a pretty good deal and spent a lot of time fixing it up. I learned all about fixing up houses working on my own house, and even turned it into a nice little business when I was done and tired of spending money on my house when I figured I could be making money doing work on other people's houses.

Now I don't do that anymore because it's just not that important to me. But as the cobblers wife has no shoes, my wife does not yet have her pergraniteel. :) But it will come.

Anyway, it's the best move we ever made. I took a huge pay cut, my wife quit working, our income went in half, and we made out like bandits as far as I'm concerned. My daughter was born 3 weeks after the move.

For all who are frustrated..... wait and rent. Your time, like mine at the time, is coming.

RIC

15   OO   2006 Jul 3, 12:34pm  

One thing home buyers need to realize is, only less than 5% of the entire home stock come on market every year. You don't need all the homeowners to go belly up to secure a good deal for yourself, you only need slightly more than 5%, perhaps 5.5 or 6% of them to go upside down in their finance to snap a good deal. Nowadays, with the % of "home ownership" at historical high, which logically implies that the % of potential owneroccupiers at historical low, you probably only need 1-2% of the housing stock to capitulate to make the market crash.

I'd say 50% of the homeowners in the Bay Area are fine, they have enough equity, and a secure enough job. Housing value goes up or down 50%, they are still living in the same home, just paper gain or paper loss, no material impact on life whatsoever, and certain number of them will die in their own homes, it is just a roof over the head.

What we are interested in is the other 50% of the homeowners, or more precisely, the single-digit percent of homeowners who are marginal "owners" that probably shouldn't be given a loan to buy a house to begin with. That's why the waiting game is rewarding, because only a very small number of desperate home "owners" are required to crash the market.

16   B.A.C.A.H.   2006 Jul 3, 12:47pm  

OO's marginal owners

Dear OO,

This is an interesting analysis. What I find surprising is that I am starting to hear "little stories" like the one a reader named SQT shared, about your 50% longtime home owners who have made themselves into marginal owners, in their pursuits of a higher apparent quality of life.

It is even people I know. Now it all makes sense, "how they could afford that".

The wildcard that I cannot put a finger on, and you did not mention in your post, is all of the immigrants wallowing in cash. From elite families in their countries (mainly India and Shanghai, I suppose), even bubble prices seem low to them, in comparison to what they get "back home". For some reason, they all want to live in the Bay Area or LA or Vancouver. Maybe, those rich Asians will bail out the people in SQT's story and bail out my friends too.

17   ric   2006 Jul 3, 12:48pm  

SQT,
One day, I will visit my brother. On that day, I think a blog party is in order!
RIC

18   OO   2006 Jul 3, 12:49pm  

I was out there shopping for a lawn mower yesterday at Home Depot.

Since I haven't been to Home Depot for a long time, I was shocked to find most any item priced above $100 had a monthly cost label next to it. I was looking for a lawn mower costing around $300-500, well, there is a monthly cost label of "ONLY 15 a month!". Then I went through the home appliance area, the refrigerators, stove ovens all have BIG CAP LETTERS of $50 a month, $30 a month hanging on the doors, it took me a while to find out what the overall cash price is!

I await the day when we go to Starbucks to find our latte price quoted by "Only 0.2 a month!"

19   ric   2006 Jul 3, 12:55pm  

OO, my starbucks habit is $2/ work day, so .2 a month would be a most welcome experience.

I think I am developing diar-Leah of the keyboard tonight. :)

20   OO   2006 Jul 3, 1:08pm  

There are rich Asians, just that many of them.

According to Merrill's wealth report, there are about 270K millionaires (defined as those having $1M USD upwards in asset aside from own residence) in China, and about another 120Kin Hong Kong and Taiwan combined. I'd say that is a good start of estimating the number of rich money coming this way. Taking Japan away, the rest of Asia has less than 100K millionaires.

So you have less than 500K millionaires from Asia ex Japan. Japanese buying American homes? Uh, they tried that 15 years ago, and it didn't bode well for their networth. Now you need to realize most of these "millionaires" barely make a 1M mark, if you only have, say, 2M to spare apart from your own residence, how likely will you blow 1M on a home in the US, a country far far away?

Immigration? The entry ticket for legal wealth immigration into the US is about 1M, which doesn't include buying a home. You need to sink in 1M investment to set up a business employing full time employees of a certain number for 5 years.

If you filter the 500K rich Asians through these criteria, there are not that many left to buy an expensive home in the US. Also, although Asians love to park their money in the US, there are many more tax-efficient ways to do than buying a home. Participating in the US stock market is low-cost and tax efficient (no property tax), buying USD bonds and CDs is entirely tax-free for nonresident aliens.

Buying a property in a foreign country is very hard. Will you buy a property in a country where you don't speak the language with no trustworthy relatives and friends? Also, most of these millionaires are businessmen who need operating cashflow to run their own businesses, why would they tie up a big part of their networth on something that doesn't generate immediate value?

Even if they do end up buying in the US, they only buy in certain pockets where there are already many other Asians, Vancouver(West Vancouver, North Vancouver), LA(Arcadia, Palos Verdes), SF(Saratoga, Cupertino), NYC for example. Rich Asians don't know where Sacremanto is, not to mention Fresno, so don't count on them bailing out any FBs in the lesser known areas.

21   B.A.C.A.H.   2006 Jul 3, 1:21pm  

About all the rich Asians

I think you omitted the primary path for legal wealth immigration. It is the foreign student, and also the H-1 visa. Those are the entry tickets. Then, once firmly into an H-1 situation, instant homeowners, from the family money. Over time, the elite family has firmly planted one leg of its dynasty in California. I have seen this pattern repeat time and again.

As you noted, they cling to the cities of the coast. Then, overstretched locals like my friends get bailed out selling to them, then they in turn move inland and bail out overstretched folks in the inland, like the overstretched people in SQT's story. This is one of the ways of repatriating the money we send to Asia via Walmart and other such venues. The elites buying the kids into foreign student and H-1 visas help to make it happen.

22   OO   2006 Jul 3, 1:41pm  

Syrib,

you are assuming that all or most H1 visas are from rich Asian families. That is simply not true. There are some overlaps, but H-1 requirements, as far as I know (and I went through this myself), didn't take into consideration your parents' networth. Whether your parents have money or not is completely a non issue in the H1 qualification issue - unless your parents are rich enough to set up a legitimate business here in the US to employ the kid, but not many people can reach that level of wealth to begin with.

If they are H1 visa holders, they progress no differently from a typical American middle class. Work for a few years, save up enough in DP and get into a home. Whether they are Asian or Middle Eastern, or Mexican, doesn't get into the equation.

The true elite families from Asia don't stay here. The upper middle or middle class have their kids migrate. The true elites need their kids to go back and take over the family businesses.

23   Different Sean   2006 Jul 3, 1:46pm  

doodler says:
mortage rates were closing in on the 20% range. As hard as it is to believe, things have been worse than they are now. Young people were just as worried then for similar reasons as young people are now.

actually, an affordability analysis has shown that people ARE worse off this time 'round -- prices are much higher compared with average incomes compared to the 80s situation, even with the earlier obscene interest rates. besides, interest rates at 18% or what have you couldn't last forever, altho it was enough to send quite a few people to the wall at the time, not surprisingly... can't remember offhand where i've seen the analysis, would need to go digging...

24   Different Sean   2006 Jul 3, 2:39pm  

Glen says:
Any thoughts/anecdotal observations on this?

most fundamentally, i think it's ridiculous from a social policy point of view that your success in a housing career depends upon you choosing your parents wisely. in this case, it means choosing parents who had only 1 or 2 kids, who paid off their house, and, ideally, didn't need or decide to engage in a 'reverse mortgage' in their retirement.

your access to affordable housing now depends on your individual rights of inheritance rather than any social contract.

if we assume that everything will continue to remain 'in the market', then i guess it's possible to anticipate all sorts of patterns of inheritance and maneuvering with concomitant outcomes -- including the possibility that prices will fall of their own accord over time due to waning of irrational exuberance, that the deaths of the 'pig in the python' baby boomers might release a larger pool of housing supply thus bringing prices down, that more building and supply might come on tap, etc. not discounting that state govts might actively start doing something about the situation and bring price fixing out of the market through some intervention.

but you're right, i can get 5.60% in an ING savings account on call instead of investing in 3% return property... altho i don't know what ING are ploughing the money into...

25   astrid   2006 Jul 3, 2:44pm  

DS,

Human society is organized on the production of (reproductively) successful offsprings. It should surprise no one that people leave money to their kids and that the kids plan their lives based on money they get.

Hell, plenty of people plan their lives around the Publisher's Clearinghouse jackpot. It's just how things are.

26   Different Sean   2006 Jul 3, 3:20pm  

Ffperson Says:
SF Cron writer says there is still excess demand…
Is this true?
http://www.sfgate.com/columnists/lloyd/
So despite the good news that the real estate market is softening, the bad news is that there’s an underlying issue that’s going to make housing unaffordable for years to come: California isn’t building enough to meet the demand.

“Our department estimates that in order to keep up with population and job growth, there needs to be 220,000 new housing units constructed every year, and that hasn’t happened since 1989,” Huston told me. “Depending on who you speak to, we have a housing deficit of 1 to 2 million units. And every year we don’t meet our demand, it increases.”

just to address this, no, i don't think it's true. that's implying that there are a million or two million cashed up individuals or families (not penniless illegals) walking around homeless, or some sort of massive pent-up demand for migration into the area from interstate. developers and realtors always carry on like this to try to justify high prices.

what you do have is high rates of speculative investment in rental properties, of the order of 30% of all purchases these days, which translates into 'demand for investment properties' amongst people who still think it's a good idea. i guess this is 'elastic' demand.

what you have in sydney is a net loss of people while the remaining people still try to maintain high prices in their own self-interest -- a net 10 000-odd people LEAVE sydney every year, i.e. more than offset arrivals, mostly in disgust at the high prices, to seek more affordable living elsewhere. and yet the prices remain high, and realtors and the usual greedies want to keep it that way...

27   Different Sean   2006 Jul 3, 3:31pm  

Human society is organized on the production of (reproductively) successful offsprings. It should surprise no one that people leave money to their kids and that the kids plan their lives based on money they get.

yes, it doesn't surprise me, but there are also things like death duties and income taxes which attempt to take it all away and distribute it again. even bill gates' dad is a strong advocate for this in his recent book (and advocating a revision of property laws in general). there is an interaction between the operation of individuals, their families, and the state, which is about maintaining the broader internetworked community in a fair and decent way. extremely affluent individuals depend entirely on all the other people in the community to deliver them their wealth, and are therefore not apart from it.

given that making money seems to be something of a fluke, and isn't the only measure of a 'good' person or the 'good' society, and can even overlook fundamental questions of citizens rights, i tend not to subscribe to social darwinist theories of monetary inheritance and natural selection as some sort of argument, although it is very popular at some level in the public mind. i don't think it withstands analysis though from a networking viewpoint. we only value people who are good at clawing money from others, regardless of the means? and what happens to the ones who had the money clawed from them? robert g allen is good at clawing money from people, but he is a manipulative liar, complete slime and borders on illegal and deceptive conduct -- many of his associates end up doing jail time for their attempts to make money. will his children inherit his sliminess? do we want to reward those kinds of behaviours? etc (and that's just the beginning of a critique)

28   Mike/a.k.a.Sage   2006 Jul 3, 3:37pm  

When do you you think the fed will mandate, not suggest, tighter lending standards, due to the acceleration of foreclosures? My guess is after the November elections. This will be the beginning of prices spiraling downward. What do you think?

29   OO   2006 Jul 3, 3:48pm  

I think it depends on how bad the economy does. I don't see the Fed tightening its lending standard right now, toxic loan flyers are still all over the place.

However, what I noticed is, the RE market is truly extremely slow. 95% the pending sale of homes I see in the neighborhoods that I am familiar with were originated at least a couple of months ago. I see no origination of pending sale. Homes are NOT moving.

Another trick I see MLS playing is, when weekend is approaching, the inventory suddenly goes up since many homes are hosting open houses. Come Monday, inventory goes down, some houses are taken off the MLS only to re-appear again over the weekend.

I am wondering if I am the only person seeing this.

30   B.A.C.A.H.   2006 Jul 3, 3:51pm  

Glen's generational issue

I enjoyed reading his analysis. Since I am a lifelong resident of San Jose, went to college here, worked in different jobs here, etc., live in East S.J. among a "different demographic" compared to my tech colleagues at the job, I have a varied anecdotal circle.

And so, I reflected on Glen's posting. In the case I am familiar with where the elderly parent passed away, the house was sold. But the more general pattern has been that the parents sold their legacy house to buy into a higher quality of life outside of the San Jose area.

Those who relocated in an area in California where they could transfer their Prop-13 tax liability generally moved to a place that their kids were not interested in because of limited employment opportunities. Like the Sierra Foothills, etc. Others cashed out of California altogether, using the money to buy a quality of life in places like Carson City or Bend or Grants Pass. In those cases, the Prop-13 reduced tax assessment vanished.

31   B.A.C.A.H.   2006 Jul 3, 4:03pm  

OO,

The USA is becoming like so many other places, children of the elite families are overrepresented in the elite universities. Whoever said life is fair?

Children of the elite get into the right programs at places like the IIT, then the right grad schools here, then finish the graduate program, get the H-1, get the ball rolling, etc. A difference is, children of California's elite who get into elite schools here for their bachelor degree are not trying like crazy to get their advanced degrees at places like the IIT, then to relocate and plant a root of the family dynasty in Asia. But the reverse is true, happening every day.

You mention immigrants from Mexico. You know, in all the years I've worked in tech, I have never met an H-1 from Mexico. We should be doing all we can for Mexicans and Mexico, because whether it is right or fair or not,and whether we like it or not, we have to deal with some consequences of that country's economic failures. But I have never met an H-1 from Mexico. Maybe, our neighbors in Mexico should get preferential treatment for those visas, sort of an affirmative action social engineering with the H-1 program.

32   Different Sean   2006 Jul 3, 4:06pm  

if you google 'bill gates dad', which i'm frequently wont to do, you get this sort of article:

FairEconomy.org - Bill Gates's dad advocates a sensible estate tax

plus his book which you can find on amazon...

33   Different Sean   2006 Jul 3, 4:10pm  

ajh:
I went and had a look at an open house for this property

canberra laddie :)

34   Peter P   2006 Jul 3, 4:27pm  

Most people on this site are not targeting the beginner homes, so you need to wait out a bit.

I am targeting the beginner homes. Currently, they are priced from high 7 to low 9. There are quite a few choices now though.

35   astrid   2006 Jul 3, 4:42pm  

Peter P,

Subtract a digit from your price and we're looking at decent starter homes in a good chunk of the country. A couple buying in that price range ought to be making $200K a year.

36   OO   2006 Jul 3, 4:45pm  

Peter P,

you should consider lowering your target to low 6, once the marginal owners who bought at the top get flushed out, I think it will be a reasonable target, if you don't want to wait for the absolute bottom.

If you don't mind condos, try high 4.

37   OO   2006 Jul 3, 4:53pm  

I read an article published by a chief eonomist of a mortgage bank with the title like ARM reset, illusion or truth (or something like that). I'll see if I can find that piece of research.

Given that we know which way he will argue, some of his data still presents the exact opposite picture of he wants to paint. One area is Equity % by homeowners. The national average was at its height back in 80s at around 58-60%, and then hovered around 56%, all the way till now. So he argued, well, since the equity % held by homeowners remains the same (oh really?), people still have a big cushion against big loss.

But wait, housing value in the last 10 years advanced 2x, 3x in many regions of the US of A, and equity ratio still remains 56%, exactly as it was 10 years ago? Where did the extra windfall in housing value go for the homeowners??? Since the 56% ratio is based on TODAY's housing value, what will it be if housing value heads down 20%?? 30%???

38   astrid   2006 Jul 3, 4:54pm  

Well, Peter P is very demanding about bathroom and bedroom sizes, and cat friendliness... :)

But really, I just can't imagine couples making $200K as people looking for starter homes. Shouldn't it be couples making $50-100K a year?

39   Different Sean   2006 Jul 3, 4:56pm  

One guest speaker at a conference held last year on affordable housing was:

Carol Galante
CEO, Bridge Housing Corporation, California (SF)
Lessons from the USA for Australia.

Bridge Housing’s experience as a not for profit developer and manager of affordable housing – what it takes and what we’ve learnt.

here’s a link to one of Carol Galante’s presentations (Powerpoint presentation, 6 Mb unfortunately):

http://www.housing.nsw.gov.au/nahc/presentations/Carol%20Galante%201.pps

can anyone confirm if the structures used in her presentation are actual affordable housing developments in CA? they look pretty swanky and posh, more like upmarket developments…

(unfortunately, the Bridge Housing Corp sells only about 30% of their developments, and sets up the rest for cost-controlled rental, presumably in a 'social investor' model. i can see other ways of controlling housing prices than this.)

40   astrid   2006 Jul 3, 5:04pm  

DS,

Though I am for higher estate taxes and ending US's generation skipping tax loopholes, I'm no longer sure that American society is ideally suited for high social welfare. The social contract here was never as strong as in Europe, Oz, and Canada, and it's been hit by asymmetrical population growth (the poorer and less educated the mother, the earlier they have kids and they have more kids) and immigration - legal and illegal.

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