0
0

Beginning of a NEW bubble?


 invite response                
2012 May 9, 6:14am   11,761 views  27 comments

by jaz5   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

http://money.cnn.com/2012/05/09/real_estate/home-prices/index.htm?iid=Lead

Just read that double digit price gains are possible...also read that the FHA (government backed subprime) is lowering costs of their insurance and will enable many more to get into the market putting even less out of pocket... is this DEJA-VU?

Do you think the Real estate bubble is being re-inflated, if so, perhaps we can cash in this time?

#housing

« First        Comments 5 - 27 of 27        Search these comments

5   xenogear3   2012 May 9, 10:02am  

99% increase in 1 year

6   TechGromit   2012 May 9, 10:17pm  

edvard2 says

There was never a supply problem during the bubble and yet prices went haywire- mostly because lending standards were lacking.

I would argue this point. I recall people camping out for days in Florida for the privilege of buying a condo. People writing essay's to the sellers on why they should pick there offer over others. While this may not have affected all areas, there were certainly supply issues in some. They are probably the same areas that have been hardest hit by the bubble collapse. Las Vegas, Florida, etc.

7   Hysteresis   2012 May 10, 1:57am  

i called the bubble during the bubble in 2005-2006 - when everyone was arguing it wasn't a bubble.

this isn't anywhere near a bubble. this season isn't even close to the bullish behavior in 2009, let alone the bullishness in 2005.

8   Sam1000   2012 May 10, 2:03am  

drtor says

jaz5 says

also read that the FHA (government backed subprime) is lowering costs of their insurance

Where did you read this? I have read the opposite that FHA fees in many categories have gone up, and that further increases were under consideration.

FHA upfront MIP and annual mortgage insurance premium is being drastically lowered starting June 2012

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-03-06/obama-plan-calls-for-lower-mortgage-insurance-premiums-for-home-refinanngs.html

9   hanera   2012 May 10, 2:15am  

Signs of bubble:

a. Price rises despite inventory is higher than historical norm and increasing;
b. Many incidents of over 20 offers for a house;
c. Queue to buy a launch;
d. Abundant flippers;
e. Prices are above affordability level.

Price rises due to limited supply obeys the law of supply and demand so is not a bubble.

10   rooemoore   2012 May 10, 2:16am  

Hysteresis says

i called the bubble during the bubble in 2005-2006 - when everyone was arguing it wasn't a bubble.

Yes, I remember. You were the only one who knew! If we had only listened to you, we wouldn't have been in this mess.

BTW, in the BA RE is much hotter now than 2009. But you're right, the RE bubble days are gone for a generation or more.

11   FortWayne   2012 May 10, 2:25am  

Very unlikely.

New bubble is going to be either in education or healthcare. Younger crowd worries about former, latter frightens me a lot more though.

12   freak80   2012 May 10, 2:26am  

There's a new bubble in seeing bubbles everywhere.

13   rooemoore   2012 May 10, 2:29am  

FortWayne says

Very unlikely.

New bubble is going to be either in education or healthcare. Younger crowd worries about former, latter frightens me a lot more though.

Quality Auto Repair Since 1979

No bubble in education. Technology will make education affordable for all. Imagine combining sites like http://www.khanacademy.org/ with software like IBM's Watson. For a price a fraction of what it costs now, students will have individual tutoring tailored to their strengths and weaknesses.

Healthcare is another issue entirely. How much would you pay to live an extra year - or five - or twenty?

14   zhanka   2012 May 10, 3:00am  

Sam1000 says

drtor says

jaz5 says

also read that the FHA (government backed subprime) is lowering costs of their insurance

Where did you read this? I have read the opposite that FHA fees in many categories have gone up, and that further increases were under consideration.

FHA upfront MIP and annual mortgage insurance premium is being drastically lowered starting June 2012

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-03-06/obama-plan-calls-for-lower-mortgage-insurance-premiums-for-home-refinanngs.html

The key is: "The Federal Housing Administration will lower mortgage insurance premiums for borrowers who refinance their loans", not for new FHA loans. Plus, it only applies to borrowers with FHA loans made (insured) before June 1, 2009. For all others insurance premiums will be increased.

15   Hysteresis   2012 May 10, 5:35am  

rowemoore says

Hysteresis says

i called the bubble during the bubble in 2005-2006 - when everyone was arguing it wasn't a bubble.

Yes, I remember. You were the only one who knew! If we had only listened to you, we wouldn't have been in this mess.

BTW, in the BA RE is much hotter now than 2009. But you're right, the RE bubble days are gone for a generation or more.

what i knew was i couldn't afford the insane prices in 2005. $600k was a low priced house in east palo alto in the middle of gang-land USA. almost a million dollars for a median priced house in SJ. prices were out of my range for a decent house.

when i started seeing janitors buying $800k houses i knew things were fucked up. and that was a very clear sign to stay out of RE which i did. now i'm timing the RE market. a few years after prices -stop- falling, i'll seriously look at buying. now is not the time. i am --planning-- to miss the bottom. hopefully not by much, but once i am confident the bottom has passed, then it's time to buy.

what i didn't know was what would happen to prices and when. i didn't know if they could go higher or if it would collapse. bubbles can blow much longer than anyone can anticipate. but once it started to deflate it's just a matter of watching for prices to stabilize and 6 years later they haven't yet although i believe we're close to that point. in a few more years i'll be more certain.

also i invested most of my free cash in stocks in 2009. i'm extremely contrarian with respect to investing. anyone else that did the same(avoided RE in 2005 and bought quality stocks anytime from 2009-2010) would be doing fairly well today. what i observe is most people follow the herd and are also terrible emotional investors - two very bad qualities if you want to make money. if you bought RE around 2005-2007 and sold stock around 2009-2010; you shouldn't be investing.

16   FortWayne   2012 May 10, 6:01am  

rowemoore says

FortWayne says

Very unlikely.

New bubble is going to be either in education or healthcare. Younger crowd worries about former, latter frightens me a lot more though.

Quality Auto Repair Since 1979

No bubble in education. Technology will make education affordable for all. Imagine combining sites like http://www.khanacademy.org/ with software like IBM's Watson. For a price a fraction of what it costs now, students will have individual tutoring tailored to their strengths and weaknesses.

Healthcare is another issue entirely. How much would you pay to live an extra year - or five - or twenty?

but it already Is going high, so is healthcare.

17   1sfrenter   2012 May 10, 6:06am  

San Francisco May 2012

Signs of bubble:

a. Price rises despite inventory is higher than historical norm and increasing NO
b. Many incidents of over 20 offers for a house YES
c. Queue to buy a launch ?
d. Abundant flippers YES
e. Prices are above affordability level YES

We are taking a step back and trying to play nice with our greedy blood-sucking landlord and see what happens at the end of the summer/fall/after election

18   rooemoore   2012 May 10, 6:57am  

FortWayne says

but it already Is going high, so is healthcare.

That is true. I am just saying the fix for education costs is easy.

For healthcare, there is no fix. It will go up and up and the richer you are the longer you'll live.

Neither of these rising costs would constitute a "bubble" in its actual meaning.

19   CrazyMan   2012 May 10, 8:11am  

The bottom end has bottomed (I think most would agree) but I still believe the mid-high will continue to drift lower.

This mini bubble is simply a supply problem, as so many are underwater they just can't sell. So, while they wait and hope for a return to 2005 prices (not going to happen in this decade) their savings are being completely drained. Once they finally capitulate, they'll end up short selling or foreclosing.

I personally know of a couple families that are in this situation.

20   rooemoore   2012 May 10, 8:51am  

CrazyMan says

I still believe the mid-high will continue to drift lower.

Define mid-high.

21   bmwman91   2012 May 10, 9:17am  

rowemoore says

Define mid-high.

Sure.

You are 2 or 3 bong loads in and you realize that some Funions and Cheetos could, quite possibly, bring about world peace if everyone was craving them as badly as you at that moment.

22   bubblesitter   2012 May 10, 9:18am  

CrazyMan says

This mini bubble is simply a supply problem, as so many are underwater they just can't sell.

That means they are stuck. No move up - No more property ladder to prosperity.

23   rooemoore   2012 May 10, 9:21am  

bmwman91 says

rowemoore says

Define mid-high.

Sure.

You are 2 or 3 bong loads in and you realize that some Funions and Cheetos could, quite possibly, bring about world peace if everyone was craving them as badly as you at that moment.

Okay, I agree, but what about the ho-hos?

24   bmwman91   2012 May 10, 9:27am  

rowemoore says

Okay, I agree, but what about the ho-hos?

Well, those depend on whether or not you are in a proper state to navigate the pastry aisle of the grocery store. It takes a strong man to resist the Siren's call of the other sugar-laden baked goodies that beckon from the shelves of THAT aisle.

25   CrazyMan   2012 May 10, 10:16am  

rowemoore says

CrazyMan says

I still believe the mid-high will continue to drift lower.

Define mid-high.

Low Tier: Under $311,666
Mid Tier: $311,666 to $573,705
Hi Tier: Over $573,705

or thereabouts.

http://blog.redfin.com/sfbay/2012/03/case-shiller_only_the_bay_areas_high_tier_fell_in_december.html

26   Claire   2012 May 10, 11:12am  

Mountain View - BIG bubble - problem is not much inventory and too many people with too much
money.

Fixer-upper - listed for 860,000 reportedly getting offers for $965,000 3/2 on 5000 sq ft lot.

I can't compete with that :-(

27   bubblesitter   2012 May 10, 11:58am  

Claire says

I can't compete with that :-(

Must be dishonest money from China.

Please register to comment:

api   best comments   contact   latest images   memes   one year ago   random   suggestions   gaiste