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Stage 2: Anger


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2006 Jul 7, 10:19am   14,777 views  224 comments

by HARM   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

typical FB

We have clearly moved on from Stage 1: Denial in the Kubler-Ross cycle of grieving, as the following should establish beyond all reasonable doubt (thanks to Ben Jones):

Washington Post - Real Estate Live

Ashburn, Va.: I'm so mad at my neighbor. I bought my new home here in Ashburn last summer and plan to sell it next year (after holding two years to avoid taxes) to make a nice return on my investment. The problem is my neighbor is trying to sell his house (very similar to mine) right now and he keeps lowering his asking price. Each time he lowers his price, I see my potential profits next year getting squashed. Doesn't he realize he's hurting the comps for all of his neighbors by doing this? I don't think he is acting very "neighborly" by doing this. I want to say something to him and tell him he should stop putting his interests ahead of his neighbors. Its people like him who are ruining the market for the rest of us. If he would just refuse to lower his price, we could maintain our comps and everyone would benefit. What can I do to stop him?

We should be seeing a whole lot more of this for many, many months to come. Grab yourself a lawn chair on any one of the many "Flipper alleys" in your neighborhood, sit back and enjoy the fireworks. Ahhhh... life is good (for bears) and is going to get even better.

Discuss & savor...
HARM

#housing

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1   astrid   2006 Jul 7, 10:24am  

Ouch. That's pure greed right there. Maybe the neighbor next door is also pissed as hell at this guy and others like him for pushing the property taxes up, so he had to sell.

2   astrid   2006 Jul 7, 10:32am  

Also, it's so ridiculous. The neighbor is viciously selling his house for thousands less than he could, just to lower comps for his neighbor's house? What the hell?

3   Peter P   2006 Jul 7, 10:37am  

If he would just refuse to lower his price, we could maintain our comps and everyone would benefit.

Yes, everyone. Utopia could be achieved if his neighbor was not screwing up the comps. His neighbor was a fifth-columnist!

4   HARM   2006 Jul 7, 10:39am  

I just love this part:

"I bought my new home here in Ashburn last summer and plan to sell it next year (after holding two years to avoid taxes) to make a nice return on my investment.... Each time he lowers his price, I see my potential profits next year getting squashed. Doesn’t he realize he’s hurting the comps for all of his neighbors by doing this?

The amazing part is this greedy A-hole doesn't even see the irony or hypocrisy in accusing his neighbor of being "selfish". The shift in psychology from housing being a necessary consumable (roof over your head) to "sure-fire flip" is so profound that this asshat really takes it personally.

5   Randy H   2006 Jul 7, 10:51am  

It never ceases to amaze me that people don't understand what a market is, let alone basic game theory. Sure, "if only we all cooperated, we'd all come out ahead!". Of course so long as there's one jackass like me included in "we", I'll game that position to increase my outcomes at the cost of the naive Since I'm not the only person thinking this way, everyone never cooperates, at least not in any type of market situation. Hell, even OPEC doesn't cooperate.

6   GammaRaze   2006 Jul 7, 10:51am  

In the stock market, there is generally some ill-feeling towards short-sellers, because "good" investors are supposed to always bet that stocks go up. Another example is Warren Buffet who was chastised for betting against the dollar (who is to blame? the ones who weakened the dollar by printing money willy nilly or the one who spotted it?)

Will we see much of this in the real estate market too? Will the first guy in the neighborhood to realize that the bubble has popped be penalized socially? Will he become a pariah?

Unlike the stock-market or currency markets, real estate affects pretty much everyone. Some very interesting social dramas are going to unfold in the next few years. Scares me a little bit.

7   astrid   2006 Jul 7, 10:58am  

I bet the neighbor is crying, all the way to the bank. I will enjoy the thought of this idiot stuck in Ashburn for the next twenty years, until inflation or heart failure bails him out.

8   HARM   2006 Jul 7, 10:58am  

Will the first guy in the neighborhood to realize that the bubble has popped be penalized socially? Will he become a pariah?

My guess is, the first guy in each neighborhood to recognize the obvious will be hated by his neighbors for a short time, but richly rewarded by the market for selling quickly, while prices are still high. He will then move out of said neighborhood and never have to listen to his greedy FB neighbor asshats again.

9   skibum   2006 Jul 7, 11:01am  

I...plan to sell it next year (after holding two years to avoid taxes)

Soon, this guy's house value will drop to the point where no capital gains = no worries about the taxes.

I want to say something to him and tell him he should stop putting his interests ahead of his neighbors.

What is this, communism? Why should the seller be chastised for looking out for himself?

What can I do to stop him?

Why doesn't he buy his neighbor's place at the pre-reduction inflated value - that'll keep the comps up!

10   astrid   2006 Jul 7, 11:04am  

"Why doesn’t he buy his neighbor’s place at the pre-reduction inflated value - that’ll keep the comps up!"

Hey watch it! That's a cartel!

Oh wait, this is the Bush administration, nevermind...

11   Peter P   2006 Jul 7, 11:09am  

Why doesn’t he buy his neighbor’s place at the pre-reduction inflated value - that’ll keep the comps up!

Good idea! Be an Equity Superhero!

12   Allah   2006 Jul 7, 11:12am  

I want to say something to him and tell him he should stop putting his interests ahead of his neighbors.

Actually, what he is doing is very neighborly! The buyer will have less negative equity than he would if he paid full overinflated price....and if he is selling, he is leaving so he is no longer a neighbor...besides, his neighbors may be the reason he is leaving in the first place!

13   skibum   2006 Jul 7, 11:13am  

Good idea! Be an Equity Superhero!

It would be the "neighborly" thing to do. And, he'll have 2 wonderful "investments."

14   Peter P   2006 Jul 7, 11:19am  

It would be the “neighborly” thing to do. And, he’ll have 2 wonderful “investments.”

To save the world from the housing bubble, an evil JBR conspiracy, this superhero should offer pre-reduction prices for all "reduced" properties throughout the entire nation.

15   astrid   2006 Jul 7, 11:20am  

Maybe they can form a consortium to buy at those pre-reduction prices to save the market. We know how well that works in the equity and currency markets.

16   Peter P   2006 Jul 7, 11:21am  

What can I do to stop him?

Voodoo? It may harm karma though.

17   tsusiat   2006 Jul 7, 11:22am  

hahaha - nice topic HARM.

Gotta love it.

I'm allowed to gloat, right, since I'm not financially invested in this drama, it's all just street theatre to me!

18   surfer-x   2006 Jul 7, 11:50am  

Braaak, 20% in the bag, braaak, 15% in the bag, braaak, 10% in the bag, braaak 5% in the bag, braaak, breaking even in the bag, braaak, buy and hold in the bag, braaak, oh fuck. braaak, neighbors greedy, i'm still a fiancial genius.

19   tsusiat   2006 Jul 7, 12:24pm  

Bottom of the same WP article: http://tinyurl.com/hofs5

Germantown, Md.: We live in a townhouse with a neighbor who is selling a "handyman's special" almost 10 percent under what we just bought our place for, which also needed some work. Should I start kicking myself for buying too high, or talk to the neighbor about their low price. I don't think their agent is very knowledgeable since they've been on the market for over a month without an open house and are showing by appointment only.

10% below what the caller paid, and still no offers and no interest in his neighbour's place. And the caller is concerned about it being priced too low! Hilarious. I guess pricing it more "knowledgeably" would help.

LOL!

20   Different Sean   2006 Jul 7, 12:44pm  

skibum Says:
I love the “Roof Farms” - it may deserve consideration for the hosing bubble dictionary. The observation of an increasing number of abandoned construction projects seems to be happening much earlier in the cycle than I would have thought. Someone posted earlier about all the abandoned sites in LV, I’ve read about a few in Boston, too. I would think that with financing secure, land purchased, etc., the financially smart thing to do would be to go ahead and finish the project. I wonder if it’s flippers bailing (and probably eating the deposit)?

DinOR Says:
A couple of months ago I would agonized over just who got stuck with unfinished condos/projects. Not that it’s unimportant. It’s certainly important to whom ever had to eat it, it’s just not important to me! F’d is f’d. I must admit though that I hadn’t heard about “derailments” in Boston! And yes, I didn’t think this phase would occur so damn early. But in the end this WAS the world’s biggest game of musical chairs so as flippers re-invested their “profits” into a bigger better, nicer newer project they and their cash were bound to part company. All that raw lumber just sitting there is ugly and someone here mentioned what will become of all these vacant and un-airconditioned homes after year+ in 120 degree heat? That IS a good question!

this is actually very interesting. putting aside the fact that the places were being built 'on spec' i.e. specuvestors were convinced they were going to triple their money overnight, etc, one of the points put across here by many posters is that "if only they would build [millions]/[billions]/[trillions] of new places in [location] and get rid of all this [restrictive zoning]/[urban consolidation]/[smart growth] thinking, then prices would come down. read my lips -- it's an [under-supply] problem." well, they are building the extra places, and no-one's coming... does this mean there is not an 'undersupply' of housing, it's actually a market price-fixing problem? and it's not even viable to finish these places off, as the speculative losses would only compound. why not rescue the projects and make them affordable housing? (because there would be too much negative equity involved.) so what's wrong with this picture?

21   Peter T   2006 Jul 7, 1:22pm  

Some people at Ben's blog thought that this person from Ashburn was acting soo funny that it might be a renter making a joke. Difficult to find the truth.

22   astrid   2006 Jul 7, 3:08pm  

When will bargaining come in?

Oh, maybe the bargaining will come after they've been foreclosed upon and start begging the IRS go easy on them.

23   surfer-x   2006 Jul 7, 4:21pm  

M. Holiday, how's Tucson?

24   Mike/a.k.a.Sage   2006 Jul 7, 4:49pm  

Do you see how well educated people are these days about how real estate works? They understand what comps mean. Thats why they only lower their prices modestly. Thats why this is so unlike previous RE bubbles. People know exactly how much they, and their neighbors, can loose. Until it gets, dog eat dog.

"The problem is my neighbor is trying to sell his house (very similar to mine) right now and he keeps lowering his asking price. Each time he lowers his price, I see my potential profits next year getting squashed. Doesn't he realize he’s hurting the comps for all of his neighbors by doing this?"

I sold my house 2 years ago, made 75g's no capital gains tax. I win, you loose sucker. But wait a minute. I owned for 8 years prior. You just want to get rich quick, just like they told you, you could on the get rich quick infomercial; paid 500$ for the tapes and all. What a mind fuck people have bought about RE.

The government should change the 2 year no capital gains exemption to 7 years.

Good call on the angry stage of the market.

25   astrid   2006 Jul 7, 4:56pm  

I don't think there should be any kind of capital gain exception. We don't get them for our regular stock investments or when we cash out a business. A house is a place to live in, not a way for people to cash in. Every time a government subsidy goes into housing, the preexisting owners gets a bump on their networth, some of the early buyers get a benefit, later buyers get the benefit priced in and receive marginal benefits in the form of slightly increased supplies (probably not even an issue in CA's NIMBY laws), and the taxpayers (including renters) get stuck with an ever more fucked up system.

26   OO   2006 Jul 7, 5:10pm  

Driving report from Gilroy and Morgan Hill, it is OUT OF CONTROL.

I was going down to South San Jose for dinner tonight, since we were in the hoods, we decided to take a ride down Morgan Hill and Gilroy to take a look since we hadn't been there for a long time.

Morgan Hill turned out to be so built up that we could hardly recognize the place, all the nice orchards around 101, especially to the west were gone, giving way to identical-looking, cookie-cutter houses on an roughly 5000 sf lot, they must have mushroomed in the last couple of years, hence the mushroom capital of California. At every junction, there would be a sign for some new development, the dotcom billboards we saw in 2000 along 101 up north must have migrated down south, only to have the text changed to "your dream home", "come live your dream" and so forth. For sale signs were alarmingly abundant.

We didn't come to a full grasp of the word "bubble" until we arrived in Gilroy. Gilroy was built SOLID along Santa Teresa Boulevard, houses all the way to the horizon, so much farmland and open space were now occupied by houses that were clearly built within last 5 years, and they are still building, non-stop. There were rows and rows and rows of houses at various stages of finish, just based on what I saw by driving along Santa Teresa, there must be at least 1,000 houses in the pipeline. I haven't even started counting the condos.

There were some nice communities on the west side of Gilroy, but every street has a for-sale sign, some of them with a "price reduction" sign on the bottom, one even spelt: "Big Price Reduction". When I came back and looked on MLS, it only showed 300+ SFHs, but based on the for-sale signs and finished new developments that are left vacant, I'd say there are at least 600 houses readily available for sale in Gilroy alone.

The drive in Gilroy was like waking up in a nightmare. You wake up in this Niceville with newly finished roads, freshly erected housing structure, more houses than any communist country could fathom for their population, but unoccupied. Everywhere you look, there are houses being built or just built, so you start to think whether you've been transformed to a character in the latest Sim City, someone playing the game just twisted all the parameters so that this spot glides into a full building mode, in a uniformly Sim architectural style.

I've never seen such a building craze in the Bay Area since I moved here 16 years ago, maybe I have not lived here long enough.

27   astrid   2006 Jul 7, 5:53pm  

The world is looking more like the "Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy" everyday.

OO,

The suckiest part of all this construction south of San Jose is what it'll do to our strawberry and artichoke supply. That area is uniquely suited to certain crops and I just hope enough farmers don't sell out before the end of the cycle.

28   Different Sean   2006 Jul 7, 6:29pm  

OO:
The drive in Gilroy was like waking up in a nightmare. You wake up in this Niceville with newly finished roads, freshly erected housing structure, more houses than any communist country could fathom for their population, but unoccupied. Everywhere you look, there are houses being built or just built, so you start to think whether you’ve been transformed to a character in the latest Sim City, someone playing the game just twisted all the parameters so that this spot glides into a full building mode, in a uniformly Sim architectural style.

potential affordable housing? refer it to Carol Galante at Bridge Housing as a business opportunity...

29   Joe Schmoe   2006 Jul 7, 11:11pm  

Personally, I can't wait to become the object of the homedebtor's anger. And I will...when I start making lowball offers!

They're pissed at the neighbors now, for adversely affecting the comps. But in the future, they'll be pissed at us, for making "unreasonably low" offers! We'll be "greedy" buyers who want "something for nothing," etc.

In fact, I am so excited about this possibility that I think I'll start making some lowball offers this weekend! REAL lowball offers -- 40 to 50% off of the asking price, not a lousy 5% or 10%. The probability that they will be accepted is obvioulsy quite low -- but I'll enjoy making them! And I do think there is a chance -- albeit a very, very slim chance -- that an RE agent or owner who knows which way the wind is blowing may bite. A sufficiently desperate RE agent might even pressure the buyer to accept the offer! After all, those commission checks have been few and far between lately.

Now may actually be a good time to start lowballing. My wife attended an open house a couple of weeks ago. It ran from 9-5. She arrived at 4:30, and there were only three names on the sign-in sheet! The RE agent lookewd ashen faced. I doubt that a homeowner would accept a real (i.e. 50%) lowball offer (I would think that they'd be virtually guaranteed to accept a 10% lowball, however) but an RE agent, OTOH -- I bet they wouldn't turn you down flat.

30   Michael Holliday   2006 Jul 7, 11:52pm  

surfer-x Says:

"M. Holiday, how’s Tucson?"

The real estate market or living there?

The real estate market is overpriced for the area, bubble-icious!

As for living there, I've only visited. But I can give the following observations: Parts look ramshackle & like Mexicali Mexico. Other areas are very nice. So, it's a mixed bag. Like Phoenix it has its niches.

What I like about Tucson is that it's about 5-7 degrees cooler than Phoenix at all times and maybe even colder in the winter. It's still hot as hell, but even 5-7 degrees or so makes it noticably cooler.

If you like that dusty, Southwest Americana feel, Tucson's the place. The Phoenix metroplex area is much more built up, windswept and modern.
I like all of the amenities of a top-10 metro area (Phoenix is 5th largest city in the USA).

Like anything, if you can make it past the first year living there, you will survive. Probably a Californian might only want two years time there, max.

I've met Californians that were desert dwellers at heart and never knew it. They moved to Arizona and never looked back. It's either in your blood or it's not.

I'm half Arizona half California. But Cali is still my dream.

'Nuff said!

31   Allah   2006 Jul 8, 12:07am  

I wish I had Warren Buffets money so I can buy that house and sell it for 50% of what I paid, just to be neighborly! :lol:

32   Allah   2006 Jul 8, 12:13am  

They’re pissed at the neighbors now, for adversely affecting the comps. But in the future, they’ll be pissed at us, for making “unreasonably low” offers!

You mean "reasonably low" 50% off or more! Unreasonably low would be 90-95% off.

33   Michael Holliday   2006 Jul 8, 12:22am  

OO Says:

"Driving report from Gilroy and Morgan Hill, it is OUT OF CONTROL.
...I’ve never seen such a building craze in the Bay Area since I moved here 16 years ago, maybe I have not lived here long enough."

1968-'74 was the last South San Jose building craze. I was a baby, moved into our house off Snell Ave., by the Foothills.

My high school, Santa Teresa High, was built in 1974.

So, yeah, all that Morgan Hill explosion harkens back to the old days. But, damn. They're gonna kill a lot of Garlic to make those ugly-ass McMansions.

When will the insanity end?

34   astrid   2006 Jul 8, 12:36am  

DS,

I fear the transportation infrastructure and the coming high gas prices will soon make the Gilroy area rather undesireable. Affordable housing you're thinking about is based on a static comprehension of a recent phenomena. If the real price of BA houses retrench back 15 years, very few people who want houses will have trouble getting them. I'd advise the affordable housing people to wait this one out to save themselves from paying inflated prices for housing stock, land, and building costs.

35   Randy H   2006 Jul 8, 12:38am  

It's sticky, soft landing now. I increasingly expect it to get stickier and softer, especially with the behavior of interest rates and bond spreads. The current environment will allow lenders to invent a new breed of "creative mortgage products" that will help to prolong the overextended debtors' reign. Namely, they'll be able to market low-payment products to those escaping ARM resets. In fact, there is plenty of evidence that this is already happening.

Homedebtors will believe that they can wait out any correction in prices so long as they can make payments. They'll psychologically justify this (mental accounting) with rising rents and general inflation. In fact, there will be some who do manage to hold on through the correction and end up 15 years later ahead of both those who sell on the way down and those who buy near the bottom.

36   astrid   2006 Jul 8, 12:50am  

Michael,

I do give Utah the edge in beauty and possibly the weather. It's too bad the wages there are low and the prices have been pushed up by ex-Californians. Slickrock is a heck of a lot more fun to hike than soft sand.

Randy,

I don't think it'll stay sticky and soft for long. There's a lot of people out there already stretched to the limit and on the brink of foreclosure. Once they're crushed down by their burdens, the prices will fall some what. Some of those properties will be bought by those waiting on the sidelines, thus reducing the pool of buyers even more. Then the next wave of defaults happen, rinse and repeat.

Stickiness can only come if buyers can be found and most owners have the means to survive. I think the last ten years have drastically cut down the buyer side while many owners will be forced to sell or foreclosed upon.

37   Randy H   2006 Jul 8, 1:40am  

Astrid,

As I've argued here a lot, I think that is a bit of wishful thinking, even if I am also wishing it. I find that in general people tend to overestimate the likely rate of foreclosures. Even if we assume that foreclosure rates will be double or even triple the rates of past corrections, we're still not talking about a very high number. That means a rise from a .07% today to .21%, not even one quarter of a percent.

The thing that keeps RE prices stable is the time-dimension. Not everyone in homes bought their home recently. Not everyone of those used ARMs. Not all long-time owners HELOC'd or refi'd ARMS. Not all HELOCers took out all their equity, or even half their equity.

Even if we assume that the range of "owner positions" is normally distributed, we're talking about a pretty slow, sticky price movement. In reality, I suspect the distribution is skewed conservatively, so the more rapid price movement may well be front-loaded, not rear-loaded.

I think this is what we're seeing now. Prices falling quickly in different categories/neighborhoods. But "quickly" doesn't mean 80%, or 50% or even 30% as we hope. It means maybe 25% or less, depending on locality. What I expect is slow losses YoY for a few years here on out. Most of the correction will take place as real-prices fall due to inflation, especially as wages inflate which they are definitely doing now as yesterday's data further solidified.

38   astrid   2006 Jul 8, 2:03am  

Randy,

That may be true in desireable core areas, where demand could stabilize the selling price at relatively high levels. But in most other areas, new houses have been built, high proportions of the current owners are stretched, and sellers will not find ready buyers.

As to the proportion of price decline, we're less than a year in. The price drops are only exposing the most overexposed FB. Most people are still holding on to the belief that this is a temporary setback. We haven't reached the psychological or the economic tipping points.

House prices in much of the country has doubled to tripled in the last 5 years, with no accompanying wage increases and with big increases in food, energy, education, and health costs. Houses will be squeezed, definitely in real dollars and likely in nominal dollars. I think enough people will be squeezed at the margins (and be the stones from which you can't squeeze more money from) that they will impact prices.

I think the current bust is likely to dwarf what happened in NYC and CA and DC in the early 90s. I'm not sure it's a good thing and I'm not antsy to buy, but I think the big price drops and the ensuing pain is pretty much inevitable.

39   astrid   2006 Jul 8, 3:05am  

I don't think so. The areas with the fastest rate of price increases are the built out or NIMBY obstructed areas. It's just a scheme to pay off baby boomers. The voters get some money and feel wealthy for a couple years, and who cares if the grandkids are screwed? They can't vote yet.

40   DinOR   2006 Jul 8, 3:23am  

Mike/a.k.a Sage,

Thank you! I've advocated that for years and it just makes sense. That way we at least have some assurance that homeowners are exactly that AND have "some skin in the game"! I realize I can get to sounding like a broken record but this "flipper" it seems to me was very aware of the "24 Month Clock". Yes Mr. Sage 7 years sounds most reasonable (with exceptions for transfers, med. reasons and death by debt)!

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