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As Predicted in 2006


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2012 Jul 30, 1:04pm   24,233 views  61 comments

by Randy H   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

This is from one of our discussion in 2006. There were topics on Patrick.net and in my own blog (capitalism2.org) which featured the [then new] Case Shiller method and a healthy dose of linear regression.

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12   CL   2012 Jul 31, 2:50am  

bmwman91 says

StoutFiles says

There is no logic in the bay area.

Because it is SPECIAL here!

They can't build more land!

13   StoutFiles   2012 Jul 31, 3:00am  

CL says

They can't build more land!

You could always buy up a bunch of Nevada real estate on the cheap and then sink California. Prime beachfront property!

14   freak80   2012 Jul 31, 3:02am  

StoutFiles says

You could always buy up a bunch of Nevada real estate on the cheap and then sink California. Prime beachfront property!

Or just buy a bunch of land in the Southeast US that is a foot or two higher than the current sea level. In 50 years, prime beachfront property!

15   Randy H   2012 Jul 31, 11:58am  

Just for reference, this analysis was for aggregate national prices, not for any particular city or locality. It turned out pretty accurately for those outside of the major metros where things tended to remain on the extreme highs or lows.

I only resurrected this because when it was originally aired most of the objections were about Case Shiller. Funnily, the realtwhores argued that CS-I was a bogus index because it didn't reconcile with NAR propaganda while permabears argued it was garbage because it didn't reconcile with Peter Schiff's dire predictions of hyperinflation, death of the dollar, and angry mobs burning the whitehouse down.

16   Buster   2012 Jul 31, 12:49pm  

errc says

What we're seeing now seems like a bifurcation of markets, where high demand low supply areas are in an uptick, or at worst flat, and low demand/so supply doesn't matter much areas are continuing their long skid.

Exactly. Que to Detroit vs San Francisco.

17   thomaswong.1986   2012 Jul 31, 1:00pm  

CL says

They can't build more land!

While driving on Winchester.. an old plot of land across the Valley Fair Mall is being turned over to new housing.. similar new developments are also going up near San Thomas Express Way.. 3 new developments so far...

Where there is a will, there is a way!

Map winchester and stevens creek

http://maps.google.com/maps?hl=en&safe=off&psj=1&bav=on.2,or.r_gc.r_pw.r_qf.&biw=1187&bih=536&q=winchester+and+stevens+creek&um=1&ie=UTF-8&hq=&hnear=0x808fcae055ec5161:0x21bea167da6cbbad,S+Winchester+Blvd,+Santa+Clara,+CA&gl=us&sa=X&ei=BZsYUPmYD6f8iwL5zoDYBg&ved=0CAYQ8gEwAA

18   Dan8267   2012 Jul 31, 1:05pm  

The real estate market is likely to "bottom out" around 2011.

This analysis assumes that the bottom will be at fair-market values. In all of human history, there has never been a bubble market that has not over-corrected in the burst. I wouldn't count on the housing market not over-correcting.

19   Peter P   2012 Jul 31, 1:10pm  

Dan8267 says

This analysis assumes that the bottom will be at fair-market values. In all of human history, there has never been a bubble market that has not over-corrected in the burst. I wouldn't count on the housing market not over-correcting.

But the burst was somewhat contained by massive liquidity injection. This is why the market is getting weird. But in the end, nothing can stop true market forces, so I will correct, just a matter of time scale.

20   FortWayne   2012 Jul 31, 1:13pm  

errc said it best. This nation is so financially screwed, housing is lease of our worries.

And when the plug gets pulled, it will really hit the fan.

21   thomaswong.1986   2012 Jul 31, 1:14pm  

Randy H says

I only resurrected this because when it was originally aired most of the objections were about Case Shiller.

In your thoughts, does it prove/disprove any relationship between prices and interest rates? As we learned, the relationship between rates and prices doesnt exist.

22   thomaswong.1986   2012 Jul 31, 1:18pm  

FortWayne says

housing is lease of our worries.

you hit the bulls eyes! CA is still high on the unemployment count. I

http://www.bls.gov/web/laus/lauhsthl.htm

California June 2012 10.7 % Oct. 2010 12.4%

23   Peter P   2012 Jul 31, 1:34pm  

thomaswong.1986 says

As we learned, the relationship between rates and prices doesnt exist.

Perhaps not linearly. But we all know that it is a complex nonlinear system with many feedback loops.

24   Rin   2012 Jul 31, 1:40pm  

Ppl, isn't part of the answer is where the white collar jobs are going?

Right now, I see no better place to buy than the Dallas-Houston-SA triangle. The 3:1 mortgage to income ratio holds well over there and for the most part, the work which is being in-shored is headed in that direction over the former bubble zones like the Boston-DC corridor. All and all, how badly can a $220K/3 bdrm home in Dallas go, when companies are adding headcount all around? The risk is in let's say places like greater Boston, where former big wigs like Fidelity are routinely sending thousands of jobs to other regions, defense contractors re-direct future projects to TX/CO/VA, and other companies basically suffice on their prior skeleton crews, simply replacing those who periodically quit.

25   Dan8267   2012 Jul 31, 2:11pm  

Peter P says

But the burst was somewhat contained by massive liquidity injection. This is why the market is getting weird.

Oh that's why. And here I thought it was because of the massive accounting fraud and the banks holding onto bad debt because foreclosing would force them to recognize losses.

26   Peter P   2012 Jul 31, 2:12pm  

Is there a difference?

27   Dan8267   2012 Jul 31, 2:44pm  

Peter P says

Is there a difference?

Probably not.

28   bubblesitter   2012 Aug 1, 1:15am  

Philistine says

thomaswong.1986 says

California June 2012 10.7 % Oct. 2010 12.4%

And don't forget that unemployment numbers do nothing to measure underemployment or shrinking wages.

Haha..Nailed it...and some people still think worst is behind us...delaying the inevitable by 5 years? 10 years? 15 years?...sounds familiar...Japan tried that...but failed miserably...

29   Randy H   2012 Aug 1, 1:19am  

Yes, life is horrible in Japan. What a miserable failure.

Give me a break.

30   bubblesitter   2012 Aug 1, 1:20am  

Randy H says

Yes, life is horrible in Japan. What a miserable failure.

Give me a break.

Reticulating Splines

Who is talking about life? We are talking about home prices. :)

31   Randy H   2012 Aug 1, 1:21am  

CrazyMan says

It's too bad the bay area doesn't match that chart. At all.

You're taking national numbers and applying them to a certain region, which is a mistake.

Please point out where, precisely, I made the above referenced mistake? Please copy/paste where I applied anything to a certain region.

32   Randy H   2012 Aug 1, 1:24am  

thomaswong.1986 says

In your thoughts, does it prove/disprove any relationship between prices and interest rates? As we learned, the relationship between rates and prices doesnt exist.

Why are you asking a question you already seem to have answered? I assume you aren't interested in learning that there indeed is a proven relationship between interest rates and prices, but that it is not linear. The function driving prices is extremely noisy and at best is approximated by a multi-linear analysis, of which interest rates are but one variable.

33   freak80   2012 Aug 1, 1:28am  

Randy H,

Is "reticulating splines" a SimCity 2000 reference??? ;-)

34   Randy H   2012 Aug 1, 1:30am  

freak80 says

Is "reticulating splines" a SimCity 2000 reference??? ;-)

What I love about Patrick.net is that it's impossible to be clever around here.

Yes, I learned more about economics from SC2000 than from my overpriced ivy mba.

35   freak80   2012 Aug 1, 1:35am  

Randy H says

Yes, I learned more about economics from SC2000 than from my overpriced ivy mba.

I don't doubt it!

Now if we could only get New York State politicians to understand the "death spiral" of high-taxes and outmigration leading to even higher taxes, and even more outmigration.

36   EBGuy   2012 Aug 2, 4:19am  

Randy, I still carry a folded copy of this chart in my wallet along with
Ivy Zelman's ARM reset chart. With rates like we have today, many ARMs were a good bet (although some folks did get slammed when they went to the full amortization schedule). I shudder to think where we'd be without the low rates. In my mind the ARM reset chart is why we've got to be Japan for the next decade. Those who can, did refi -- others will default if the rates go up.

37   Randy H   2012 Aug 2, 5:23am  

I think Japan is a reasonable model. A lot of what I based the Bubblizer on was from quantitative research derived from the Japanese deflation.

The reason a lot of people can't fathom the Japan outcome is that it is DEFLATION, not inflation that drove their macro experience. Deflation is hard for nearly all of us reading this blog to really comprehend, unless you're one of the few 85+ year olds who happens to be internet savvy. The fundamental evidence of deflation is all around, quite unfortunately.

38   Randy H   2012 Aug 2, 5:24am  

And deflation really would cause the original 2006 predictions above to go way off the rails. Be ready to crumble up that piece of paper in your wallet and toss it.

39   EBGuy   2012 Aug 2, 11:43am  

I don't see any upturn on the chart, so no need to toss it yet. (Its mostly for the "who could have foreseen this?" folks). The C/S Composites are still negative year over year; I'm betting we'll see new post peak lows come January. C/S SF Bay Area may be another story; I'll have to wait an see if the index turns early in August. Deflation Nation indeed. Heck, even my summer plane tickets back East are only $321 round trip this year. Last I checked, effective rates on short term T-bonds were negative and the Swiss and Danes were auctioning off debt with negative interest rates.
Any thoughts on virtual goods seller Zygna versus virtual goods marketplace Second Life? Parallels (maybe you could start a separate thread)?
As AF would say, potatoes are the only real alternative currency.

40   Randy H   2012 Aug 2, 12:43pm  

Comparison of virtual market bubbles. Now there would be a very interesting comparison. I'm not sure it would generate quite as much interest, but the data is there. I'll see if I can dig up some of the SecondLife research data I had from that whole circus. You know, to this date the only real brush with real world creepishness due to my blogging has come from the SecondLife cultists.

41   B.A.C.A.H.   2012 Aug 2, 1:54pm  

EBGuy says

With rates like we have today, many ARMs were a good bet (although some folks did get slammed when they went to the full amortization schedule). I shudder to think where we'd be without the low rates

My young DINK coworker got their 800K place in The Fortress this summer, proud new 1st Time Homeowners In The Fortress. S/he told me, their savvy "5/1" adjustable made it doable. I dunno what the "/1" means but s/he told me that the rate (or payment?) won't go above 2.5% till 5 yrs have elapsed.

42   B.A.C.A.H.   2012 Aug 2, 1:56pm  

CrazyMan says

t's too bad the bay area doesn't match that chart. At all.

That's right. It Is Different Here. And It Is Different This Time.

43   B.A.C.A.H.   2012 Aug 2, 2:01pm  

Randy H says

The fundamental evidence of deflation is all around, quite unfortunately.

Yes it is. Even in times of deflation there will some things we pay for that have rising prices. Doesn't mean there's inflation. Just ask the many folks whose wages are stagnant.

44   thomaswong.1986   2012 Aug 2, 2:18pm  

B.A.C.A.H. says

/he told me, their savvy "5/1" adjustable made it doable

translate... couldnt get a traditional 20% down + Fixed Rate 30 yr mortgage..
Perhaps that $800K should be alot less.. like 1997 prices ($350K plus 35%).

45   thomaswong.1986   2012 Aug 2, 2:23pm  

Randy H says

The function driving prices is extremely noisy and at best is approximated by a multi-linear analysis, of which interest rates are but one variable.

Hype! thats what is driving prices...

46   Randy H   2012 Aug 2, 2:45pm  

Deflation can act as either The Great Equalizer or The Great Stratifier. The current establishment is assuredly doing everything in their power to try to split the difference, but that's the least likely outcome. I think right now deflation is causing accelerated stratification -- some things keep costing more and more compared to stagnant wages and salaries, but many other things, which happen to be those things coveted by those in upper wealth strata, are deflating very rapidly compared to their wages/wealth-income.

If deflation is allowed to spin into a spiral cycle, then it starts reversing and destroying the upper wealth bands very effectively, as it did in the Great Depression. But Japan showed us that it's possible for enough modern government intervention to prevent that outcome and to preserve the current arrangement of wealth strata by simply extending the time horizon for the correction.

I think the best outcome the inflationists could hope for at this point is some sort of very weak stagflation. I think even that is a fleeting hope at this point.

47   FortWayne   2012 Aug 3, 1:08am  

Randy H says

Yes, life is horrible in Japan. What a miserable failure.

Give me a break.

It's completely fine if you ignore all the radiation and such.

48   david1   2012 Aug 3, 1:27am  

thomaswong.1986 says

B.A.C.A.H. says

/he told me, their savvy "5/1" adjustable made it doable

translate... couldnt get a traditional 20% down + Fixed Rate 30 yr mortgage..

Perhaps that $800K should be alot less.. like 1997 prices ($350K plus 35%).

Or they are smarter than you and realize the expectation of interest rates increasing over the next 30 years is already priced into the 30 year fixed product. So they decided it was unlikely they would stay in the current (starter) house for more than 6 years and decided against paying a higher interest rate. 6 years because even if it resets higher in year 5, it still can only go up 1-2% per year, which would put them where they would be with the fixed product. For most mortgage products, interest rates would need to effectively double for the floating rate to be higher than current 30 year fixed products.

This doubling is likely in the next 30 years at some pointm, but unlikely in the next 5 (or even 10). If interest rates do double, rest assured house prices will be significantly higher so refinancing or selling is certainly an option.

These ARMs are not "teaser" rates that you heard about during the boom/bust.

49   Eman   2012 Aug 3, 2:14am  

EBGuy says

Randy, I still carry a folded copy of this chart in my wallet along with

Ivy Zelman's ARM reset chart. With rates like we have today, many ARMs were a good bet (although some folks did get slammed when they went to the full amortization schedule). I shudder to think where we'd be without the low rates. In my mind the ARM reset chart is why we've got to be Japan for the next decade. Those who can, did refi -- others will default if the rates go up.

Yep. For those ARM owners that stuck out this long, HARP 2.0 helped some people. If the current HARP 3.0 passes, expect the distressed market to dry up significantly, and we would essentially be back to a normal market so quick that it would make your head spin. Then expect a steady year or year upswing after that.

I know a couple persons that saw their ARM dropped to 3.0% and 3.25%. They're as happy as ever. Each month, they're paying down over $1k worth of principal. I guess you can call that beginner's luck. Good for them. :0)

50   Eman   2012 Aug 3, 2:20am  

On another note, I know quite a few people that are paying about 2.0% interest only on their HELOC. That's a payment of $166/month for each $100k of borrowed money.

Get that money & throw it in mREITs, and you would make out like a bandit. We're talking about making a 10-12% spread here. Of course, there is risk. There's no free lunch. Gamble at your own risk. :0)

51   StoutFiles   2012 Aug 3, 2:41am  

Randy H says

Yes, life is horrible in Japan. What a miserable failure.

Give me a break.

Reticulating Splines

Yeah, tsunamis and nuclear meltdowns are wonderful!

Just kidding, I'm sure Japan is fine overall. I wouldn't want to live in Tokyo though, seems very crowded.

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