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FuckedCounty.com "dead pool" revisited


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2006 Aug 2, 5:00am   18,600 views  234 comments

by HARM   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

housing dead pool

Ok, folks, the DQ numbers for June, 2006 are all in, so this is as good a time as any to see how we did on our "FuckedCounty.com" predictions from 1 year ago. Those of you who were around back then and posted predictions can click here to see how your forecasts compared to actual results. I will post my own here to get things started:

Note: we were looking at the Year-over-Year (YoY) price changes.

HARM Says:

August 5th, 2005 at 9:44 pm e
SCAL
(-)10-19% San Bernardino
--- actual result: +14%
(-)10-19% Riverside
--- actual result: +7.4%
(-)20-29% San Diego
--- actual result: -1.0%
(-)10-19% OC
--- actual result: +7.1%
(-)0-9% LA
--- actual result: +8.8%
(-)0-9% Ventura
--- actual result: +7.4%

NCAL
(-)0-9% San Francisco
--- actual result: +2.4%
(-)10-19% Santa Clara
--- actual result: +6.0%
(-)10-19% Sacramento
--- actual result: -1.3% (had to pull it from here)
(-)0-9% San Mateo
--- actual result: +0.9%
(-)0-9% Alameda
--- actual result: +2.1%

Wow! Incredible how CLOSE I was to actual YoY declines, isn't it??

Alright, in my humble defense, I can say this was relatively early along in my "bubble awareness" development. I had only been posting ~1 month, and August, 2005 probably marked the peak of my most stridently bearish phase. There were also many who predicted even larger drops than I. It also hadn't fully sunk in just how long debt manias (and ultra-lax lending standards) could persist or how sticky prices might be on the way down (FB escalation of commitment). Considering current market momentum, such drops might still be possible by end of 2007, but I doubt any sooner.

Discuss, enjoy...
HARM

#housing

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1   Peter P   2006 Aug 2, 5:20am  

What is your prediction for the next year and the year after that? Please provide data similar to the one above.

No predictions from me anymore. Let's predict the mood of FBs instead.

2   DinOR   2006 Aug 2, 5:27am  

HARM,

Median prices by and large have been incredibly stubborn but when we visit forsakencraft or "flippers in trouble" the numbers are much more in keeping with your projections. One problem though. NONE of them have actually sold! This is just a lag time between the line in the sand you had so boldly drawn and the blood in the sand (or street if you prefer). At this point we're only measuring what HAS sold, not what hasn't. Forsaken guy covers my buddy's old turf out by Murrieta, Perris and Moreno Valley? Some of those flippers are 20%+ below their cost basis and STILL can't get out from under it! Your credibility is well intact where I'm concerned.

3   astrid   2006 Aug 2, 5:28am  

I'm lucky mine are 4 years down the road and hedged in "real dollars".

HARM, I wouldn't worry too much about your prediction. Market psychology and timing (as opposed to fundamentals) is always a tricky thing, and your predictions might just be a couple months off. We're about 6 months into this market standoff between unrealistic (but increasingly desperate) sellers and wait-n-see buyers...something ought to give pretty soon.

4   DinOR   2006 Aug 2, 5:32am  

I think the "flippers in trouble" guy (or is it gal) covers the SAC area along with Elk Grove or whatever. The bottom line is that a stubborn median price isn't helping them at all! They're under water and it's all over except the crying. We've reached the tipping point Peter P often spoke of where prices don't really have to go down (they just have to stop going up) to get a marked change in buyer mentality.

We're there.

5   StuckInBA   2006 Aug 2, 5:47am  

HARM,

The predictions from this point onwards are going to be more difficult to make. The price volatility is tremendous even in single pockets, and if you compare different BA cities (say Palo Alto and Tracy), the deviation is hard to quantify in one average number.

That's because the market is dead. To some extent it's playing out more slowly than I thought in fringe areas, while in others like Cupertino it's happening faster than what I imagined. And Evergreen is in such freaking deep trouble, that it's completely beyond my wildest imagination.

One pattern I have noticed is, folks are paying close attention to price. Not to what they get for it. Anything over 800K is hard to sell in most areas. But below that, there are enough GF that so desperately want to "own" in BA, that they don't mind any house.

Such things skew the median even more. No point in predicting that.

6   StuckInBA   2006 Aug 2, 5:50am  

I will repeat my previous prediction. Before 2008 is over, BA will see prices back to 2004 level. I will make it more precise.

The current sqft shown by DQ is $507 for Santa Clara county. I predict it will go to 400 by end of 2008 in nominal terms. That's 25% drop, wiping out 33% gain.

7   skibum   2006 Aug 2, 6:10am  

Before making more predicitons about price changes, it might be worthwhile to re-state some of the key factors that may play a part in determining where prices are headed, and over what time course.

- Fed interest rate (and resultingly, HELOC/ARM rates): up, down, or hold?
- 30 yr fixed mtg rates: up, down, or hold?
- Possible tightening of lending standards
- ARM resets
- Possible recession, vs. hyperinflation, vs. deflation, vs. stagflation
- Revelation of lending fraud on a widespread basis
- Change in market sentiment, both buyers and sellers (herd effect)
- Demographics : boomers cashing out of McMansions, immigrant buyers
- Possible breaking of the RE cartel
- Underestimating the lending industry's ability to come up with new ways
to screw borrowers (40-50yr mtgs, re-re-re financing, etc.)
- Local market dynamics (Palo Alto vs. Tracy vs. Cupertino, etc.)
- Geopolitical events

There are obviously way too many variables to allow a "model-based" prediction of prices. But the overwhelming feeling you get nowadays, even in prime BA locales is that sentiment has really changed.

That said, I predict YoY slight negative declines by the late Fall, with continued slow decline 2007-2012 (true bottom), totalling 30% nominal decline by then. However, beyond that, the mass exodus of boomers from their McMansions and then from this world in general will cause another glut in available housing by 2020-2030. Of course, that's just talking out of my a$$.

8   Peter P   2006 Aug 2, 6:13am  

Let's say the median price is 700K. Now, someone sells his house for 750K, after a reduction from 800K, and then he buys a house for 1.25M, after a reduction from 1.5M. Despite the two reductions, the transactions (750K and 1.25M) will still cause the median price to INCREASE because they are above median.

9   StuckInBA   2006 Aug 2, 6:19am  

Big oooops. From 500 down to 400 is not 25% drop, only 20% drop (and wipes out 25% gain). Sorry for the mistake.

10   skibum   2006 Aug 2, 6:20am  

Peter P,
I get your point re: dragging up median prices despite price reductions on particular transactions. However, the example doesn't really apply, as you provide two transactions that are above median price to start with, unless the first one sells for less than 700K. One could provide the same example the other way: a house lists for 500K with a 700K median. It's bid up to 600K, but it still drags down the median since it's below 700k.

11   Peter P   2006 Aug 2, 6:26am  

One could provide the same example the other way: a house lists for 500K with a 700K median. It’s bid up to 600K, but it still drags down the median since it’s below 700k.

Exactly. Median price is not a valid measure at all. Price per sqft is also flawed because it does not capture lot size.

I don't think there is a good measure out there. We can only feel the market.

12   skibum   2006 Aug 2, 6:27am  

I don’t think there is a good measure out there. We can only feel the market.

Use the Force.

13   HARM   2006 Aug 2, 6:28am  

skibum,

It's very hard to tell w/out the data on which specific preperties have actually sold vs. a year ago, but the impression I get listening to realtors like George is that it's mostly the higher-end homes that have been selling recently. The low-end and middling properties are mostly just sitting there with unrealistic asking prices, which would definitely skew the median upward. Shiller used same-house sale data stretching back to the late 1800s to create his own (presumably more accurate) housing appreciation index, which he published in the second edition of Irrational Exuberance. It showed housing barely beating inflation long-term (by about 0.6%/yr).

14   HARM   2006 Aug 2, 6:30am  

@seamus,

Thanks --and I agree.

15   Peter P   2006 Aug 2, 6:31am  

One note: Shiller's index forms the basis of the housing futures (S&P Case-Shiller index).

16   DinOR   2006 Aug 2, 6:33am  

One thing we are totally discounting here is the use of "incentives". Some a$$clown builder wants to give away a hummer or a pool or all expense paid vacations that is effectively lowering the cost of the home. Before everyone dog piles on me (I'm aware these are mostly figured in) but it's also true that "some" of that cost was born by the seller/builder. Now of course they still book the sale as "full price offer" but they also threw in pergraniteteel, up-grade maple cabinets, central vac. an exposed aggragate driveway, sound surround system and a 2 year pre-paid lease to a mini Cooper!

But! They are still showing it as support for the median! I guess the Pulte 12 hour 100K off sale doesn't count? Ridiculous I tell you!

17   Peter P   2006 Aug 2, 6:36am  

I do not mind free upgrades, free interest rate buy-down, and free closing though. :)

18   DinOR   2006 Aug 2, 6:37am  

Ridiculous.

19   skibum   2006 Aug 2, 6:38am  

HARM Says:

It’s very hard to tell w/out the data on which specific preperties have actually sold vs. a year ago, but the impression I get listening to realtors like George is that it’s mostly the higher-end homes that have been selling recently.

I agree that median price is a crude measure of market status, but clearly the MSM and the average American homedebtor rely on that number as a gauge. Re: higher-end homes selling, that may be true in FLA, but my impression is that in many parts of the BA the higher end stuff is barely moving. This has been brought up many times before, but I think there is a buyer mentality to look within a certain price range (based on acceptable monthly payments via ARM, FRM, or whatever), and buy the most home one can afford. With declining prices, these people are just looking at better houses, better locations, better amenities for the same price point. Those who purchased a year ago and are aware of this are probably gnashing their teeth.

20   Peter P   2006 Aug 2, 6:43am  

skibum, above-median houses in BA are hardly high-end houses. A 750K townhouse is nothing impressive even in Sunnyvale on the "wrong" side of El Camino.

21   Randy H   2006 Aug 2, 6:43am  

Peter P's explanation of the trouble using median measures is one aspect. Another is falling transaction volume.

What happens is that as the number of transactions falls, the confidence of the mean (median or average) accurately predicting any specific data point in the entire universe of transactions falls. Anyone familiar with stats knows this as the confidence interval or alpha.

So, medians are still very accurate for a very broad sample; so broad that it lumps an entire county together ignoring the fact that both Redwood City and Atherton are in the same sample set for San Mateo. But, if you start to dive more granular, by relevant zip code or neighborhood, then you have too few sample points to accurately predict much of anything.

All that's happening now is volatility (std deviation) is rising. So the usefulness of any of these numbers is diminishing, and won't be helpful again until the prices come down by enough to increase transaction volume. Maybe a better number to watch right now is standard deviation.

You won't find sigma or n included in any news articles or CAR releases. You'll have to find them in raw data or more detailed stats releases.

22   DinOR   2006 Aug 2, 6:44am  

Peter P,

Well exactly!

Homedebtor A bought at the peak of the market and "won" the multiple offer bidding war.

Homedebtor B bought slightly after the peak and has all mentioned above AND his HOA's (or whatever) paid for a year!

You know, a big screen isn't going to motivate off the sideline but at some point we'll have to calculate the difference between buying at the absolute rock bottom (from the bank likely as not) OR milking the "incentives" for all they're worth. They will intersect at some point. Something tells me once builders "blow out" their current and in progress inventory they won't be handing out incentives at all. (Won't be able to afford to)!

23   Peter P   2006 Aug 2, 6:44am  

I drove past a condo complex that I used to live in. It has 8-10 for sale signs outside.

24   Peter P   2006 Aug 2, 6:46am  

The complex is in Sunnyvale and most units are priced under 550K.

25   Randy H   2006 Aug 2, 6:49am  

On one of the lowballs I wrote the seller was offering a bunch of hoo ha incentives (but no big-screen TV). Things like 1 year paid pool service, gardening, credit with a landscaper, and credit towards a new dishwasher. In my offer I stipulated a valuation of each of those line items and then reduced my already low asking price by those amounts. A signal: no thanks, keep your comps, but since you're offering, take that off the price too.

26   Peter P   2006 Aug 2, 6:50am  

You know, a big screen isn’t going to motivate off the sideline but at some point we’ll have to calculate the difference between buying at the absolute rock bottom (from the bank likely as not) OR milking the “incentives” for all they’re worth.

I will only appreciate "incentives" that are useful to me. Vacation or big screen TV? Perhaps not. Marble bath? Perhaps. :)

27   HARM   2006 Aug 2, 6:52am  

DinOR,

All good points. Yes, homebuilders, Realtors and sellers alike are all loath to see median sales price go down and will do almost anything --including outright fraud and illegal off-book "rebates"-- to try to artifically buoy those sales price stats. Personally, I don't see how throwing in a "free" Hummer or hot tub is supposed to help buyers, as they will effectively be paying interest on these baubles for the 30+ year life of their mortgages.

As a prospective buyer, I understand that the thing which helps me the most --by far-- is LOWERING THE DAMN PRICE. A lower sale price means a lot less money paid in lifetime interest, a lower tax basis for the house, lower homeowner's insurance premiums, lower closing costs, etc. But then again, I'm not completely math illiterate like most Americans.

28   skibum   2006 Aug 2, 6:56am  

above-median houses in BA are hardly high-end houses. A 750K townhouse is nothing impressive even in Sunnyvale on the “wrong” side of El Camino.

That is the sad truth of BA home prices.

29   Peter P   2006 Aug 2, 7:13am  

That is the sad truth of BA home prices.

My point is that median-lifting transactions can still be occuring.

30   StuckInBA   2006 Aug 2, 7:14am  

above-median houses in BA are hardly high-end houses. A 750K townhouse is nothing impressive even in Sunnyvale on the “wrong” side of El Camino.

That is the sad truth of BA home prices.

The real sad truth is, BA has much higher concentration of engineers in the population than most of the areas in the world, and they still have no clue about the basic math needed to make a purchase. The 2 things they definitely do not understand is "median", and "price per sqft" (for both house and lot). It's depressing to see the brightest minds become "howmuchamonth" crowd.

31   DinOR   2006 Aug 2, 7:15am  

HARM,

Don't get me wrong, what these incentives basically are is "bag money". (Usually given for someone to look the other way). So I agree, and it is frustrating watching all this shuckin' and jivin' when the ethical thing would be to lower the price. I suppose it's all in the details. Most of the finance incentives are structured around using "their in house lender" which I trust as far as I could throw! It won't take long before web-sites pop up "rating" just which builder has the best incentives and then Consumer Reports will jump on the band wagon just as they've done with the auto industry.

All I'm saying is if it had to boil down to being FB: A (bought at the peak) or being FB B: (tangible incentives out the ying yang) I guess I'd rather be FB B. If he/she HAD to sell it would give them a better market position than FB A. (Damn, maybe I SHOULD try on a blue blazer)!

32   DinOR   2006 Aug 2, 7:23am  

SP,

Can't say as I've ever seen a stampeding wildebeest (other than on Mutual of Omaha with Marlon Perkins) but your point # 4 is dead on! Seller vs. Seller! Spy vs. Spy! And yes that lowball mf is now your best friend. The Selfish 'Gene".

MSM seems to be rather enjoying the gore fest already.

33   skibum   2006 Aug 2, 8:00am  

SP,
Exactly. One thing to add, though, is that MSM are hardly impartial journalists wanting to sell stories. How many reporters own homes and have a bias towards seeing the bull housing market continue? How does this consciously or subconsciously affect their reporting? Ideally, each real estate story should have the reporter state conflicts of interest (I own a home, I have X number of investment properties, etc.)

34   OO   2006 Aug 2, 8:18am  

You are all correct, except...

Fed may start cutting rate later in the year when the trouble starts. I am not saying that rate cutting can save the world, but it gives the FBs extra breathing room on the way down.

The worst capitalized FBs (who are usually specuvestors at this stage) will be gone in 12 months, chap 13, chap 7 whatever. But if the Fed starts cutting rate, I'd say the low/no-volume, slow-motion price dipping will go on for about 1-2 years until the FBs run out of savings (or financing alternatives). Then you will see a big crash.

So I predict a 10-15% drop by the end of the year till mid 2007, then level off, after the Fed starts cutting rates. Give it another couple of years, then you will see the true avalanche.

People won't get serious about price cutting for their main residence until they run out of options.

35   OO   2006 Aug 2, 8:38am  

Peter P,

if you are buying in CA where your property tax now and in the future is tied to ONE thing and one thing only - sale price, you should just forgo all incentives and head straight for the home run - price reduction. Sale price affects the perpetual cashflow on property tax.

For a difference of $50K in sale price, the difference in property tax paid in the first year is 625, the summation of such difference for 30 years, in undiscounted cashflow is about 25K. So the $50K difference is not just $50K, it is rather $75K or more.

Therefore, even if the incentives appeal to me, I will reject them just based on principal, without even considering the impact on my financing cost difference.

36   Peter P   2006 Aug 2, 8:49am  

Therefore, even if the incentives appeal to me, I will reject them just based on principal, without even considering the impact on my financing cost difference.

Of course, I prefer price reduction. However, it is easier to get incentives than a reduction from builders. Just keep the discounted cashflow in mind.

37   Peter P   2006 Aug 2, 8:52am  

I am under the impression that it is easier to get 50K worth of incentives than 25K in reduction. The key is whether you can find utility in the incentives.

38   HARM   2006 Aug 2, 8:57am  

Of course, I prefer price reduction. However, it is easier to get incentives than a reduction from builders.

It's always easier to get the incentives, this is true. Of course, successful negotiating is never easy, as it is always in your interest to obtain concessions the other party does not want to give you. Remember: builders and sellers have been playing hardball with buyers now for 6+ years running. Isn't it about time to be our turn?

I'd still wait at least couple of years, when blood is running freely in the streets. You just might be able to get both without much haggling.

39   OO   2006 Aug 2, 9:01am  

I am not sure if you want to get anything from the builders in a down market. They are losing money, they are laying off people, so the quality of their homes will definitely suffer. There are so many ways to skimp, and inspection can hardly uncover all the problems. Plus, I think you only have a walk-through but no inspection for a new construction?

There are already horror stories out there about builders substituting recycled pipes in their new construction which will greatly reduce the lifetime of the house. Get something that is built in the late 90s (but not early 90s) is probably a better bet for quality.

We should have a vintage chart for homes built in the BA according to economic cycles and local events. Houses built right after the big quake are likely to be more conservative in shock-resistant designs. Houses built at the top of the bubble are more likely to be rushed to the market.

40   HARM   2006 Aug 2, 9:09am  

OO,

Good points. Ties in nicely with DinOR's "nothing built, bought, HELOC'ed or Refi-ed since 2001" rule.

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