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Examples of stupid comments I’m tired of reading in real estate reports and listings:


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2006 Aug 3, 11:42am   25,684 views  227 comments

by tsusiat   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

charming handyman's special!

Choices Increase for Buyers…. …. Real Estate Board President, Joe Doe, notes that while sales have softened slightly, prices have remained relatively stable and are up compared to the beginning of the year….[agghh, inventory is tracking much higher than sales, month after month]

Private garden with a fenced yard on a quiet street. Perfect for kids, pets and a veggie garden….. Partially updated with new maple kitchen and hot water tank in this comfy light filled doublewide [mobile!]. Perfect "as is" rental for renters with pets or college students [nearest college is 40 miles away. Yes, we are including a hot water tank].

REVENUE, REVENUE, REVENUE!! Nothing to do but collect your rental income! [of course, the mortgage payments alone are about double the current rent …]

Priced to sell, quick possession. [We need cash. Please.]

Move right in condition. [What, this is a selling point for a HOUSE?]

First time on the market in 50 years! [I see dead people]

Inside shows very nicely. [Outside, not so much]

Character …. 3 bedroom home on quiet street. Tenanted -- renting for $1200, planning on leaving end of August. Great investment or holding property. [mortgage payment with 20% down at 6% = $1657]

This is a very well maintained 1940's home with many substantial upgrades & is perfect for the 1st time home buyer. [mortgage payment with 10% down at 6% = $2126 = necessary annual income of $80,000. Local median family income is $55,000. Lots of potential first time buyers at these LOW, LOW prices]

I could go on, but you get the picture. Feel free to supply your own versions of the insanity of the Real Estate babble, with links if you like…

The language skills of real estate journalists and salespeople are getting a real work-out these days; if this continues, I expect to see future examples of creativity that would get excellent marks from a grade 8 creative writing teacher [punctuation, not so much…].

tsusiat

#housing

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68   DinOR   2006 Aug 4, 2:51am  

tannenbaum,

Nice recap of rates. I believe you're right, any reductions in the near term will not provide the salvation DL and FB's so desperately seek. All it can possibly do is quell the panic and hopefully prevent too many FB's from "just dropping off the keys".

Incentives for them will not include pools, pergraniteel or anything of the like. It will be more along the lines of: Re-fi NOW to a FRM and get a free case of Top Ramen Noodles! (Why do I get myself so worked up about this stuff)?

69   Glen   2006 Aug 4, 2:52am  

Allah,

I agree that inflation is not under control. But that's why I think the Fed will pause, rather than cut. They can get away with this if they continue to talk tough on inflation, while claiming that inflation is contained.

70   Allah   2006 Aug 4, 3:08am  

They can get away with this if they continue to talk tough on inflation, while claiming that inflation is contained.

From what I read, they aren't claiming inflation is under control and if hint that they are finished much less decrease rates, the dollar will crash very hard. There are many who are about to dump the dollar, myself being one of them!

71   skibum   2006 Aug 4, 3:10am  

Conor Says:

Randy, 50/50 sounds about right. The key for me is how economic actors will respond once the Fed finally does cut rates again. Will people embrace risk-taking anew? How will they express this view? Stocks? Real estate? Commodities? Obviously, the housing bubble created a lot of the prosperity we’ve seen over the past few years, so if we could create a new bubble perhaps we can have a soft landing for awhile.

The other economic "actors" to consider are foreign investors and how possible near-future rate cuts would affect thevalue of the US dollar, the bond market, and commodity prices. If the Fed goes soft and starts cutting rates again soon, these players will not like it. I would imagine these considerations are as important if not more important than the herd of mass investors looking for the next asset bubble. Maybe I'm just being naive.

72   Randy H   2006 Aug 4, 3:15am  

Conor,

Definitely some pass through from rising real oil prices, and a significant source of inflation. But the US imports a fairly small portion of oil from currency risk sources, and even with those will still enjoy a reserve currency status for at least 10-15 more years. The ECB helps ensure that with their policy -- the ECB does not want a disorderly appreciation of the Euro which would come with a rush to petroeuros. That would kill their ever anemic export-driven recovery.

Meanwhile the US is (in my opinion unwisely, for other reasons) plowing forward with a policy that will result in domestically produced corn & beans increasingly taking the edge off of foreign currency exposure to crude. Add to that the far less currency exposed sources of crude from which the US largely draws.

These equations are far from linear. There may well be an ultimate day of reckoning. I just contend that no one here or elsewhere is likely to guess it with any accuracy.

73   Randy H   2006 Aug 4, 3:21am  

The missing piece of the puzzle is FISCAL POLICY. I sometimes think everyone forgets there are 2 seats in the cockpit. The pilot is the Congress/Executive with Fiscal. We've just decided the pilot is drunk and we'll let the co-pilot fly this bird.

74   StuckInBA   2006 Aug 4, 3:36am  

The stock market is completely confused about the rate hikes. The thing has now turned south. Even the Gold market is very tentative on rate hikes.

The stock market is fixated on the rate for the short term. Given that they have almost concluded that Fed won't hike, we already had some short rallies. I am betting the gains are priced in. If Fed pauses as expected, it will not start any rally. But if the Fed shocks, there might be a strong decline.

Hence I have made some short term bets on the downside. Let's see.

75   StuckInBA   2006 Aug 4, 3:44am  

The feedback loops and various branching points are extremely interesting.

Fed stops the hikes, not just pause. Then reduces the rates soon. Maybe the $ weakens. That might push up inflation and/or long term rates. It reduces consumption. That hurts economies that export to US. Which might reduce the oil demand, and stabilizes oil, keeping inflation in check.

This is just one of the many scenarios. Seems more like weather predictions.

Is Chaos Theory used in economic modelling ?

76   RaiderJeff   2006 Aug 4, 3:47am  

Re: Listings

I love this little trick by realtors where they list a home as having 3 beadrooms, however upon further investigation, you come to find that the house isn't a true 3 bedroom home, but rather a 2 bedroom home that can be converted into a 3 bedroom house.

Makes me laugh when I think back to those RE sponsored commercials where they dressed some actor up in a suit who said - As a realtoooor, I have high ethical standards to live by, you can trust me, etc. Please, the lack of ethics in this industry is a joke (which really isn't funny).

I can just imagine the training that goes on within the walls of Century 21 where they probably have some sales manager stand in front of a bunch of new agents and says - Okay people, just remember, there is the truth and then there is the "truth".

77   Peter P   2006 Aug 4, 3:49am  

Is Chaos Theory used in economic modelling ?

Have you read The Misbehavior of Markets by Benoit Mandelbrot?

78   Randy H   2006 Aug 4, 3:57am  

Is Chaos Theory used in economic modelling ?

There's a reason neural networks are so popular when it comes to modeling this beast. Too many interrelated moving parts. Feedback loops within feedback loops which affect other feedback loops inside of other feedback loops.

79   e   2006 Aug 4, 4:04am  

But just imagine someone who was born and raised in California? All they’ve ever knows is nice weather, an expectation of good cuisine, and higher salaries? The way I look at it, there are people like my brother who has never left TN, thinks it’s the best place in the world, hates going to NY where his GF lives.

That strikes too close to home.

Basically the problem is that Californians think that California is the center of the universe because they can't leave California no matter how many hours they drive, and because they're too cash strapped to visit other places.

In reality, it's universally understood that New York is the center of the universe. But Californians will never understand because of Californiatitis (the swelling of the California in the brain.)

80   e   2006 Aug 4, 4:07am  

Thought it would be back at 1997/1998/1999 levels of 2-3% with the “google” effect and Web 2.0 and all!

That, stabilized interest rates, continued money flowing out of google - Mountain View condos to start at $500k for a 1br/1ba by end of the year. (Pretty close already...)

81   HARM   2006 Aug 4, 4:07am  

No one who’s serious or respectable expects anything one could label “hyperinflation”. Some expect stiff inflation — something like maybe 10% per year. Hyperinflation is 1% per day.

Fed will raise rates to slow domestic, realized consumer inflation as in PCE. They don’t care about the dollar. The dollar is actually a very complex issue. In many ways a weakening dollar is tremendously advantageous for the US. It creates domestic jobs, increases exports, narrows trade and capital flow balances, reduces government debt burdens, and puts pressure on any country pegging to the dollar. Anyone who keeps their dollar pegs (to fight off losing their export-to-US cost advantage) is effectively taking inflation off our hands and eating it themselves. So, we don’t even pay the full cost of the inflation we create.

I completely agree and have been arguing this for some time. Those who believe that the Fed would actually tighten enough to allow (broad-based) deflation to take hold simply haven't been paying attention or considering this thing from a Washington D.C. risk/reward perspective. High (but not hyper) inflation is the path of least resistance to both Fed and the politicos it serves.

It's a safe bet they will continue to talk tough on inflation while doing precisely the opposite. How long it will continue keep our international rate & credit swap shell game going is anybody's guess though. Conor's scenario of successive waves of "raise-then-lower" rate cycles (but peaking lower on each successive cycle until you can no longer raise) sounds plausible.

82   skibum   2006 Aug 4, 4:08am  

With trends towards slowing jobs growth and indicators showing persistent inflation, stagflation seems to be the most likely outcome of all this. In my simplistic view of this, I wonder why the markets are so gleeful that the jobs numbers are tepid? So what if these numbers give the Fed an excuse to pause next week? The Fed is in a pickle no matter what they do. They can try to just "hold the course" and keep rates in this "neutral" zone, they can continue raising rates to beat the crap out of inflation expectations, or they can start lowering rates soon to rehash the lame attempt at "stimulating the economy." As I see it, at least for the myopic perspective on the housing market, none of this is very good. Raise rates more, and the hard landing scenario seems more and more likely. Keep rates in this "neutral" zone, stagflation persists, no one can afford anything as wages are flat and prices continue to go up. Lower rates, and inflation gets out of control. Pick your poison, BB!

83   StuckInBA   2006 Aug 4, 4:13am  

Have you read The Misbehavior of Markets by Benoit Mandelbrot?

No. I have only read his book on his Fractal Geometry. Which was 15+ years ago, so I only remember a few things. Is it worth reading ?

84   DinOR   2006 Aug 4, 4:14am  

MA,

When we pondered earlier what sector/asset class might be the new beneficiary of possible "rate reductions" I was hoping someone might have said, innovation?

There are still so many unresolved issues here and abroad that should demand our full attention and best efforts but as a country we seem to have abandoned innovation and are now perfectly content playing "round robin" from one established sector to the next.

*For those that have never played in a "round robin" tournament, no one is ever really eliminated, every team plays every one else at least once and in the end trophies are awarded to everyone for "participating".

Is this what we want?

85   Peter P   2006 Aug 4, 4:16am  

No. I have only read his book on his Fractal Geometry. Which was 15+ years ago, so I only remember a few things. Is it worth reading ?

It is not bad.

86   DinOR   2006 Aug 4, 4:21am  

HARM,

I too praise Conor's cyclical assesment. Why not? It's "worked" so far? The best part is that it keeps the California Real Estate Lottery System well intact. You lose? Better luck next cycle!

87   Glen   2006 Aug 4, 4:22am  

Peter,

I read Mandelbrot's book. It is a good one, though I think his central thesis can be stated fairly succinctly: Markets routinely and systematically underestimate the frequency and severity of "fat tail" cataclysmic events.

This is just one reason why I tend to discount the importance of mathematical modeling in finance. Every once in a while, a category 5 event occurs, which makes all of the models irrelevant. If there is a derivatives meltdown and/or severe and sudden dollar crash, I hope to avoid it.

88   Peter P   2006 Aug 4, 4:29am  

The best part is that it keeps the California Real Estate Lottery System well intact. You lose? Better luck next cycle!

Have you watched The Island? Whoever wins the lottery gets to go to "the island".

89   Peter P   2006 Aug 4, 4:30am  

A fat tail book I liked better is “Fooled by Randomness.”

I have two cats with fat tails. I do not need more reminders. :)

90   Glen   2006 Aug 4, 4:30am  

Michael,

I liked that one better too. Though it made me acutely aware that I am a fool for checking on my investments daily.

91   Randy H   2006 Aug 4, 4:43am  

He’s second to Stephen Wolfram in self-love, however.

Wait, I rediscovered this cool little computer game called "Life". Eureka! It's a whole spanking new kind of science.

92   StuckInBA   2006 Aug 4, 4:45am  

I am glad we are talking about what happens after Fed pauses. Hardly anyone else is doing that.

The Fed pause, this time or next time, is almost certain. It's boring to discuss that. So far, I am hearing a consensus being developed here towards -

1. Fed pauses, and most likely drops rates, in a year, or earlier.
2. That doesn't help RE prices anyways, but merely slows down the decline.
3. Short term inflation in stock prices and/or commodities
4. Longer term decline in US$
5. Consumer price inflation (actual, not voodoo) for the foreseeable future

If this plays out, there is systemic risk introduced. What happens to the "entitlement programs" as talked by US Treasury Sec ? Deficits of all sorts will increase. Will it lead to higher taxes or eventually the Fed will be forced to hike rates ?

There doesn't seem to be a way out. Unless some epoch making change happens (like Internet in the 90s) and productivity shoots up. But what if it doesn't ?

93   Randy H   2006 Aug 4, 4:49am  

DinOR,

I am actually a optimistic about innovation for at least a few more cycles, which is effectively most or all of my lifetime. I'm a bit more cautiously optimistic that this will continue well into my children's and grandchildren's lifes as well.

There are indeed still a huge number of problems that need solving. Energy, medtech, biotech, agritech... Hell, even the tired old problem of software and IT hasn't been adequately solved yet. The number of people who believe their IT world is adequate and needs no further improvement please raise your hands. Why the hell does Windows get a little slower every freaking time I use it?

94   Peter P   2006 Aug 4, 4:50am  

Wait, I rediscovered this cool little computer game called “Life”.

Is it an MMOG? :)

95   skibum   2006 Aug 4, 4:51am  

George Says:

I personally think the next bubble is going to be in gold.

Unless there's a sea change of attitude towards gold and ease of purchase/transaction, I don't see this happening on nearly the same scale as internet stocks, housing or even beanie babies. Your average sheeple just won't have the sophistication and access to gold markets to make this happen. This is, of course, unless people start buying decorative gold and jewellry. It may very well happen in with the investor crowd, though.

96   StuckInBA   2006 Aug 4, 4:57am  

You mean people won't discover the GLD, SLV, DBC etc ?

97   StuckInBA   2006 Aug 4, 4:58am  

Aaarghhhh. Why is my comment erased ?

98   skibum   2006 Aug 4, 4:59am  

StuckInBA Says:

1. Fed pauses, and most likely drops rates, in a year, or earlier.
2. That doesn’t help RE prices anyways, but merely slows down the decline.
3. Short term inflation in stock prices and/or commodities
4. Longer term decline in US$
5. Consumer price inflation (actual, not voodoo) for the foreseeable future

If this plays out, there is systemic risk introduced.

If this scenario plays out, this administration, BB and Greenspan will go down in history as the ones who crippled the US economy for decades to come. I'd add to the above politicians caving in to the masses and introducing massive bailouts when FNM, FB's and their ilk beg for help. I'm also doubtful innovation will save the day in the long term. The US is losing ground to the rest of the world in training top-notch engineers, scientists, and the like. Moreover, as economic conditions become less favorable for business and innovation, and as India and China grow economically, the US will be less and less desirable a place for innovative minds to come and do their thing.

99   Randy H   2006 Aug 4, 5:01am  

People may bubble up gold and other commodities through ETFs. They won't through the futures markets; and the goldbug "brokerages" aren't pervasive enough to capitalize on any rush to gold fast enough.

George may well be right, but I question the degree to which such a bubble can ultimately inflate. If the bubble is in futures it will abide by the laws of that market, which are brutal and ruthless, in which an individual investor is like a mark playing 3-card monte on the corner. Futures markets tend to correct bubbles pretty quickly, so don't blink.

If it bubbles up in ETFs then it will be self limiting as an irresistible target of arbitrage. In fact, how much of the GLD volume is already speculative hedge bets on a runnup? A lot of the new units being created in GLD are going straight to hedge funds. As soon as sheeple start buying in in significant numbers with a long-n-pray strategy, the HFs will start milking the cow.

If Vanguard et. al. start marketing gold or "golden" ETFs to people's 401ks, then the bubble could get pretty big. I'd like to think that someone would say "ahem" and put some regs into place if that started. Then again...

100   DinOR   2006 Aug 4, 5:01am  

Randy H,

Well said. I get a little depressed watching all of the markets knee jerk reactions from one sector/bubble to the next. There are plenty of interesting, promising and worthy pursuits out there! Of course I don't have answer ONE! To think that gold will provide the next "thunder" is more depressing than I can handle. It's like we're working backward. Tech, houses, gold, what's next...... flints?

101   skibum   2006 Aug 4, 5:06am  

Tech, houses, gold, what’s next…… flints?

Ever see "Waterworld"????

102   StuckInBA   2006 Aug 4, 5:08am  

Glen and tannebaum,

Both of you mention a possibility that is rarely seen here. Lower interest rates and lower house prices. We are so certain that we are different than Japan !

But you have a point. If the prices continue to drop, people won't have any equity to qualify for a refinance. The teaser rate, option ARM crowd is going to be in trouble. The rates may not drop enough for many 3/1 ARM holders as well.

So forget the rates. Just declining house prices can feed on itself.

103   Randy H   2006 Aug 4, 5:08am  

Tech, houses, gold, what’s next…… flints?

Tulips fit in there somewhere.

104   DinOR   2006 Aug 4, 5:09am  

skibum,

"The U.S is losing ground"

Well, that's kind of hard to argue with but I do feel that we still have a tremendous obligation to move things along. If India (or wherever) shows the most promising advances well then they should rightfully attract the investment capital! I'm O.K w/ whom ever gets it. I think my comments were more along the lines of coming up with real solutions (not necessarily the new "hot" thing for former daytraders and house flippers).

105   Glen   2006 Aug 4, 5:09am  

I think Skibum is right.

Long term, we got big problems.

If BB tries to stave off a dollar crash, he will trigger a recession. Even if the Fed tries to "reflate" this will exacerbate the fiscal crisis because SS benefits are inflation-indexed. You can only game the CPI numbers for so long...

But there are a lot of things that can happen to alleviate the pain. Randy makes a good point about potential for future productivity gains. Plus, we could cut a *huge* amount of fat out of our economy---we have enormous waste and inefficiency in education, healthcare and defense. The fiscal situation could be drastically improved with a more responsible administration. SS could be reformed. Healthcare and education could be streamlined. Unnecessary weapons programs could be cut. Ag subsidies could be eliminated. And on and on....

My fear, though, is that these kinds of changes may not be politically feasible. AARP, teachers unions, the military industrial complex, HMOs, etc. are pretty well entrenched and very tough to negotiate with. It will take some kind of major crisis, combined with decisive and intelligent leadership to address these issues... I'm agnostic on whether this will happen, but I'm definitely *not* optimistic. We are living in interesting times, I'm afraid.

106   DinOR   2006 Aug 4, 5:10am  

Randy H,

I meant no disrepect to our good friends and brothers in arms at ITulip.com!

107   e   2006 Aug 4, 5:13am  

The US is losing ground to the rest of the world in training top-notch engineers, scientists, and the like. Moreover, as economic conditions become less favorable for business and innovation, and as India and China grow economically, the US will be less and less desirable a place for innovative minds to come and do their thing.

There's some sort bizarre assumption there that people care about the future. We're Americans damnit - planning for the future means some sort of communist centralized planning.

Besides, why do the boomers care? They're so self-centered that they even named the next generation after themselves!

See: Boomer Echo
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2004/10/01/60minutes/main646890.shtml

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