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How Much Longer Can The Real Estate Market Recovery Last?


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2013 Aug 6, 3:30am   14,080 views  62 comments

by smaulgld   ➕follow (4)   💰tip   ignore  

Who Will Buy the Houses to Sustain the Real Estate Market?

The current real estate recovery is characterized by higher home prices driven by low inventory and high demand relative to the existing inventory.

The demand is driven by Fed induced low interest rates that has invited speculators to the real estate market.

In many areas fewer homes are being sold this year than last year (when not many homes were sold), yet prices continue to soar.

A sales down, prices up dynamic is not the characteristic of a healthy sustainable real estate market.

As I mentioned in a recent WSJ Marketwatch article, a healthy housing market thrives on a vibrant jobs market. Currently the job market is weak, especially among millennials who should be providing the pipeline for future homes sales.

http://smaulgld.com/can-the-housing-recovery-continue/

#housing

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1   smaulgld   2013 Aug 6, 3:56am  

on another board someone noted that all cash buyers don't need jobs-this is true but how many all cash buyers are there?

2   smaulgld   2013 Aug 6, 4:13am  

actually the point is there is not and has not been a recovery- just rising home prices on limited sales

3   edvard2   2013 Aug 6, 4:45am  

As someone who survived the last bubble it'll last probably until everyone on the street talks non-stop about the housing bubble. We aren't to that point yet, but that's as good a guess as any.

4   smaulgld   2013 Aug 6, 4:48am  

edvard2 -good point- but it seems this isn't really a bubble just higher prices. The participation is very narrow.

5   smaulgld   2013 Aug 6, 4:54am  

Higher prices with a DECREASE in sale is not a sustainable market

6   Robert Sproul   2013 Aug 6, 5:13am  

My understanding of bubbles is that they end in a complete revulsion of the asset class. Retail purchase of stocks was nonexistent for 25 years after '29.
I have much trouble with the idea of the bubble that burst in 2006 ending in this absurd echo bubble.
Where is the fear that should have been created by the very recent wealth destruction?

7   smaulgld   2013 Aug 6, 5:36am  

If employment is weak it doesn’t matter how low rates are and it certainly doesn’t help if rates are rising!

8   smaulgld   2013 Aug 6, 6:15am  

Robert Sproul-"Where is the fear that should have been created by the very recent wealth destruction?"

It is there-That was one of the points of the article. Home prices are rising but sales are not-this bubblet is not producing an increase in homeownership-indeed it is going down.

This is not like 2004/05 when everyone was getting a loan and buying a home.

Volume is low.

9   smaulgld   2013 Aug 6, 6:31am  

Robert Sproul-this echo bubble doesn't sound anything like the last one. Also stocks are experience a similar increase -not based on greater volume, but less inventory based on share buybacks

10   smaulgld   2013 Aug 6, 7:20am  

Donjumpsuit- good thoughts

there has to be a point where home prices become unaffordable in relation to wages.

There may always be superrich enclaves like NYC and San Francisco but for the rest of the country where jobs are not plentiful and don't pay that much, there really cant be a surge in home sales or prices

11   smaulgld   2013 Aug 6, 7:23am  

you can make up lack of income with leveraged buying by lowering rates and allowing for bigger loans
We have seen that with car financing. People used to pay cash for cars in the 60's-they would save up and buy one.
Now cars are sold on the basis of financing-the average car in 1970 cost about 2500-3000 and the average wage was about $15K or 5X less than annual income

Now a car costs about 20K but the average income is not $100K
but people still have cars-the difference is they finance them now.

12   David9   2013 Aug 6, 7:41am  

How much longer? Anybody's guess. According to this article President Obama wants to make some changes in housing:

http://nbcpolitics.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/08/06/19897574-obama-warns-on-housing-we-cant-just-re-inflate-a-housing-bubble?lite

1.) Wind down Fannie and Freddie
2.) Lenders become mostly private not government
3.) "As home prices rise, we can’t just re-inflate a housing bubble,"
4.) Ensure a bailout never happens again

Certainly is different in not contradictory rhetoric.

In my opinion, there wasn't a lot of specifics in the article, a very nice speech if you will. Not going to hold my breath, we may just end up flipping houses with tiny inventory for the next decade.

13   smaulgld   2013 Aug 6, 8:37am  

David9-Zillow is actually having an event with OBama on this:http://patrick.net/?p=1227874

14   David9   2013 Aug 6, 8:54am  

smaulgld-Thanks, I prefer to remain anonymous. Besides, I would be too inflamatory. I'm glad he is reaching out for information.

15   smaulgld   2013 Aug 6, 9:48am  

David9-some of the comments appear to come from people using their real names and are inflammatory. It seems Zillow is reaching out to those that are asking more pedestrian questions to ask the President.
What's odd is that housing should not be a federal issue or one that the executive branch should deal with. What is interesting is it seems as if the president is advocating for less govt involvement in housing.

16   Bubbabeefcake   2013 Aug 6, 10:02am  

smaulgld says

What is interesting is it seems as if the president is advocating for less govt involvement in housing.

That's only because they've exausted evey resource there is to prop up housing in which will turn out to be a complete failure when the smoke finally clears

Is the term for this behavior called backpaddeling or is he just peeing all over himself !

17   David9   2013 Aug 6, 10:09am  

smaulgld-I didn't look that closely at the screen to read/view some of the already posted videos.

"What's odd is that housing should not be a federal issue or one that the executive branch should deal with."
One would think.

I just don't think it's the best idea to possibly undermine the President even on a Zillow video. Ever heard of Marilyn Monroe? One of my questions would be "How long is the suspension of Mark to Market accounting going to last? It has already been since 2009." It is my understanding that in past real estate markets this was an effective market stabilizing tool to limit the number of 'foreclosures', 'lis pendens' etc on a banks books that they can list as an asset.

18   smaulgld   2013 Aug 6, 10:33am  

Bubbabear "That's only because they've exausted evey resource there is to prop up housing in which will turn out to be a complete failure when the smoke finally clears"
You could be right-running from failure

19   smaulgld   2013 Aug 6, 10:38am  

David9 "I just don't think it's the best idea to possibly undermine the President even on a Zillow video. Ever heard of Marilyn Monroe? "
it is surprising the out right vehemence of some of the posts.

20   David9   2013 Aug 6, 10:55am  

smaulgld-"it is surprising the out right vehemence of some of the posts."

Great, yes, even at a short glance I saw 'Quantitative Easing', 'Bank Greed', 'Underwater' etc.

Easy to miss in a blink from the article I posted:
"He argued for projects that would put construction workers on jobs repairing rundown homes or clearing vacant properties, and called for policies to ensure affordable housing."

Does this mean they are going to hire the unemployed to bull doze the Lis Pendens?

You said yourself, 'Why is the Executive Branch involved in this at all?"

I see three possibilities:
1.) They are fishing just to see how much people do know.
2.) It is good PR
3.) It is a public opinion poll. (I do hope they are not looking for information themselves.)

21   puhim   2013 Aug 6, 10:57am  

smaulgld says

How Much Longer Can The Real Estate Market Recovery Last?

To be fair there was never a recovery just a transition from Recession to GREAT DEPRESSION!

22   smaulgld   2013 Aug 6, 11:01am  

I think its more of an opportunity to look like he is addressing an issue.

The housing market has far too many tentacles of the federal government and federal reserve to be"fixed" Indeed any fix would involve even more government involvement and would only make it worse.

This is why I find it intriguing that the president would talk about eliminating fannie mae with out (yet) naming another federal agency to take its place

23   puhim   2013 Aug 6, 11:01am  

smaulgld says

This is why I find it intriguing that the president would talk about eliminating fannie mae with out (yet) naming another federal agency to take its place

This way he can "DELETE" 1 TRILLION in LOSES!

Just move a few numbers about and will be like it never existed.

What FHA DEBT!

24   David9   2013 Aug 6, 11:34am  

smaulgld- Don't you also find it intriguing that after having to endure over a year and a half of housing cheerleading articles lauding the phenomenal, extraordinary housing market recovery, now, after 6 years, very quietly and gently it is suggested a few things are broken.

25   puhim   2013 Aug 6, 11:46am  

Without QE Real Estate "Worldwide" will now CRASH!

26   smaulgld   2013 Aug 6, 9:41pm  

Puhum:"To be fair there was never a recovery just a transition from Recession to GREAT DEPRESSION!"
True but there has been a recovery in the price of the relatively few homes that have been sold in the last year.
That is the "recovery" that is at risk.

27   smaulgld   2013 Aug 7, 12:33am  

David"Don't you also find it intriguing that after having to endure over a year and a half of housing cheerleading articles lauding the phenomenal, extraordinary housing market recovery, now, after 6 years, very quietly and gently it is suggested a few things are broken."

there isnt a problem when it suits them and there is a problem when then can be the hero and fix it or look like they are fixing it or if they need to blame someone

28   smaulgld   2013 Aug 7, 12:41am  

robertoaribas "see you on here, a year from now, when home prices are even higher, and you are even more shrill and disconnected from reality."

home prices will be higher next year if the employment market picks up tremendously or if the Fed backpedals and doubles down on QE
otherwise there isn't enough demand in the system.

29   smaulgld   2013 Aug 7, 12:57am  

California job growth accelerates-but in the service sector-and how many of these jobs are part time.

http://www.centralvalleybusinesstimes.com/stories/001/?ID=23955

If we see growth of full time jobs across all sectors, home prices could increase- we aren't see that yet

30   smaulgld   2013 Aug 7, 1:34am  

Unfortunately too much of the economy and housing market depends on the Fed.
But having said that I'll go with home prices on the national level flat to slightly down YOY in August 2014.

To me what is more important is not home prices but increased sales of homes and higher home ownership rates-that would reflect a true recovery

31   smaulgld   2013 Aug 7, 2:02am  

" I'd postulate that with so many homes financed with ultra low rates, as rates rise, lots of owners like me will say, "screw it, my mortgage is 4%. I'm keeping this home forever."

Great point. And that is what will happen.
The low interest rates were a gift to the wealthy creating a greater wealth disparity.

The Fed's policies favor the propertied and those with access to credit.

Had the fed done nothing, home prices would have fallen and we would have the "affordable housing" the Fed government claims to favor

32   tatupu70   2013 Aug 7, 2:05am  

smaulgld says

Great point. And that is what will happen.

The low interest rates were a gift to the wealthy creating a greater wealth disparity.

Huh? How do you figure that?

Low interest rates favor borrowers and penalize savers. Wealthy are savers. Poor are borrowers.

33   smaulgld   2013 Aug 7, 2:13am  

tatupu70 "Low interest rates favor borrowers and penalize savers. Wealthy are savers. Poor are borrowers."

Agree 100% with your statement- here is how.
the "poor" savers can't save because there is no place to earn a decent return. With no real savings and perhaps poor to ok credit they can't buy homes.

The wealthy already have assets saved and credit good enough to take advantage of the record low interest rates so they were able to buy homes cheaply the past few years and lock in 30 year long term rates thus locking in low shelter costs and perhaps asset appreciation.

The wealthy also own the greatest amount of stocks as they have the most disposable income and extra cash to invest.
The stock market has done extremely well these past few years.

So the wealthy don't mind parking some of their cash in a no interest bank account while they invest the rest in stocks and borrow money at low rates to buy homes.

34   tatupu70   2013 Aug 7, 2:33am  

smaulgld says

Agree 100% with your statement- here is how.

the "poor" savers can't save because there is no place to earn a decent return. With no real savings and perhaps poor to ok credit they can't buy homes.

Come on now. You don't really think this. The poor can't save because they spend all their money just on necessities.

35   Dan8267   2013 Aug 7, 2:35am  

smaulgld says

on another board someone noted that all cash buyers don't need jobs-this is true but how many all cash buyers are there?

I'm an all cash buyer, but I will only buy close to where I live and work, where the jobs are.

36   smaulgld   2013 Aug 7, 2:43am  

tatupu70 "Come on now. You don't really think this. The poor can't save because they spend all their money just on necessities."

that's true and my point - low interest rates don't help them participate on the upside -ie buying houses on credit and buying stocks.
And if they managed to have a little left over-they can't save because the interest rates offered by banks pay less than the rate of inflation.

So the point remains the same-the wealthy benefit from this low interest rate environment and the poor don't

37   smaulgld   2013 Aug 7, 2:44am  

Dan8267"I'm an all cash buyer, but I will only buy close to where I live and work, where the jobs are."

Makes total sense. The number of people in your good circumstance, however, are not enough to sustain higher prices

38   kmo722   2013 Aug 7, 8:44am  

The real estate "recovery" ended with the Fed's massive intervention.. they made sure of that.. they next "recovery" phase will start when all the easy money has been made again after this interruption.. not too far in the future IMO.. it won't be a cliff like the last one as the factors are different this time.. a slow bleed .. similar to Japan..

39   exfatguy   2013 Aug 7, 8:51am  

Everyone I talk to says bubble, bubble, bubble, and they're right, but yet prices keep going up and homes sell before they're listed.

Throw away all of your economic textbooks. Normal has just been normalized.

40   kmo722   2013 Aug 7, 8:57am  

exfatguy says

Everyone I talk to says bubble, bubble, bubble, and they're right, but yet prices keep going up and homes sell before they're listed.

Throw away all of your economic textbooks. Normal has just been normalized.

that happened in 2006 as well.. I'm not following any one market, but all the national news I've read lately points to a slowdown in sales.. the culprit, according to the RE industry, of course, is higher interest rates and not the cost of the product itself, which can only and forever go up.. or maybe not..

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