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‘I Am Optimistic that House Prices Could Fall for 20 Years’


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2012 Mar 17, 5:57am   46,784 views  110 comments

by HousingBoom   ➕follow (1)   💰tip   ignore  

http://wallstreetpit.com/76795-robert-shiller-i-am-optimistic-that-home-prices-could-fall-for-20-years

I do not see why people are even debating when home prices are going to bottom. For those who think we have already bottomed nationally, why the heck would one of the top housing forecasters in the US believe it will bottom in two decades!!!! That is 20 YEARS of declining home prices!!!

Unless you are an expert like Robert Shiller and co-founded an indicator to track home prices (Case Shiller Index), you might stand a chance against his predictions.

There is no way home prices have bottomed on a national level when foreclosures are still skyrocketing and the debt crisis is upon us. My point is, if Robert Shiller believes prices will bottom in 20 years, I would think calling the bottom in 10 years would be optimistic!!!! It is common sense!!

#housing

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1   clambo   2012 Mar 17, 6:10am  

No kidding. Look around you. See those slack-jawed punks, baggy pants, tattoos, piercings, gansters, hood rat chicks, slobs, illiterate losers? Do you think they will ever have $100K saved up for a down payment? What job can they get that will allow them to save up?
As the parents of the boomers shuffle off their mortal coils, the houses will also enter the market place along with the millions of foreclosures and down down down we will go.

2   bubblesitter   2012 Mar 17, 6:28am  

clambo says

What job can they get that will allow them to save up?

Inflation! Fed will just print the money hand them directly to prop up the home prices. LOL.

3   bubblesitter   2012 Mar 17, 6:29am  

HousingBoom says

‘I Am Optimistic that House Prices Could Fall for 20 Years’

is that optimism?

4   xenogear3   2012 Mar 17, 6:43am  

I believe that first home should be free.

5   waiting_for_the_fall   2012 Mar 17, 7:02am  

The people who were sucked into buying in 2008 for the 8k tax credit will be defaulting in another year or two.
Since home values keep dropping, people can't refinance their underwater homes and they either walk away or are foreclosed. That means more foreclosures/short sales will be on the market.

Nearly everyone I talk to who wants to buy a home doesn't plan on living there more than 5 years.
Buying a home will be a bad idea for buying short term, and end up being what it should be: for people who plan on living in the home for 20 years or longer.

6   TMAC54   2012 Mar 17, 7:12am  

HousingBoom says

Unless you are an expert like Robert Shiller

Frank Whittle was not an expert. That is why Hitler used jet engines first.
Bill Gates nor Steve Jobs, Carrol Shelby and a large list of geniuses did not finish school.
Like name calling, our culture arrogantly ignores those without credentials.

Real Property is NORMALLY valued at 2.5 X annual income. WHY did it rise to 8 X and higher ? Two unspoken reasons. #1. Women were NOT considered credit worthy for mortgages until 1973. Property prices doubled by 1980.
ALL the greedy sheep who profited from that unspoken windfall, from then on, anticipated more of that same unjustifiable return from their house alone.

#2. The "Information age" beginning about 1983, (3 yrs after real estate prices fell 17%) generated more cash flow than any other invention in history. This HUMONGOUS amount of new cash flow allowed many buyers to offer MORE than the asking price,(wtf) borrow on equity to buy several more properties, accept liar loans over 125% of the appraised value, take shared equity mortgages etc.etc.etc.
Hindsight is showing us insanity. We won't admit those facts either, We will just demand that gubmint fixit. The one phenomenal constant that will eventually return, is that multiplier, @ 2.5X income.

We demanded gubmint fix it. What could they have done ? They were forced to waste TRILLIONS on fixing real estate, but we won't talk about that. Maybe our future generations won't have access to our reasoning. Ya think ?
You can buy several properties on the way up and still feel secure. Ya can't sell properties on the way back down and benefit the same way.

7   rootvg   2012 Mar 17, 8:02am  

waiting_for_the_fall says

Nearly everyone I talk to who wants to buy a home doesn't plan on living there more than 5 years.

That's a California thing.

I know plenty of people who buy homes to live there basically forever but they don't live here.

8   RentingForHalfTheCost   2012 Mar 17, 10:13am  

clambo says

No kidding. Look around you. See those slack-jawed punks, baggy pants, tattoos, piercings, gansters, hood rat chicks, slobs, illiterate losers? Do you think they will ever have $100K saved up for a down payment? What job can they get that will allow them to save up?

They have many ways to get the downpayment

1. Steal money or goods directly from you

2. Be given free money by the gov't to prop up housing prices. Then in 2 years they will default and your taxes will bail them out.

3. Sell drugs to your kids who eventually start robbing from you to pay for the drugs

4. Make a fake insurance claim at their crappy work and collect disability money for years causing your premiums to rise. In effect stealing directly from you

See, lots of ways. The crafty ones will apply a mixture of all and end up with a McMansion in Berkeley.

9   RentingForHalfTheCost   2012 Mar 17, 10:24am  

HousingBoom says

Unless you are an expert like Robert Shiller and co-founded an indicator to track home prices (Case Shiller Index), you might stand a chance against his predictions.

Yah, but Shiller doesn't live in the Cupertino, Phoenix, Las Vegas, Fremont, San Francisco, etc. He is also not Asian and sends his kids to private school. He has no clue about housing. He needs to go to all the overcrowded open houses and witness all the cash in people's wallets. 600K listings going for 550K! 1.2 million dollar listing sitting on the market for months with no bidders! How can he explain all this housing mania. All the record sales and price increases in all these cities mentioned. Landlords and flipper are making a killing. Just in Cupertino alone the medium house price is enough to bail out Greece. Shiller is a crook and a scam artist. Just listen to his aggression and nonsense. I'd like to see him put down Scientology in front of Tom Cruise and then see them both duke it out. Cruise should be at clear stage 12 by now and that means he can levitate at will. What a fight it would be. The superior Cruise against the seemingly calm and collected Shiller. I'd pay for ring side seats! Ding ding ding....

http://www.youtube.com/embed/Ru8zoSvz0Wo

10   rootvg   2012 Mar 17, 1:00pm  

Nomograph says

rootvg says

That's a California thing.

You really should consider leaving California since you hate it here so much and can't stand Californians. I can't think of a better way to have a miserable life than living somewhere you hate.

Why not move to Kentucky? It's filled with like-minded conservative folks, and with all the Usenet experience I'm sure you can get a job maintaining the website of the Creation Museum.

I'd rather stay here and irritate the living fucking shit out of people like you.

11   thomas.wong1986   2012 Mar 17, 1:21pm  

Nomograph says

You really should consider leaving California since you hate it here so much and can't stand Californians. I can't think of a better way to have a miserable life than living somewhere you hate.
Why not move to Kentucky? It's filled with like-minded conservative folks, and with all the Usenet experience I'm sure you can get a job maintaining the website of the Creation Museum.

I doubt your a Californian... cant be anyone more greedy pnet like you.

12   B.A.C.A.H.   2012 Mar 17, 1:33pm  

rootvg,

Nomo's right. You haven't retracted your bigoted and hateful remarks about your fellow Californians.

You think Danville is an island of such bigotry in The Bay Area? Think again. Put some placards on your front yard telling your gay neighbors what you think of them, like you told us here on patrick.net.

13   freak80   2012 Mar 17, 2:16pm  

Nationally, prices have come back to something like long term historical averages:

http://www.multpl.com/case-shiller-home-price-index-inflation-adjusted/

Of course that's just the national average. It's possible that part of China's massive RE bubble has been "exported" to the Bay Area.

14   B.A.C.A.H.   2012 Mar 17, 3:30pm  

rootvg says

I'd rather stay here and irritate the living f... out of people like you.

This has got to be the lamest reason I've heard yet for someone who's not from around here to choose to live in and buy a home in the Bay Area.

15   freak80   2012 Mar 17, 3:43pm  

I don't think rootvg ever tried to argue for Young Earth Creationism on Patrick.net. At least not since I've been active here.

16   thomas.wong1986   2012 Mar 17, 4:20pm  

Nomograph says

thomas.wong1986 says
I doubt your a Californian... cant be anyone more greedy pnet like you.

Do you lapse into Chinese when you get angry?

Your gonna have to try a little harder than that...it doesnt take much to see your a permbull on RE. I say your neck deep in it, and the idea of additional declines would certainly wipe you out. But further decline will occur.

17   offroadjunkie   2012 Mar 19, 2:07am  

Ugg, now children, if we are not going to play nice, then at least stay on topic...

18   fewy   2012 Mar 19, 2:35am  

One reason why housing prices are going up in the Bay Area has to do with rent prices. I had a nice upscale apartment in San Jose for four years. My rent was between 1900 and 2100 in those years. Now that I'm moving out the next tenant will be looking at a monthly rate of 2500+ for the same unit. With rent prices this high people can just buy a 500k-600k starter home with a similar payment.

19   BoomAndBustCycle   2012 Mar 19, 2:45am  

Way to cite a year old article!

20   dunnross   2012 Mar 19, 3:00am  

fewy says

One reason why housing prices are going up in the Bay Area has to do with rent prices.

Housing prices are not going up in the Bay Area. Housing prices are falling in the Bay Area.

21   bubblesitter   2012 Mar 19, 3:05am  

dunnross says

Housing prices are not going up in the Bay Area. Housing prices are falling in the Bay Area.

Exactly. If one is biased then he won't see that decline or one is defending from behind the armor of CS index,and is truely ignoring the current on the ground numbers. :)

22   realitycheck   2012 Mar 19, 3:09am  

fewy says

One reason why housing prices are going up in the Bay Area has to do with rent prices. I had a nice upscale apartment in San Jose for four years. My rent was between 1900 and 2100 in those years. Now that I'm moving out the next tenant will be looking at a monthly rate of 2500+ for the same unit. With rent prices this high people can just buy a 500k-600k starter home with a similar payment.

I think it is not the rent. Rent was never the factor in house prices here. I wish it was. The interest rates going down for last 9 months with low inventory caused a little spike. Once foreclosures hit the market and rates go up(They already have started going up!), you will the downtrend in housing to resume

23   rootvg   2012 Mar 19, 3:56am  

Helloeeze says

"I Am Optimistic that House Prices Could Fall for 20 Years’"

I believe that statement alone reveals Mr. Shiller's bias. And that concerns me a bit.

I put some stock in his charts though. He has been right the last few years.

Still, around the Bay Area most homes sell quickly at asking prices (which are lower than the peak, sure) But in good areas house will sell at 2005 prices easily. Whether those buyers later on will regret buying in 2012, we will have to wait and see.

Here again, it depends upon what, how, where and when.

In The Arena was (I believe) Richard Nixon's next to last book. He grew up in rural southern California and related a story from high school where he and a few others were assigned to debate buying versus renting. What analogy did they use? Cost to buy versus cost to rent. Period, paragraph.

24   Icabod   2012 Mar 19, 4:05am  

Nomograph says

Why not move to Kentucky? It's filled with like-minded conservative folks, and with all the Usenet experience I'm sure you can get a job maintaining the website of the Creation Museum.

That was damn funny. :p

25   1sfrenter   2012 Mar 19, 4:10am  

dunnross says

Housing prices are not going up in the Bay Area. Housing prices are falling in the Bay Area.

Housing prices are falling here, but rents are not.

Seems to me that rents and housing would fall simultaneously, over time. If not, then any rent vs. buy calculator would only be accurate for that particular moment in time, but not for any future calculations.

I guess could keep rising as home prices fall if the 1% has their way and starts buying up foreclosures in bulk and renting to the 99%. Actually, I believe that is the plan - the last step in class warfare: the 1% has most of the money, now they want the land.

26   1sfrenter   2012 Mar 19, 4:11am  

1sfrenter says

I guess could keep rising as home prices fall

Meant to write:

I guess RENTS could keep rising as home prices fall if...

27   RentingForHalfTheCost   2012 Mar 19, 4:14am  

fewy says

buy a 500k-600k starter home with a similar payment

Wow. Go into debt 500-600K to the bank so you can avoid a $2500 monthly payment. Incredible logic. No one sees how this accumulating debt is crippling our country? Hello out there...

Here is a marvel idea. Pay the 2500/mth to sit and wait. If you think you can afford a debt load of 500-600K then 2.5k is nothing to you. You got that in change in the sofa. ;)

28   freak80   2012 Mar 19, 4:14am  

If rents are going up, that means fundamental demand is going up and will tend to keep housing prices up. However, house prices could still be overvalued.

In the end, do what's cheaper: renting the house or renting the money to "buy" the house. Also consider the costs of buying/selling if you're in a non-secure job.

29   freak80   2012 Mar 19, 4:17am  

$2500/month on 500k is an annual rental yield of 6%. That's a little closer to sanity. Of course there's still maintenence, property taxes, and insurance, so the real yield will be less than 6%.

30   rootvg   2012 Mar 19, 4:20am  

RentingForHalfTheCost says

fewy says

buy a 500k-600k starter home with a similar payment

Wow. Go into debt 500-600K to the bank so you can avoid a $2500 monthly payment. Incredible logic. No one sees how this accumulating debt is crippling our country? Hello out there...

Here is a marvel idea. Pay the 2500/mth to sit and wait. If you think you can afford a debt load of 500-600K then 2.5k is nothing to you. You got that in change in the sofa. ;)

It's not crippling the country at all. There are only a few places in the United States where buying is THIS expensive.

This is the Bay Area. It's an economic, cultural and political bubble. There are simply too many people here with large sums of money they never earned or earned too easily or were simply handed because of the family they were born into.

And guess what else? You're not gonna change it.

Many people will not be able to continue to afford living here and other places like it. Michael Bloomberg, Judd Gregg, Peter Schiff and others have discussed this at considerable length.

31   bob2356   2012 Mar 19, 4:22am  

wthrfrk80 says

If rents are going up, that means fundamental demand is going up and will tend to keep housing prices up. However, house prices could still be overvalued.

In the end, do what's cheaper: renting the house or renting the money to "buy" the house. Also consider the costs of buying/selling if you're in a non-secure job.

Are rents really rising? I read in NY times recently that rents went up 2.4% in the last 12 months, but that was not inflation adjusted. With 2.9% increase in the cpi there was actually a decrease in rents. I'm sure rents in certain area's are rising. Also I haven't been able to find a breakout of rents just for houses alone, so who know what the real story is.

32   freak80   2012 Mar 19, 4:34am  

bob2356 says

Are rents really rising?

Well I just assumed "fewy" was telling the truth vis a vis rents in San Jose. It's just one data-point though.

33   anonymous   2012 Mar 19, 4:35am  

Ok, so Shiller said what exactly? They "could" be falling for 20 years. They also could not. If a house falls every year 1%, shiller would be correct, right? Useless information. It's like saying...the stockmarket COULD be going down for 20 years...or up...or stay flat. It MAY....It also MAY not. All these guys make ridiculous claims to get on the news. When the stockmarket is at 6000 the analysts come out and say that we may go to 1000. When the stockmarket is at 13k, the same guys are saying that we are going to 20k. Useless info. You have to make radical claims these days to get on the news.

So what, you have to live somewhere and if you are coughing up 2500/month in rent, you might as well pay off a house with that.

2500/m over 30 years = 900k in rent spent. That is, if you don't have a rent increase EVER. Highly unlikely to go 30 years without rent increase. After 30 years you practically spend a million bucks. Remember, you still have to live somewhere when you retire...meaning...keep paying rent.

Why not use that money and pay off a 500k home? Or a 600k home? Remember, you will spend 1million to rent. And after 30 years you have NOTHING to show for from the 2500 you spent every month.

I don't know. No brainer for me, regardless what shiller says.

34   BoomAndBustCycle   2012 Mar 19, 4:47am  

RentingForHalfTheCost says

fewy says

buy a 500k-600k starter home with a similar payment

Wow. Go into debt 500-600K to the bank so you can avoid a $2500 monthly payment. Incredible logic. No one sees how this accumulating debt is crippling our country? Hello out there...

Here is a marvel idea. Pay the 2500/mth to sit and wait. If you think you can afford a debt load of 500-600K then 2.5k is nothing to you. You got that in change in the sofa. ;)

Debt is not the bondage that you make it out to be! Debt at a variable interest rate can overwhelm you... But low fixed rate debt is not something to be afraid of! Its like being afraid of death... You are eventually going to die, there is nothing you can do about it... If you die with manageable fixesd rate debt or flush with cash, neither is following you to the grave. If you are worried about your heirs well-being... Take out a juicy life insurance plan.

35   freak80   2012 Mar 19, 5:03am  

SubOink says

Why not use that money and pay off a 500k home? Or a 600k home? Remember, you will spend 1million to rent. And after 30 years you have NOTHING to show for from the 2500 you spent every month.
I don't know. No brainer for me, regardless what shiller says.

Yes, rent is "money down the drain." It really sucks doesn't it? And yes, inflation tends to favor buying rather than renting, since rents rise with inflation whereas your debt does not.

But interest on debt is also "money down the drain." So are maintenance, property taxes, and insurance.

Choose the option that results in less money down the drain. To see, use the rent vs. buy calculator under "real estate tools."

36   fewy   2012 Mar 19, 5:26am  

RentingForHalfTheCost,

A dual income family with only one person employed in the tech sector should be able to afford a 500k to 600k home. Even with 5 years of experience this family should be making 150k a year, if they have ten years of experience I would say that would be around 200k. With those incomes and maybe some sort of down payment this house falls into the historic 3x annual salary range.

37   David9   2012 Mar 19, 5:28am  

So many good points relating as to why housing is not a bottom, I didn't choose one. Right, just look anywhere, around you, your neighborhood, the city you live in, information from the media is debatable, combined with what you see and common sense about interest rates, foreclosures, shadow inventory, etc. it looks to me like a set up agonizing slow drop in house prices. (Didn't someone say the banks are bankrupt? ;-) yeah, that would make sense no liquidation, they can't afford it.)

This leaves unsexy choices regarding housing, just rent or choose an option that 'results in less money down the drain'.

38   anonymous   2012 Mar 19, 5:55am  

wthrfrk80 says

But interest on debt is also "money down the drain." So are maintenance, property taxes, and insurance.

Interest is also deductible and the portion of the payment is significantly lower than renting.

example: Mortage of 2400/m , in the first year interest portion is about 1800/month and it keeps going lower and lower of the course of the loan. Once you have passed 15 years your interest portion is less than what goes towards your principal. It's like rent that gets reduced every month!

Maintenance costs are not what some people make it to be. In rentals, most landlords hate their maintenance costs and because they don't live in their $hitbox you end up with the cheapest, cheesiest quality of everything. In a home, you can upgrade your bathroom to your liking, yes, it costs, but you are also the one enjoying it.

Insurance? My homeowners insurance = what my renters insurance used to be. Same shit. ($1000/year)

39   anonymous   2012 Mar 19, 5:56am  

wthrfrk80 says

Yes, rent is "money down the drain." It really sucks doesn't it?

When we sat down and calculated what we spent in rent, I almost fainted.

It served as a big motivator to get our shit together and buy.

40   K Dub   2012 Mar 19, 6:24am  

RentingForHalfTheCost says

Yah, but Shiller doesn't live in the Cupertino, Phoenix, Las Vegas, Fremont, San Francisco, etc.

Don't forget Philadelphia, Houston, San Jose, or San Antonio. You know, 4 of top 10 cities (by population) in the U.S.

As Paul Krugman famously concluded (and somehow played Captain Obvious and won a Nobel Prize for it), people move towards big cities for jobs. Guess what? Some of these people will desire houses as well. Why these cities aren't included in the Mr. Shiller's Housing "Index" is beyond me.

It would be very helpful to add the aforementioned cities. This would help track housing trends correlating data based on the 50 largest cities in the U.S. It should be updated every 10 years via the latest U.S. Census Bureau data. This information would be more relevant to more people.

Take a look at either the Top 10-City or Top 20-City Composite Housing Index. It's just a chart run by idiots and consumed by popular media outlets as the unquestionable de facto standard for housing information.

Shiller and crew are a bunch of idiots. This is why I visit patrick.net instead.

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