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housing prices peak 2


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2022 Apr 29, 9:29pm   606,097 views  5,680 comments

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https://finance.yahoo.com/news/pimco-kiesel-called-housing-top-160339396.html?source=patrick.net

Bond manager Mark Kiesel sold his California home in 2006, when he presciently predicted the housing bubble would pop. He bought again in 2012, after U.S. prices fell more than 30% and found a floor.

Now, after a record surge in prices, Kiesel says the time to sell is once again at hand.

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4435   AmericanKulak   2024 Feb 22, 4:44pm  

AD says


There is no car payment as most of the service workers living on the beach in the Florida panhandle use a bicycle or moped, and sometimes the county bus system. Some are more sophisticated and have electric bikes. But they live on the beach to only be within a 2.5 mile walk of any potential service job.

C'mon man. County Bus system in the Panhandle? Walking 2.5 miles or waiting half an hour for the bus in July in 90F 90% humidity and by the time they get to work, they'll need to shower before the Manager would let them approach customers. The ladies would be looking like Tammy Fae Baker by the time they walked or waited for the bus, and have a 6 inch sweat spot on their pits


4436   AmericanKulak   2024 Feb 22, 4:48pm  

AD says


No, $10 is more accurate for Bay County, Florida especially the Walmart on 23rd Street in Panama City. I know first-hand from shopping around that $10 per person is very reasonable in the Florida panhandle. The county is very pro active as far as sidewalks and bike lanes.

You can eat well on $10 a day with Great Value, which is Walmart's brand like oatmeal, raisan bran cereal, cannelli beans, etc. 1 egg, wheat toast, and raisin bran cereal for breakfast would cost about $2, a can of Progresso soup is $2.25, and that leaves plenty (+$5) for dinner like a half a rotissiere chicken.

Are they walking to the Walmart and Publix too in that heat and carrying those bags home? Or a 2 hour round trip just to get there by taking the bus (.5 hour wait + .5 hour drive because stops, then back)

And GMO corn syrupy, soy oil laden hell is in that Great Value?
4437   AD   2024 Feb 22, 4:48pm  

AmericanKulak says

Publix Subs are great but still $7 and up, and around 1200-1400 calories.


Great Value wheat as well as honey wheat bread is $2 at Walmart. That lasts at least 1 week for 1 person.

You can get 2 pounds of Great Value cooked ham for $6.50 at the Walmart on 23rd St in Panama City.

I like going to the 23rd Street Walmart because there is usually a Pentecostal preacher with a megaphone on the sidewalk entrance who puts on good preaching.

The preacher's van with Alabama license plates has a few bumper stickers like "My Church Allows Dancing With Snakes" and another sticker says "F&%$ Biden".
.
4438   AmericanKulak   2024 Feb 22, 4:52pm  

Hey listen, I ain't saying Great Value isn't cheap, but I can't imagine the corn syrup filler hell that it that bread. I do shop at Dollar Store, but for things like Boxed Milk ($1.25)

All I'm saying is, it's a lousy life to have to take county buses to do anything in 90F 90% humidity.

My mass transit is fine, it goes up and down A1A like clockwork - but only on the beach. Try taking a bus to the mainland and you're talking half hour waits, and a half dozen stops with a half hour or more to get where I could get in 5 minutes by car, 10 during the weekends or rush hour.
4439   AD   2024 Feb 22, 4:52pm  

AmericanKulak says

Are they walking to the Walmart and Publix too in that heat and carrying those bags home? Or a 2 hour round trip just to get there by taking the bus (.5 hour wait + .5 hour drive because stops, then back)


I'm telling you they use their bikes with baskets, and many have electric bikes which are getting more popular here. They can ride on sidewalk as long as they go less than 15 miles per hour.

There is a Walmart about 1.5 miles away from our townhome community and a Publix about 2 miles away.

Hottest it gets is typically 90 degrees and 63% relative humidity during July.

.
4440   AmericanKulak   2024 Feb 22, 4:56pm  

I think you're grossly undervaluing the utility of a car.

A 3 mile round trip carrying Groceries in a Florida summer (and having to cross at least one very busy road/street) is brutal, and waiting for a county bus, well the bus stop doesn't have AC. Many don't have a roof.

Look, I've gotten $1500/month for my studio, which I think is insane. $31k was no great income 20 years ago when most daily needs were 1/3 the price.
4441   AD   2024 Feb 22, 4:59pm  

AmericanKulak says

I think you're grossly undervaluing the utility of a car.

A 3 mile round trip carrying Groceries in a Florida summer (and having to cross at least one very busy road/street) is brutal.


You do not need a car to live and work on the beach here in the Florida panhandle. I see this firsthand with a lot of the tenants of the 3 bedroom townhomes in my community who do not have automobiles and rely on electric bikes. They only work 2 miles away and the stores are within 2 miles distance as well.
4442   AD   2024 Feb 22, 5:04pm  

AmericanKulak says

Look, I've gotten $1500/month for my studio, which I think is insane. $31k was no great income 20 years ago when most daily needs were 1/3 the price.


The 3 bedrm townhomes in my community are renting for about $2200 a month. Figure conservatively that utilities are about $300 a month. So its only about $850 a month per person for 3 people renting a 3 bedroom townhome.

The problem is you are seeing everything from your South Florida perspective just like Eman is fixated on San Fran-sicko, and not from the best place on Earth, called America's Riviera, American Paradise, or Emerald Coast (i.e., Florida panhandle).

I don't think you are the poster Ten Pound Bass who is a sage Patnet member from South Florida.

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4443   AmericanKulak   2024 Feb 22, 5:06pm  

AD says


You do not need a car to live and work on the beach here in the Florida panhandle. I see this firsthand with a lot of the tenants of the 3 bedroom townhomes in my community who do not have automobiles and rely on electric bikes. They only work 2 miles away and the stores are within 2 miles distance as well.

I don't see that in my beach community. My last tenant worked at a beach store (which is literally two blocks away and I've walked it) and couldn't have made more that $18/hr tops, and had a car.

I'm not trying to be a prick here:

We're having a conversation about a 20-something being able to afford any car in a non-metropolis area of the USA. That would be a given for any 20-something that didn't live in LA, Chicago, or New York in the Post-war era. Hell, something they got working a p/t job in HS after a short time. If we were doing this in 1980, 1990, 2000, or 2010, the fact a 20-year old server had a car would be a given, unless she lived in a Big City.

The decline of living standards in the USA is such that we're talking about this.
4444   AmericanKulak   2024 Feb 22, 5:12pm  

AD says


The problem is you are seeing everything from your South Florida perspective

I'm not in South Florida, I'm East Central. Daytona-Melbourne. A place where 5 years ago, before I returned to the states prior to COVID but was thinking about it, there were 100s of standard 3bed/2bath homes in the high 100s for a 60s Space Program Ranch /low 200s for more recent on the market. Hell, in 2021 during Covid you could rent a 3/2.5 Satellite Beach house a few blocks from the beach for less than $1800/month. Next to @Patrick SFB. Yeah, they're no longer AFB.

I brought my studio for ~65k in the mid 2010s. You can't find a studio under $150k now.

EDIT: $160k, and those are in the Crack Canaveral area, a few blocks of converted Army Missle Range Barracks, the only 'bad' part of the area.

The housing is too damned high.

And it's going to collapse.
4445   AD   2024 Feb 22, 5:16pm  

AmericanKulak says

The decline of living standards in the USA is such that we're talking about this.


Back in 1993 when I was first stationed at the NAVSTA here, it was cheap living and high standard of living. You could afford to rent your own home and not need roommates.

Its gotten worse as far as living standards because of the investors (i.e., Eman, Blackstone, Blackrock, etc.) who have driven up residential real estate and treat housing like it is stocks.

But the standard of living is a lot better here in the Florida panhandle than it is in San Fran Bay Area.

By the way, when I was living in the Washington DC metro area, a lot of my friends lived in Dupont Circle and Adams Morgan and did not have cars.

.
4446   AD   2024 Feb 22, 5:17pm  

AmericanKulak says

Next to Patrick SFB. Yeah, they're no longer AFB.


Its Space Force, not an Air Force base. I use to live not far from Patrick AFB about 5 blocks from Ron John and the pier.
4447   AmericanKulak   2024 Feb 22, 5:20pm  

Yes, I have a buddy in the Panhandle, it's probably one of the better places. I'm not super familiar with it.

Eventually, and it's not possible due to family issues, would like to be in North Florida. Between Talahassee and Jax closer to the GA border for the 3 season and cheaper land.

I remember in the early 90s you could buy a brand spanking new 3/2 on a quarter/fifth acre in Central Florida for $70k. Boxy bland ranch, but still. And there would be maybe 3-4 houses on the block. Now they're selling in the mid $200k and up, over 300% appreciation, and their newer equivalents are zero lots and $300k+

Cheap money causes pain.
4448   AmericanKulak   2024 Feb 22, 5:20pm  

AD says


Its Space Force, not an Air Force base. I use to live not far from Patrick AFB about 5 blocks from Ron John and the pier.

Yep! They just changed the last of the signage a few months ago, finally.

I really can't complain living half a block from the beach. It got in the 40s many of the past few nights, though. I don't remember that, but then again, I was coming from a colder place.
4449   AmericanKulak   2024 Feb 22, 5:22pm  

That and I got to see the record 2 of 3 spaceX launches in 24 hours (the third was at Vanderburg)
4450   AmericanKulak   2024 Feb 22, 5:35pm  

In any case, we're getting there:

https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/415-Blue-Jay-Ln-2-5-Satellite-Beach-FL-32937/2056105604_zpid/

Originally listed a Aug 2023 at $359, now $299, or ~$250/sqft to ~$210sqft. Still too much, and not for me with the bedroom quantity and non-enclosed back space where I'd probably get shit for putting out a potted plant much less a Square Foot Garden. Wonder what it went for 10, 20 years ago, cause it ain't a new building and probably 70s-80s with the Dunkin Donut/Pizza Hut roof (forget what that is called).

In any case, it's !!!Happenning!!!




4451   stereotomy   2024 Feb 22, 5:44pm  

As much as I hate the POTATUS, some form of debt relief is necessary. Hell, even the Babylonians (Hammurabi ring a bell?) had 7-year periodic debt relief. Granted, debtors back then were literal slaves and treated like animals.

I'm hoping the debt relief will free enough people to risk taking on the gubment. It almost feels like the terminal phase of the Soviet Union, when everything was in slow motion collapse, and Gorbachev kept trying to incentivize the population not to rebel.
4452   AmericanKulak   2024 Feb 22, 5:47pm  

Hey Hey Momma, goin' down, goin' down





MUH APPRESHIASHION!!!

Seriously, this house is no more than $240k inc. inflationary past few years. $250k if it was updated and improved from the early-mid 90s build it appears to be
4454   ForcedTQ   2024 Feb 25, 8:32pm  

AmericanKulak says

That and I got to see the record 2 of 3 spaceX launches in 24 hours (the third was at Vanderburg)

“Vandenberg”
4455   AmericanKulak   2024 Feb 25, 9:41pm  

ForcedTQ says


“Vandenberg”


Right, the minor lesser, little used one whose name I forgot in tandem with it's importance. ;)
4456   Misc   2024 Feb 27, 1:17pm  

Looks like the latest housing prices came in today. Another record high. 5.5% year over year increase in prices.

Go figure.

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/home-price-growth-us-accelerates-140000941.html
4457   AD   2024 Feb 27, 1:20pm  

Misc says

Looks like the latest housing prices came in today. Another record high. 5.5% year over year increase in prices.

Go figure.

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/home-price-growth-us-accelerates-140000941.html


Not sure if it is that home sellers like DR Horton are buying down mortgage rates and its not reflected in the sales price ?

A lot of times you don't know if cash was given to the buyer unless you see the closing documents. So the price does not reflect that.

Hence, should there be an automate adjustment to the median price that is being reported ? Such as discount it by 5% ?

.
4458   DOGEWontAmountToShit   2024 Feb 27, 1:47pm  

AD says

Not sure if it is that home sellers like DR Horton are buying down mortgage rates and its not reflected in the sales price ?

A lot of times you don't know if cash was given to the buyer unless you see the closing documents. So the price does not reflect that.


Yup. Wolf Street covers that.

https://wolfstreet.com/2024/02/26/prices-of-new-houses-v-prices-of-existing-houses-why-sales-of-new-houses-hang-in-there-while-sales-of-existing-houses-plunge/
4459   Misc   2024 Feb 27, 1:56pm  

Nope these are Case/Shiller prices. They measure the difference in prices for the same houses over time.
4460   DOGEWontAmountToShit   2024 Feb 27, 4:34pm  

Misc says

Nope these are Case/Shiller prices. They measure the difference in prices for the same houses over time.


Not new houses then.
4461   GNL   2024 Feb 27, 5:47pm  

I'll post my prediction again.

House prices will not see any kind of significant decrease. In fact, I believe we will see prices hold and go higher and higher. America is for sure creating a 2-tier economy...the haves and the have nots. The % of have nots will increase. But I do believe that property taxes will go to the moon OR the fed printer will continue to go brrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr.
4462   mell   2024 Feb 27, 5:53pm  

GNL says


I'll post my prediction again.

House prices will not see any kind of significant decrease. In fact, I believe we will see prices hold and go higher and higher. America is for sure creating a 2-tier economy...the haves and the have nots. The % of have nots will increase. But I do believe that property taxes will go to the moon OR the fed printer will continue to go brrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr.

I agree with this. For many years I believed the next crash must bring house prices down, but any industry which is a racket is mostly immune to severe downturns
There are too many subsidies at play for both healthcare and housing, plus the unfettered pressure of immigration, which is why these 2 sectors won't crash.
4463   AmericanKulak   2024 Feb 27, 6:22pm  

UkraineIsFucked says


https://wolfstreet.com/2024/02/26/prices-of-new-houses-v-prices-of-existing-houses-why-sales-of-new-houses-hang-in-there-while-sales-of-existing-houses-plunge/

There was a bit of a hold breath moment about 15 years ago when new was holding out while used started to dip. Then it was bombs away.

We could be in that phase now.

The rates dropped a bit but the buyers are staying away in droves. Remember, last year was the weakest year for RE transactions since 1993, when the population was 15-20% smaller and boomers right in the wheelhouse of homeowner/family ages.

Left shoulder and head done. Maybe this summer and fall the right shoulder. it's goin' down. Fundamentals and Demographics can be delayed, but not defeated.



EDIT: Interesting point noticed by Wolf Richter - there's never been a double top in the history of the Case-Shiller. My comments above are me looking at it like other (stock) charts.

"Buy now, before competition resumes!" - spoken to the last bagholder
4464   AmericanKulak   2024 Feb 27, 6:47pm  

Wolf Richter
Feb 26, 2024 at 3:40 pm
ChS,

“Home prices aren’t that out of step with CPI”

LOL. CPI Rose by 31.6% over the past 10 years, while the median price of existing homes rose by 97% — home prices rose three times faster than CPI and nearly doubled!!!
4465   DOGEWontAmountToShit   2024 Feb 27, 6:53pm  

30% of office buildings are ‘worth nothing’ and have to be torn down, say experts

https://creditnews.com/economy/30-of-office-buildings-are-worth-nothing-and-have-to-be-torn-down/
4466   AmericanKulak   2024 Feb 27, 7:01pm  

I think a dirty little secret is that Insurers, which always invested in large office buildings in Metros and retail around them, are actually raising premiums because their investments are foooked.
4467   GNL   2024 Feb 27, 7:18pm  

mell says


which is a racket

100% IMO. Everything starts there. Debt cannot be allowed to break the economy or cause deflation or be written off (no, it just gets papered over) so, less affordable homes will be built and only homes will be built for the upper levels of society because that is where the $$ is. It costs too damn much to build so, nothing can be "affordable" (look at all the companies starting or talking about dynamic pricing. Why? Entities are looking for every last shred of profit. Nothing can be left for the next person. You cannot have a robust society society wide (or as wide as possible) if nothing is left on the table for the next guy.). So, we will either get social unrest (human nature simply will not sit by and watch a small % of people have everything) or higher property taxes to pay the poor not to rip the country apart or printer continue to go brrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr. The cost structure of America is too damn high.

Wouldn't it be easier and better to simply ensure everyone has a living wage job? Or is that muh socialism speaking?
4468   Misc   2024 Feb 27, 7:22pm  

UkraineIsFucked says

30% of office buildings are ‘worth nothing’ and have to be torn down, say experts

https://creditnews.com/economy/30-of-office-buildings-are-worth-nothing-and-have-to-be-torn-down/


Yes, because of climate change the forecast for Jewish lightning strikes has never been higher.
4469   AmericanKulak   2024 Feb 27, 7:32pm  

GNL says


Wouldn't it be easier and better to simply ensure everyone has a living wage job? Or is that muh socialism speaking?

Inflation and Housing costs won't be a problem until matching wage pressure happens, then it will be a problem.

We can take the power back by telling the HR Ditz we're not driving an hour each way and getting suited up to go to the Third Interview, only to be asked if what color socks we like to wear and why, or what our totem animal is, or the other "Internet Quiz" BS that passes for Cutting Edge Human Resources Managerial Techniques.

If she (dumbass 23 year old or bitter 55 year old Cruise Ship taker who can't even entice the horny 20-something 5'5" Indonesian Bartender anymore) wants to ask, the job needs to pay 3X the annual rent of the two bed apt near the company HQ office building. Or you can work remote and the company can save everybody some time and money.

GNL says


You cannot have a robust society society wide (or as wide as possible) if nothing is left on the table for the next guy.).

Materialism and Female Liberation (80% of consumer spending is female, and 2/3 of credit card debt AND the majority of college loans) was very expensive.

The funny thing is that if we lived and married and raised families like the 1950s, with banking laws from the 1950s not after the disasterous "reforms" of the 90s that "Modernized the banking system", most people could probably retire by 55 or semi-retire by 50 without the traditional pensions.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7CMConpppdc
4470   GNL   2024 Feb 27, 7:53pm  

AmericanKulak says

Materialism and Female Liberation (80% of consumer spending is female, and 2/3 of credit card debt AND the majority of college loans) was very expensive.

Those numbers are accurate?
4471   AD   2024 Feb 27, 8:08pm  

AmericanKulak says


Wolf Richter
Feb 26, 2024 at 3:40 pm
ChS,

“Home prices aren’t that out of step with CPI”

LOL. CPI Rose by 31.6% over the past 10 years, while the median price of existing homes rose by 97% — home prices rose three times faster than CPI and nearly doubled!!!


I thought the housing aggregate for CPI or PCE was around 6.5% annually and about twice the overall CPI or PCE rate. So I'm not sure why The Wolfman at Wolf Street would state that.

I saw that firsthand as the average 3 bedrm townhome in my hoa was $150,000 in 2014 and rented for around $1300 a month. Same townhome sold for $310,000 in February 2022 when townhome prices peaked in Bay County, Florida.

Right now the average 3 bedrm townhome is easily selling for around $275,000 and renting for $2200 a month, based on monthly costs of $400 for HOA, $150 for property insurance and $140 for property tax.

Fortunately household income in Bay County has been catching up with housing since February 2022.

.
4472   AmericanKulak   2024 Feb 27, 9:23pm  

GNL says


Those numbers are accurate?

Going by memory. The 80% of consumer spending is accurate, and is the college loans (women have been the majority of college attendees for decades now). I'm foggy on the CC spending, as I am going by memory from hearing a podcast. I will verify - I have a book ordered on the subject by an Economist who worked for financial institutions.
4473   AmericanKulak   2024 Feb 27, 9:26pm  

AD says


Right now the average 3 bedrm townhome is easily selling for around $275,000 and renting for $2200 a month, based on monthly costs of $400 for HOA, $150 for property insurance and $140 for property tax.

We'll see - I know we disagree on this, but I think the median home price is more fairly in the $200k neighborhood when all is said and done.

I'm focused mostly on Central and South Florida, but I think the whole state will shake out on a trip back to the historical mean.


According to rent.com:

Rents in Florida have decreased -4.15% year over year.
Tampa’s rent has decreased -.96% year over year and -3.38% month over month, with a median rent of $2,162.
Orlando’s rent has decreased -1.99% year over year and -.04% month over month with a median rent of $2,110.

https://thelistingrem.com/are-rents-going-down-in-florida/

As flipping shifted to Short Term Rentals, a lot of people and entities leveraged to buy properties, esp. in and around vacation areas (like Orlando Theme Parks/Disney). However, with rents dropping, insurance and taxes rising, can they hold on? Alot of those "Cash buyers" were actually using loaned money from stocks or other bank loans rather than mortgages. As an example, my mother took a 2% loan on a fraction of her stocks to upgrade her apartment, but that loan is now up to 7%, fortunately she's mostly paid it down by now. Those who took big loans to buy COVID priced Zero Lot SFHs or Condo are probably in worse shape than her.
4474   AD   2024 Feb 27, 10:24pm  

AmericanKulak says

We'll see - I know we disagree on this, but I think the median home price is more fairly in the $200k neighborhood when all is said and done.

I'm focused mostly on Central and South Florida, but I think the whole state will shake out on a trip back to the historical mean.

According to rent.com:

Rents in Florida have decreased -4.15% year over year.
Tampa’s rent has decreased -.96% year over year and -3.38% month over month, with a median rent of $2,162.
Orlando’s rent has decreased -1.99% year over year and -.04% month over month with a median rent of $2,110.


That is a "different Florida" compared to the Florida panhandle, also affectionately referred to as America's Riviera or The Emerald Coast.

Okay, you mention a "return to the mean" ... so you mean (no pun) that housing prices should have went up about 5% each year since 2014 (when an avg townhome was $150,000) ?

(1.05^10) x $150,000 = 1.63 x $150,000 = $244,500

I think Robert Shiller stated back in 2015 that historically housing prices have appreciated about 4% annually since 1950.

.

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