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housing prices peak 2


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2022 Apr 29, 9:29pm   475,340 views  4,833 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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2951   HeadSet   2023 Jul 27, 11:34am  

Patrick says


The question would be why new houses sell for less than existing.

Do not forget if the builder is selling in a development, he has one big advantage - the builder likely has an on-site realtor who is not paid the 6% commission. Another advantage is the builder does not have to recoup "improvements" a homeowner may have done such an updated kitchen or landscaping. If the seller of the existing house originally bought within the last 4 years, there may not be enough appreciation to cover the old loan origination fees and points.
2952   AmericanKulak   2023 Jul 27, 11:40am  

AmericanKulak says


Again, in my East Coast FL area, the stubborn ass old home owners - and I'm talking 1200 sq ft early-mid 60s spacerace boom houses on 1/5th acre, carport (no garage), a 2 bedroom with the sunroom enclosed (badly), with HVAC often added later and poorly (ie enclosed sunroom only has one small vent, will be 5-10F hotter than the rest of house) - $280-299k.

VERSUS

Brand new DR Horton $281-306k for genuine 3 bedrooms with another 200 sq ft under air (1400-1600) a decent sized master suite with walk-in closets, new everything inc. built in USB ports, brand new and not undersized later added Central HVAC, roof, etc. AND the Builders unlike the homeloaners/inheritance kids are covering closing costs. Granted, they're zero lots, maybe 6000 sq ft total, but they come with 2-car garages.

I still just can't imagine paying north of $2000/month for a 3 bedroom/2 bath house or having to come up with ~$50-60k down.


Knew I wasn't crazy



EDIT: Oops, thanks Rubicon
Rubicon says


Here ya go


just_passing_through says

I saw a plot on PDW showing the median price of new houses dropped below the median price of used houses for the first time ever.

I can't find it now and am not sure if it was legit.
2953   Eman   2023 Jul 27, 3:52pm  

HeadSet says

Patrick says






Good. It is about time that borrowers, and not savers, pay the price for all that irresponsible borrowing.

It’s sad that our Fed is reactive rather than proactive. The next time we hit recession, they’ll cut Fed fund rate down to 1% again, and the cycle continues. That’s my bet.
2955   Eman   2023 Jul 27, 10:44pm  

1337irr says

https://www.reddit.com/r/wallstreetbets/comments/15b8lwk/tales_from_a_401k_administrator/
TL;DR- Hardship withdrawals are up to pay mortgages.

What makes you think these people don’t use hardship as an excuse to take money out of their 401k and gamble on the stock market options?
2956   1337irr   2023 Jul 28, 12:43am  

Eman says

1337irr says


https://www.reddit.com/r/wallstreetbets/comments/15b8lwk/tales_from_a_401k_administrator/
TL;DR- Hardship withdrawals are up to pay mortgages.

What makes you think these people don’t use hardship as an excuse to take money out of their 401k and gamble on the stock market options?

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/foreclosures-rising-experts-means-housing-180030618.html
2957   Eman   2023 Jul 28, 4:05am  

1337irr says

Eman says


1337irr says



https://www.reddit.com/r/wallstreetbets/comments/15b8lwk/tales_from_a_401k_administrator/
TL;DR- Hardship withdrawals are up to pay mortgages.

What makes you think these people don’t use hardship as an excuse to take money out of their 401k and gamble on the stock market options?


https://finance.yahoo.com/news/foreclosures-rising-experts-means-housing-180030618.html

From your article:

“Even though foreclosures are spiking, it’s not the big deal everyone is making it out to be. We are just reaching a more normal level of foreclosure filings,” said Brian Wittman, owner/CEO at SILT Real Estate and Investments.

“According to ATTOM, there were approximately 150,000 foreclosure filings in Q1 of 2019,” Wittman said. “There are still only roughly around 100,000 in Q1 of 2023. It is a rise year over year of approximately 10%. It still doesn’t appear to be the issue everyone thinks it will be.

Just putting things in perspective.
2958   Eman   2023 Jul 28, 4:28am  

- The rate for early-stage delinquencies – defined as 30 to 59 days past due – was 1.4% in April 2023, up from April 2022. The share of mortgages 60 to 89 days past due was 0.4%, up from April 2022.

- Over the 2005 to 2008 period, delinquency rates rose from around 5 to over 22 percent for subprime mortgages on investor - owned properties, compared with a rise from 5 to around 18 percent for owner-occupied properties.

We’re not quite there…yet compared to the last housing bubble.
2959   zzyzzx   2023 Jul 28, 5:44am  

Eman says

It’s sad that our Fed is reactive rather than proactive. The next time we hit recession, they’ll cut Fed fund rate down to 1% again, and the cycle continues. That’s my bet.


Fixed:
The next time we hit recession, they’ll cut Fed fund rate down to 0% again
2961   zzyzzx   2023 Jul 28, 8:02am  

https://fortune.com/2023/07/27/housing-market-institutional-freeze-invitation-homes-net-seller-wall-street-real-estate/

Housing market institutional freeze: Invitation Homes—the largest owner of U.S. homes—was a net seller for the third straight quarter
2962   NuttBoxer   2023 Jul 28, 8:50am  

Eman says

It’s sad that our Fed is reactive rather than proactive. The next time we hit recession, they’ll cut Fed fund rate down to 1% again, and the cycle continues. That’s my bet.


You assume they're being reactive because you see their role as preserving the economy. But if you see examine the outcome of every Fed action without this assumption, you will quickly realize their role is very different.
2963   NuttBoxer   2023 Jul 28, 8:53am  

AmericanKulak says

Knew I wasn't crazy


Looking at the last crash, used is what had a significant drop, and new really didn't move down that much at all. If that trend follows this time around, used has a LONG way to go, as new is dropping precipitously already.
2964   NuttBoxer   2023 Aug 1, 9:05am  

Cardboard box sales have dropped 20% in the first two quarters, most since 2009. But I'm sure those house prices are fine...
2965   1337irr   2023 Aug 1, 9:38am  

NuttBoxer says

Cardboard box sales have dropped 20% in the first two quarters, most since 2009. But I'm sure those house prices are fine...

Could you please expand on that? What kind of cardboard boxes sales have dropped? CPG? Moving? Industrial? Budweiser?
2966   HeadSet   2023 Aug 1, 10:56am  

Anecdotal, but I have using Zillow for a while to look at single family homes in Va and NE and have notice plenty of price drops during the last two weeks of July. Also, I see developers are selling off their lots to the public because apparently builders are not buying those lots. The prices have not fallen enough to make up for the rapid rise of the last few years, at least not yet.
2967   NuttBoxer   2023 Aug 1, 1:26pm  

1337irr says

Could you please expand on that? What kind of cardboard boxes sales have dropped? CPG? Moving? Industrial? Budweiser?


The number is from companies who make boxes for everything and anything. Boxes are used to ship products. Less products ordered, less boxes. If you want more than that:
https://www.zerohedge.com/economics/big-drop-cardboard-box-sales-scream-recession
2968   NuttBoxer   2023 Aug 1, 1:26pm  

Also Yellow just went under, always a sign of economic strength when the largest LTL in the country goes belly up!
2969   HeadSet   2023 Aug 1, 1:45pm  

Rubicon says

“Seeing plenty of price drops” is like “I think it’s going to rain at some point.”

I have no detailed analysis, just see lots of these:


2970   AmericanKulak   2023 Aug 1, 5:37pm  

Rubicon says


That’s the first rookie mistake. No crash ever happens in the same fashion as circumstances/parameters change. Tired of explaining for the millionth of time why this time is different. Sadly, you will likely never own an house and remain a life long renter stuck in the “but it has to crash” circle.

Nope.

Demographics. Boomers are now almost entirely over 65.

You always have time to hold out when you think you've got many years of stroke-free, chronic-illness free life yet. After 65, you're a slip or a stroke away from Assisted Living, or at least a 1st Story only smaller place. When you can no longer climb stairs with ease, selling may be out of your hands as much as your fork now is. And your kids might sell it to pay for that assisted living senior community.
2971   1337irr   2023 Aug 1, 5:39pm  

Rubicon says

NuttBoxer says


1337irr says



Could you please expand on that? What kind of cardboard boxes sales have dropped? CPG? Moving? Industrial? Budweiser?


The number is from companies who make boxes for everything and anything. Boxes are used to ship products. Less products ordered, less boxes. If you want more than that:
https://www.zerohedge.com/economics/big-drop-cardboard-box-sales-scream-recession



Zerohedge….aka the sky is falling….ALWAYS!

+ Reventure Consulting.
However, I see rain in the forecast.
2972   AmericanKulak   2023 Aug 1, 5:43pm  

Rubicon says

Nice looking houses! Those are >1M USD in SoCal.

They soon will be!
2973   AmericanKulak   2023 Aug 1, 5:48pm  


Yet, at the same time, year-over-year sales of new homes surged by 23.8% while existing-home sales sagged.

“With low existing home inventory, new home inventory is becoming competitive, and new homes are now competitive on price,” said Robert Frick, corporate economist with Navy Federal Credit Union, in an emailed statement. “The premium for a median-priced new house versus an existing house is now only $5,000.

In October 2022, the median sales price for a new home was $496,800, while the median existing-home sales price was $378,800—a difference of $118,000. This gap has since narrowed by roughly 96%.

https://www.forbes.com/advisor/mortgages/real-estate/housing-market-predictions/

Knew I wasn't crazy about seeing the new houses go for not much more than the used housing. Browsing Zillow weekly is useful to get a snapshot.

If inventory is so limited, why is the gap between new and old so small? If the housing market isn't doing badly, why are builders trying to bail out despite having a pricing advantage?
2974   Eman   2023 Aug 1, 6:32pm  

HeadSet says


Rubicon says


“Seeing plenty of price drops” is like “I think it’s going to rain at some point.”

I have no detailed analysis, just see lots of these:




Simply amazing how cheap they could build in the Midwest and South compared to California.

These houses are over $2M here in North San Jose and on tiny lots too.

https://redf.in/fo6KKF
2975   Eman   2023 Aug 1, 6:59pm  

Smaller house. Built on tiny zero lot line with no driveway. Sold for $1.95M last month, and with $336/month HOA dues too.

https://redf.in/oI7Edl
2976   1337irr   2023 Aug 1, 7:03pm  

Eman says

Smaller house. Built on tiny zero lot line with no driveway. Sold for $1.95M last month, and with $336/month HOA dues too.

https://redf.in/oI7Edl

It's by H-Mart. That's why it sold for such a high price.
2977   WookieMan   2023 Aug 1, 7:38pm  

Eman says

Simply amazing how cheap they could build in the Midwest and South compared to California.

These houses are over $2M here in North San Jose and on tiny lots too.

What we're gonna build would be $3M+ probably. Getting bids and nearing $700k. We're gonna suck it up even with high interest rates. Midwest is on paper technically cheap as hell. You can get 2,200 builder grade homes for $250k still. They suck. But it's a house and forced saving for those less disciplined.

I'm just done living in my 20's. I can afford a nice house. Kids ages and work circumstances we'll be at home a lot more. We'll probably keep it till we die or hand it down to our kids. If a crash hits we'll just buy shit up. We have the cash. I kind of want a crash. Not buying a boomer house though (not a dig at boomers though they were 100% the cause of 2006-8). So we're gonna build. Dragging our feet, but we'll get it done.

Life is complicated. You live it once. I have no interest ever in being beholden to a landlord. I want to own my property. I don't even care about prices or anything. I care about knowing I have a place to go. And thing is anyone that's not a deadbeat can go and get a job for $50-60k per month tomorrow. They're out there. There's no excuse to cry poor or say housing will crash. It might. Take advantage of it and prepare to be in that position. No one factors in moving expenses and time lost from work as a renter/ That's part of your rent. It's expensive and time consuming.

Though I'll say don't own a home if you don't know shit about repairing anything. You have to have some mechanical and trades skills. Which I think is the case with many anti owner people. They expect it to be repaired and handled. Guess what your rent goes up. Raising rents is easy. You making more money might not be depending on your work. There's not choice in it. You beholden to another person/management company. That SUCKS.
2978   GNL   2023 Aug 1, 7:45pm  

https://redf.in/fo6KKF


Shoot me in the head. That is ugly as fuck.
2981   Eman   2023 Aug 1, 10:50pm  

GNL says

https://redf.in/fo6KKF


Shoot me in the head. That is ugly as fuck.

If you think that house is ugly, try this one. It’s a 60-year old house without any upgrades. It’s the home to AAPL company. It’s a hot home so it will likely sell above list price.

You see, I don’t make the rules. I don’t wish for housing prices to crash, or to go up. I want housing prices to be affordable to everyone, but the market does whatever the hell it does. It’s simply interesting how people perceive I’m a housing bull.

https://redf.in/lr58lw
2982   Eman   2023 Aug 1, 10:54pm  

Trollhole says

Patrick says







Awesome!

Not sure what makes it so awesome. People have to pay a lot more for the same thing a couple years ago.
2983   Eman   2023 Aug 1, 11:03pm  

1337irr says

Eman says


Smaller house. Built on tiny zero lot line with no driveway. Sold for $1.95M last month, and with $336/month HOA dues too.

https://redf.in/oI7Edl

It's by H-Mart. That's why it sold for such a high price.

I don’t think it has anything to do with H-Mart or Costco nearby. It’s just what the market is willing to pay.

My in-law lives just down the street. Bought 25 years ago for $330k. Redfin has an estimated value between $1.5-$1.6M. It is what is it. I neither hate it, or like it. It’s just the cost of living in the Bay Area is nosing bleeding expensive. Whining and bitching don’t help. Just have to figure out a way to make it work, or move elsewhere.


2984   Eman   2023 Aug 1, 11:18pm  

1337irr says

Rubicon says


NuttBoxer says



1337irr says




Could you please expand on that? What kind of cardboard boxes sales have dropped? CPG? Moving? Industrial? Budweiser?


The number is from companies who make boxes for everything and anything. Boxes are used to ship products. Less products ordered, less boxes. If you want more than that:
https://www.zerohedge.com/economics/big-drop-cardboard-box-sales-scream-recession




Zerohedge….aka the sky is falling….ALWAYS!


+ Reventure Consulting.
However, I see rain in the forecast.

What kind of rain do you see in the forecast?
2985   Blue   2023 Aug 2, 12:23am  

GNL says


https://redf.in/fo6KKF

Shoot me in the head. That is ugly as fuck.

Feel sad for the victim who would buy this shack and paying insane taxes and HOA!
2986   B.A.C.A.H.   2023 Aug 2, 6:01am  


Feel sad for the victim who would buy this shack and paying insane taxes and HOA!

Yeah, but fairly recently built 4 BR 4 BA it was probably designed for today's buyer in San Jose: multiple working age adults sharing the cost.

That shack is a much better value than this 1400 sq ft 3 BR 2 BA gem across town:
https://www.zillow.com/homes/5359-Keene-Dr-San-Jose,-CA-95124_rb/19746754_zpid/
Blue says

These lucky folks who "got the house" will be on the hook for an annual tax bill north of $30K, - $2500/month. God Bless them for subsidizing our local government.
2988   NuttBoxer   2023 Aug 2, 10:12am  

Eman says

but the market does whatever the hell it does.


This is a loaded statement. Let's envision for a moment a truly free housing market. No licensing required to buy or sell, and I mean for any step of the process. Closing costs, only if you want to hire someone. You want an inspection, up to you whoever you want to do it. No appraiser because if there are property taxes, it's a flat rate set by the area based solely on size and location of the property, doesn't matter what you build on it.
Next no local, state, or federal assistance programs, NONE. All loans go through the bank directly, the bank assumes 100% of the risk, and has no one to back them if you fail to pay. Imagine what that does to lending standards and allowable length of repayment.
Ok, now you can say what you said earlier because the market will truly be allowed to do whatever it wants. But you won't see those prices, I doubt even a 10th of what you see currently.
2989   HeadSet   2023 Aug 2, 10:24am  

NuttBoxer says

All loans go through the bank directly, the bank assumes 100% of the risk, and has no one to back them if you fail to pay. Imagine what that does to lending standards and allowable length of repayment.

Yes, government backed loans are the sole reason for the inflated house prices, the mini-mansion boom, and the trend toward oversize homes in general.

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