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housing prices peak 2


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2022 Apr 29, 9:29pm   605,584 views  5,680 comments

by AD   ➕follow (1)   💰tip   ignore  

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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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4106   GNL   2024 Jan 21, 2:12pm  

SunnyvaleCA says

Next up: Somewhere over in the East Bay there's a newly proposed law that prospective landlords aren't allowed to do criminal background checks. Of course, landlords can still be sued for a criminally misbehaving tenant. Go figure.

Is anyone really surprised by this? As income/wealth inequality increases, more of this type of stuff will come about.
4107   AmericanKulak   2024 Jan 21, 2:24pm  

Eman says

Twice a year, I send donations to charities in America. I’m willing to bet I donate more than 99% of Americans in this country.

I’m an immigrant who love America. I’m not American. I’m proud of what I do. No sugarcoating and no jealousy of others. I love my friends and am willing to support them to succeed.




Eman, you're a good egg, with lots of useful info.

Appreciate it.
4108   Eman   2024 Jan 21, 2:39pm  

SunnyvaleCA says

GNL says


This is why I don’t invest in San Francisco and Berkeley. They’re BS land. I invest in Santa Clara County where the law is being interpreted for what it is. You don’t pay rent, you get evicted.

Yup. San Fran and Berkeley are financially dangerous places to be landlords. Nothing will set you back like a squatter missing six months of rent, harassing neighbors, and trashing the area. Next up: Somewhere over in the East Bay there's a newly proposed law that prospective landlords aren't allowed to do criminal background checks. Of course, landlords can still be sued for a criminally misbehaving tenant. Go figure.

The catch is these judges don’t follow the law. In Santa Clara County, you don’t pay rent, you get evicted. There’s no such thing as relocation fee and 3 extra months of free rent while the tenant is finding a new place.

Our property manager (PM) just told us a story about his latest eviction. The tenant basically told the judge her place is a 💩 hole with cockroaches, rodents, etc…. The judge replied “if it’s such a 💩 hole, why do you still want to live there?” Then asked if she will pay rent. She said no. The judge gave the writ of possession to the PM. Tenant has 5 calendar days to vacate, or the sheriff will remove her. Next!
4109   Eman   2024 Jan 21, 2:49pm  

AmericanKulak says

Eman says


Twice a year, I send donations to charities in America. I’m willing to bet I donate more than 99% of Americans in this country.

I’m an immigrant who love America. I’m not American. I’m proud of what I do. No sugarcoating and no jealousy of others. I love my friends and am willing to support them to succeed.




Eman, you're a good egg, with lots of useful info.

Appreciate it.

Thanks man. I do what others don’t, and I mean it. Giving back is the greatest gift of all. Seeing folks in my sphere dropping dead in their 40’s and 50’s in the recent years have made me realized that’s tomorrow is not promised. We all can drop dead at anytime.

I have a “death file” on my laptop. I also have a print out. I told my wife if I drop dead, the usernames, passwords, assets, liabilities, life insurance, etc… are all on there. This way, she knows where to pick up the pieces and run with it. It’s been 7 years so I need to update the family trust.

Just helped out a friend this week when he reached out. He promised to pay back by July. One thing I’ve learned is that consider the money is gone if I lend to family or friends. If it comes back, it’s a blessing. Let’s see how it goes.

4110   Eman   2024 Jan 21, 3:24pm  

He’s young in his early 30’s. Mistakes will be made. If he gets out of this pickle, which I believe he will, he’ll be fine riding out this down cycle. Not too shabby for a kid to own 11 rentals in the Bay Area in his 30’s.

This is the lesson I learned from Sam Zell. He was in a pickle in the early 90’s during the S&L Savings Crisis. He needed someone to bail him out. Jay Pritzker gave him $50M. Sam learned a valuable lesson of being over-leveraged. He went on to become a billionaire with plenty of liquidity.

My money is liquid. I let it flow and help family and friends if ever needed. I value relationship more than money.
4111   Eman   2024 Jan 21, 3:30pm  

I helped another kid about a decade ago when he and his wife was living inside a shed behind a mobile home. He’s making so much money now. He made $4M in 2022, and $2M in 2023. He said he owes me his life. 🤷‍♂️


4113   GNL   2024 Jan 21, 4:15pm  

Wow, that is one scary chart. I wonder what 2024 has in store. I've gone on record a couple times now and I'm going to do it again...I believe the homeownership rate will fall for a long time.
4114   AD   2024 Jan 21, 5:28pm  

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Hopefully the 30 year mortgage rate will settle no higher than 5.5% this year. It would only be about 1.5% higher than the rate when prices peaked in early 2022.

And consider that income has gone up +3.5% annually since early 2022 as far as income catching up with housing costs.

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4116   Eman   2024 Jan 22, 8:41am  

ad says

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Hopefully the 30 year mortgage rate will settle no higher than 5.5% this year. It would only be about 1.5% higher than the rate when prices peaked in early 2022.

And consider that income has gone up +3.5% annually since early 2022 as far as income catching up with housing costs.

.

At this point, it looks like a good probability it will happen by end of year. People didn’t think it was possible while you did. Great prediction. 👏
4117   Eman   2024 Jan 22, 9:10am  

Patrick says

https://nakedemperor.substack.com/p/this-weeks-must-reads-15-21-january





Last cycle peak sales in 2006 before the drop. This cycle peak sales 2021. The difference is that inventory was building up and most people were on ARMs leading up and into it in 2006 cycle vs people are on 30-year fixed mortgages for this cycle coupled with low inventory.

If the current trajectory plays out, there’s some money to be made in the interest rate and cap rate arbitrage between now and 2025-2026. Whoever has the balls to buy investment assets now will get rewarded in the coming years.
4118   DOGEWontAmountToShit   2024 Jan 22, 11:34am  

Housing Market To Suffer 'Aggregate Price Decline'

The spring selling season may finally bring true price discovery to the market

ADAM TAGGART
JAN 22, 2024

The US real estate market remains frozen.

Transactions are at multi-decade lows, mortgage rates remain painfully high and home prices are at near record-levels of unaffordability.

As we enter 2024, should we expect things to get better for housing, or worse?

For answers, we turn to mortgage lending expert & housing analyst Melody Wright, who has been busy visiting many of America's most popular housing markets to develop a true boots-on-the-ground understanding of where the trends are headed.

Melody expects the spring selling season to finally start unlocking "true price discovery" for the US housing market, and predicts a national aggregate price decline as the year progresses.

https://youtu.be/WL2ZRP84T7Y
4119   indc   2024 Jan 22, 11:42am  

Eman says

Patrick says


https://nakedemperor.substack.com/p/this-weeks-must-reads-15-21-january





Last cycle peak sales in 2006 before the drop. This cycle peak sales 2021. The difference is that inventory was building up and most people were on ARMs leading up and into it in 2006 cycle vs people are on 30-year fixed mortgages for this cycle coupled with low inventory.

If the current trajectory plays out, there’s some money to be made in the interest rate and cap rate arbitrage between now and 2025-2026. Whoever has the balls to buy investment assets now will get rewarded in the coming years.


I would like to understand here, do you think interest will go back to 3% in 2025?
4120   Eman   2024 Jan 22, 12:23pm  

No one knows if or when mortgage rate will go back to 3%. However, the Fed dot plot suggests it’s a no by 2025.
4121   Al_Sharpton_for_President   2024 Jan 22, 1:24pm  

The talkng heads believe a 5% mortgage rate will be the magic number that enables current mortgage holding owners to sell, i.e., that breaks the logjam.

But keep in mind that real estate prices continued to fall after the financial fraud crisis, in spite of decreasing mortgage rates.
4122   GNL   2024 Jan 22, 1:31pm  

This is beyond fucked up. We do not have a free market. Manipulation of interest rates is criminality.
4124   Eman   2024 Jan 22, 2:40pm  

@indc,

Based on history and Piper Sandler’s prediction of the economic cycle, I believe there’s a high probability we’ll see 3% 30-year fixed mortgage rate again after 2030.
4125   AD   2024 Jan 22, 4:40pm  

Eman says


indc,

Based on history and Piper Sandler’s prediction of the economic cycle, I believe there’s a high probability we’ll see 3% 30-year fixed mortgage rate again after 2030.


~10 year cycle ?

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4126   gabbar   2024 Jan 22, 5:08pm  

GNL says


This is beyond fucked up. We do not have a free market. Manipulation of interest rates is criminality.

There is free market, in theory. Manipulation of interest rates is an implicit government function.
4128   Eman   2024 Jan 22, 5:17pm  

AD says

Eman says



indc,

Based on history and Piper Sandler’s prediction of the economic cycle, I believe there’s a high probability we’ll see 3% 30-year fixed mortgage rate again after 2030.


~10 year cycle ?

.

18-year business cycle which started in 2012-2013. You don’t want to hear the prediction for the next downturn.
4129   AD   2024 Jan 22, 5:36pm  

Al_Sharpton_for_President says


The talkng heads believe a 5% mortgage rate will be the magic number that enables current mortgage holding owners to sell, i.e., that breaks the logjam.

But keep in mind that real estate prices continued to fall after the financial fraud crisis, in spite of decreasing mortgage rates.


I figure we won't at least have a collapse of prices.

Maybe a 20% drop at most from the peak price set in early 2022 no later then October 2025 which will bring median house prices close to 2020 price levels.

.
4130   Eman   2024 Jan 22, 5:57pm  

Will the rent drop help to drive down inflation to 2%? It’s 41% of the CPI. 2% CPI = the Fed will be more aggressive with the rate cuts.



https://x.com/ryandetrick/status/1749247574244991262?s=46&t=5lEEPaezr6Ic-W4Z6huZ5Q
4131   GNL   2024 Jan 22, 6:03pm  

gabbar says


GNL says


This is beyond fucked up. We do not have a free market. Manipulation of interest rates is criminality.

There is free market, in theory. Manipulation of interest rates is an implicit government function.


That is THE control mechanism for the economy. It can, and I am more than sure it is, be/being used to favor certain groups, no? This bouncing up and down, up and down. Down for too long etc etc. And used to protect people/companies/government etc. And if that doesn't work, bailouts. I don't believe there is a free market.
4132   fdhfoiehfeoi   2024 Jan 22, 6:28pm  

GNL says

There is free market, in theory. Manipulation of interest rates is an implicit government function.


This statement is an oxymoron.
4133   gabbar   2024 Jan 23, 9:44am  

GNL says

I don't believe there is a free market.

There never was a free market, there won't be one in the future. Everything is rigged and manipulated.
4134   zzyzzx   2024 Jan 23, 10:57am  

https://www.marketwatch.com/story/d-r-hortons-stock-dives-as-lower-prices-for-new-homes-hurt-profits-48596483

D.R. Horton’s stock dives as lower prices for new homes hurt profits

The stock DHI, -9.09% tumbled 9.6% toward a six-week low in midday trading, which puts it on track to suffer the biggest one-day drop since the record 20.2% plunge on March 16, 2020. The selloff comes a day after the stock had closed at a record $157.70.
4135   Al_Sharpton_for_President   2024 Jan 23, 11:35am  

35:31: “…21% of the mortgage market (being delinquent) is way over the delinquency we were in late 2006.”

Well worth a listen in its entirety.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WL2ZRP84T7Y&%3B%3Bt=3725s


4136   AD   2024 Jan 23, 12:08pm  

zzyzzx says

D.R. Horton’s stock dives as lower prices for new homes hurt profits


good tell tale as far as economy

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4137   fdhfoiehfeoi   2024 Jan 23, 7:36pm  

gabbar says

There never was a free market, there won't be one in the future. Everything is rigged and manipulated.


See around 1800-1810 for a good example of a free market. USA of course
4140   Eman   2024 Jan 24, 8:20am  

zzyzzx says





Thank god I’m not an agent, and I don’t have rent to pay. Thank god for my wife who has been taking care of me all these years. 😅
4142   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2024 Jan 24, 8:47am  

GNL says

Do you give a damn about your progeny? If I remember correctly, you are an immigrant. Maybe that's why you think the way you do. You aren't a real American. That isn't a knock on you, I'm just making an observation.


I'd counter he IS an American (naturalized) and like lots of risk taking American's we had in the past. Old School...

Beyond that I worked with people from all over the world and in my experience in the bay area Vietnamese are the most patriotic Americans (as a group).
4143   DOGEWontAmountToShit   2024 Jan 24, 8:50am  

Image for this thread is broken.

@AD
4144   AD   2024 Jan 24, 9:21am  

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Yahoo Finance no longer has this April 2022 article. Marketwatch still has it actively published. See below excerpts from Marketwatch.

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Mark Kiesel is thinking of selling his California home and becoming a renter. Families looking to buy a home make want to take heed.

Kiesel, who serves as global credit chief investment officer at Pimco, warned in an interview with Bloomberg that his “long-term 25-year charts” that guide his decisions to buy and sell real estate are “flashing orange right now.”

‘I think we’re in the final innings.’

— Pimco’s Mark Kiesel on the housing market’s strength
Kiesel notably called a top to the last housing bubble, selling his home in Newport Beach in May 2006. At the time, he called the housing market “the next Nasdaq bubble.” He waited until May 2012 to buy a home again, just home prices hit their nadir.

According to Bloomberg, he purchased his home in Orange County for $2.9 million back then. Today, its value is estimated to be around $5.5 million, according to Redfin RDFN, -0.94%.

Kiesel suggested that buying a home today wouldn’t net more than a 2% return; he didn’t indicate over what time period he thought that return would happen. “I can find other things I can make money on other than a house,” Kiesel said.

Kiesel’s stance differs from that of the company he works for. In a March note, Pimco analysts argued that the current housing cycle is different from the last one, because the broader housing industry was so heavily scarred by the last crash. “U.S. housing should remain supported over the long term by two pillars: a secular shortage of housing units and resilient, delevered borrowers,” they wrote.

Instead of a housing bust, Pimco analysts expect that home-price growth will slow in response to affordability challenges and rising interest rates. The average rate on the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage was 5.1% as of Thursday, close to a 12-year high, according to Freddie Mac FMCC, 7.89%. In time, the Pimco analysts anticipate that the low supply of homes for sale will recover, providing buyers with more options and creating a more balanced market.

Pimco’s view is shared by many other economists who would argue that stronger lending standards prevent against the type of behavior that contributed to the last crash. But some analysts are bearish on the market. Ian Shepherdson, chief economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, suggested Wednesday that home sales could drop by more than 20% in the coming months, and fall even lower still.

.



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4145   Patrick   2024 Jan 24, 10:28am  

zzyzzx says









This is true.

House prices, which are mostly land prices, cannot rise forever. Eventually there will be a revolt, or just demographic devastation as young couples find they simply cannot afford to have children because they have nowhere to live.

The solution is Georgism, the single tax on land values and no tax on anything else, especially not income or sales.

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