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housing prices peak 2


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2022 Apr 29, 9:29pm   603,705 views  5,669 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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5089   AD   2024 Jul 28, 9:52pm  

AmericanKulak says


Even will mass migration, we now have half the net people entering the workforce as leaving it as we did a decade ago.


Civilian labor participation is still not that bad : https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/CIVPART

I'd be concerned if it was below 57%.

We need to innovate more to realize productivity gains by technology if there are concerns with workforce size (due to demographic trends).

I was thinking about senior citizen care and nursing homes, where technology can help the nursing aide. This means more senior citizens can be watching and monitored by the nursing aide.

So if home prices are at 2007 levels in 2025, think about household income inflation since then and that household income and wages catching up with housing prices.

That is why I can agree with your forecast about asset values plummeting as far as housing affordability like we had around 2012 to 2015.

A family member built a 3 bedroom/2.5 bath (not including finished basement which has 2 bedrooms and a full bathroom) house (on 5 acres with a garage apartment that rents for $1300 a month ) out in mountain west for $250,000 in 2000.

Two appraisals came in recently for a reverse mortgage, $1 million and $1.3 million.

It should be $800,000 assuming a 5% annual appreciation rate, but I think a lot of people want to live there to escape the city and grow your own food (chickens, greenhouses, etc) as well as enjoy the outdoors. Hence it appreciated at least 6% each year, and not 5% since the year 2000.

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5090   AmericanKulak   2024 Jul 28, 9:53pm  

AD says

Civilian labor participation is still not that bad : https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/CIVPART



5091   AmericanKulak   2024 Jul 28, 9:55pm  

AD says


I was thinking about senior citizen care and nursing homes, where technology can help the nursing aide. This means more senior citizens can be watching and monitored by the nursing aide.

Every nursing aide will tell you there is already Wayyyyy too much work. Massive shortage, because Florida is so far beinhd

Also the fake "Right to Work State" that requires NON-emergency health care workers like CNA to do 3 weekend shifts a month, as a grift grant to the private companies that run them. There's a free market solution to the "nobody wants to work Friday nights" problem, but the lobbyists bribed the state to be "Required by Law in every contract to work 3 undesirable shifts without shift differential pay".

The pay rate for nurses and CNAs is another unsustainable Florida problem, Florida has a massive nursing shortage but refuses to allow the market to set rates, intervening for corporate socialism on behalf of Big Hospital. Only state worse than Florida is California for nursing shortages. Many nurses turn around and go right back when they see the wages vs. cost of living. Again, Florida is no longer a "Low wage, but cheap cost of living state".

I just spoke to a 30-year old from Arkansas that told me her and her husband are going back, because the wages are almost the same there, but housing is far, far cheaper than Florida.
5092   AD   2024 Jul 28, 9:58pm  

That's because of demographics of the workforce as the baby boomers started to retire in mass around 2013.

You just have to figure out how to do the more with less. Look at how agriculture has become very productive going back to Great Depression Era.

It does not take a large family to run a farm like it did 140 years ago.

We need another economic revolution like the industrial revolution as far as this, and I gave an example as far as nursing homes and senior care using technology so that a nursing aide can be assigned to more senior citizens.

I even like now that robots are used to serve food in restaurants as one example.
5093   AmericanKulak   2024 Jul 28, 10:02pm  

AD says


We need another economic revolution like the industrial revolution as far as this, and I gave an example as far as nursing homes and senior care using technology so that a nursing aide can be assigned to more senior citizens.

They already did this BY creating and expanding the duties of Nurses Aides. Only a bare minimum number of workers are kept around, and that's because insurance companies will jack their malpractice insurance up the roof if they try to replace yet more nurses with CNAs. There is actual numbers behind that, and insurers do NOT want to pay so that Hospital Admins can grift more from them and the Government (44% of health costs are now paid from the USG)

The worker has no more to give.

Our #1 problem is Corporate Socialism. We need more free market, and less giveaways and regulations favoring large businesses.

No country ever entered prosperity by lowering wages and increasing living costs based on inflated assets.
5094   AD   2024 Jul 28, 10:02pm  

AmericanKulak says


I just spoke to a 30-year old from Arkansas that told me her and her husband are going back, because the wages are almost the same there, but housing is far, far cheaper than Florida.


Florida always has been an outlier for housing price volatility. So I agree with you Florida housing prices now are too high relative to worker wages.

In Panama City Beach though, townhomes are not that overly priced and if they drop from median price of around $290,000 (peaked around $330,000 in early 2022) to a bottom of $250,000 by 2025, then they will be a forerunner to housing affordability.

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5095   AmericanKulak   2024 Jul 28, 10:05pm  

AD says


AmericanKulak says


I just spoke to a 30-year old from Arkansas that told me her and her husband are going back, because the wages are almost the same there, but housing is far, far cheaper than Florida.


Florida always has been an outlier for housing price volatility. So I agree with you Florida housing prices now are too high relative to worker wages.

In Panama City Beach though, townhomes are not that overly priced and if they drop from median price of around $290,000 (peaked around $330,000 in early 2022) to a bottom of $250,000 by 2025, then they will be a forerunner to housing affordability.

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Could be, unfortunately I've seen no data from the Panhandle, only a few anecdotal articles about long time military retirees getting pushed out by rising prices.

However, everything else in penninsular Florida seems to be running a course, that it always does. And probably the country will follow a similar course.

10-15 years like clockwork. My parents brought in the early 90s in a trough like the early-mid 2010s. I predict in about 3-4 years we'll be well into a trough.

Even Miami is slowing down.
5096   AD   2024 Jul 28, 10:31pm  

AmericanKulak says

Could be, unfortunately I've seen no data from the Panhandle, only a few anecdotal articles about long time military retirees getting pushed out by rising prices.

However, everything else in penninsular Florida seems to be running a course, that it always does. And probably the country will follow a similar course.

10-15 years like clockwork.


Residential property insurance is problematic in the Florida panhandle. My home property insurance is going up from around $1850 a year to $2250, and the insurance company is being generous since it was approved for about a 55% increase by the insurance commission. I remember it was $600 a year in 2016.

Check out Zillow for Panama City Beach and also Florida panhandle. Average household income is around $80,000 for Panama City, FL, and median is around $63,000.

https://www.floridatrend.com/print/article/40499

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5097   zzyzzx   2024 Jul 29, 5:00am  

AD says

AmericanKulak says





American Kulak, figure 100 was the index value in 2000. Conservatively apply a 4% appreciation since its Florida (and Professor Shiller said the national historic annual appreciation rate is 4%),

1.04^24 x 100 = 256




How does this compare to local wages over the same time period?
5098   AmericanKulak   2024 Jul 29, 10:38am  

The oldest baby boomers (largest generation in US history) are between 77 and 78 years old today.

The peak birth year is 1957, or 67 years ago.

The median age of death in the US is 77. That means half die before 77.

If anything, life expectancy for middle and senior aged males in the USA is actually... declining! Though even without that point, it's still a decade away.

Boomers own 32 million houses in the United States, 38% of all houses, while making up 21% of the US population.

So in the next decade, about something like 20M houses will be up for sale and there will be pressure to sell fast. You don't need to die in order for the house to go up for sale (assisted living, caregiving by relatives in their house, relatives and children are in other states and don't want to maintain or rent a distant house, etc.)
5099   AmericanKulak   2024 Jul 29, 11:00am  

Used car prices have plummeted in the past year, reaching their lowest point since 2021.

The price declines come after a prolonged supply crunch in the new vehicle market caused used values to skyrocket.

Not long ago, the rise in used car prices was one of the key reasons the overall inflation rate was so high. Now, used vehicles are now the No. 1 category driving down inflation in the economy, according to an analysis of consumer price index (CPI) data by car shopping app CoPilot.

The June CPI report showed used vehicle prices are down 10.1% in the past year, after falling 1.5% in the last month.

Why are used car prices falling? CoPilot CEO Pat Ryan explains that the supply of new vehicles is up about 50% since July 2023, which has had a spillover effect on the used market.


https://money.com/used-car-prices-driving-down-inflation/?xid=applenews

Dealers are fucked because they have to fill in their plans with new vehicles, but can't moved the used cars because of the high interest rates, and the newer cars are often priced very competitively to the used/trade-ins and come with teaser rates the used cars don't.
5100   AmericanKulak   2024 Jul 29, 2:48pm  

It's different this time


5101   DOGEWontAmountToShit   2024 Jul 29, 5:58pm  

AmericanKulak says


It's different this time





Everytime I'm on a roller coaster at that particular point, my balls scrunch up as much as they can.

....but the Experts on PatNet said....
5102   AD   2024 Jul 29, 10:03pm  

zzyzzx says


AD says

AmericanKulak says

American Kulak, figure 100 was the index value in 2000. Conservatively apply a 4% appreciation since its Florida (and Professor Shiller said the national historic annual appreciation rate is 4%),

1.04^24 x 100 = 256

How does this compare to local wages over the same time period?


Tampa / St Petersburg metro area per capita income

https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/TAMP312PCPI

year 2000: $29,223
year 2022: $60,091
year 2024: $64,000 (estimate)

****** per capita (or per person) income in Tampa metro area increased about 3 times or 400% from 2000 to 2024 *******

compared to Case - Shiller housing index for Tampa:

2000: 100
2024: 350

***** housing for Tampa metro area increased about 3.5 times or 450% from 2000 to 2024 **********

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5103   AD   2024 Jul 29, 10:06pm  

zzyzzx says

How does this compare to local wages over the same time period?


Can't sustain this if 30 Year mortgage rate is above 5% AND housing prices continue to increase again.

Need lower mortgage payments due to interest rate decrease and housing income increases (greater than housing price increases).

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5104   DOGEWontAmountToShit   2024 Jul 29, 10:11pm  

AD says

Can't sustain this if 30 Year mortgage rate is above 5% AND housing prices continue to increase again.


Except in patently fucked up circumstances (California and allowing foreigners to buy houses), those days are over for a while.

Cheap mortgage rates are toast until the Millennials start saving en masse during their pre-retirement years, like Boomers did for the last 15 years until recently.
5105   AD   2024 Jul 29, 10:17pm  

DemocratsAreTotallyFucked says

California and allowing foreigners to buy houses


Need then foreigners with deep pockets from India, China, Malaysia, etc to buy +$1.5 million bungalows in California, then in turn the California home seller moves to a state with less expensive housing like Colorado, Nevada, Arizona, Idaho, etc.

I guess that gravy train of foreigners is no longer running for now to at least the start of the next bubble cycle

Look at how prices are dropping in states where Californians were buying like Colorado (such as Colorado Springs, Vail, Breckinridge, etc) as well as Idaho, or prices have went down a little while sales volume is virtually zero
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5106   DOGEWontAmountToShit   2024 Jul 29, 10:34pm  

AD says

I guess that gravy train of foreigners is no longer running for now to at least the start of the next bubble cycle


The absentee ones only want the R/E to park their money outside of home. Even if they lose 30% or so in value, that is 70% that they 'saved'. This mostly pertains to Chinese. Indians tend buy to live here.

Corporate owned housing tend to sell when shit goes south w/o batting an eye. So if you bought a house in a new subdivision of 80 homes built and a REIT bought 35 of them at a discount by that subdivision's home builder, then decides to sell, you may be fucked because they are going to sell those 35 all at once. Esp if they are distressed and can't sell them in an LLC package which won't nornally effect CMAs generated.
5107   AD   2024 Jul 29, 10:38pm  

DemocratsAreTotallyFucked says

Cheap mortgage rates are toast until the Millennials start saving en masse during their pre-retirement years, like Boomers did for the last 15 years until recently.


I look at if the 30 year mortgage rate steadies to 6% , then I will buy 4 discount points to get it to 5%. Compare that to the 3% rate when housing prices peaked (in early 2022).

5% is a "cheap enough mortgage rate" if housing prices remain at the peak price levels, as our household income went up about 20% since 2022.

I am hoping this is the case as household income catches up with housing prices and the 30 Year mortgage rate drops to 6%.

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5108   AD   2024 Jul 29, 10:52pm  

DemocratsAreTotallyFucked says

Corporate owned housing tend to sell when shit goes south w/o batting an eye.


I read there are about 16.2 million single family homes that are for rent, and Invitation Homes is the largest single owner of single-family rental homes in the United States, managing more than 80,000 homes as of 2021.

I agree as if you buy, then you plan on owning the home for at least 8 years to help you recover if you bought near the peak.

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5109   AmericanKulak   2024 Jul 29, 11:00pm  

AD says


****** per capita (or per person) income in Tampa metro area increased about 3 times or 400% from 2000 to 2024 *******

Per Capita

2000 - $40k/year (likely skewed upwards from all the MN retired teachers and IL gov employees on 2/3 last salary, esp back then)
2024 - Definitely not $120k/year and really half that (again, skewed by retirees from MUCH higher wage northern states).
https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/MHIFL12057A052NCEN

2000- Typical Florida home was $106k. Let's be generous and say Hillborough was $125k
2024- Typical Hillsborough Home goes for $410k, a nearly 4x increase in price

https://www.tampabay.com/archive/2009/09/11/prices-history-don-t-mesh/#:~:text=But%20in%202000%2C%20Florida%20homes,40%20percent%2C%20to%20about%20%24144%2C000.
https://www.redfin.com/county/464/FL/Hillsborough-County/housing-market

The two choices are: Double the incomes, or pound the outrageous inflated house values down 50%.

Let's pound the asset prices down, since doubling incomes is going to create massive inflation for everybody on everything from groceries to electric.

Doubling incomes while lowering rates will only exacerbate the affordability problem in the long term.

Keeping rates high or better yet VOLKER SOLUTION will provide retired boomers with nice CD returns, keep speculators out of SFH and much of the housing market, etc.

Low interest/Cheap money is just more of the same crack that got us here.
5110   AD   2024 Jul 29, 11:13pm  

AmericanKulak says

The two choices are: Double the incomes, or pound the outrageous inflated house values down 50%.


Prices in Panama City Beach especially east end are about 15% below early 2022 peak levels. And 3 bedroom, 1 car garage townhomes rent for ~$2000, same price in 2022 and compared to $1500 in 2016.

So townhome rent has only increased about 3.5% since 2016 in east Panama City Beach.

I would hope that prices remain where they are now for next 3 to 4 years while income slowly catches up with prices.

That is why you don't need a 50% asset crash with housing like we did with stocks (i.e. a lot more liquidity) in October 2022 (~20% crash), April 2020 (~34% crash), 2008 (~58% crash) and 2002 (~50% crash).

Just let the air out slowly of the housing asset bubble over the next 4 years.

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5113   AmericanKulak   2024 Jul 31, 11:52am  

Redfin
@Redfin
About 56,000 home purchases were canceled last month, equal to 15% of homes that went under contract 👉 http://bit.ly/4clZNzz #realestate

Metros with the highest share of home-purchase cancellations were:
1. Orlando, 20.8%
2. Jacksonville, 20.5%
3. Tampa, 20.5%

https://x.com/Redfin/status/1818686844214612008

About 56,000 home purchases were canceled, equal to 15% of homes that went under contract—the highest percentage of any June on record. Buyers are skittish due to elevated mortgage rates and record-high home prices.
20% of homes for sale last month had a price cut—the highest June share on record. Many sellers are dropping prices because their homes are sitting on the market, causing listings to pile up; active listings posted the biggest annual gain on record.
Home sales fell roughly 1% from a month earlier in June—the biggest drop since October.
https://www.redfin.com/news/home-purchase-cancellations-june-2024/
5115   AmericanKulak   2024 Jul 31, 3:56pm  

The best thing about the price collapse is watching Real Estate Agents having to go back to their Fitness Instructor and Applebee waitress jobs.

Gym owner: "I know if the real estate market is hot or not by how many instructors return to bring clients to the gym"
5116   DOGEWontAmountToShit   2024 Jul 31, 4:26pm  

My standard meme response to 'housing experts' who try to lecture me on X:


5117   EBGuy   2024 Jul 31, 10:26pm  

Blackstone (though their subsidiary Home Partners of America) is selling off some of its portfolio in Florida. Home Partners of America had a rent to own model that is evidently not working out. Will be interesting to see if this moves the market...
Blackstone is liquidating properties in Florida
5118   AD   2024 Jul 31, 11:58pm  

EBGuy says

Blackstone (though their subsidiary Home Partners of America) is selling off some of its portfolio in Florida. Home Partners of America had a rent to own model that is evidently not working out. Will be interesting to see if this moves the market...
Blackstone is liquidating properties in Florida


Tricon (owned by Blackstone since January 2024) has some decent priced rentals in Las Vegas: https://triconresidential.com/find/vegas/

The California rentals such as in Sacramento and Inland Empire are outrageous at ~$3100 a month for 1500 square foot homes (3 bedroom/2.5 bath with garage).

It all comes down to housing not being more than 35% of household income, and living conditions (i.e.,quality of home and neighborhood, not putting 2 families under the roof of a 1 family home, etc).

Maybe Powell and Federal Reserve keeping rates still high will help with making housing prices and rents more affordable.

Notice how 10 Year Treasury has dropped from recent high of 5% (set in Oct 2023) to now around 4%. 1 Year Treasury has called some, though the yield curve is still inverted.
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5119   PeopleUnited   2024 Aug 1, 3:32am  

The house of cards is beginning to shake. But it is not so simple as a market correction to “solve the problem.” There is a housing shortage in many areas due to lack of building to meet demand, rich people holding vacation and/or investment properties, and unrestrained illegal immigration.

In general for prices to correct we need more supply and/or less demand. More supply is not coming very quickly (unless you want to count the apartment housing that continues to sprout up like weeds), and aside from mass death or mass deportations or massive job losses we are not seeing a decrease in demand for housing.

Lower interest rates could cause prices to correct a bit, but lower prices increase demand so any price decreases are likely to be marginal except in coastal areas where prices are out of line with incomes.

A major housing correction is something that central banks will work to avoid like the plague because it could cause bank collapses and even a full financial system meltdown as the derivatives market built on selling mortgage backed investment trading is still largely lurking underneath the surface like an iceberg. People see the iceberg of high housing prices and think that is the problem, but what lies below the surface is the real problem. The financial system is a house of cards.
5121   DOGEWontAmountToShit   2024 Aug 1, 6:15am  

PeopleUnited says

In general for prices to correct we need more supply and/or less demand. More supply is not coming very quickly (unless you want to count the apartment housing that continues to sprout up like weeds), and aside from mass death or mass deportations or massive job losses we are not seeing a decrease in demand for housing.


Need LESS financialization aa well.
5122   AD   2024 Aug 1, 9:45am  

PeopleUnited says


In general for prices to correct we need more supply and/or less demand. More supply is not coming very quickly (unless you want to count the apartment housing that continues to sprout up like weeds), and aside from mass death or mass deportations or massive job losses we are not seeing a decrease in demand for housing.


That is the ruling class and establishment solution, put everyone in apartments like they are living in New York City. Similar to living in a "15 minute city".

Only the rich get the "brownstone townhomes". I see a lot of apartments going up in Florida panhandle, which seems to be the service worker (waiters, cooks, hotel room cleaners, etc) housing.

Townhomes are the next step up for "middle class", but its no different then living in the Washington DC metro area.

That's because all the factors where the "starter homes" or "lowest price homes" start at $450,000 versus household income of $75,000 with a 30 yr mortgage rate well north of 6%.

A GS-13 (step 1 to step 5) at least going back to early 2000's could only afford a townhome in DC metro area. A colonel or captain (O-6) or a GS-15 had enough to buy a nice home in the DC area.

Housing has been treated like stocks since at least 2002, as a post alluded to the financializing of housing "assets".

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5123   Eric Holder   2024 Aug 1, 12:56pm  

PeopleUnited says


More supply is not coming very quickly (unless you want to count the apartment housing that continues to sprout up like weeds)


Eh? I'm watching a whole fucking side of a pretty big hill being rapidly covered with new SFHs right from my office window. Looks exactly like weeds sprouting up.
5125   AmericanKulak   2024 Aug 1, 9:05pm  

PeopleUnited says

https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/MSACSR

They were not only building like mad in 2008, but had above trendline building until 2010.

And since then, many counties and cities have imposed much more requirements for contractors to finish what they started.
5126   AmericanKulak   2024 Aug 1, 9:07pm  

Eric Holder says


Eh? I'm watching a whole fucking side of a pretty big hill being rapidly covered with new SFHs right from my office window. Looks exactly like weeds sprouting up.

Just wait until you see how many multifamily housing units are underway. And the plethora of post-GFC laws to force builders of them to complete the work.

The trend was a friend, but now it ends.

Apartments Could Be the Next Real Estate Business to Struggle
Owners of some rental buildings are starting to struggle because of rising interest rates and waning demand in some once booming Sun Belt cities.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/07/04/business/apartment-multifamily-loans-trouble.html

"They delved too greedily and too deeply, to the foundation of the demographic shift, and woke the Overexpansion Balrog"
5127   AmericanKulak   2024 Aug 1, 9:10pm  


According to the latest forecast from RealPage, a property management software company in the multifamily sector, 671,953 U.S. apartment units are projected to be completed in 2024. This would represent the highest level since 1974, the year of then-President Richard Nixon’s resignation.

Sunbelt boom markets, like Austin, where the most supply is coming online, are also the very places where multifamily rents are falling.

https://www.fastcompany.com/91124238/housing-market-fed-dilemma-inflation-rent-chart-zillow
5128   AD   2024 Aug 1, 9:22pm  

AmericanKulak says

Apartments Could Be the Next Real Estate Business to Struggle


Yeah, Urban Blu in Panama City Beach is advertising on the top of its main page that it has new low rates. I never seen a leasing website in the Florida panhandle post info like this.

The 1 bedroom is renting for around $1400, and likely that may come with more deals like 1 month rent free for a 13 month lease, or free cable and internet, etc. The same type of place rented for $1000 back in 2015.

So that's only about a 4% annual increase in rent from $1000 to $1400.

Going back to 1993, I recall that the historic average for the area was 4% annual increase in rent.

https://www.urbanbluliving.com/floorplans

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