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housing prices peak 2


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2022 Apr 29, 9:29pm   607,815 views  5,694 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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606   Michael Cooke   2022 Aug 20, 3:07pm  

GNLused says

zzyzzx says


https://finance.yahoo.com/news/stock-market-live-news-updates-august-16-115939840.html

The stock market isn't bothered by a cratering housing market

Just what exactly is the stock market trading on? A hot economy? TBTF? "The fed always has our back"?


GameStop (stock) of course.

That stock is proof of inflation..
607   Booger   2022 Aug 20, 3:10pm  

GNLused says

zzyzzx says


https://finance.yahoo.com/news/stock-market-live-news-updates-august-16-115939840.html

The stock market isn't bothered by a cratering housing market

Just what exactly is the stock market trading on? A hot economy? TBTF? "The fed always has our back"?


Nobody wants to invest in housing or crypto, so the stock market wins by default.
614   exfatguy   2022 Aug 23, 10:33am  

My perfect scenario is rates go to 11%, and house prices drop accordingly so that monthly payments are affordable. I then buy at lower principal, and shortly after that rates go back down to 2% and I refinance! I can dream, right?
615   GNL   2022 Aug 23, 10:56am  

exfatguy says

My perfect scenario is rates go to 11%, and house prices drop accordingly so that monthly payments are affordable. I then buy at lower principal, and shortly after that rates go back down to 2% and I refinance! I can dream, right?

It could happen but, most likely over a long period of time.
616   ForcedTQ   2022 Aug 23, 12:44pm  

zzyzzx says




But but but, it won’t be like 2008 this time…..

All the illegals will pool their cash and buy up inventory as prices drop while leaving the rentier class holding the shit bag…
618   B.A.C.A.H.   2022 Aug 23, 3:50pm  

exfatguy says

My perfect scenario is rates go to 11%, and house prices drop accordingly so that monthly payments are affordable. I then buy at lower principal, and shortly after that rates go back down to 2% and I refinance! I can dream, right?

Yes.

And lock in a lower Proposition 13 assessment.
619   Booger   2022 Aug 23, 4:30pm  

I'm hoping that home prices drop such that near the bottom I'm ready to buy my retirement home in Florida and GTFO of the Northeast.
620   Ceffer   2022 Aug 23, 6:14pm  

Reported drops of hundreds of thousands of dollars on some units are happening in Santa Cruz. However, it is already a grotesquely inflated market. I am curious about what will happen this winter. Inventory has increased, but still isn't huge.
621   HeadSet   2022 Aug 23, 6:25pm  

Booger says

I'm hoping that home prices drop such that near the bottom I'm ready to buy my retirement home in Florida and GTFO of the Northeast.

You will feel right at home since so many of your NE neighbors will move there as well.
622   Ceffer   2022 Aug 23, 6:30pm  

Booger says

I'm hoping that home prices drop such that near the bottom I'm ready to buy my retirement home in Florida and GTFO of the Northeast.

Just make sure Omar Little and Stringer Bell don't follow you down there.
623   Blue   2022 Aug 23, 6:38pm  

Just visited a place in union city, prices still don’t seem to be going down significantly yet. Any old 3/2b asking 1-1.5m.
Edit: someone I know bought very old 3/2b shack for 1.4m, a total ripoff. I couldn’t tell them directly. It’s down 50k after closing in about a month ago. I feel sad for them.
624   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2022 Aug 24, 8:53am  

Mailer from a bay area broker:

Mortgage rates have dropped ~ a half point since a peak hit in mid-June and inflation seems to be under control, but home sales continue to lag and the Bay Area median home price dropped for the 3rd straight month in July. The Bay Area median dropped 7% in July vs June (from 1.4M to 1.3M). Although that was flat Year-to-Year vs last July, the Bay Area home price median has now dropped 16.4% since its all time peak of 1.54M in April

San Francisco, San Mateo, and Contra Costa Counties saw the biggest Month to Month median price drop in July (10.5%, 8.8%, and 7.6% respectively), while Napa County actually saw a 13.6% month to month “gain” and 17.9% Year to Year gain.

Bay Area housing demand cooled further in July as the effects of higher mortgage rates and high home prices continues to hit potential home buyers, dragging home sales to their lowest level in over 2 years. Bay Area home sales volume dropped 20% in July vs June and a whopping 37% vs July of 2021. Santa Clara County saw the biggest Year to Year drop in Sales volume in July at 46.1%!
And the median time on market has risen from 12 days in June to 15 days in July. Last July it was only 10 days.

C.A.R. chief economist Jordan Levine recently pointed out that home sales have taken a trouncing due to a market shift in response to the surge in mortgage rates, and that pending sales suggest that the market could remain soft in August. But that the pace of sales declines is expected to slow in the coming months as rates continue to stabilize, market volatility begins to subside and supply conditions further normalize.

C.A.R. President Otto Catrina also recently weighed in that high home prices and rising interest rates in the Spring depressed housing affordability to the lowest level in nearly 15 years, which in turn dampened home sales. But that buying opportunities remain in the coming months for those who have been waiting on the sideline as more listings become available, competition continues to cool off and rates begin to stabilize.

In recent “good” news for the California housing market as a whole, after dropping precipitously in recent months, the first few weeks of August show that the market may be searching for a bottom on transactions. Through the first 2 weeks of this month, pending sales are actually up 1.9% from where they were last month. Although just a modest increase, it’s encouraging that pending sales have not fallen further in August. Recent trends in mortgage rates may have motivated some potential homeowners to take advantage of the fall from nearly 6% in June to just 5.22% in the latest weekly data.

And the California Housing Sentiment Index recently revealed that buyers are beginning to see a light at the end of the tunnel by observing a tapering in both the price growth of homes and mortgage rates, as well as more inventory to choose from. Inner Bay Area inventory is currently up 31% Year-to-Year.

However, sellers seem to be holding back a bit as they have grown more pessimistic that it’s the right time to sell. The component of the index tracking consumers’ perspective on the ‘right time to sell’ slipped for the 4th consecutive month, to 60%, as indicators of market competitiveness show buyer demand has cooled-off from its highs due to affordability challenges.

Overall, Bay Area home prices have come down off a peak in April and sales activity has also been slumping. But mortgage rates have come down by a half point since June, there are signs that inflation is under control, and inventory is higher than in previous years.

All of these positive buying signals should motivate enough fence-sitting prospective Bay Area buyers to come back to the market and home prices should settle down near the current levels the rest of the year.
625   zzyzzx   2022 Aug 25, 5:40am  

https://nypost.com/2022/08/24/us-housing-market-in-much-worse-shape-than-fed-admits-economist/

US housing market in ‘much worse shape’ than Fed admits: economist
627   GNL   2022 Aug 25, 8:43am  

I just photographed a home that is on it's 2nd realtor. The first realtor listed it for $1.15 million. The 2nd realtor is listing it at $899. This is in Nothern VA. On a side note, Realtors are paying me as much as $1,000 to photograph, video and provide URLs for these listings.
628   zzyzzx   2022 Aug 25, 11:46am  

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/housing-market-bank-of-america-downgrade-173236691.html

BofA downgrades three homebuilders as housing downturn accelerates

Rafe Jadrosich at Bank of America Global Research downgraded shares of Lennar (LEN) to Underperform from Neutral, and shares of KB Home (KBH) and Toll Brothers (TOL) to Neutral from Buy, as rising interest rates challenge affordability for buyers.
629   zzyzzx   2022 Aug 25, 11:47am  

GNL says

Realtors are paying me as much as $1,000 to photograph, video and provide URLs for these listings.


These Realtors need to learn how to use an IPhone. Seriously, unless you are using a drone and photographing the inside of the sewer line exiting the place, $1000 is way too much. They must be fucking stupid.
630   Patrick   2022 Aug 25, 11:50am  

GNL says

Realtors are paying me as much as $1,000 to photograph, video and provide URLs for these listings.


@GNL Could you post a sample of your work?
631   WookieMan   2022 Aug 25, 12:00pm  

GNL says

On a side note, Realtors are paying me as much as $1,000 to photograph, video and provide URLs for these listings.

Awesome. You ever get into drones? I know we talked privately. I rarely check my burner account for patnet as I didn't trust a lot of people in the past.
632   GNL   2022 Aug 25, 1:39pm  

WookieMan says


GNL says


On a side note, Realtors are paying me as much as $1,000 to photograph, video and provide URLs for these listings.

Awesome. You ever get into drones? I know we talked privately. I rarely check my burner account for patnet as I didn't trust a lot of people in the past.


I live in the DC area (McLean Va.) very little drone access around here so I never got my license. Besides, there's a national company called Dronebase.com. They have a great "little" system going on. There are also too many factors for me to get involved with, it can be difficult because of weather. I let Dronebase have the work.
633   GNL   2022 Aug 25, 1:42pm  

zzyzzx says


GNL says


Realtors are paying me as much as $1,000 to photograph, video and provide URLs for these listings.


These Realtors need to learn how to use an IPhone. Seriously, unless you are using a drone and photographing the inside of the sewer line exiting the place, $1000 is way too much. They must be fucking stupid.


Come on man, I could go on and on about why a Realtor should not take their own photos let alone use an iPhone. There is an image and perception to using a "Professional" photographer/videographer. Agents aren't trying to be a jack of all trades. I have plenty of clients that used to take their own photos. I'm also able to do things faster and cheaper than my competition. Stuff like virtual staging. Fake furniture can be put in empty homes. Again, editors do this for me and then I mark it up. A competitor of mine charges $60 per photo to do this. I charge $25 and still make $10-$12 per photo. At that price, Realtors are more likely to 1. pay for it and 2. order more photos.
634   stfu   2022 Aug 25, 4:04pm  

GNL says

Come on man, I could go on and on about why a Realtor should not take their own photos let alone use an iPhone. There is an image and perception to using a "Professional" photographer/videographer. Agents aren't trying to be a jack of all trades. I have plenty of clients that used to take their own photos. I'm also able to do things faster and cheaper than my competition. Stuff like virtual staging. Fake furniture can be put in empty homes. Again, editors do this for me and then I mark it up. A competitor of mine charges $60 per photo to do this. I charge $25 and still make $10-$12 per photo. At that price, Realtors are more likely to 1. pay for it and 2. order more photos.


I completely agree with this. There is a night and day difference between professional photos and someone using a mid level DSLR. It's like magic. Two pictures of the same room at the same angle - the professional photo will look like a castle next to the amateurs hovel. It's especially important in the age of zillow - where pictures do most of the marketing.
635   GNL   2022 Aug 25, 4:59pm  

stfu says

It's especially important in the age of zillow - where pictures do most of the marketing.

Yep, Zillow wouldn't even exist, imo, if there were no photos. Imagine that, a multi billion dollar company couldn't survive without photos.
636   GNL   2022 Aug 25, 5:02pm  

If someone could figure out how to control copyrights to all of the photos the industry requires, they'd control the real estate industry.
637   Booger   2022 Aug 26, 4:16am  

https://archive.ph/AeQhw

Blackstone Single-Family Landlord to Halt Home Purchases in 38 Cities
639   Booger   2022 Aug 26, 5:15am  

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have been ordered to reduce the amount of 2nd homes and Investment properties they can finance to 7% of their total production.

Translation - Interest rates and costs are going up nationwide on all 2nd home buyers and investment property buyers.
642   Al_Sharpton_for_President   2022 Aug 26, 5:35am  

Booger says

Opendoor taking a bath on this one:
https://www.redfin.com/CA/San-Diego/8353-Calle-Morelos-92126/home/4529149?600390594=

RE investors and home sellers had become addicted to ridiculous annual price appreciation, and so when listing prices are lowered, it still may not mean a loss if the home were owned for a few years, as may be the case with this home. When someone who bought four or five years ago and sells now experiences a negative average annual return, then we're talking. But dropping price from an expected 14% or even 20% YOY price increase, while in the right direction, does not necessarily make for a bad investment overall.
643   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2022 Aug 26, 7:54am  

stfu says

I completely agree with this. There is a night and day difference between professional photos and someone using a mid level DSLR.


I've got some great photo gear and even used to develop and edit my own old-school film back in the day. Still, I hire a pro for my real estate and it pays off. In particular for my maui short term vaycay rental where I have maybe 50 bookings a year.
644   zzyzzx   2022 Aug 26, 8:16am  

Al_Sharpton_for_President says

Booger says


Opendoor taking a bath on this one:
https://www.redfin.com/CA/San-Diego/8353-Calle-Morelos-92126/home/4529149?600390594=

RE investors and home sellers had become addicted to ridiculous annual price appreciation, and so when listing prices are lowered, it still may not mean a loss if the home were owned for a few years, as may be the case with this home. When someone who bought four or five years ago and sells now experiences a negative average annual return, then we're talking. But dropping price from an expected 14% or even 20% YOY price increase, while in the right direction, does not necessarily make for a bad investment overall.


It does for OpenDoor in this case. For others I think a lot of them have HELOCS and are going to walk away when they see their equity evaporate, just like last time.
645   zzyzzx   2022 Aug 26, 8:21am  

But people can afford houses:


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