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2005 Apr 11, 5:00pm   192,051 views  117,730 comments

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2107   4X   2010 Mar 30, 3:32am  

...and exactly what is wrong with this:

• Closing the Medicare prescription drug "doughnut hole" by 2020. Under current law, Medicare stops covering drug costs after a plan and beneficiary have spent more than $2,830 on prescription drugs. It starts paying again after an individual's out-of-pocket expenses exceed $4,550. Senior citizens stuck in the doughnut hole this year will receive $250 rebates.

• Raising the threshold for imposing the "Cadillac" tax on expensive health insurance plans to coverage valued at more than $10,200 for individuals and $27,500 for families. The tax won't kick in until 2018.

• Imposing an additional 3.8 percent Medicare payroll tax on investment income for individuals making more than $200,000 a year and couples making more than $250,000 a year.

• Eliminating the "Cornhusker Kickback," which gave Nebraska a special exemption from all new Medicaid expenses. The federal government will instead assist every state by picking up 100 percent of the costs of expanded Medicaid coverage between 2014 and 2016, and 90 percent starting in 2020.

• Reducing the fine for individuals who fail to purchase coverage from $750 to $695.

• Increasing the fine on large companies failing to provide health coverage for workers from $750 to $2,000 per employee.

2108   EBGuy   2010 Mar 30, 3:46am  

How do we know they have abandoned this?
I'm assuming we'll see a decrease (MBS, unlikely, or Treasuries, more likely) in the Fed's balance sheet when they start paying back the Treasury Supplemental .

2109   theoakman   2010 Mar 30, 11:52am  

The main thing standing in the way of economics as a legitimate science is the intellectual dishonesty that is ubiquitous in academia. In science, we know what a meter is, we know what a degree is, we know what a second is, we know what a kilogram is. In economics, there are no standards of account. A dollar today isn't the same unit of account a dollar tomorrow is. Yet, most economists base their models on the idea of a unit of account that is fixed. When they actually adjust for inflation, they refer to fraudulently massaged and ever changing measures such as the CPI. Economists are incredibly transparent idiots who generally have no clue what they are talking about in their own so called field of expertise.
In the 1920s, when Physicists, Chemists, and Mathematicians proposed theorems and battled it out, they conceded when they were wrong or if someone else was right. Economists? They just rewrite history, massage their data, or outright lie about being right. Oh yeah, and they completely ignore when they were wrong.

Your typical macroeconomists would be akin to a scientist that would try to convince you it is hotter outside by saying the temperature went from 30°C to 70°F. If we recall, GDP was supposedly rising the entire 1st year of this recession.

2110   4X   2010 Mar 31, 1:53am  

BobK says

So what I see here is this.
Muslims aggressively invade countries to force people to convert to Islam = GOOD. Who cares that Northern Africa was formerly Christian now is under Muslim occupation, forced to convert or die. Who cares that Spain and parts of France were under Muslim domination until the crusaders drove them out.
Christians call up a self-defense force called the Crusades and that is BAD. I guess Christians are supposed to just die under the Muslim sword.
Got it. I see the anti-Christian bigotry is epidemic on this board.
Absolutely disgusting.

My point was that both religions engage in stupidity.

2111   Tude   2010 Apr 5, 6:25am  

You are REALLY going to give any credit whatsoever to pending sales when a tax credit is set to expire soon after? Seriously, wake me up after we have had 2 months of rising pending home sales with normal interest rates and ZERO tax credits...

2112   Tude   2010 Apr 5, 6:27am  

Oh, and don't forget, almost total government support of the mortgage market via FHA (which just so happens to amount to a free down payment with the tax credit...)

2113   Tude   2010 Apr 5, 7:53am  

Of course it's not all inclusive...but you also need to look at your demographic. The statistics show that the majority of sales are on the lower end (which means the credit has an even bigger impact). Interest rates were also at a historic low coinciding with the last months of the tax credit. And the biggest sales increases are in the cheaper areas (22% in the mid-west, compared to a FALL of 5% in the West...).

My point stands. I am not calling the bottom nor saying we are in the midst of a recovery until all the government funny business stops, and interest rates are at a normal level.

2114   TType85   2010 Apr 5, 8:24am  

FWIW the 8K tax credit had no bearing on my purchase decision. I still have to send my taxes off. I had it *almost* perfect this year, was going to get $89 back. I did do FHA and the 8K doesn't come close to covering what we had to put out (~20K or so)

2115   grywlfbg   2010 Apr 5, 8:30am  

I also think interest-rate increases will put downward pressure on the market for awhile. So many buyers are "monthly payment" borrowers that a rise in interest rates will have a direct negative impact on the amount they can buy.

Still looks like the 1930 dead cat bounce only extended through unprecedented govt intervention. Lot of people were wiped out when the real crash happened.

2116   Obamamist   2010 Apr 5, 8:40am  

Stronger jobs, services reports send stocks higher

Pending home sales rise 8.2 percent in February

Oil Surges to 17-Month High on Signs of U.S. Economic Growth

TREASURIES-10Y yield hits 4 pct on signs economy picking up

2117   TType85   2010 Apr 5, 8:47am  

grywlfbg says

I also think interest-rate increases will put downward pressure on the market for awhile. So many buyers are “monthly payment” borrowers that a rise in interest rates will have a direct negative impact on the amount they can buy.

For a home I am a "monthly payment" borrower. I have the credit and income to get in to a more expensive place but there was a "comfort zone" of my monthy outlay. If interest rates rise what you can get at the same price changes. If the higher rate drives the housing market down at the same pace it's all good.

2118   pinnacle   2010 Apr 5, 9:56am  

If things are "picking-up" why are 400,000 more people on federal exetnded unemployment?
Why has U6 gone up to 16.9 percent? How does that indicate "stronger jobs"?

2119   azrob00   2010 Apr 5, 10:06am  

Stock market is having it's strongest rally since 1930... what could possibly go wrong?

2120   ClaraCoCo   2010 Apr 5, 10:11am  

Wait and see what happen after the summer fever.

2121   ClaraCoCo   2010 Apr 5, 10:43am  

Stock is definitely recovering, not the housing market though as the government intervention causing the delay of the inevitable

2122   MarkInSF   2010 Apr 5, 3:51pm  

Going up!

Indeed. Subprime is old news. Yet delinquencies of prime and jumbo loans continue to explode unabated.

And, speaking of Case-Shiller....

No guarantee the drawn baseline is correct, but nationwide things still look pricey.

2123   Austinhousingbubble   2010 Apr 5, 6:52pm  

There is NOTHING that screams 'recovery.' Foreclosures are steady and loan delinquencies are up, according to Fannie/Freddie. Employment is still way down there in the toilet - particularly for those making less than 100K a year; indeed, long-term unemployment increased by 414,000 over the month to 6.5 million. Over 40% of Americans fall into the long-term unemployed category. HOLY SHIT! Personally speaking, at least three people I know (high and mid-level professionals) have had their salaries either frozen or reduced starting last year.

Personal bankruptcies are up sharply and personal savings rates are back down again, too. It likely only flourished last year thanks to all the squatters/defaulters who were socking away the money they would otherwise have been using to pay their mortgages.

Perhaps there's a takeaway from this; if house prices weren't being gigged, the American consumer might actually have a little more money in his jeans, which necessarily translates to a better personal savings rate and better cash flow in local economies. Now THAT would be good news. Instead, we have a government devoted to throwing as many future generations under the bus to keep the cost of housing as high as possible for the benefit of...whom? Maybe for speculators, but speculators are the natural enemy of anyone who isn't a born taker. So, the takers, the fraudsters and swindlers are all doing well. Huzzah.

2124   justme   2010 Apr 6, 5:19am  

>> I challenged everyone to show me this house

Could the problem be that Case-Schiller deals with real houses, and not some imaginary house that you cooked up as a fake and singular counter-example?

2125   Done!   2010 Apr 6, 6:33am  

"Home sales WAY up."

No they are not, mortgage apps were up in February. I was one of those statistics, and guess what?
I got out of the market, and houses are already 30K cheaper than when I was looking 2 to 3 months ago.

2126   Done!   2010 Apr 6, 6:43am  

"Roughly 700 million square feet, or 17.2%, of the more than 4 billion of available office space nationwide was unoccupied as of the end of March, according to the real estate research firm Reis. The last time office vacancies were this high was in 1994."

So nobody is renting office space, and nobody is working in those office spaces, then Who's buying houses?

2127   pkennedy   2010 Apr 6, 10:07am  

I don't know the ins and outs of the case shiller index, but the main issues I see:
1) Housing in the bay area went up because demand pushed it higher, not inflation. The population has exploded here, so obviously demand will go up. I'm sure a house out in the middle of now where palo alto in 1947 vs no where idaho, with the same price, didn't track identically. I'm guessing one of those homes would be worth significantly more than the other.
2) Housing will go up, if there is access to money. Eg a 30 year loan vs a 5 year loan, greatly increases how much a person could spend. We've got dual incomes now, easier ability to leverage ourselves, etc.
3) Houses from 1947 would be retrofitted with plumbing, electricity etc. But really it would be the land that was worth 99% of the real estate value today. The house would probably pull down the value of the real estate because it would have tear down costs associated with it.

2128   simchaland   2010 Apr 6, 10:27am  

Actually, people are leaving the Bay Area and California in droves. Immigration has slowed way down. I'll look for the actual figures, but I heard it on CBS radio while driving in the car. (I wish I had more time to find the actual numbers, sorry, maybe someone else will.) And I heard on the same program that the Bay Area job market will take 5-10 years to recover. We simply don't have any new industries to support enough job support.

So, where's that demand coming from?

2129   Austinhousingbubble   2010 Apr 6, 11:18am  

A home selling for $6000 in 1946 does NOT in fact sell for $42,836 today. Depending on what area of the country it’s in, it sells for anywhere between $125,000 and $600,000.

Perhaps -- but the point is that they aren't worth that much, and that they should NOT be selling for so much, and WOULD NOT were it not for either a) cheap credit or b) a nationalized mortgage market.

2130   Austinhousingbubble   2010 Apr 6, 10:11pm  

Your points are interesting. Some hard data that tracks the actual sales histories on a decent cross-section of properties for the last 70-80 years would be nice to add to the dialogue.

Personally speaking, the Case-Shiller index is not the main indicator in gauging how much further housing has to fall -- because it is really a question of that, not whether it will. I prefer the coalface to theory, and based on what I am witnessing at street level, nothing makes me ready to sympathize with the sunny scenarios from your original post. The consumer mindset hasn't really changed - I'll grant you that - but there will continue to be less of the easy credit underpinnings to facilitate discretionary spending/zero savings, and eventually less government intervention to assuage the contractions and inevitable austerity long due the American public. The free-money economy is over for main street, and eventually, even the comedy in housing must come to an end; a too-long fade out to black, it seems, but an end.

2131   justme   2010 Apr 7, 3:57am  

Still waiting for the address of the 3 houses from 1930s-50s that are still standing and supposedly prove that Case-Schiller is "wrong".

2132   justme   2010 Apr 7, 4:54am  

Not going to disagree with you on that one, azrob00.

2133   tatupu70   2010 Apr 7, 5:13am  

azrob00 says

the case-shiller index shows aggregate prices, not specific homes, and only a nitwit would ask for a specific data point to validate an index number; AND, major metros have likely exceeded the US/State/City indexes for multiple decades.

I'm not as expert as many of the others here, but I thought Case-Shiller was specific homes.

2134   pkennedy   2010 Apr 7, 7:46am  

He gave us a link, with 1930's pricing. Come on, at least read his messages before replying with your "This is what will happen! I have no data! and I'm ignoring your data! I'm right!" attitudes.

As far as old housing needing updates, electrical or sewer, we're talking about 75,000 vs 300,000. 225,000 in upgrades to bring a house up to code? We aren't talking about bringing the house up to full code, only none egregious upgrades need to be done. Most houses haven't had all their piping pulled, and wiring pulled from the walls. I've lived in too many of these houses around here to see no ground outlets on any of these houses. They aren't cutting edge upgrades on any of these houses. The case shiller index is including all these homes. Not to mention many of these upgrades would go under the "repair" category. Pulling every wall out of a house to replace electrical and piping isn't common. Once a house gets to that point, it's a tear down.

Housing trading at a premium means nothing. A premium of 50% in the 1930's is added on in the 1930's and now. The premium has been increasing over time, which the case shiller index isn't showing. In fact it's stating that there has been no increase and that is ewogs entire argument.

2135   pkennedy   2010 Apr 7, 9:38am  

The comment on earth quakes:
http://www.cnn.com/2010/TECH/science/04/07/earthquake.frequency/index.html?hpt=C1

"Quake frequency normal, scientists say."

In essence: More earthquakes around populated areas this year, nothing else.

2136   audra.quinn   2010 Apr 7, 9:42am  

Beacon Economics Predicts 2010 Will Outperform Expectations

http://gbr.pepperdine.edu/blog/index.php/2010/04/05/1889/

2137   pkennedy   2010 Apr 7, 10:14am  

Case shiller probably works in areas where demand does not increase. Which is essentially the only areas where people want to live these days.

Otherwise, demand is going to push housing up in an uneven fashion, and will be held there. There will always be a buyer for a property that is in high demand.

2138   Â¥   2010 Apr 7, 11:17am  

The difference between 1968-71 and 2010 is about three trillion in market cap of various tech companies in the South Bay.

The South Bay *invented*, and greatly profited from, the personal computer, the most wealth-creating advance of the 20th century.

The South Bay was a sleepy cowtown and orchards before tech hit.

2139   Austinhousingbubble   2010 Apr 7, 11:37am  

I thought it was big budget features like The Milpitas Monster that kicked things off for the South Bay.

2140   justme   2010 Apr 7, 11:56am  

Tatapu70,

Case-Shiller is based on comparing multiple sales (over time) of the same house. It then aggregates the statistics of such same-house sales. In other words, C-S looks at specific houses, namely those with multiple resales, but then naturally also aggregates many such houses to get a more accurate statistical estimate of price increases.

C-S is also uses the concept of CONSTANT QUALITY houses. If someone puts money into changing the size of the house, say doubling the size. C-S does not count that as a constant quality house. And it shouldn't. If the price went up because you increased the size or standard of the house, that changes both the baseline cost and the new value. If you doubled the house size with an addition or re-build, and the new price went up, some of that must be attributed to the size doubling. Just as an example. Other types of upgrades also matter.

I quote from Wikipedia:

The Case–Shiller Home Price Indices are constant-quality house price indices for the United States. There are multiple Case-Shiller home price indices: A national home price index, a 20-city composite index, a 10-city composite index, and twenty individual metro area indices.

2141   hottytoddy   2010 Apr 7, 12:00pm  

Forget about defaulting, how many countries owe us billions or trillions for saving their bacon when no one else would or could? How about most of Europe, certain Middle Eastern kingdoms? One could go on and on. Maybe it is time to call in those markers!

2142   Austinhousingbubble   2010 Apr 7, 4:47pm  

I also posted an entire page full of homes for sale in the 1930s from all over the country. Instead of acknowledging it, you ignored it.

What would be much more interesting is a sampling of such properties with sales histories or even just tax assessments from over the last seven decades.

2143   azrob00   2010 Apr 7, 5:45pm  

CPI in 1925 = 17.5
CPI today = 216
average salary 1925 $1300 a year. [not sure if this is per worker, or per capita]
Home prices in metros 5000 to 10,000.

yes, major California cities have seen higher than inflation price increases. This stands to reason, as they basically grew from nothing to modern cities over this time frame, and the nature of supply and demand have not grown the same in major cities over this time. Salaries have also apparently grown faster than inflation as well, but then again, standards of living have increased. homes today are a bit bigger than 600 square feet of 1926, have more than one small bathroom, have electricity and running water...

2144   ordertaker   2010 Apr 8, 3:58am  

These people are probably responsible for the rise in consumer confidence.

2145   justme   2010 Apr 8, 4:36am  

Bap33,

Houseprice/income has increased over a number of years from a historical typical value of about 3/1 to over 7/1 in some areas. I think that is well established.

2146   tatupu70   2010 Apr 8, 4:59am  

pkennedy--

But, don't you agree that using a countrywide Case-Shiller and applying it to the BA isn't appropriate? I doubt Case or Shiller would try to use the index in that way. Does anyone have a BA index?

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