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Coping with my Schadenfreude


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2006 Apr 12, 10:14am   15,412 views  268 comments

by HARM   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

Mr. Housing Bubble

WSJ article reports Flippers are getting a rough ass-pounding from the market.

Despite the current turmoil, some Floridians remain bullish, including Stuart Miller, the chief executive officer of Miami-based Lennar, one of the largest home builders in the U.S. But Mr. Morgan, the broker, says for him the market has slowed considerably. He wrote in an email late last week that "we went three days this week with not a single showing. That's incredible. I have 35 listings. We usually get 2-6 showings a day....I received more desperate calls from sellers than ever. One lady broke down into tears. Her husband bought two investment properties, and they are now going to lose their 'life savings' if they sell the homes in today's market."

I experience strong visceral feelings of pleasure and satisfaction.
(_pinky to corner of mouth, Dr. Evil style_ Woohahahahaha!!!)

Q: Does this make me a bad person?

Discuss, enjoy...
HARM

#housing

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97   DinOR   2006 Apr 13, 2:03am  

Anyway, getting back to those "guilty pleasures" I have to be honest here. I would hate to see them do away with flaky NAAVLP altogether b/c one of my secret guilty pleasures has been to wait for the crash, swoop in and pick up a swanky (formerly overpriced) McMansion with a pool and do the whole thing on some kind of IO payment, then commence to neglect it entirely! Wouldn't that be fun? While your neighbor that bought at the height of the market struggling with ever higher payments looks on in horror as you invite Surfer X and his "buds" over to "break in" your blender? You know, the tupperware "Texas Tumbler" sized glasses? Not sure I'll ever actually do it but just the thought has kept me going.

98   edvard   2006 Apr 13, 2:03am  

SFwoman,
All said and done.. It's still a condo. I don't know- I'm a bit old fashioned, but the idea of paying to own a part of a building seems like fake ownership for some reason.I wouldn't feel like I owned it all to myself. Even at a million bucks, this is signifigant dough. Guess I am yet to be on a level where my value structure has aquired metropolitan penchants and taste, but that's ok. The idea of people paying 500k for a view of the NASCAR track is quite ubsurd. Then again... NASCAR is HUGE in parts of the country. I got so sick and tired of seeing all the NASCAR stickers everywhere back there. Imagine if all the "No war in Iraq!" stickers on the bumpers in Berkeley turned into "Dale Earnhart is No 1!" stickers. That's what it is like.. only 50% worse! Believe it or not, in Japan, US NASCAR is immensly popular- so popular that there is actually a Nascar track there. I have to say that I admire the NASCAR marketing machine. It is the most sucessful marketing campaign in US history. It is soon to eclipse basketball. Product placement is everywhere, and they fully understand their target audience. I got so sick of it. The only good thing about it was that every weekend there was a race, the freeways were abandoned because everyone stayed home to watch the race, effectivly erradicating the weekend rush.

99   astrid   2006 Apr 13, 2:05am  

"While your neighbor that bought at the height of the market struggling with ever higher payments looks on in horror as you invite Surfer X and his “buds” over to “break in” your blender? You know, the tupperware “Texas Tumbler” sized glasses?"

Can I join in? I'll help you build a BBQ pit or a smokehouse for extra rusticity points.

100   astrid   2006 Apr 13, 2:08am  

nomad,

I never got the point of NASCAR myself. You watch the cars, usually at a great distance from your vantage point, go round and round the track at really high speeds. I've been told by my Chinese family (who are big F1 fans) that they follow it for the car crashes.

101   astrid   2006 Apr 13, 2:13am  

DS,

Import 100 million Chinese from the poorest part of China. They'll eat up all those pesky rodents in no time.

But they might be hard to eradicate afterwards...

102   surfer-x   2006 Apr 13, 2:13am  

HARM HARM HARM, it's a$$ pounding.

You are a very bad man.

103   Different Sean   2006 Apr 13, 2:28am  

Even products made in Australia cost more. I can buy Australian wine at the Marina Safeway or Plump Jack for less than it costs at any store in Australia (or even the wineries).

erm, that sounds a bit odd to me. freight across the pacific isn't free. an AUD$16 RRP bottle of wine would be US$12 + freight. my g/f actually audits exporters for the australian trade commission, the only benefit exporters get are a favourable exchange rate internationally. unless giant multinationals deliberately siphon off most of the stock to sell overseas under exclusive agreements...

i thought everyone had to pay $10K a year in tuition fees to attend US colleges - the kids who come here on semester swaps surely do...

104   astrid   2006 Apr 13, 2:30am  

DS,

FAB speak of the good ole days, before whippersnappers like me, hate to rent, and nomadtoons2 came along.

105   astrid   2006 Apr 13, 2:31am  

I had a friend from high school who was English and ended up going to Cambridge. She came back with complaints of Blair's plans to raise Oxbridge tuition, and got laughed out by everyone else.

106   astrid   2006 Apr 13, 2:34am  

California tuitions are still quite affordable for in-state students. However, with room and board, the total amount would be close to $20K a year.

107   Different Sean   2006 Apr 13, 2:38am  

room and board here would be $5,000–7,500 a year if you didn't live at home, and tuition has gone up lately... depending on the course, could be $3,000-$4,000 a year, and even that is enough to make students think twice and stay away in droves...

108   Randy H   2006 Apr 13, 2:38am  

Just to follow up on my previous post,

Perhaps I didn't read carefully enough nomadtoon's real question. If it is a worry about what to do (hold cash or not) during USD exchange rate deflation during a depression question:

As the USD weakens versus other currencies, which happens as interest rates go down, a number of things happen. Within the US itself, everything I said in the previous post holds. The macro things that happen between countries are a bit different, and not all of them affect your decision to hold USD cash as a person living and buying/saving in the US.

Inflation is negative (deflation), which will eventually force interest rates down. As rates go down, the USD is less desired by foreign investors. (Insert all kinds of reserve currency debate here). As the USD goes down, we become worse importers because buying foreign goods is more expensive, and we become better exporters because foreigners can buy our goods cheaper. This should reverse net-exports and narrow the trade deficit, or cause a trade surplus. The offsetting cost is in capital flows. We get less foreign investment in the USD.

For you, this means that you will do better holding dollars as cash, not travelling abroad, and buying domestic made products. The big wildcard is related to how businesses, which are largely global in nature, will react to this. They may be unable to shift production back to the US (or unwilling), and they may exploit the deflation by refusing to lower prices enough. They could then arbitrage the situation by "stealing" your newly found purchasing power and transferring that to other countries. There are also lots of complications caused by all the countries that peg to the USD to manipulate our import tastes. They can prolong the agony too by refusing to allow their currencies to rise compared to the USD.

109   edvard   2006 Apr 13, 2:44am  

Randy,
Thanks for the info. All of my savings, except for a small IRA and 2 mututal funds is old-fashioned cash. As in it sits in a bank. With all indicators of a recession, I've thought:" Oh crap. everything I have is in US dollars." We'll see how it plays out. As long as food is still easily affordable and rent is still within reason, I'll count myself of. All I can say is that this questionable future is making me tighten down. No new trucks, fancy gadgets, or other expensive things for awhile.

110   astrid   2006 Apr 13, 2:44am  

DS,

As for wine and higher valued products, the majority of the cost doesn't come from shipping but from the mark ups at every stage of distribution chain. Because Americans have greater purchasing power and have presumably built a more efficient distribution system, the producers and the middlemen are able to make money charging comparatively lower overall mark ups to the final US consumer.

111   Randy H   2006 Apr 13, 2:47am  

Oh, and keep in mind that Depression and deflation are not the same thing. Deflation is just negative Inflation, an economic thing. Depression is a socio-political-economic thing which happens to be caused by deflation (historically), but could theoretically be caused by other factors too. I believe the definition of a Depression is just a very long, severe, sustained Recession.

That's why econ books always say deflationary-depression, so that we know it is a deflationary period accompanied by sustained negative GDP growth. The "socio-political" part comes in because Depressions are so severe that they disrupt the orderly functioning of society itself. Massive unemployment, a breakdown of financial institutions, political unrest, and usually salvation through warfare are the hallmarks of Depression.

Let's not cheer for that to occur.

112   Different Sean   2006 Apr 13, 2:51am  

As for wine and higher valued products, the majority of the cost doesn’t come from shipping but from the mark ups at every stage of distribution chain.

er, yes, but domestically it goes from vineyard to warehouse to stores. to get to america, it goes from vineyard to warehouse to port to ship to port to warehouse to stores. there's a markup in the distribution chain for you, unless the shippers, wharfies and truckies all work for free, and running a ship costs nothing... not to mention customs and excise fees, insurance, breakages, etc. Obviously internationally $12US buys $16AUS, so there may be a perception it is cheaper just by the numbers. note also that the AUD was 54c US for a while there, which was a boom time for exporters. now it's crept up to about 72c. (The AUD used to buy US$1.20 once, when it was pegged to the GBP - and I remember it too.)

113   Different Sean   2006 Apr 13, 2:55am  

i did a comparison on the retail cost of the LG TV fridge recently with a friend in DC who was buying one - it was a few hundred dollars dearer here after taking exchange rates into account... imported whitegoods/appliances here were about 10% more on average brand for brand, probably more to do with buying power and volumes of sales...

114   edvard   2006 Apr 13, 2:57am  

ALL YOUR EQUITTY ARE BELONGING TO US!

115   astrid   2006 Apr 13, 2:58am  

Is it wrong of me to find Seth Green utterly cute and clever?

116   LILLL   2006 Apr 13, 2:59am  

Love the 'affluenza' word...Perhaps it should be added...
The insatiable need of FBs to continually add to their debt. Bigger is better...blah, blah, blah

117   Randy H   2006 Apr 13, 2:59am  

DS,

Let's find a shipper for less than the delta and set up an arbitrage.

118   astrid   2006 Apr 13, 3:04am  

SFWoman,

I wonder if you got to this article yet?

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/04/13/garden/13tbox.html

:P

119   Different Sean   2006 Apr 13, 3:06am  

Af-flu-en-za n. 1. The bloated, sluggish and unfulfilled feeling that results from efforts to keep up with the Joneses. 2. An epidemic of stress, overwork, waste and indebtedness caused by dogged pursuit of the American Dream. 3. An unsustainable addiction to economic growth. 4. A television program that could change your life.

http://www.pbs.org/kcts/affluenza/

Let’s find a shipper for less than the delta and set up an arbitrage.

hmm, yes. how?

I'm sometimes tempted to set up a chain of general appliance stores, given it seems to turn people into billionaires, even here...

120   Randy H   2006 Apr 13, 3:09am  

--Let’s find a shipper for less than the delta and set up an arbitrage.

hmm, yes. how?

Generally, it is only possible to find worth while arbs with extremely pricey, luxury goods like exotic sports cars. Shipping, insurance and such always exceed the delta in other cases (obviously, or everyone would be doing arbs).

121   Different Sean   2006 Apr 13, 3:12am  

Generally, it is only possible to find worth while arbs with extremely pricey, luxury goods like exotic sports cars.

Let's do that then. Actually, they were going to export GMs made here to be the new Pontiacs, especially at 54c to the $, but that deal may have gone sour after it rose more to 75c...

the best arbitrage is the 'race to the bottom' for labour costs, using mexico, brazil, china, india, etc...

122   astrid   2006 Apr 13, 3:13am  

Randy,

Owneroccupier and I were talking a couple days ago about an arbitrage of the Mainland Chinese yuppie food market. I also see an arbitrage opportunity in the French designer bags market. Maybe hire unemployed French baccalaurate graduates as designer bag purchasers...

123   Randy H   2006 Apr 13, 3:16am  

astrid,

Yea, but I'm not in favor of giving them more virtual lifetime employment benefits whenever they decide to party in the streets for a couple of weeks.

I'll hire them if they agree to move somewhere like Poland where I can fire them when they get lazy.

124   Different Sean   2006 Apr 13, 3:16am  

trust Rush to get it ass about... the striving for manifest economic and material 'success' is going to destroy the planet before long, through war or simply running out of resources - it simply isn't sustainable...

125   astrid   2006 Apr 13, 3:17am  

"Rush Limbaugh has been using affluenza..."

That's rich, coming from a man who's paid 3 different alimonies.

126   LILLL   2006 Apr 13, 3:17am  

I sold my first house for $254,500. I remember the price because it was an odd price AND because that very house came up for sale 10 years later for EXACTLY the same price. Real Estate does NOT always go up and if people didn't learn the first time around...well that's nobodies fault but their own. If they're too young to know this...well then the're young enough to build their wealth back up again. I had to. I learned a HARD lesson the last time around. Good money can be made in real estate, but you must understand the cyclical nature of the market. I'm sorry, but this stuff is OBVIOUS. You'd have to be a fool to not get it.
I was speaking to a developer last week. They build SFHs all over CA...about 700 per year. She is very well aware of the market shift and they are preparing for it. They have made so much $$$ they are flush and are slowing down their business as we speak. They have the $ to send their kids on European vacations etc.(I know the kids)
My hesitation in investing in some other market is...I am not INTERESTED in another market, so I may not notice the signs of a shift. I AM interested in real estate and watch it very carefully, so therfore, at some point, I will own again...and hopefully profit.
Remember when we were advised AGAINST owning the biggest house on the block? What's with these sheeple? Perhaps they're too young to remember when that was a bad investment? Perhaps they've been afflicted with affluenza.

127   astrid   2006 Apr 13, 3:19am  

"I’ll hire them if they agree to move somewhere like Poland where I can fire them when they get lazy."

Excellent, we can hire Polish students to buy designer bags as second jobs. I smell an ebay business here.

128   astrid   2006 Apr 13, 3:21am  

-second
+summer

129   Randy H   2006 Apr 13, 3:21am  

LiLLL,

That $254,500 house actually lost value, perhaps quite a bit of value depending upon when this 10-year period was, due to inflation.

This is a reason when I say real-assets are a hedge against inflation I am careful not to say "a house" is a hedge against inflation. Sometimes it is not.

130   Randy H   2006 Apr 13, 3:23am  

Excellent, we can hire Polish students to buy designer bags as second jobs. I smell an ebay business here.

Getting around VAT will be the key to making this scheme work. I think there are punitive tariffs also for exporting such things in excess of the "personal allotment", but I'm not up on such rules.

In general, the EU is *not* an open market, not even within itself.

131   skibum   2006 Apr 13, 3:24am  

Robert,

Friggin' hilarious post! However, you MUST cut back on the weed.

132   astrid   2006 Apr 13, 3:26am  

"punitive tariffs also for exporting such things in excess of the “personal allotment”, but I’m not up on such rules."

Really. I was more concerned about Chinese import duties but I hadn't given thought to EU export duties. Also, I thought the EU was a free trade zone within its boundaries.

133   astrid   2006 Apr 13, 3:29am  

Linda,

My concern with the current crop of young buyers is that they're committing to huge loans compared to their earning capacity. Unless they discharge it in bankruptcy, they will be carrying a loss that will take ten to twenty years to make up.

134   LILLL   2006 Apr 13, 3:31am  

Randy,
It was 1988 when I sold it, and 1997 when it was bac up for sale.
I remember being glad that I hadn't bought several properties and held them hoping for appreciation as several friends were VERY property poor.

135   Randy H   2006 Apr 13, 3:35am  

I think the EU only has export duties for luxury goods (like designer bags and such), but my knowledge is a bit dated on EU tariff specifics. There's been all kinds of WTO junk in the last few years, so it could have changed.

Ask Polish Plumbers if the EU is a free trade zone. Ask any French company trying to source from EU eastern labor markets. The FT had a great opinion piece yesterday about the future of the Eurozone. It is great, except for France, Germany and Italy, who happen to be over 60% of the Eurozone's GDP.

136   Randy H   2006 Apr 13, 3:38am  

SFWoman,

Seriously, a school colleague and I were, at one point, trying to set up something similar (but not high-end designer) based in Mauritius, targeting China. We backed out after Mauritius got clobbered by the WTO.

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