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Surfer-X, you are right that something's gotta give. Either companies make more and pay more, or people get to keep more, or home prices decline. Without something happening there, rents aren't going anywhere soon except perhaps down. And the more rents go down, the less likely anyone should ever buy a home unless they paying factors of millions in present-value to someone else to bank as gains.
I love this counter to the Realtor(tm) sales tactic: "Paying Rent just makes someone else rich" / "...pays someone else's mortgage".
How about, "at least a serious rental property business owner works for their income and gains. after all, being a landlord ain't exactly easy work, especially with a$$holes like me as renters".
Well.. if that ends up being the case, people buying now are not ultimately making a bad move at all.
If that ends up being the case.
We will be very perceptive of any change in conditions.
I’d love to see this bubble plotted out with a couple of other past real estate bubbles just to see how similarly/dissimilarly they behave. What is the average percent drive-up, the slope, the time frame, the denoument (is that what the post peak would be called?), the regression to or below mean.
SFWoman, you should probably be working at a Hedge Fund.
Randy,
"How about, 'at least a serious rental property business owner works for their income and gains. after all, being a landlord ain’t exactly easy work, especially with a$$holes like me as renters'."
LOL! Why just be a bear when I can be a boor!
Huh? Why would the economy strengthen? What new products or services would serve as the basis for this?
Don't know. But the reality is not always reasonable.
If rent in the BA goes up significantly in real terms, what’s likely to happen is a lot of young people and renters of all ages will move out.
Using the 1/3 gross guideline for rental affordability, people can pay a lot more.
For example, someone making 1 HaHa, which is about 13K a month, can afford to pay more than 4400/month.
SFWoman,
I'd feel more comfortable with someone like you working at a HF than many of the types who inhabit those dark depths.
Using the 1/3 gross guideline for rental affordability, people can pay a lot more.
And to further amplify Peter P's point, if you move somewhere like Evansville, IN, then you will be paying significantly more for rent than PITI, which is even worse than it appears because wages are so much lower there.
If people were to do a present value calculation (I know, in my dreams) and really consider their options then fleeing the BA because of rents is not going to be a winner except for a very few select areas in the SE or perhaps Texas.
Peter P,
Yeah, I'm still looking forward to the day of guaranteed 1 Ha Ha per capita income :P Maybe Different Sean can start a worker's revolution around that slogan...
SFWoman,
Noooo, you need to write a bunch a pretty calculus formulae, draw a couple graphs, and throw a differential equation in the foot notes too. Not that these have to really support your numbers, just have lots of greek letters. Seriously, take a look at what the Black-Scholes equation really is and ask yourself if you have what it takes to win a Nobel. I guarantee you did much harder stuff in your second year in undergrad.
Ahh the Laffer Curve. You're venturing beyond my domain of knowledge there because, to me, it's just a sidenote theory in neoclassical economics which manages to piss off both the Keynesians and the high-tax/no-deficit crowd at the same time.
My only claim to fame is having Stiglitz as a prof, but he managed to piss off even his Clinton allies before he got a chance to get fired by Bush.
Randy and Peter,
Okay, let's work with the 1 HaHa number. :P
1. I think we'd better work with after tax dollars for rent, since realtors are always telling us that there's no tax deduction for rent. The tax bill will eats up about 45% of that Ha Ha. If I made less in a different part of the country, the tax burden would also be lower, esp. in a state with lower taxes.
2. Although rent is higher than PITI in certain parts of the country, both PITI and rent are a lot cheaper in absolute terms than BA right now, and will be even cheaper when BA rent starts going up.
3. In a lot of the other communities, decent to good public schools are still available, so there may be savings on private school tuition.
However, I never assumed the rising rent price to squeeze out directors and tech supervisors (because junior engineers do not make 1 HaHa, I wish they do so I could mooch off of my junior tech friends more, but they don't), it's the marginal people who are barely making ends meet. Any price increase can lead to affordability problems and drive them or towards cheaper local housing.
In any case, I don't see anything driving BA wage growth or population growth right now. And the housing stock now in existence will still be there when the bubble bursts. I just don't see any conditions, outside of a few small high income pockets, that would give landlord pricing power.
SFWoman,
Your intuitions are right. RE isn't liquid enough for B-S to really apply anyway, but certainly RE is highly psychology-driven (there is no efficient market for RE transactions, at least not yet or probably anytime soon).
In B-S risk is just volatility as measured by standard deviation. There's all kinds of related pricing theories which include more esoteric stuff like random-walk theory, Brownian motion, and stuff only math and physics Phds can understand. But none of these work for RE.
Maybe you could use a binomial model on RE for a specific home if you could get the function right.
I thought the 1/3rd was for buying a house, not renting? I assume rent should be less, because:
1. no tax deduction
2. no equity building
Landlords also use the 1/3 guideline to qualify tenants.
Return to BA,
Congrats, sounds like a nice bargain. I asked about CL bargains. Just curious. I sold some furniture on CL when my parents moved and everything worked out pretty well. Are you moving back to the BA before the summer heat sets in for Virginia?
Ha Ha is 150K pre-tax.
Yeah, I’m still looking forward to the day of guaranteed 1 Ha Ha per capita income Maybe Different Sean can start a worker’s revolution around that slogan…
'Universal suffrage, Universal HaHaness'
'One HaHa for all'
'A message to all employers: HaHa'
We're doing an international comparison, and this is the only wrap I get :cry: Some trotskyist, 1st international comintern reference...
Apart from the FT articles, there's a recent OECD report on housing affordability across 17 affluent OECD countries. This is a useful summary from The Age which includes links (may also require free subscription, hmm, I will paste it in if any demand):
http://www.theage.com.au/news/national/house-prices-world-highest/2005/11/30/1133311106610.html
and plenty of coverage in The Economist in recent years. Some good work at demographia.com also, altho Robert Cote and I disagree quite adamantly with some of Wendell Cox's most basic theses...
Returning to BA,
Ha! You Bay Area weather wimp! Well when I was young, I lived in Shanghai with no air condition, and 100% humidity and mosquitoes the size of giant mallrats...
Sorry, can't resist. I took some classes at Berkeley one summer and had project partners who thought Berkeley had bad weather! :P
DS,
Excellent slogans. Can't wait for my 1 HaHa job. Do I have to take over factories physically? or can I just send in my resume?
Thanks for the graph, very interesting and very effective demonstration of your point about higher housing costs.
DS, Anyways, sorry about what I may or may not have implied about your being or not being a Trotskyite. It's really a sort of praise, I'm too flabby and bourgeoisie to lead a revolution.
Return to BA,
Well, at least the evenings will be cool and the humidity will be low. The Tri-Valley areas is a bit more temperature extreme than the rest of BA.
Bhiptis says:
I’m still not convinced that the correction would be a decline, rather than just a moderation.
That's fine.
I've been playing around with a Randy's model, and one that I built from scratch that shows a month-to-month breakdown of all costs, tax advantages, reinvestment returns, etc. There are a couple of selectable scenarios for appreciation and inflation ("Hard Landing" and "Speculator's Wet Dream" among them :-) ).
Given the current gap between PITI and equivalent rent, in most scenarios a renter who saves the difference and reinvests will be ahead of a buyer. Leveling prices at anything less than 10% inflation gives an advantage to the renter. The lower the inflation rate, the better for the renter.
Peter P says:
Using the 1/3 gross guideline for rental affordability, people can pay a lot more.
For example, someone making 1 HaHa, which is about 13K a month, can afford to pay more than 4400/month.
I thought then "1/3 gross" rule works only when paying PITI, because at first, most of your monthly payment is tax-deductible.
$4400 after tax is a boatload of money, even if you make 1 HaHa.
Peter P says:
But I am quite surprised that rent is nearly 25% higher in Mountain View compared to last year.
That *is* the Google effect.
Have you been to downtown Mountain View recently? No one over 30 lives there, it seems.
I wrote:
Given the current gap between PITI and equivalent rent, in most scenarios a renter who saves the difference and reinvests will be ahead of a buyer. Leveling prices at anything less than 10% inflation gives an advantage to the renter. The lower the inflation rate, the better for the renter.
Correction: if prices stay flat for 10 years, then start rising again at the rate of inflation, higher inflation is actually better for renters.
For a house price of $1mil, $2800 equivalent rent, an after-tax reinvestment return of 2% above inflation and 10% inflation p.a., a renter who saves and reinvests the difference to today's PITI can buy the house in cash after about 10 years.
After about 6 years, the renter's PITI will be lower than his rent if he bought at that time. Nice.
Pop!,
yes, 28% collectable tax. However, here is the caveat, if you can engage in a cash transaction when you sell, you don't need to tell IRS, the coin dealer will certainly report you though, unless the transaction is small.
If you buy CEF, you are not taxed the 28% collectable tax, only capped at CG tax 15%, however, you are subject to PFIC tax filing each year. You can google Passive Foreign Investment Company to familiarize yourself with PFIC taxation.
*not a tax advice nor an investment advice*
Joe Schmoe,
of course wealth has concentrated, just look at the earnings and assets of the top 10% housholds, they have increased their share of the entire pie significantly in the last decade.
Come on, do you really take the 70% home "ownership" at face value? 0-down ARM/Neg-am - financed homebuying will make you a home "owner"?
Without at least a certain percent equity (I personally define that to be 50% at least), one cannot call himself an owner, he is a debtor, the bank is the homeowner. Who owns the bank? Who owns the MBS?
Real estate is just one form of asset. And owner-occupied home is NOT an asset, it is a durable good. What can I do with my home? Unless I want to start a business and need to pull equity from the home to get a head start, it is of no use other than providing a roof over my head. BillG doesn't need to own homes, he can own shares of REITs, he can own GSE shares, owning a home and renting it out is very *primitive* and *labor-intensive* way to make money these days, let the REITs or professional apartment owners do that, you provide the money, they provide the sweat job, that is how capitalism works, marrying money with knowhow.
This RE bubble will lead to further redistribution of wealth from the moron masses to the wealthy class. Why? The wealthy people are unlikely to take on toxic loans to buy 3 McMansions. They instead invest in REITs, or hold GSE bonds, or shares to benefit from the RE boom. Remember we said who will get bailed out when this all blows up? It is certainly not the shareholders of GSEs or large banks who will be the bagholders. The bagholders will be still the marginal middle class who took on the toxic loans thinking that they can get ahead in this game. This is their ticket to poverty.
I thought then “1/3 gross†rule works only when paying PITI, because at first, most of your monthly payment is tax-deductible.
It is on most apartment rental application. Again, there are affordability guidelines. One should spend LESS than that.
Most people do not itemize anyway. To them, mortgage interest deduction does not exist.
That *is* the Google effect.
Have you been to downtown Mountain View recently? No one over 30 lives there, it seems.
Too bad I have to compete for housing with these people. :)
I am not bitter, if rent continues to explode, buying would not be as bad an idea. I doubt this will happen soon. But if it does, I will embrace the change.
GLD between approval and launch took almost a year, so there is no telling when it is going to launch, but at least we know 90% of chance is, it is going to launch. That's why CEF is exploding with the premium, in case you are really desperate to get in, you can buy a UK silver ETF on LSE. You pay no capital gains tax to UK for playing on the LSE as a foreigner, but you still owe uncle sam.
The only problem is, this fund is just backed by futures contract like DBS on NYSE, it doesn't carry physical silver. I prefer SLV that will store physical silver.
I won't use the Hunt Brothers $40 as a benchmark tho, that was an unnatural price. Silver also had some fundamental weakness, like the disappearance of film processing, I have yet to see another big industrial usage replacing that yet. However, during the 1980s, the natural support seems to be around $20, which is about $50 at today's price, I hope SLV will launch before silver hits $20.
You also need to watch out for gold. Gold in the last run shot up from $650 to $850 in FIVE days, so not many people could really cash out at the top, so setting a realistic goal of $650 adjusted for CPI is a better way. But again that also depends on how much money FED prints, who knows, last time we had a 18% Fed rate to curb the gold run, I don't think Ben has the gut to do so.
Fewlesh,
as a west valley native, do you know of any nearby places with really beautiful setting, least earthquake risk, and NO brand name (or least brand name), so when things tank I don't have to compete with other IPO lotto winners, trust fund kids for a good piece of land. School district is not an issue with me, I plan to send kids to private schools. I prefer something on the west side, commutable within 45 minutes to San Jose.
Fewlesh,
why can't Fed just buy the federal long-term treasury outright through open market operation? At least in the short term, that will stabilize the long rates. In the long term, we all know that USD is doomed.
Fewlish,
thanks for the link on electronic manufacturing, that is a big help.
Do you know what is holding up SLV ETF? I think the price is going to explode once it is available. Perhaps that is the problem.
USO is already trading.
Returning,
Try "Analysis for Financial Management" by Higgins. From there, if it's what you're after, try "Principles of Corporate Finance" by Brealey, Myers & Allen.
I think what you're after is Corp. Finance, not really economics. Econ is all theory and won't help you evaluate individual companies on their GAAP reports. Econ will help you to evaluate the strategies of companies in some depth and determine if they're full of shit or not, especially smaller companies (harder with larger, multinational or conglomerates).
One more, "Valuation" by Mckinsey & Company is very good at getting into the mechanics of how to take GAAP statements and comparables then determine a value for a company, which helps you determine things like merger opportunities, EPS and PE reasonability, and value from glamor stocks. For example, I ran a simple WACC valuation on Google just for Giggles. They need to find gold buried under their campus to justify their share price.
The_Scum,
Many posters -- and at least one notorious moderator -- bring more heat than light. In and ideal world we are purely rational beings. We rise above our fear, greed or anger. Even love can lead to irrational behavior.
But we need to get emotional to do anything important. We certainly have to listen to our hearts.
Huck Finn knew he was damned for helping his friend Jim escape. He knew it was wrong because Jim's "owner" had never done anything to Huck. He tried hard, but Huck just couldn't bring himself to do the right thing by turning his friend in.
The "spring bounce" in the BA will closely track Barry's batting average and slugging percentage. His OBP is still high because opposing pitchers and managers remain in awe of his historical "past performance." But when they've gone after him this spring he can't get it done -- so far. It just seems like something's missing. What could it be?
If Barry keeps slumping, they'll keep testing. Either he finally breaks out or they'll eat him alive when they know it's all gone.
When the psychology of fear and greed reaches its logical conclusion, prices will move.
Garth,
To add to that, now everyone finally believes that Barry's past performance was "pumped up" artificially. Balco=seedy mortgage lender. Didn't his surge in power start in the late 90's?? Hmmm, coincidence?
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Today's (Monday April 17, 2006) Financial Times features an in-depth treatment of the global housing market. The headline reads:
The Global Property Boom
Dangers of the Housing Market Delusion
The opening article is by Martin Wolf. Some interesting excerpts:
Higher prices merely redistribute income among residents [as opposed to creating real wealth], mainly from young to old
Where prices have risen far faster than underlying incomes, only two possibilities exist. Either prices have moved to a higher equilibrium level, in which case future purchasers will have to save more and consume less. That would itself have significant economic implications. Or they have reached an unsustainable level, in which case they will fall in real terms. That would have more significant economic implications. [Note that both possibilities have very significant economic implications]
The future will tell us which and where -- possibly quite soon.
Germany, Japan, US, France, UK, Australia, Spain, Ireland, and New Zealand are all covered and plotted comparatively. A quick summary of the most notable comparisons:
Real House Prices:
Ireland, Spain and UK, by far the highest
Next are France, US, Australia, New Zealand.
As of YE 2005, only Australia, and UK prices are heading down.
Lowest (and still falling as of YE 2005) real prices are Japan and Germany. These two countries are the only to be below 100 on the real-price index, meaning RE has been losing value in these countries in real terms from around 1995 (1995=100 on index) to 2005.
Affordability
Least affordable: Ireland, Spain, UK. Australia and New Zealand were trending up with the top 3 until around 2003.
France is the next least affordable, and on track to overtake the UK soon.
US affordability was almost exactly equal to France until around 2002, when US affordability erosion started slowing, and was flat as of YE 2005.
Again, Germany and Japan are the most affordable, ranking around 75 on a 1995=100 index of price-to-income. Since right around 1995, both Japan and Germany have been locked in almost identical, long-term real-price deflation and increasing affordability trends.
What will USD 1M Buy you Abroad?
London: 328 sq ft, 70% of a 1 bed room flat; 30% of a 4 BR house
Tokyo: 522 sq ft, 100% of a 1 bed room flat; 40% of a 4 BR house
New York: 557 sq ft, 110% of a 1 bed room flat; 50% of a 4 BR house
Paris: 594 sq ft, 120% of a 1 bed room flat; 50% of a 4 BR house
Moscow: 624 sq ft, 120% of a 1 bed room flat; 50% of a 4 BR house
Madrid: 1,074 sq ft, 210% of a 1 bed room flat; 90% of a 4 BR house
Mallorca: 1,663 sq ft, 330% of a 1 bed room flat; 140% of a 4 BR house
Manchester UK: 1,843 sq ft, 370% of a 1 bed room flat; 150% of a 4 BR house
Croatia: 3,254 sq ft, 650% of a 1 bed room flat; 270% of a 4BR house
Bulgaria (on coast of Black Sea): 6,803 sq ft, 1,360% of a 1 bed room flat; 570% of a 4 BR house
Note that some of these countries, noticeably Spain, seem to be affordable from a US perspective (in terms of prices), but it ranks very poorly on real-price and affordability ratings due to low incomes and interest rate to inflation mismatch problems (which is a problem for EMU countries such as Ireland and Spain which suffer from France & Germany's deficits in monetary terms).
The original articles are here and here (online version, requires pay subscription). There are a few others which appeared in print that are also surely online. If you have a FT account, you'll have no trouble finding them.
Post by Randy H
#housing