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Attack of the California Equity Locusts!


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2006 Jun 20, 3:45am   14,376 views  263 comments

by HARM   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

Attack of the equity locusts!

Randy H Says:
June 18th, 2006 at 10:46 pm e

Hi DS & LiLLL

Good to be back. I will say that I am a bit more disillusioned about the housing bubble after touring the deep rural Midwest. I saw people putting 3BR McMansions in rural Indiana on the market for $800K, and not with 50 acres either, just tiny little yards. I talked to old high school friends who think they’ve discovered the golden goose because they’re flipping homes in little towns of 5,000 people making $10K per pop. People are using the same toxic loans as we are in the BA, second mortgages, negative amortization, interest only and all. There are still nice old homes for $150K, but they haven’t been updated since 1940, have 1 bathroom for every 5 bedrooms, and about 20 cubic feet of total closet space. The biggest boom business is flippers moving into these old homes and turning them into faux McMansions with some cheap, creative drywalling and pergo, then trying to sell them for 150% return.

Similar posts from Ben Jones' blog:

Comment by Brandon
2006-06-16 15:07:53

The condo boom has arrived in downtown Boise:

“The development will consist of 19 three-story buildings. Each unit in a building will be allocated two spaces in an underground parking area. The units will range in size from 1,800 to to 2,600 square feet, and will be priced between $700,000 and $1.2 million.”

Yes folks- San Diego condo prices right here in Boise!
We need more housing in downtown Boise, but 700k plus?

Comment by groundhogday
2006-06-16 15:46:47

In Bozeman, MT we have a flush of new downtown condos coming onto the market - the “mill district” which used to be known as the bad part of town. Small 1-2 bedroom condos 800-1100 sq ft are listed for $350k +
All the way up to $660k for a 3/2 1650 sq ft luxury condo or $1 million for a penthouse loft.

Consider that Bozeman is a town of 30-35 k with a handful of restaurants and bars downtown. And the “mill district” is bounded by the railroad tracks, interstate 90, main street traffic and a poor neighborhood with a bunch of very junky bungalows.

In a word: unbelievable.

Have CA specuvestors fled their own (now depreciating) RE market to ply their evil trade in "fly-over country"? Will they do for the Midwest and South what they did for their own state (f@ck over working families and drive prices to absurd heights)? Is there still enough time to warn people in those regions, so they can organize lynch mobs and destroy the flippers before they wreak too much damage on their (still) affordable communities?

Discuss, enjoy...
HARM

#housing

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123   surfer-x   2006 Jun 20, 8:24am  

skibum WHAT? Google is complety re-contexulizing the ebusiness environment. Whoops, sorry, that was Razorfish. What does google do again?

124   skibum   2006 Jun 20, 8:24am  

Sir Surfer-X, Lord of Profanity Says:

While it is big fun thinking of the boomer hoard when the lights get flicked on and they realize that the 24 yo trophy wife has turned into a 50yo hag, the simple fact of the matter is they are likely to be too coke’d up to even care.

Dude, I just about peed in my pants from laughing so hard when I read this.

125   HARM   2006 Jun 20, 8:25am  

If anyone debates that $80 is too much for an engineer; I know for fact that that agencies charge over $80/h for ENTRY LEVEL people.

Ptiemann,

I think we've already been over this before ad nauseum. The vast majority of Bay Aryan households --much less all Californicators-- do not make $200k or even $150k (1 haha). I work for an IT department in a large company and our entry-level QA staff don't make anywhere near $80/hr. They exist of course, but you are talking about a very small, select group of high-skill people.

http://www.bayareacensus.ca.gov/counties/SanFranciscoCounty.htm

126   surfer-x   2006 Jun 20, 8:26am  

Kobrick said that Google clearly has a great product, but that alone isn't enough to make it a good stock

Funny I cannot recall for the life of me buying any of Google's "products".

127   StuckInBA   2006 Jun 20, 8:26am  

Last year, around same time. Everyone believed RE could only go up. Crash ? Huh. Hard landing ? Are you nuts ? The worst case was not soft landing, but a permanently elevated plateau.

Fast forward 12 months. Where are we ? Exploding inventory. Prices are not going up, no matter what the median indicates. Houses go "below" asking. Who thought that could happen ? In BA ? What happened to all the rich people ?

Just 12 months. Very short time. Very very short time. And interest rates are STILL historically low. This was a mania. It is ending on its own. All the other things HARM mentions can only add to the downward trend.

No bear market ends in a short time span. The trend continues till everyone is convinced that this is how it will be forever. We have just begun the bear market.

How long will it go ? How will it end ? Who knows. But I plan on being in an economic downturn for a long time.

128   Peter P   2006 Jun 20, 8:26am  

If anyone debates that $80 is too much for an engineer; I know for fact that that agencies charge over $80/h for ENTRY LEVEL people.

I do not know any agency that charges $80/h and pays $80/h. What kind of charity is that?

If I charge $80/h I will only pay $40/h or I rather close my doors.

129   Peter P   2006 Jun 20, 8:29am  

Here’s your Google orb of influence

Should we say Google in Retrograde?

130   edvard   2006 Jun 20, 8:31am  

Not to sound mean here.. but as someone making 50k and now hearing from people that seem to be making 200k or more here, on other sites, and in the papers now bitching that they can't afford, and what an outrage it is, well.... welcome to the club! I've been in it for a hell of a lot longer than some who make 2,3, and 4 times as much as I do. Actually, hearing so many people here that make a shitload of money concerns me. That means as soon as the prices start coming down... KABOOM! tons of people who are doing very well, who've saved up, and are in a better position than I am, even though I've been saving my ass off for years. A person making 200k can save more than me in 6 months than it took me 5 years to save. depressing.

131   StuckInBA   2006 Jun 20, 8:37am  

ptiemann Says

Someone wrote:

Re: “Am I missing something, because to qualify for a 650K note you need to make in the high 190s or so. HaHa’s bullcrap notwithstanding, how many people are making that much coin? Not many.”

Just take 2 married immigrant engineers. $250k combined income easily.

The are not making any more "immigrant engineer couples" ! Those who existed before, have already bought. The newer ones are very happy earning fabulous salaries in India and being "nouveau rich" there.

132   surfer-x   2006 Jun 20, 8:37am  

A person making 200k can save more than me in 6 months than it took me 5 years to save. depressing.

True, if you are thinking of a person just like you but making 4X the loot. But let me assure you most if not all BA jackasses making 200K plus are tapped to the max. Know what goes good with your new 5 series? Well thats a 5K mt bike that you never ride. What goes good with your uncomfortable but stylish danish modern sofa? Well a 50" flat screen, nevermind that there is nothing to watch.

133   HARM   2006 Jun 20, 8:37am  

@WW2,

Ignore the "everyone here makes $___,000,000.00 a year" nonsense. Census numbers (plus personal observation and common sense) should have disabused any non-troll of that foolishness long ago. I put that myth right up there with the "wage inflation will bail us out" crowd.

134   MichaelAnderson   2006 Jun 20, 8:38am  

>>A person making 200k can save more than me in 6 months than it took me 5 years to save. depressing.

They can, but do they?

135   surfer-x   2006 Jun 20, 8:39am  

Ignore the “everyone here makes $___,000,000.00 a year” nonsense. Census numbers (plus personal observation and common sense) should have disabused any non-troll of that foolishness long ago. I put that myth right up there with the “wage inflation will bail us out” crowd.

Perhaps you would be happier back in Russia you Amerika hating fiend.

136   Michael Holliday   2006 Jun 20, 8:39am  

To BA Or Not To BA Says:

I was in self-doubt till the beginning of this year. I thought there was bubble, but I was about to give up. There was enough theory on this and other boards about why the house prices should correct. But there was no evidence in real life that I could find. Zilch. Nada.

Now I see evidence of the beginning of the crash all around me. I see the change of psychology. I see change of tone in RE agents speak. Not only I see high inventory, I see price reductions, and house not selling even AFTER the price reductions.

This is exactly playing according to the script.

What else do people expect ?

_____

Very good, positive post. It makes me happy to see that you are observing the unfolding of a housing crash like the unfurling petals of the Golden Lotus Flower.

What else do people expect? Hmm...good question!

Well, what I'd like to see...what I expect to see is a growing anger...a smoldering rage that finally expresses itself in explosive, medieval vigilante sort of ways as you see mobs of angry folk, carrying lighted torches, hoes, brooms, and shovels, chasing their naked realtors down the street, screaming, "kill the lying, little rat! Kill that motha..."

137   Randy H   2006 Jun 20, 8:41am  

Greg,

Just remember that my opinions are worth what you paid for them. I think 1-2% deflation falls within the "zone of error", and is not sufficient to constitute real price deflation to be worried about, so long as it's not protracted for too long.

138   skibum   2006 Jun 20, 8:44am  

Michael Holliday Says:

Well, what I’d like to see…what I expect to see is a growing anger…a smoldering rage that finally expresses itself in explosive, medieval vigilante sort of ways as you see mobs of angry folk, carrying lighted torches, hoes, brooms, and shovels, chasing their naked realtors down the street, screaming, “kill the lying, little rat! Kill that motha…”

That's just more of the same, though - people refusing to blame themselves for bad decisions and finding a scapegoat. This is already happening in the media/NAR publicity machine, with all those claims that either the Fed raising interest rates are the main culprit in the slowing market, or that all the bubble stories are just a "self-fulfilling prophecy." What a joke.

139   edvard   2006 Jun 20, 8:47am  

Micheal Holiday,
As mentioned yesterday, the boycott housing site is evidence of a vein of people that all feel the same.. which is PISSED. The visitors seem to be people that have had some pent-up rage for some time now, as evidenced by some of the messages in the visitor's section. Mob mentality for sure.
I think that this is one life-altering event that doesn't get discussed much amoungst those that feel helpless about it. If more sites like patrick, boycott housing, and Craigslist can eventually harness this mindset, then the battle is already partially won. Then again, I assume the amount of people actually pissed enough to look for sites that discuss it is fairly small, so who knows?

140   Peter P   2006 Jun 20, 8:54am  

Where I live in Sunnyvale and Mt. view areas there still is not that much inventory available. YES, it’s higher than what it was but not materially so to get sellers to panick and lower prices materially.

These places are within the orb of influence though.

141   Randy H   2006 Jun 20, 9:01am  

Blogs are a very powerful media, and we should take comfort that our form of information and debate is growing in influence and importance.

However...

We should not delude ourselves about the relative size of "us" versus the "sheeple". We are still a very small majority compared to the population of those who buy and sell homes. I assure you many many times more people are influenced by those stupid "nasty wife" ads than by all these blogs combined. This is why, if we want to have the biggest impact possible, we need to remain credible, self-challenge our own community's most objectionable and outrageous claims, and cooperate when the "mainstreamers" pick up on our torrents.

It seems unfair that some jackass talking head gets to have his/her staff dip their big toe into a world we've all worked hard for years to create, and then present it to the masses as if they are the fount of knowledge. But life ain' fair, it just is.

I've been pondering ways we (all the legit bubble bloggers and their blogs represented here) can get more exposure to big media.

Any ideas?

142   Randy H   2006 Jun 20, 9:03am  

$95k is only about the median income in Santa Clara. So… a lot of people are making a lot more.

If $95K is the median, then half are making more by definition; the amount by which they exceed median is not revealed by this number.

143   HARM   2006 Jun 20, 9:04am  

Fyi for burbed, hellboy, etc.

When quoting a previous post, it's helpful to offset it using italics tags:
<i> Quoted text here. </i>
Diplays as: Quoted text here.

This makes your responses much easier to distinguish from the quoted text.

144   MichaelAnderson   2006 Jun 20, 9:06am  

When I interviewed at Sega (I declined the offer, because I would have had to sell my house to rent there), the guy RUNNING the place had not bought yet because prices were so high. This must have been 10 or so years ago. Bay Area prices are unfathomable to me. I don't understand how it works.

I'm more interested in what happens to the places that Californians retire to. I feel like at least I have a chance of understanding those markets.

145   Randy H   2006 Jun 20, 9:06am  

Greg,

If "inflation" does not match real GDP growth, then growth will be halted in short order. This is why there is "normal inflation", and why it is normal for it to be sustained over very long periods of time. There will continue to be real GDP growth for so long as there are productivity improvements, we continue to replace depreciated capital stock, and there is 0 to positive population growth.

146   Joe Schmoe   2006 Jun 20, 9:09am  

Actually, so much of the alienation we feel is a product of the fact that the MSM never tells our story.

The MSM is dominated by the Boomers. The issues we are experiencing aren't on the radar screens of people at the SF Chronicle or the CBS Evening News.

And it's not just the housing bubble. Most of us are in our late 20's and 30's. Let's see a show of hands: how many of us would like to trade places with a recent graduate. Anyone?

(This is something that we Gen-X'ers will have a duty to change in the future once we are in charge -- we will have to insure that the kids who come behind us have a future and do not have to struggle needlessly like we did.)

The MSM doesn't ever talk about either of these issues. Partly because its principals, 50-something Boomers, can't relate. And partly becuase they just don't give a damn. In the case of housing prices, their interests are actually opposed to ours.

So don't feel bad if you get frustrated by the fact no one talks about the issues that are important to you. Your feelings are normal; the MSM is not reporting them.

147   MichaelAnderson   2006 Jun 20, 9:10am  

>>I’ve been pondering ways we (all the legit bubble bloggers and their blogs represented here) can get more exposure to big media.

>>Any ideas?

Easy. You pointed out how effective the nasty wife commercials are. Take up a collection and advertise on TV.

I vote for a commercial where all the realtors are werewolves and all the mortgage brokers are vampires.

148   Joe Schmoe   2006 Jun 20, 9:11am  

(Randy's comment prompted the above post, meant to cite to him but forgot.)

149   skibum   2006 Jun 20, 9:13am  

hellboy says:

Where I live in Sunnyvale and Mt. view areas there still is not that much inventory available. YES, it’s higher than what it was but not materially so to get sellers to panick and lower prices materially.

On the other hand, those places are suburban sprawl to the max, enough to suck your soul dry, places I don't plan to live in anyway.

150   HARM   2006 Jun 20, 9:13am  

@SQT,

I agree with your sentiments, but your math is slightly off: you should have pegged specuvestors at "two in five buyers" (40%), not one in four (25%). 25% is soooo 2004 ! :-)

151   OO   2006 Jun 20, 9:13am  

I know one thing for sure, come the next RE crash, SoCal will be much more toast than BA, as it has always been.

I thought we were nuts, until I checked out some Santa Monica homes online, absolutely unjustified. It is not like the entire Santa Monica is nice, there are many half run-down alleys and houses, yet they sell at an even higher price than Pac Heights, or Portola Valley, Saratoga, etc. LA beaches? Give me a break, cold water, polluted, drills in sight, nah, thank you very much.

I second Joe's opinion and LA SFHs in good or bad neighborhoods can see easily another 50-70% crash from here. Plus, you guys are quite overdue for another big bang in the next few years. It could be any time now.

152   FRIFY   2006 Jun 20, 9:15am  

True, if you are thinking of a person just like you but making 4X the loot. But let me assure you most if not all BA jackasses making 200K plus are tapped to the max. Know what goes good with your new 5 series? Well thats a 5K mt bike that you never ride. What goes good with your uncomfortable but stylish danish modern sofa? Well a 50″ flat screen, nevermind that there is nothing to watch.

While I'm sure they waste a lot, it's pretty easy to save when you're pulling in $17K/month. Yuppie DINKs can buy all these toys you've mentioned plus the house and not sweat putting $3-$5K/month into savings. That's fine if trash talking their squandered wealth makes you feel better, just don't fool yourself that they're not sitting pretty.

Of course, once they have kids, they have to keep working to pay the Mortgage.

153   Peter P   2006 Jun 20, 9:19am  

While I’m sure they waste a lot, it’s pretty easy to save when you’re pulling in $17K/month.

Do you know how much food can cost you?

154   skibum   2006 Jun 20, 9:20am  

burbed Says:

I disagree, I agree. I don’t think there will be a crash in Palo Alto, Mountain View, Sunnyvale, Cupertino (e.g. Facebook, Google, Yahoo, Apple). There’s just too much money here.

You forget one important ingredient: market psychology. If this whole thing continues downward as predicted, there will be acceleration downward in prices as the mentality of "must buy now or be priced out forever" is replaced by, "investing in RE is a losing proposition." Hence, those with the money you cite would not be so keen to rush and bid up on homes. It's already apparent in the high-end markets as we speak. Just check out inventory, numbers of under contract/pending sales, and you'll see sales in these areas have slowed to a grind.

155   skibum   2006 Jun 20, 9:21am  

dagnabit - screwed up the italics again...

156   skibum   2006 Jun 20, 9:23am  

The important contention many of you all are forgetting is that this asset bubble, just like every single other asset bubble in history, will collapse under its own weight. External perturbations like rising interest rates, Iran's nukes, Britney Spears abusing her baby, etc are not necessary to collapse a bubble, although they may certainly accelerate the process. It's the fundamental nature of mass hysteria and the herd mentality.

157   HARM   2006 Jun 20, 9:25am  

While I’m sure they waste a lot, it’s pretty easy to save when you’re pulling in $17K/month.

FRIFY,

Mmmkay...

First off, 200K/yr is $16,667/month GROSS, not NET. Take-home (after federal/state + FICA, etc.) is probably closer to $10-11k/month.

Secondly, we've already established that 200k is much higher than median/average/typical/whatever HH income, even in the Richer-Than-Thou Bay Area.

Third, with the U.S. savings rate in negative territory (for the first time since the Great Depression) who exactly is saving anything?

158   Red Whine   2006 Jun 20, 9:29am  

@Randy H --

"1) That the money will decrease in spending power even if your investments “beat inflation.”,

Can you explain what you mean here in a bit more detail?"

Yes, what I meant is that, despite the fact that my various investment accounts are increasing at, let's say 6% in a sluggish economy, while you're beating "inflation" (as measured by the nonsensical CPI which backs out food, energy/gas, and housing [in favor of the Rental Equivalency Index]), I can promise that your invested dollars are shrinking in purchasing power.

For example, the Orange County 3/1 house I began renting in July of 2000 was appraised then at $193k, and now with it valued at $650k circa late 2005, $193k wouldn't even be enough for a down payment unless you made $160k (1 HaHa) or thereabouts. You cannot possibly save fast enough.

@FRIFY

"I have until Winter to formulate Plan B. Distract and delay tactics are losing their efficacy. Footrubs and massage coupons might last me to next Spring… "

Obviously, you're in the exact same boat as me. It's awful letting your family down without even knowing it. All this time I was scrimping and saving and eeking the last ounce of life out of my 1994 Geo -- by saving a downpayment rather than jumping into a death-or-glory loan I was unknowingly knocking my family farther and farther behind. The inlaws think I'm a reckless gambler for NOT borrowing 9x my income to buy in. As the siblings were buying more and more condos on more and more exotic loans, it turns out WE were the gamblers, not them. Who knew? They're always asking "What exactly did they teach you in your BSBA program?" Well, they were filling our heads with stodgy, outdated information that used to pass as "financial prudence" (like the whole 20% down, don't take on more than 4x income in debt) but now would be called "overconservatism" at best. Plus, we go to the family functions and it's like a car show, all the sibs and cousins pulling up in the latest Mercedes thanks to their condos, talking real estate into the night. Always reminding me that they can't imagine WHAT I was thinking, and of course I have no defense. It's like the "walk of shame" and we get to do it at least once a week. Like I said, most times I wish she'd just meet somebody who owns a condo, he could sweep her off her feet and that would let me off easy. I could go someplace new, and never mention any of this mess to anybody! Just start fresh and hopefully not be so damn irresponsible the next time around. Screwing yourself is disappointing -- screwing your family is the worst circle of Dante's inferno.

159   FRIFY   2006 Jun 20, 9:30am  

PP,

Do you know how much food can cost you?

I don't want to shock you, but my Sushi intake fell 90% after we had kids. On top of that, Blowfish Sushi has been replaced by Supermarket Sushi.

On the otherhand, Oatmeal and milk expenses have increased 1000% fold...

:-)

160   tsusiat   2006 Jun 20, 9:36am  

I hate to say this, but why the constant attacks on realtors. They may facilitate the process and lie or cheat or otherwise misrepresent the buyer to the seller and vice versa, but really, the problem is the

sellers = insane asking prices, and arrogant insistence that they deserve them

bankers = nutbars allowing people to borrow money on the expectation they can repay later based on appreciation, not income, or more nefariously, hoping for crashes and foreclosures and getting properties back in big money private hands for pennies on the dollar

regulators = maniacs who allowed the fiscal environment to evolve because they feared telling big financial corporations how to operate their lending practices, or didn't want a recession after the dot bomb, and cut the rate to almost 0%

Japanese = carry yen trade, let's face it, in another 10 years the Japanese will own more of America then they did back in the 80s. Just watch...

Seriously, why don't we make fun of sellers more and forget about the realtors?

My $.02.

161   Randy H   2006 Jun 20, 9:40am  

RW,

That is a single measure of purchasing power parity, not inflation. Inflation is multivariate, and the aggregate is intended to measure the depreciation of the monetary unit against a benchmark basket large enough to include all those variables. The "backing out" problem is very complicated, and you can read about it in many places. It's nothing sinister, just a problem with overloaded uses of CPI.

There have always been depreciating/appreciating assets and even specific deflation/inflation. This is not the same thing as general deflation/inflation from a macroeconomic perspective. If your investments are properly diversified then you are concerned about macro deflation/inflation, not about about specific PPP when measuring your returns.

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