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After their real estate bubble burst 20 years ago, Japan is still in a real estate slump. Yikes.
Things sure aren't looking up. So much for the "dead cat bounce" we got from the Homebuyers' Tax Credit programs. Like all Keynesian stimulus programs they end in a thud.
http://www.zerohedge.com/article/hard-truth-about-residential-real-estate?source=patrick.net#main
More proof the Homebuyers' Tax Credits were a flop:
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=adSkz7WCGd0o
More proof the Homebuyers’ Tax Credits were a flop:
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=adSkz7WCGd0o
lol-- you must have a different definition of success than most sane people...
Yup, I saw that too, and laughed.
CNN.COM had the stones to print that “70%†of real estate is afordable.
Yup, I saw that too, and laughed.
Tenouncetrout says
CNN.COM had the stones to print that “70%†of real estate is afordable.
Do you guys disagree with their methodology then?
I am not sure enough of their methodology to say ... but, I am sure enough of their motivation to maintain my doubts. Is that fair?
I am not sure enough of their methodology to say … but, I am sure enough of their motivation to maintain my doubts. Is that fair?
I completely understand being a skeptic--usually a good thing. But, at some point, real estate will hit bottom and will be affordable. So, I just wouldn't dismiss the article out of hand...
The real estate market will have hit bottom when I can pick up a 3 story house overlooking the marina on Marina Blvd in SF for $1.5M I think that will be in first quarter of 1978. Now all I need is a time machine.
*sarcasm*
All real estate is local. Who cares what is happening in Las Vegas if you are in the market for a brownstone in the Upper East Side of Manhattan. You can't have the banks pull comps from Vegas. It just won't work out that way.
Prices are still falling in Phoenix
Everyone who bought last year is now underwater.
There are many, many empty houses.
I'm not sure there are many cities where there aren't alot of empty houses and apts. If someone tells you so, then you should go and check for yourself.
I wonder if insurance costs will affect rent and payments.
If people make 44,000 and pay 3500, it seems that it will cut into their rent/payment budget.
If they make more they pay more, so pple making 50,000 will have less budget too.
also if we get VAT it will make maintaining a house expensive. Paint costs 50-100 dollars a can in New Zealand and many houses are not painted for years.
also if we get VAT it will make maintaining a house expensive. Paint costs 50-100 dollars a can in New Zealand and many houses are not painted for years.
There is no VAT tax in NZ. There is a GST (goods and services aka sales tax) tax of 13.5%. Everything is expensive here. NZ is 4 million people (about the size of the Philly metro area) living on 2 islands a very long way from anything (6000 miles Shanghai to Auckland), prices reflect the reality of shipping and handling relatively small quantities (no wall mart type purchasing power) of goods over long distances then distributing them in a sparsely populated country with a very limited road system (there is only 15 miles of divided highway in the entire country). That's 50-100 NZ at .66 NZ to the dollar as of last night by the way.
I've seen very few houses in NZ with poor paint. Houses in my area are mostly very well maintained. What part of NZ do you live in that has so many poorly maintained houses?
More proof the Homebuyers’ Tax Credits were a flop:
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=adSkz7WCGd0o
lol– you must have a different definition of success than most sane people…
The only thing the tax credits program did is move up the buying date for buyers that would have purchased in the future. Now that those purchases have been made, what's the result? Predictably, a dramatic drop in sales activity. Also, an "unintended consequence" increased our national debt. When you add it all up, it sums up as just another government boondoggle that passes on more debt to future generations and accomplishes next to nothing.
The only thing the tax credits program did is move up the buying date for buyers that would have purchased in the future. Now that those purchases have been made, what’s the result? Predictably, a dramatic drop in sales activity.
Well, you're in the minority there from what I've read on this board. And really, looking at sales data, it's hard to defend your conclusion. The number of sales in the months preceding the tax credits program compared to the sales during the program is pretty dramatic, wouldn't you say? How many months of sales at the pre-credit rate would it have taken to equal what you ended up with? That's pulling ahead a lot of sales...
Ray America may be a minority here on this but IMHO he is perfectly correct here. The $8000 tax credit was horrible policy.
You can't just hand out $8000 to EVERY buyer without it distorting the market (ie supporting high prices).
Until we figure out that high real estate prices are a BAD thing in this country we'll never get our act together.
http://www.calculatedriskblog.com/2010/04/home-tax-credit-costly-failure.html
Congress spent $15B to keep home prices high in 2009 and part of 2010. What a great investment.
Ray America may be a minority here on this but IMHO he is perfectly correct here. The $8000 tax credit was horrible policy.
I wasn't commenting on whether it was good policy or not--just whether it accomplished its purpose...
I wasn’t commenting on whether it was good policy or not–just whether it accomplished its purpose…
Distoration of market prices, a false sense of stability, cover up of mistakes by government programs... ? Why yes! It certainly did that.
same thing cash-for-clunkers did ... it made buyers out of stupid people with no money.
I was listening to Bob Brinker's "Money Talk" program on the radio yesterday. He had a substitute host on that had a "guest" that was advocating ... get this ... that the tax credits for homebuyers be "extended for the next 30 years!" He thinks it's a "wonderful program." Oh, by the way, he might have been slightly biased and self-serving being he owned a mortgage company. LOL
that might work on the local level, but Saudiman wants greenbacks today, gold tomorrow.
same thing cash-for-clunkers did … it made buyers out of stupid people with no money.
It had the side-benefit of getting polluters and gas guzzlers off the streets; the credit was only good if there was a MPG gain in the replacement.
While not my cup of tea, policywise (destroying the old engines with sand was a bizarre part of the deal), it was a lot better than boosting used-home transactions, which do not involve any element of wealth creation, or reduce the consumption of natural resources.
No, vote for me. I want to give every American citizen $100,000. Illegals get the $50,000 as a reward for their gumption on getting here; speaking as a fellow immigrant, I know how hard it is assimilating in a foreign culture.
You have to be kidding? Give illegals $50,000 for breaking the law? I invite all cultures to this country, just do it legally.
I was listening to Bob Brinker’s “Money Talk†program on the radio yesterday. He had a substitute host on that had a “guest†that was advocating … get this … that the tax credits for homebuyers be “extended for the next 30 years!†He thinks it’s a “wonderful program.†Oh, by the way, he might have been slightly biased and self-serving being he owned a mortgage company. LOL
I turned it off when he has someone else on, so i cant comment on the May 29th show. But Bob has always advocated a market without government involvement like the GSE and crazy spending Congress programs like the Tax Credits. He often stated house purchased should be 20% down fixed loans when it makes financial sense. His sub for this weekend programs is a female journalist and SF resident. As such a heavily biased infavor of buying RE regardless of the consequences.
Ray America may be a minority here on this but IMHO he is perfectly correct here. The $8000 tax credit was horrible policy.
You can’t just hand out $8000 to EVERY buyer without it distorting the market (ie supporting high prices).
Until we figure out that high real estate prices are a BAD thing in this country we’ll never get our act together.
I agree!
turned it off when he has someone else on, so i cant comment on the May 29th show. But Bob has always advocated a market without government involvement like the GSE and crazy spending Congress programs like the Tax Credits. He often stated house purchased should be 20% down fixed loans when it makes financial sense. His sub for this weekend programs is a female journalist and SF resident. As such a heavily biased infavor of buying RE regardless of the consequences.
Exactly right on all points. The sub was a SF journalist that was highly biased towards extending the Tax Credits, etc. She also had the head economist from the National Assoc. of Realtors on to spew his nonsense. Interesting that while he was on, they didn't field any questions from the audience. I had the feeling while listening to it that the program was financed by the real estate industry.
No, vote for me. I want to give every American citizen $100,000.
You got my vote for now. Do I hear anyone promising $1,000,000?
2013-2015 in California. Most people here are still in denial about the value of their grossly over inflated property value. Some areas in the Central Valley and Southern Cal are coming close, but the Bay area has maintained somewhat, but 2010 and 2011 will be horrific times if the government doesn’t intervene. If they do, it will pro-long the inevitable housing value corrections forthcoming to Nthe Bay area.
Your right, there is denial, but it will not be prolonged. The govt may induce higher prices while our private industries will react by moving jobs elsewhere as we have seen over the past 10 years. So either way, prices will decline.
The housing market will have bottomed when I (yes me) have an offer accepted by a seller.
I call it the "shultzie" confidence index (TM) Here's how it works: I figure I've lost out on offers because either mine were too low (i've lost out by 5-8k on 3 different occasions) or the seller was too high and someone else bit on it (simple logic I know but stay with me). The day will come when I will be comfortable enough with economic conditions, the job market and overall financial stability that I up my offering price OR the seller will be in such a state of discomfort they take my offer because it is the best one. Either way when that 5-8K gap closes - we have hit bottom.
Hey its as arbitrary a measure as any of the others so why not?
The day will come when I will be comfortable enough with economic conditions, the job market and overall financial stability that I up my offering price OR the seller will be in such a state of discomfort they take my offer because it is the best one. Either way when that 5-8K gap closes - we have hit bottom.
Or when people learn how to make a deal. Ever watch "Pawn Stars" on history channel. Some guy waltz into a pawn store and thinks he can get $10K for some item. The owner laughs and says "not gonna happen, but I will give you $$2K for it".
http://www.history.com/shows/pawn-stars/videos/no-stolen-goods#the-art-of-the-deal
She also had the head economist from the National Assoc. of Realtors on to spew his nonsense. Interesting that while he was on, they didn’t field any questions from the audience. I had the feeling while listening to it that the program was financed by the real estate industry.
Wow! That would be a heavy departure from the tone of the shows Bob often does. If i was Bob I get rid of her. Im sure plenty of ticked off listeners had a word or two for the NAR shill.
Wow! That would be a heavy departure from the tone of the shows Bob often does.
I listen to Bob Brinker's "Money Talk" often. Around here, it comes on Sat and Sun at 4:00PM. I even fastened a platform to hold a radio to my bicycle, so I can listen as I ride.
Bob Brinker does not seem beholden to Wall St types, as he often advises non-commission paying actions such as lattered CDs and no-load funds. However, Bob is glad when house prices rise. Just a few weeks ago, when he was going over the Case-Shiller stats, he was overjoyed by numbers showing price appreciation in a section of the Bay Area. His take was that he loves it when people make money. Puzzling attitude, considering his comments on non-housing issues.
Although Bob Brinker is very objective about true investments like bonds, stocks, and related products, his take on housing "investment" is not so different from his guest host.
I believe bottom will hit in about 2015
That gives everyone time to adjust to the "new normal: house prices affordable at declining income levels, hangers-ons and dreamers time to spend down all their savings hoping prices will "stabilize or come back (up) to normal."
While I believe there will be a 30% minimum reduction on homes from here, on the West Coast, I have a question:
In Ashland, Oregon, and in the Bay Area, prices have been above "rental return ratios" and "income to price ratios" for decades have they not? What will ever bring these prices back to 1970's levels? Why and how do people afford to keep the houses as rentals? I am about to sell out my house in Ashland, and appreciate any insights to what keeps markets inflated over time (beyond the latest bubble), even beyond what should be the correct price for affordability. I think this phenomenon of "over price" really affects west coast prices, and I have not found this explained.
prices have been above “rental return ratios†and “income to price ratios†for decades have they not?
Once you pay a price, you've locked yourself in. As wages and buying power inflate, the rental return ratio looks bad for new buyers but people who bought in the 80s and 90s are still doing OK.
Also, declining interest rates have been propping up the market since 1982:
http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/MORTG/
if history is any guide we'll be seeing 3.5% interest rates later this decade. Don't ask me how this works, that's just what the chart says.
I follow the Shultzie Gap Index rules of bottom finding too.
YAY! move over Robert Shiller
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Please do not comment about your local real estate market. Nationwide, when and why do you think residential real estate will bottom out and begin to rebound to the point where prices not only stabilize but actually begin to appreciate?
#housing