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2006 Oct 20, 4:54pm   14,887 views  145 comments

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Start with any generally observable and credible premise. Example: "Rents are up 10%." Or "Inventory is up 135%."

Assuming the premise is true, what impact will this have on the Bay Area housing market?

For instance:
KCBS reported rents are up 10%. Most anecdotal evidence suggests anywhere between 7% to 15% increases. If this is true, it could have the following consequences:

1. Rents go up -> Wages go up -> Wage inflation slows job growth -> Puts brakes on population-driven rent increases -> Rent vs. Buy adjusts a little, not a lot.

2. Higher rents -> People move out of area -> Rents stabilize, maybe fall -> Rent vs. Buy doesn't change a lot, and demand for both rental and for-sale housing softens -> Prices continue to slide.

3. Higher rents + refis -> help to bail out a few homeowners, reducing the overhang of potential FB's -> Could cushion the landing a little.

4. Rents keep going up 10% per year -> Creative renting strategies (home sharing, warm-bedding, etc.) become common, but overall renting becomes an expensive proposition -> People continue to do whatever they can to buy, keeping nominal prices high -> Rent vs. Buy is mainly adjusted by higher rents.

Or another example.
Premise: Punch bowl gets thrown away after Nov. 8 elections.
FB's rush to the exits -> No buyer confidence -> Inventory spikes up -> Prices fall FB's put unsaleable houses for rent, driving rents down.

The above are just examples. You can start with any other credible economic premise and expand it to assess impact on the HB. And even those outside the Bay Area can contribute their own crystal ball visions. And if this turns out to be too arcane, feel free to start a new thread.

SP

#housing

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81   DinOR   2006 Oct 22, 10:33am  

Erc,

I think OO (OwnerOccupier) has made a good call there. Why....... I can't think of a state that ISN'T contemplating a law suit against CountryWide? Building materials pricing has slid in a meaningful fashion, everything from copper to concrete and they could be some solid shorting candidates as well.

82   Randy H   2006 Oct 22, 11:08am  

I am considering doing part time MBA at Santa Clara University. I can not get into stanford or HAAS based on my previous academics and GMAT scores. I am a 27 yr old professional gal already making little less than 100K. Is it worth my time and money? Any ideas on how much SCU MBAs make after graduation?

These are just my opinions, and they are very biased by my own experience and decisions in life. Others will surely disagree.

An MBA from a non-top school is seldom worth the investment, with a couple of exceptions. Remember that going to earn an MBA costs a ton in tuition, it costs in lost salary and advancement opportunity, and it costs very heavily emotionally, especially if you're married, with kids, etc.

Part-time or executive programs allow you to keep working but (a) they cost an astronomical tuition, (b) they will practically kill you because you quickly find out it's still a full load of coursework, just compressed into fewer marathon length classes.

Lower tier MBAs can be worth it if you're going to a school that has a particular specialty in your industry. If you were a director at Monsanto, then an MBA from Ohio State probably will take you farther than one from Haas.

The problem with SCU is that it's only regionally recognized, and even there it's regarded as average. C of W&M is more respected on that comparison.

My advice would be to *just try*. You may very well surprise yourself. In reality, you only need a 650+ GMAT to get consideration if you have a few good years of experience and some career success under your belt. If you can't get in now, then just try to raise your GMAT a bit and try again in a year. (And don't over-focus on the GMAT. Most top schools don't use it to determine who gets in, only the minimum cut-off. Plenty of 700s GMATers get rejected.)

83   Randy H   2006 Oct 22, 11:12am  

I can’t think of any good MBA schools that has part time programs (Haas being the only one, even then I don’t know if you consider them top tier).

All of them do except Stanford and HBS. The EMBA programs. Wharton, Columbia, Haas, Kellogg, Chicago; even internationally LBS, INSEAD, and so on. These pretty much all cost +$100K in tuition, be warned.

84   OO   2006 Oct 22, 11:16am  

FAB,

good point. I know 3 women from HBS and GSB who are no longer working any more, and their husbands are making "merely" 200s. However, they all got into a home much earlier at half the current price, like 5-6 years ago, so making the mortgage payment is no longer an issue.

For those MBAs, JDs, or MDs who graduated 5-10 years ago, they are pretty set and unless they commit some blunders, hardly anything can kick them out of their homes.

Can the newly minted MBAs, even from the best schools, get into a decent home in a decent neighborhood at the current price in the sought-after parts of the country where the high-paying jobs are located? No, very unlikely. Of course we are not counting exceptional examples of those who can make partners at VCs, IBs, or hit a jack pot with IPO. I am just talking about the average crowd.

85   OO   2006 Oct 22, 11:26am  

If you are not targeting Los Altos Hills or Atherton for your next residence, you shouldn't really worry about the top-earning MBAs, these people who can pull in 1M+ annual income fall into an entirely different category. Yes there are in fact lots of people (relatively speaking) here making multiple millions a year. But in absolute numbers, they still represent a very small part of the population.

I'd say for the Bay Area, if you are focusing on the middle upper class areas in the Bay Area, the median household income is around 200K-250K income, and that is your competition.

86   OO   2006 Oct 22, 11:39am  

I am wondering if I can get the following data anywhere without much pain?

1) Total SFH stock in each zip code
2) # of transaction of SFH in each year, dating back as much as possible
3) Ratio of SFHs entirely paid off

87   FormerAptBroker   2006 Oct 22, 11:47am  

CB Says:

> One went to Stanford MBA while the other has a
> MBA from Harvard. Given that there is no way that
> I would’ve gotten in to either programs, I’m not that
> jealous They are probably very smart, but the
> (big name) MBA connections definitely open doors.

There are definite advantages to going to a top tier school but many people forget that huge numbers of the kids at top tier schools don’t need the schools to open any doors (a friend was in the same section with GE Chairman Jack Welch’s son at HBS and when I was down at GSB Billionaire John Arrillaga’s (hot looking) daughter was a student).

Then OO Says:

> Can the newly minted MBAs, even from the best schools,
> get into a decent home in a decent neighborhood at the
> current price in the sought-after parts of the country where
> the high-paying jobs are located?

In the Bay Area most people under 30 that own homes get help from their family. Most (white) MBA grads come from wealthy or very wealthy families so they should do fine since wealthy successful parents will help their kids buy a home and give them enough money for the wife to stay home so they won’t have to watch their grandkids raised by a nanny from Peru…

88   anonymous   2006 Oct 22, 11:53am  

*unlurks*

Yeah, let's drift this thread a little off-topic onto the topic of MBAs / pay / part-time MBA programs.

Like HonestHunk I'm looking at a part-time MBA. Why? My job lacks sufficient intellectual stimulation, but I'm not willing to give up the very good income it brings. In fact, I already make near the median that a graduating MBA in my city would get. I have a technical background and am now in administration, so what I learn (and the community) could be very useful in teaching me how to comport myself in business.

I sure am not contemplating the part-time MBA to make a 50% bigger salary! I don't even have a career change in mind (I did that with the last job switching out of engineering).

I'm already 29, and I might just stop working after the first or second kid (e.g. 5 years from now). With a graduate degree and a professional designation, I kept putting off applying to MBA school....until I got really bored which is now. I may not even quit working post-kids (I'm not domestic enough to want to stay at home everyday) and it could be "useful" in 10 years.

If it wasn't so expensive I'd probably have started by now. It's not a problem to pay for it but I could find other uses for $50K. Damn expensive way to get some intellectual stimulation. I guess that's why I spend so much tie reading Patrick.net threads...it's good and it's free! (even if I give patrick $5/ month for his links).

Comments?

*relurks*

89   FormerAptBroker   2006 Oct 22, 11:53am  

OO Says:

> I am wondering if I can get the following data
> anywhere without much pain?
> 1) Total SFH stock in each zip code
> 2) # of transaction of SFH in each year, dating back
> as much as possible
> 3) Ratio of SFHs entirely paid off

If you have someone (like a realtor) that does business with a title co. call their title rep. the above info should be easy for any title co. research dept. to pull. As mentioned before any home with out "secured" debt will show up as entirely paid off...

90   anonymous   2006 Oct 22, 11:54am  

-tie
+time

91   skibum   2006 Oct 22, 12:15pm  

I recall a thread discussing MBA's a while back. Many of us asserted that the value of the degree is not so much the academic content of the coursework (just look at ConfusedRenter - MBA and he's selling real estate now...); rather, it's (a) the "label" of the school you get to slap on your resume 2 years and $50-100K later, and (b) the connections you develop with other business types there, which are more valuable the more top-tier the school. So my non-first hand experience advice is, ask yourself, is going to a place like Santa Clara or any other place you're contemplating going to get you these things?

92   skibum   2006 Oct 22, 12:18pm  

@Boston Transplant,

I guess we have opposing views on the "value" of the MBA.

93   SP   2006 Oct 22, 12:21pm  

allah said:
They will whore themselves to that occupation and America will hire them instead of their own.

Why would you consider someone training for a professional career to be 'whoring' themselves? Is it just because they can do the job for less money than you are willing to do?

Not trying to start a flame war, I just found your choice of phrase a little extreme.

SP

94   OO   2006 Oct 22, 12:24pm  

Boston Transplant,

you are talking about a nice home in the best area, of course you should not be able to afford one. My understanding of a nice home in the best area is a 4000 sf home on an acre lot in Atherton, why do you think just by having an MBA degree from the best schools entitle you to such a prize? There are 1000+ graduates from HBS each year, if all of them can afford such a home, how many Athertons should we have in the Bay Area?

95   astrid   2006 Oct 22, 12:32pm  

OO,

As I understood Boston Transplant, his gross household income would be about $250-300K. Out of that, they would probably pay pretty substantial student loans. They could probably afford a $750K-1M house pretty comfortably...but that's not very much in all but the most ghetto South Bay neighborhoods.

But until the prices get cheaper, there's always renting as a option. Maybe one of those VC wives or the proverbial 30 yr long absentee landlord would agree to a 5 year lease with fixed rates of increase. That would be a pretty cushy deal while waiting for the RE market to deflate.

96   astrid   2006 Oct 22, 12:35pm  

Beats me. I've always been lead to believe (except from the MBAs on this blog) that HBS was just one long grueling marathon network session.

97   OO   2006 Oct 22, 12:38pm  

astrid,

the operative word is "nice" and "best" :-)

I think for a family of 250-350K to afford a 1.2-1.5M is not unreasonable (not that I encourage their buying at this stage). 1.2-1.5M will get you something decent in the good parts of Saratoga, but not a "nice" home. It is probably a 50-year old 2200 sf home on a 1/4 acre lot, not "nice", which probably means a larger, newer home on a larger lot. Any "nice" home in the "best" neighborhoods in the bay area cost at least 5M+, and frankly nobody should be able to afford them except for those exceptions we talked about: CEOs, VC partners, IPO founders, successful HF managers, etc.

98   OO   2006 Oct 22, 12:38pm  

FAB, thanks for the info.

99   OO   2006 Oct 22, 12:44pm  

Boston Transplant,

is Boston cheaper than the Bay Area? Somehow I am always under the impression that Boston is even more expensive, because it is much smaller than SF geographically. When I was there over 15 years ago, Boston was decisively more expensive than the Bay Area.

Beacon Hill is very nice, I remember the rent of 15 years ago for a 2-bedder was higher than that of Pac Heights.

100   Boston Transplant   2006 Oct 22, 12:46pm  

p.s. I apologize if my name has confused anyone. I am transplanted TO Boston FROM northern California. I do hope to return someday and it would be nice to buy a home (not a mansion) somewhere near Stanford or SF.

Also, using the 3X salary number that pops up here from time to time, we would not consider spending over $800k, and in reality our budget is much lower than that because one or both of us may work part time in the future. I know, we can't have 1 to 1.5 salaries and live near Stanford or SF. Sigh...

101   Boston Transplant   2006 Oct 22, 12:48pm  

OO,

I think Boston is now less expensive than SF, but I'm not sure. Our apartment in Beacon Hill has 1000 square feet and rents for $2400/month. We even have a roofdeck with a view of the Charles. This same apartment would probably sell for $750k or more...

102   astrid   2006 Oct 22, 12:53pm  

Ha Ha,

You stand on immigration and Democrats makes less sense with each new iteration. You can vote Republican or Libertarian if you like (since your vote means zilch in the coming election), but I don't think their platform would be less illegal immigrant friendly compared to Democrats. Perhaps you need to look up some of the more xenophobic third parties for something more amenable to your sensibilities.

OO,

I was being conservative since BT's wife probably had substantial student loans in addition to housing costs. Arguably, yeah, only the most successful/lucky will end up in an Atherton mansion, but it is a big cognitive dissonance for people who've been super performers all their life. Why can't they have the 3,500 sqft McMansion that their loser classmate in Austin lives in or own outright like the teachers next door to their rental?

103   OO   2006 Oct 22, 1:02pm  

Boston Transplant,

the rent to value ratio certainly sounds much better in Boston. Down in the south bay area, there is no way you can get 3.8% gross rental yield on the house or apartment, everywhere I look it is around 2.5%, some even as low as 2%.

Well, while I believe that the big correction will set in, I am not sure of how big the correction will be for certain prime neighborhoods (not Portola Valley or Atherton, just blue-ribbon areas with good schools). It just seems to me that there are quite a few 200-300K families targeting these locations (or are already rooted there), so when the correction happens, there still may be more demand than supply.

The odd thing is, these neighborhoods that we are talking about, Menlo Park, Palo Alto, Los Altos, Cupertino, Saratoga, etc or even Almaden, seem to have a stabilized number of SFH listings (except Los Gatos all other are below 100) at the moment. Let's say that the general market starts dropping a lot, all you need is just another 1,000 households with 200-300K income to jump in to pick up the slack. The problem for all of us here is, we are all looking at the same areas, so no matter how much east bay cracks, it is really not helping much.

If you are planning to come back, don't buy a house out on the east. I've been told many times before, and it seems to be true, those who left CA and bought elsewhere always found it very hard to buy back in, because when CA starts to pick up, it picks up much faster than the rest of the country, and it is always one of the most expensive spots in the world.

104   skibum   2006 Oct 22, 1:14pm  

@Boston Transplant and OO,

Having gone to school in the BA, then moved to Boston for about 8 years, and then recently moved back to the BA, I can address the comparative housing costs questions. Simple answer: Boston is a LOT cheaper than the BA. Even in the nicest parts of downtown (Beacon Hill, Back Bay, South End), only the super-luxe full service condos go for anything close to $1000/sf. Compare that with your typical crappy POS condo/TIC in lower Pac Heights that is in need of a complete rehab. The "prime" suburbs (Newton, Wellesley, Brookline, Weston) are nowhere near as expensive as Atherton, Woodside, LAH, etc. $1M in prime Boston suburbs still gets you a lot. Try this: http://tinyurl.com/ska33

If you're looking for a downtown Boston place, have you looked at the South End? The housing stock is beautiful, there are lots of young professionals with kids (most move to the 'burbs by school age b/c of the city's lousy schools), you get more space than on the Hill, and you can often get a parking space out back.

105   FormerAptBroker   2006 Oct 22, 1:25pm  

Boston Transplant/BT Says:

> OO, I think Boston is now less expensive than SF,
> but I’m not sure. Our apartment in Beacon Hill
> has 1000 square feet and rents for $2400/month.
> We even have a roofdeck with a view of the Charles.
> This same apartment would probably sell for
> $750k or more…

I'm no expert on Boston (since I grew up, went to undergrad and grad school in N. Cal), but over the years I've got to know a lot of people that grew up, went to undergrad and/or grad school in Boston and it seems like home prices and rents on the Peninsula and SF have always been higher than similar Boston and Boston suburban areas. Today a 1,000 sf place in Pacific Heights with a view of the Bay and a roof deck would probably rent for at least $4K a month and sell for well over a million (I saw recent sale of a 1 br condo on Broadway in Pac. Hts. without any view that went for $1.1mm)...

106   OO   2006 Oct 22, 1:31pm  

I never rented in the city, my first rental was down in the South Bay near Palo Alto. Perhaps my perspective was skewed by the fact that I came to BA after the real estate crash right when the market was still sinking.

107   Randy H   2006 Oct 22, 1:31pm  

TO Lurker,

Again just my opinion which is worth what you paid...

In your specific situation, getting an MBA from a part time program, especially well ranked like Haas EWMBA, might serve you well if you think you'll have a career break for kids but want to return later. Re-engaging a career after a couple few years break is hard enough, but having an MBA should give you a leg-up on the competition; it will also give you a huge network you can draw on when time comes to find your way back into the workforce.

The NPV of the proposition isn't so good though. You'd have to look at it as more of a "real option". That is, you're buying insurance in case you want to continue your career.

108   OO   2006 Oct 22, 2:06pm  

goober,

this only applies to very few suburbs. There are far more houses than 1000+ in the whole BA.

It all comes back to one theme - employment. If we encounter a 2001-style recession again, when an average GSB or HBS graduate of that year even had trouble finding a job, then even the best zip codes will suffer.

I have a friend who graduated from 2001 class of GSB, and we went to his commencement. Many graduates of that year were still struggling for an offer at commencement, some guys remained unemployed 8 months later.

However, whether there will be massive job loss is not determined by the housing stock of a few select suburbs. It is determined by too many things beyond the control of the US government or any government.

109   Peter P   2006 Oct 22, 2:12pm  

Did you meet lots of Chinese students at your Stanford class?

There are quite a few.

I believe they have a pretty good SJD program, if you choose to get one. ;)

110   Peter P   2006 Oct 22, 2:15pm  

But, if they are making $500K a year for say 3 years already, they could easily buy that $2mil condo.

How so?

You are either a troll or a subverter or both.

111   Peter P   2006 Oct 22, 2:20pm  

I think for a family of 250-350K to afford a 1.2-1.5M is not unreasonable (not that I encourage their buying at this stage).

More like 1M - 1.4M if they have 20% down...

4X income is already quite a stretch.

112   OO   2006 Oct 22, 2:21pm  

I am more concerned about the HOA fee and property tax on that 2M condo. These two added up can easily be around $50K a year, and all the outgoing will be after-tax since at $500K you are most definitely taxed at AMT.

113   Peter P   2006 Oct 22, 2:23pm  

Let’s say that the general market starts dropping a lot, all you need is just another 1,000 households with 200-300K income to jump in to pick up the slack.

They can only afford 800K to 1.2M. What can they get?

I have a friend who was preparing to spend 1.6M in PA. Everything was crap at that price.

114   Peter P   2006 Oct 22, 2:24pm  

I am more concerned about the HOA fee and property tax on that 2M condo. These two added up can easily be around $50K a year, and all the outgoing will be after-tax since at $500K you are most definitely taxed at AMT.

Exactly.

115   Peter P   2006 Oct 22, 2:27pm  

Where you live is secondary…How you live is primary!

Where you live is secondary…What you eat is primary!

116   OO   2006 Oct 22, 2:36pm  

Peter P,

just have to say your friend is looking at the wrong place. Palo Alto is the most overpriced (not just expensive, but overpriced) neighborhood in the South Bay.

Try Saratoga, 1.6xM can get you something like this: (Saratoga High)
http://tinyurl.com/yz3xdt

or this: (with Monta Vista High)
http://tinyurl.com/ybq3tq

117   SP   2006 Oct 22, 3:16pm  

@allah,
Thanks for the clarification that by 'whoring', you mean someone who is willing to do a job with equivalent competence for less money. Since you mentioned "swarms of Indians" in your example, I was curious whether your definition applies to only that group, or to say "swarms of Czechs" or "swarms of Angolans", for instance.
SP

118   FormerAptBroker   2006 Oct 22, 3:34pm  

flooded with rentals Says:

> The investment property/2nd homeowners are in a quandary.
> Do I take a negative cash flow every month and try to ride
> out the downturn or do I dump this 2nd home.

Very few flippers/investors have the ability to “ride it out”. A good example is our friend Casey, and he is not the only Sacramento Flipper in trouble:
http://flippersintrouble.blogspot.com/

> The mortgage on owner occupied home will adjust soon.
> In some cases the monthly mortgage will go up $700 or more.
> This puts time pressure on the decision of what to do with
> the 2nd home.

Here in SF I know lots of people that got in when rates are low and have $1mm mortgages that are going to go from about $3K a month to close to $7K a month when they go from IO to fully amortizing. As foreclosures continue to rise it will put upward pressure on MBS credit spreads (that are currently near the all time lows) and some of those $1mm loan payments may go as high as $8K a month (remember this is before property taxes and/or HOA fees that will add another $1K to 2K a month) by the end of 2007…

119   SP   2006 Oct 22, 3:35pm  

One thing I haven't seen mentioned in all this hypothetical speculation about highly-paid, two-income MBA couples is this - many of these jobs appear to be in the financial industry, and in highly specialized, exotic and risky niches.

In anything like a downturn, my guess is that these will be hit harder with cuts in headcount and/or reduced compensation. I don't have the inside data to confirm this, but am extrapolating from what I have seen with specialized, high-income roles in other industries.

SP

120   Peter P   2006 Oct 22, 3:37pm  

If you make 500K/yr for 3 years, you could save about $500,000 net after taxes.

Yeah right. You assumed that people consume the same amount regardless of income. :)

Even if that is true. A 1.6M mortgage is the maximum limit for 500K income.

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