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Bubblepalooza


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2007 Jan 31, 10:52pm   25,799 views  251 comments

by Patrick   ➕follow (59)   💰tip   ignore  

Bubblestock

From a Malcolm S in San Diego:

Hey Patrick, I just had an idea which is so morbid, ridiculous and ill conceived, I thought I would run it by you. You asked how to have fun during the bubble, well how about a party? This catastrophe is the biggest joke of the decade and I think it calls for a nationwide rally maybe in SF, or whatever city you designate as the birthplace of the housing bubble.

It could be called BUBBLESTOCK or BUBBLEPALOOZA! Some of your advertisers, and I guarantee a bunch of other businesses and media would love to sponsor, support, attend, and cover such an event.

Picture it! Swarms of like-minded bubbleheads converging on Golden Gate Park for an overnight festival of music, big screen bubble clips, movies, roasts.

Some ideas:

Lereah's powerpoint presentation on now is the time to buy
Fun with Dick and Jane
All the YouTube clips like Mortgage Gangstas
Gotta have at least a few country western songs about losing the house and the tractor

Think of the impact something like that could have. It could literally be a jab of historic proportions.

I guarantee that even with this theme you will have lenders, and realtors paying booth fees.

#housing

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245   FormerAptBroker   2007 Feb 4, 6:06am  

Jimbo Posted a link to a great graph and said:

> 8%/yr overall apreciation since 1968.

Around 1900 the median home price was just over $1K in 2001 after 100 (One Hundred) years of massive job growth and quite a bit of inflation in California the median price went up just $250K, then in the next 4 (Four) years in a period with many high paying jobs leaving the state and very little inflation the median price went up by over $250K to $524K (looks like a bubble to me)...

246   Jimbo   2007 Feb 4, 6:08am  

By "real" growth, I mean inflation adjusted growth. But yes, renting would be better, assuming rents stay stagnant, too, but that is a big assumption.

Rents will probably go up about as fast as incomes, which should be a percent or three faster than inflation.

I agree that this is a bad time to buy, if you are primarily interested in real estate as an investment.

Whether it is better to buy or rent depends on how long you intend to stay, what you think t he inflation rate is going to be and how fast both rents and home prices are going to appreciate.

I did this math about two years ago and came up with home buying making sense if you intend to hold for 10+ years.

Of course it would make no sense at all to buy a declining asset.

247   Jimbo   2007 Feb 4, 6:17am  

FAB, you and I have very different definitions of what a "bubble" is. Just the normal boom bust cycle of California Real Estate is not a bubble to me. You can see from that graph I posted that home prices actually increased at a faster rate for longer in the mid to late 70's than they did recently.

A "bubble" is when prices increase at an increasing rate, to the point where they are disconnected from all financial fundamentals. Usually prices are 10X or even 100X what they should be worth based on a rational valuation.

Good examples of bubbles include Dot Com stocks in the late 90's, the South Sea bubble, the Mississippi Finance bubble in France. Other examples are the "Nifty Fifty" stocks in the 70's and the Japan land market bubble in the 80's.

In all cases, prices dropped 75-99% after the bubble popped and always quite rapidly.

I don't think that describes California Real Estate today, but I know that puts me in the minority here.

248   FormerAptBroker   2007 Feb 4, 6:19am  

Brand Says:

> I believe that prices will come down, because
> that is the inevitable outcome of a bubble. Things
> generally cannot plateau at an astronomical price.
> Perhaps Randy or others can cite instances where
> this has happened.

I have never heard of any “bubble” hitting a “plateau” without a solid reason (say the average wage in a remote area going up after a large company moves there).

Looking at the link Jimbo posted with median home priced reminded me that high end homes in La Jolla, Hillsborough and Ross were selling for ~$1mm in 1989 (~5x the median) and dropped a lot more than average/median homes by 1994. In the current bubble cycle I’ve noticed that high end homes in La Jolla, Hillsborough and Ross are pushing $5mm (almost 10x the median). I’m wondering if these homes will drop as much this time and if watching the price of homes nearby drop by $500K a year will make more people run for the doors (and sell making things drop even faster) than the drop of “only $100K a year” back in the early 90’s…

249   Brand165   2007 Feb 4, 6:20am  

FAB, you really can't compare gold standard prices to "currency" economy prices. The gold standard stabilized the prices on durable goods for a dozen decades.

btw, someone at work said that FDR actually took us off the gold standard? I thought that this move is oft attributed to Nixon? But gold was siezed by the government in the 1930's, IIRC. Perhaps one of our resident goldbugs can clear up the history at work?

250   Jimbo   2007 Feb 4, 6:40am  

FAB, yeah I thought it would work itself out that way, too, that is why I bought TOL puts.

I did okay, but I would have done better buying KBH puts.

I guess the global redistribution of wealth upwards has helped maintain the price of high end homes. Let's see if that continues.

My dream house is "only" $2M anyway, so I don't think I am going to be helped much either way...

251   Brand165   2007 Feb 4, 6:59am  

Jimbo: One thing I have often wondered is how many super-expensive homes get resold? They are often uber-customized for the original owner. It seems just as likely that someone who wants to build a $4M home would acquire the appropriate land and then build their own "perfect" home.

Of course, if you're going to buy or build a $4M home, then money probably isn't a concern anyway...

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