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What would a psychic say about the housing market?408


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2007 Mar 3, 8:21am   31,334 views  227 comments

by Peter P   ➕follow (2)   💰tip   ignore  

"I sense fear."

"I am seeing a silver lining."

"So much sadness."

"What a relief."

What would a psychic say? What would you say if you are gifted?

Disclaimer: for entertainment purposes only

#housing

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113   Peter P   2007 Mar 5, 12:50am  

As I repeatedly said, I am looking forward to a RECESSION in 2007

That should take care of the traffic jam and the restaurant wait. Of course, restaurants have to stay in business, but well-run establishments will always remain.

114   Peter P   2007 Mar 5, 12:56am  

They care much more about school district, and unless they’ve done their research, they by their very nature of being recent immigrants have not seen a RE market in decline in the Bay Area (many were not in the US, much less the BA, in the early 90’s.) As a result, there’s been less of a pullback on buying here, IMO.

This is why we are going to avoid good school districts.

Immigrants from Hong Kong and Thailand will probably remember their little RE disaster.

I do not enjoy the suffering of others, but we all learn from it, right?

115   Peter P   2007 Mar 5, 12:57am  

In college, I switched to broad rice noodles - they taste great with almost anything, esp. any coconut milk based sauce.

I prefer thin rice noodle. Broad ones are difficult to eat with chopsticks.

116   DinOR   2007 Mar 5, 1:13am  

Peter P,

I'd love to think that I really "learned" something here but I fear it's been mostly just a guilty pleasure? It seems we've reached a point where I'm actually having some difficulty just keeping up w/all the negative developments.

My crystal ball says we have a LOT of "built-in" selling pressure in RE b/c so many that bought since 2005 were more for appreciation potential than personal utility (and financed for the short term). Many people that are staring down the barrel of rate re-set (and of course all the loan costs) will likely throw their hat in the ring too. Especially when they figure out they really don't need it (the house) and really couldn't afford it to begin with.

Inventories will likely continue to rise, bottoms will be called and short sales may eclipse regular sales.

117   SFWoman   2007 Mar 5, 1:22am  

Ok, Real estate (since I am apparently the only non-over of ramen here)

My friend, the Ethical Hong Kong Chinese Realtor fom a few threads ago, told me she has a few clients looking for multi-unit buildings in good areas. She found a couple to bid on, and both times was massively overbid by the same group of people. She said that they paid so much for both buildings that not only did the buildings not pencil out as investments, they don't even pencil out as spec buildings.
She mentioned it to a friend and the person was shocked that she didn't know about the group. The word on the street about them is that they are just buying up investment properties to launder Russian mob money.

A bit of bubble contribution that had not occurred to me.

118   SFWoman   2007 Mar 5, 1:24am  

OOOps, it's not just sub-primes...

"Lehman Cuts Prime Mortgage Lenders on Default Risks (Update1)

By Will Edwards

March 5 (Bloomberg) -- Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. reduced its investment rating on U.S. mortgage companies including Countrywide Financial Corp. because a surge in loan defaults is showing evidence of spreading beyond the riskiest credits...."

http://www.bloomberg.com/tvradio/radio/#

119   astrid   2007 Mar 5, 1:53am  

Peter P,

I like fresh thin rice noodles, but the dried rice noodles always turn out undercooked or overcooked for me.

I use fork to eat noodles. I find chopsticks to be challenging.

Here's another short recipe from my mom - Cucumber salad with peanut sauce.

ingredients
2 or 3 English cucumbers or 6 pickling cucumber
2 heaping spoonful of peanut butter
1 tsp of salt
1 tsp of sugar
a couple splashes of balsamic vinegar to taste
optional: crushed peanuts
optional: chopped dillweeds

Lightly pound the cucumber with the flat side of a heavy cleaver, crush it until the sides crack in a couple places, then cut the cucumber into 1" sections. Put into a 3-4 qt lidded tupperware. Add salt. Close the lid and shake well.

In a small 1 pt bowl, use a fork to mix the peanut butter with 1 TBSP of scalding water, then add sugar and mix til relatively smooth. Dump into the the tupperware and then shake some more. Add peanut and dillweeds.

Serve with a splash of balsamic vinegar (to taste).

120   Peter P   2007 Mar 5, 1:55am  

Thanks, astrid. I love cucumber salad. Cucumber is one of the very few veggies that I prefer raw.

BTW, where do you get fresh rice noodle?

121   Peter P   2007 Mar 5, 1:56am  

I think the mortgage shakedown has begun. Housing correction may begin (for real) very soon.

Not investment or home buying advice.

122   Peter P   2007 Mar 5, 1:57am  

Or should I say, reflexivity has changed course?

123   astrid   2007 Mar 5, 2:00am  

The thick kind you can buy in sheets in Asian supermarkets. I see the thin kind occasionally (check the bakery area) though I've never had any. I consume most of my thin rice noodles in SW China, where "Over the Bridge" rice noodles is ubiquitous.

124   Peter P   2007 Mar 5, 2:02am  

where “Over the Bridge” rice noodles is ubiquitous

I had that before. That was great! :)

126   StuckInBA   2007 Mar 5, 2:08am  

Someone on some blog mentioned a month ago when NEW blew up, that it is still time to make money on this pig. The analogy was with all the JDSU's of the dot com crash. They didn't stop going down till they became penny stocks.

Look at this.
http://finance.yahoo.com/q/cq?d=v1&s=fmt+lend+new+nfi

Priceless.

127   DinOR   2007 Mar 5, 2:19am  

StuckinBA,

Absolutely hysterical chart pairing there my friend! Mind you, this is what they are down TODAY (so far anyway) not YTD etc. How can this be happening? I thought RE only goes up? :(

Mortgage Implode had some really funny comments on the most recent New Century conference call too! What the analysts heard left them in total disbelief.

128   StuckInBA   2007 Mar 5, 2:21am  

PAR :

Lots of good people are hurt when bubbles pop.

Unfortunately very true. Anyone who has witnessed the dot com crash, can recount many sad stories.

We bubblesitters didn't do anything that is going to led to this recession. But we will get hurt as well. Hopefully far less hurt than the FBs. I will take solace in good old schadenfreude. And if people like Greenspan and DL get dumped in dung, it will be the bonus.

129   astrid   2007 Mar 5, 2:32am  

SP,

It's a matter of taste. I much prefer the taste of ramen (the noodles, not the flavor packets, which can vary wildly from brand to brand) to regular dry noodles and ramen helps me control portions better. The only thing that prevents me from eating ramens regularly is that they're extremely unhealthy - it's kinda scary when palm oil is the healthiest oil I can hope for.

130   astrid   2007 Mar 5, 2:37am  

Jon,

That's a false dichtomy. A more analoguous situation would be if the LL told you that you had a rent control apartment and induced you to spend $50K to fix up the place, then kicks you out after 6 months.

131   astrid   2007 Mar 5, 2:40am  

-dichotomy
+analogy

ugh, me type baaaaad Engliss

132   Peter P   2007 Mar 5, 2:42am  

The path to gourmet bliss is paved with starvation.

Hmmm....

Ramen = hand-pulled noodle?

133   DinOR   2007 Mar 5, 2:49am  

Where good people and mom and pop innocent bystanders are concerned... I think for the most part we already got our medicine!

Absolutely horrible stock market returns (March 2000 to April 2003) paltry returns on our deposits and a slumping currency. You mean there's more?

The pain will be most acute where the leverage was the most abused. Maybe I should be, but I'm really not that worried.

134   Allah   2007 Mar 5, 2:52am  

Moral of the story? Median prices don’t always tell you what you think they tell you, especially when you have extremely small data sets.

I said before and I'll say it again, Median prices are bogus! Just a stupid number that shows the midpoint of what people are paying but not what they are ACTUALLY GETTING for that price.

Whether the median goes up or down, it don't tell you anything about what direction the price of houses are going. Look at the delta of sales data from one year to the next and look at the inventories; now notice how many people HAVE TO SELL this time? Throw in the cheap money that is disappearing and you really don't need any more clues as to how this is going to end.

135   astrid   2007 Mar 5, 3:21am  

"Peter P Says:
hand-pulled noodle

Hey Beavis, check it out. he said…

SP "

This is the correct answer to your question? Am I hired?

136   Peter P   2007 Mar 5, 3:25am  

Huh?

137   sfbubblebuyer   2007 Mar 5, 3:32am  

Wow... NEW down 65% in one day so far? Jeebus!

138   EBGuy   2007 Mar 5, 3:42am  

Real Estate Trivia

Only two cities in the 20 cities covered by the S&P Case/Shiller Home Price Index showed gains in December. One of the cities was Seattle which barely eked out some appreciation. Name the other city.

139   astrid   2007 Mar 5, 3:53am  

Charlotte?

140   DinOR   2007 Mar 5, 4:47am  

EBGuy,

Miami?

141   EBGuy   2007 Mar 5, 4:52am  

Astrid said:
Charlotte?
No. Charlotte is one of the more "rational" markets, though, so the downtick could be seaonal.
As a side note (and clue?), the Indices do NOT include condos.

142   EBGuy   2007 Mar 5, 4:58am  

Dinor said:
Miami?
What, are you insane? You are also correct! It is probably the last place I would have thought of (maybe because condos aren't tracked?)
I also figured out why you are so angry :-) Portland has the lowest index of the markets that are tracked back to 1987 (Index @ 41.05 -- remember, all cities are normalized to 100 for Jan. 2000).

143   astrid   2007 Mar 5, 5:18am  

Jon,

The landlord own the property. As such, LL has the right to future rent increases/capital appreciation and bear the burden of an empty building/burst water pipe. Rent control takes away the LL's property rights and arbitrarily gives it to a tenant, even though that tenant paid virtually nothing for the rent control rights. If you want to go about your goal in an economically rational way, the tenant could negotiate for a longer term lease and restrict rent increases.

Let me try different analogy - how would you feel if you were just offered a great new job, but your current employer told you that he/she had a property right in your current position and that you have to stay in your current job?

144   Different Sean   2007 Mar 5, 5:22am  

good article in slate, cited earlier:

"David Lereah, who published a book in 2005 telling readers how they could get rich participating in the endless housing boom, published a book in 2000 advising readers how they could get rich from the endless information technology boom."

145   Peter P   2007 Mar 5, 5:29am  

Rent control is evil.

146   Different Sean   2007 Mar 5, 5:32am  

astrid Says:
Jon,
The landlord own the property. As such, LL has the right to future rent increases/capital appreciation and bear the burden of an empty building/burst water pipe. Rent control takes away the LL’s property rights and arbitrarily gives it to a tenant, even though that tenant paid virtually nothing for the rent control rights. If you want to go about your goal in an economically rational way, the tenant could negotiate for a longer term lease and restrict rent increases.

Yes, but none of this is operating in the real world. How many LLs are prepared to sign leases restricting rent increases and making longer terms? My LL specifically says they don't want to do either of these things. Some countries have 5-10 year leases, this is not one of them.

This particular apartment block was built 'wholesale' by a developer years ago, before the boom, with minimal maintenance requirements. Some parts of the complex are 5 storeys with no lifts installed, thus saving on annual maintenance fees. There are no HOA fees to pay because the developer owns the whole lot. He does maintenance from his pool of builders on other projects, thus reducing costs. There's no pool or gym or other luxury features. However, he wants to charge marginally *above* market rates right now because he thinks he can, at a time when rates are supposedly rising rapidly. This all goes back to my constant remarks in the past of what represents a fair and healthy social settlement. I have currently amassed about 6 emails from other tenants also protesting the steep rise.

The fair social settlement notion is what underpins all rent control systems, and attempts to protect people from exactly this sort of behaviour. The whole rental system is somewhat flawed in fact, it's just an accident of history.

Ironically, I suppose I'm from a family a little like FAB's, who has amassed a pile of investment properties -- I can move interstate and be given one at any time I like for almost nothing...

147   Different Sean   2007 Mar 5, 5:44am  

Peter P Says:
Rent control is evil.

Markets are evil.
Peter P is evil.

When I went to university, it was necessary to back assertions up with some sort of reasoned argument.

148   astrid   2007 Mar 5, 5:48am  

DS,

I think if I offered 10% above the market rates and sign a 5 year contract, some LL will take me up on the offer.

To force below market rent down LL's throat amounts to a taking, from the LL to the tenant. In the long run, such economically inefficient transactions are in no one's interest - except that of the lottery winners who got in before the rent control laws went into effect. That's not a fair system.

149   Peter P   2007 Mar 5, 5:51am  

When I went to university, it was necessary to back assertions up with some sort of reasoned argument.

Duh, this is a psychic thread.

150   Peter P   2007 Mar 5, 5:53am  

Peter P is evil.

:twisted:

151   astrid   2007 Mar 5, 5:56am  

SP,

Your obscurely scatological comment inspired me to make my own obscure meta comment about your employee interview technique (asking the question, telling the (right/wrong) answer, asking for justifications).

152   HARM   2007 Mar 5, 6:02am  

Different Sean Says:
March 5th, 2007 at 1:26 am

I agree. Unfortunately, it’s the ’system’, and this particular LL is too scheming and too big a player to negotiate too much. He already owns a ‘discount’ property by building it himself. We should all become property developers, obviously, and secure our futures. But I’m either 1) leaving, or 2) negotiating or 3) passing it on to my employer as a wage rise…

DS,

It sounds like (a) your LL is asking WAY above market rate for your place and (b) you are ready to exercise your right of refusal, and (c) you have some real options/alternatives to choose from. It doesn't sound to me like your LL can demand whatever arbitrary amount he wants and get it -- with or without your consent-- unless there is really some kind of cartel/Mafia/shadow government-like gang that controls rents in Oz.

That's precisely how well functioning, transparent markets (note I avoid the use of politically loaded term "free") are supposed to work. OTH, if rent control were introduced to Oz, you would find a very different situation within a generation. Over time, rent control would mainly act to discourage new rental construction (limiting new supply and further driving up rents), and of course people would learn to game the system from both ends --just as is happening today in rent-controlled areas of SF (re-read FAB's many examples of illegally sub-let RC apartments, people who take over leases from dead relatives, etc.).

If your LL tries to stick you with a rent hike far above market-rate, then move. When s/he is unable to fill the unit for the sky-high "wishing rent' and must carry the costs of a vacant unit, s/he will quickly learn that "owners" cannot unilaterally dictate market prices.

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