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Gallery of Unlikely Bubble Victims


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2007 Mar 29, 8:28am   16,738 views  220 comments

by HARM   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

typical media bubble 'victim'

One of the more interesting side-effects of the housing bubble's collapse is its ability to produce victims from some rather unexpected places. For example: Lennar Corporation, one of the nation's largest home builders which profited handsomely during the run-up (and has been accused by some of substandard workmanship), has just officially been granted victim status from the media:

One by one, some of the nation's largest home-builders have seen quarterly earnings get crushed by the slump in the housing market. Lennar Corp. became the latest victim Tuesday, with a 73 percent plunge in first-quarter earnings and predictions that it is going to fall short of 2007 earnings goals. Since the start of February, home-builders KB Homes, Hovanian Enterprises Inc. and Toll Brothers Inc. all reported falling profits. Stuart Miller, Lennar's president and chief executive, said a lack of demand for the winter-spring buying season, new problems with subprime lenders and higher-than-desired land costs hurt profits.

Apparently, the recent sub-prime credit crunch has also produced quite a few human victims among those who can no longer borrow beyond their means indefinitely and add to their already crushing debt loads:

“A first-time home buyer with an annual income of about $36,000 and almost no savings, Mr. Fields did not qualify for a prime loan for the $315,000 house. So his half brother arranged a 15-year mortgage from WMC Mortgage Company, a subprime division of General Electric, and another from the Option One Mortgage Company, the subprime group of H & R Block.”

“The $2,312 monthly payments were much more than he could afford, but Mr. Fields said his brother assured him that they could find tenants. They did, but then lost them. Last July, without the rental income, his brother, who was managing the property, stopped paying the lenders. Mr. Fields now owes almost $30,000 in delinquent payments and has fallen out with his half brother.”

“‘It’s just sad,’ said Mr. Fields. ‘I can’t even borrow money.’”

And the damage is not just limited to uneducated, Joe 6-pack types with limited means and bad credit. Look what just happened to a PhD with a good job:

“Unlike many borrowers who took out subprime loans, Andy Sobel had good credit, a decent job and modest savings, but he needed to stretch to buy a home in the white-hot San Diego housing market in 2004.”

“Three years later, Sobel has lost his home and his savings, and he faces a big tax bill as a consequence of a failed subprime mortgage held by Countrywide Financial Corp. he says he should never have been written.”

...“‘You never think that this could happen to you. You feel like an idiot,’ said Sobel, who has a doctorate in education. ‘You fall down and they stab you.’”

If these people can become media "victims" of the housing bubble, who's next? Some possibilities:

Alan Greenspan:
"I was forced to lower rates to 1% to moderate the tech bubble recession, and to make the economy look good, so incumbents could get reelected. Those big, mean politicians were really pressuring me! How was I supposed to know it would spawn an even bigger bubble in real estate?? I'm just a powerless (former) central bankster!"

David Lereah:
"I didn't want to keep fanning the flames with outrageous lies and baseless industry propaganda, but I had to feed my family. The NAR kept on blackmailing me with my enormous salary and benefits. What was I supposed to do --quit and become a regular working-stiff like all you low-rent schmucks out there?"

Gary Watts:
"If I didn't come right out and say '15% was in the bag' for 2006, they would have hurt my family. I practically choked on those words, but it was either say it or 'lights out' for little Billy and Janie. I had to choose between my family or my integrity --what would anyone have done in my situation?"

Casey Serin:
"How could I say 'no' to such sweet deals, when everything I learned from those R.K./Robert G. Allen books and seminars was screaming 'Yes, yes, yes!' Besides, Galina was really pressuring me to 'get a house'. How was I suppoosed to know she meant only one? Besides, all those sellers really tricked me --they used my Macaroni Grill & Jamba Juice addiction to talk me into those illegal cash-back deals. They preyed on my fears of being a Looser and took full advantage of me. I feel so... violated."

Discuss, enjoy...
HARM

#housing

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16   astrid   2007 Mar 29, 11:48am  

http://www.slate.com/id/2162989?nav=ais

the bigger the mansion, the worse the CEO

17   Allah   2007 Mar 29, 11:49am  

A great article written by a realtor!

Asset Deflation : The Death of Real Estate

In other words, it is time to sell all of your real estate, save for possibly your home. If you don't, you will likely regret it. You will gradually watch all of your equity disappear into thin air. And then, unless you have little debt against it, you will likely lose your property to foreclosure. It's as simple as that.

18   Randy H   2007 Mar 29, 12:26pm  

OO

Some bond funds argued that MBS counted as "international" investments. Seems pretty tortured logic to me, but their rationale was that they were investing in MBS' purchased by foreign investors. So technically, it's an "unhedged foreign investment". It just happens to be largely dependent upon the US housing market and is denominated in dollars. (chuckle)

19   FormerAptBroker   2007 Mar 29, 1:58pm  

Paul Says:

> Yeah it’s like crying for Enron execs because they
> were out of work. What about my grandmother who
> was out about $1M when the stock went to zero.
> That was stock my grandfather earned and purchased
> over the decades working for predecessor nat. gas
> companies. In the new world it’s probably grandma’s
> fault!

Not to give your Grandma a hard time but (if $1mm was a large part of her net worth) it was her fault (since she didn’t diversify). I was lucky that I learned about diversification when I was young so I still had time to make more money before I retire (even thought I don’t ever plan to really retire in the traditional sense).

Growing up I saw my parents make a lot of money in Real Estate so after I started working I put about 95% of my money in to Real Estate and by 1994 it was all gone (when I signed the last quitclaim deed).

There are very few true “victims” out there and we would live in a better world if more people would take responsibility and admit that there is almost always something they could have done to avoid their problems.

20   astrid   2007 Mar 29, 2:12pm  

The gods are fickle, so don’t take anything for granted. One day you’re a powerful king with a beautiful wife and 4 lovely children, the next day you’re a an 1ncestuous patr1cide and your kids are killing each other…

21   astrid   2007 Mar 29, 2:25pm  

Here's the largest category -- baby boomers. Even though almost all of them got into the housing market before prices really shot up, I bet we'll be hearing lots of stories about boomers who mysteriously became RE bust victims on houses they've owned for 20 years.

22   Brand165   2007 Mar 29, 2:25pm  

Not to mention you've stuck knitting needles in your eyes. See, this is why you should never best a Sphinx or rescue abandoned babies from hillsides. That's just asking for it.

23   astrid   2007 Mar 29, 2:34pm  

(Or pretentious idiots who name their daughters Antigone or Medea...)

24   Brand165   2007 Mar 29, 3:01pm  

[sighs] People believed that their paper wealth was real money. Now that the paper wealth in many real estate assets could be declining, people will be upset. They feel like forces beyond their control are forcibly removing money from their pocket.

What people don't seem to realize is that you can whine about Tech 1.0, CEOs, congress, excess market liquidity, subprime mortgage brokers, tulip salesmen, hurricane insurance companies, the FDIC or God himself... it doesn't make your money come back. Donald Trump doesn't whine much. He diversifies, has contingency plans and starts scrapping harder when the going gets tough. That's why self-made rich people often rebound from major setbacks.

I still have a fundamental question that we've never really answered. At the end of this real estate decline (or bust), will people finally stop treating their house as an investment? Will a house again just be a place to live?

25   losstotheworld   2007 Mar 29, 5:02pm  

A Doctor out of his residency who’s income is most likely going to go up substantially.

What other professions have a “guarantee” as good as a Dr’s for income appreciation?

Did the people who were given ARM loans have jobs that had the same potential for significant income increases

However the doctor may find himself oin a malpracise law suit and may be forced out of the profession. also may be injured or disabled before the bigbucks.

26   e   2007 Mar 29, 6:34pm  

There was even one devlopment in Monrovia that –get this– starts from $1.8 million and is being sold through Sothebys (the London-based auction house for the uber-rich).

There are some $600k homes near my parents place in the east coast that's being sold by Sotherby's

I don't think it's the same Sotherby's - i think they just rented out their name.

Kind of like the new "Louvre" that's going up in Dubai

27   e   2007 Mar 29, 6:36pm  

Have you guys seen this?

http://www.theonion.com/content/video/immigration_the_human_cost

Oh man, it cracks me up

28   ozajh   2007 Mar 29, 6:45pm  

Brand,

the greedy two Lexus DINKs

(nice description BTW :))

These are exactly the people who are going to lobby the politicians hardest for a bailout, because;

1. It will be literally inconceivable to many of them that they are, in fact, insolvent. ("Foreclosure?? Bankrupt?? That sort of thing only happens to dropout losers. You know, illegals and the like. Not people like us!!")

2. They are used to getting the system to work for them, and either they themselves or friends/relatives will be politically active.

And they are NOT going to like the term "bailout" (even if it's accurate, in fact especially if it's accurate) because that word carries some sort of welfare stigma which is, of course, totally inappropriate for professionals like them.

No, they will expect (and they will 'expect', rather than 'hope for') a 'solution' which carries no negative semantic baggage. Sorta like the way the fine upstanding free-enterprise salt-of-the-earth MidWest farmers reinterpret their price supports as weapons in the economic war against the wicked Europeans, and therefore not really 'government subsidies' at all.

29   Sylvie   2007 Mar 29, 9:49pm  

I'm so tired of the whining people who did this to themselves. When the housing ATM was booming at the peak they were telling us we were losers. They bragged about their new H2 Hummer and the vacations we couldn't afford. So F' em I could care less. When I lost my higher standard of living in 2000 due to divorce I didn't go out and buy things I used to be able to afford but could no longer. I didn't run up my CC or apply for a home knowing I no longer made six figures.

These stupid idiots knew their financial limitations and did this crap anyway. Only in America do you have so many damn posers who want everyone to think their better off than they actually are. Some area are much worse in that respect Orange County especially comes to mind. It is nobody fault but the individual if they don't live within their means. It is not governments job to help these losers get out from under the mess they themselves caused. And the blame game please!!! Yeah there were a lot of RE player to be sure but what moron doesn't research and finally read the fine print of documents they sign. This is one of the biggest investments a person makes. What did you think you were signing stupid?

NO F'ing BAILOUT

30   DinOR   2007 Mar 30, 12:19am  

"The fourteenth book of Bokonon consists of only one word and a period. Here it is: Nothing."

Thanks for summarizing Jon! :)

31   DinOR   2007 Mar 30, 12:24am  

"I see $$$, plenty of $$$"

Really? Because I don't. I'm picturing a sea of despair for some time to come. Oh! Must be referring to an immediate return to a "normal market" of 35% a year appreciation!

32   DinOR   2007 Mar 30, 12:39am  

eburbed,

The Onion once again shows why they are "America's Finest News Source"! (It looks like they found that gap toothed illegal out front of a Home Depot and said, "Hey dude, wanna make a coupla' bucks"?)

33   DinOR   2007 Mar 30, 1:25am  

eternitus "The Great"

Absofreakinglutely! Good for you!

Before "lofts" were all the rage in Portland the city gave prospective buyers a 10 year "tax moratorium" (ridiculously low taxes) IN EXCHANGE for a hefty chunk of their profit if they sold in the first 10 years on a sliding scale matrix. It was perfectly legal! You want to be subsidized? FINE.

Of course (up until about a year ago) there were waiting lists and lotteries to "get in" on the action. Now they sit on C/L month after month (but they're still offering the moratorium). Go figure.

34   Allah   2007 Mar 30, 1:33am  

Danilo Bogdanovic:

Allah - If you had read my blog in its entirety you would have noticed that I am all for and bring up ideas on how to change the real estate industry for the better. I am also sick of horrible and deceitful agents, corrupt lenders, big brokerages and the NAR for screwing consumers and giving the entire real estate industry a bad name. I am also against the broker-centric business model and believe that consumers should have the power.

I believe you.


What I was trying to say is that the honest, hard working loan officers who actually do care about their customers and can actually sleep at night (they are still out there) need to make sure that the lending institution they are working for is not doing corrupt things. Even if the particular loan officer is legit, but the company is not, the loan officer could be out of a job and/or a paycheck.

The loan officer is the interface between the lender and the buyer. He knows everything that is going on, in fact he is the one who initiates the loans. A loan officers job is:

1) find potential clients, individuals or businesses, in need of loans;
2) specialize in commercial, consumer, or mortgage loans;
3) often act as salespeople, persuading clients to obtain loans from their institutions;
4) help clients apply for loans;
5) analyze and verify the application to determine the client's creditworthiness;

If people are taking out loans they cannot afford, the blame lands squarely on the loan officer.


And I’m also saying that the company is at fault for not only screwing consumers over, but also for not paying their employees. Both are against the law and they need to pay for both offenses.

The problem is that the lenders are bankrupt; they have no funds to pay anyone. The only place the money can come from is either the taxpayer or the printing press and I am against both of them.


And if you blame every loan officer blindly across the board, then do you also blame the hard working guy in the mail room of Enron’s corporate building for the corrupt actions of the few at the top of Enron? Didn’t think so…

When the nasdaq bubble popped, I didn't blame all those (including myself) that had money in mutual funds that disappeared, never to be gotten back. I also didn't expect the taxpayers to make up the difference (and they didn't). I could have done more research and pulled my money out in time but I didn't so I accept the loss. If I worked for a corrupt business and I didn't leave the company, any losses I would have to accept myself as well.

Think about it, if I was working for a corrupt company was doing damage to society; after I lose this job, do you feel it is right that I should have society pay for what the company couldn't.

If you work for a crook, don't expect fairness. Anyone (even the poor slob in the mailroom) with common sense knew that lenders were giving loans to people that weren't in their best interest; it has been all over the news for the last few years. This is criminal activity! I have read over 100 articles about this and I'm not even in the business! I wanted for this to stop for years, I knew how it was going to end; but there was nothing I could do. If I was working for the company, I would have left!

It's not like something that was just uncovered. No one can play the "babe of the woods" routine and expect the taxpayers to compensate them; they knew what was going on and they could have left, but they chose to stay and go down with the sinking ship instead. Take your lumps and don't expect society to cushion the blow!

If you feel that the mailroom guy didn't know then maybe the next time we get a speeding ticket we can say.

Defendant: "Your honor, I didn't see the sign for the speed limit. I thought it was 55, but it was 30. I must have blinked my eyes for a second as I drove past the sign."

Judge: "That's ok, I'll let you go, just make sure that you look out for the sign the next time, ok?"

Defendant: "Thanks, your honor."


We’re all on the same page - you just took my post out of context. And if you don’t believe my stance on things, just ask Kevin at HousingPANIC about my guest post there a while back.

Again, I do believe you but I don't believe I took your post out of context. Now that everyone is talking about a bailout, putting up a thread like this is sure to bring forth many angry taxpayers!

35   Allah   2007 Mar 30, 1:56am  

I think what would be fair for a bailout is this:

Send out a form to everyone in America that has identifying information (such as ss#, etc.) with checkboxes as to whether you are for or against a bailout. If you choose no, you are exempt from it, but if you are also an FB, you can't get any funds. The entire funding of the bailout will be divided between all those who chose yes.

Those who don't want it, don't have to pay. All the bleeding heart liberals and FB's that want it can pay. The FB's get their bailout. Everyone is happy!

This is America and I think each and every individual should be able to decide how their money is used! It shouldn't be decided by a majority of votes! It's like when you work for a company and it is someones birthday who you just happen to really hate; someone comes around with a cup asking for $10 to chip in for a present for your enemy, should you have to pay the $10? I don't think so!

37   Allah   2007 Mar 30, 2:08am  

Historically, the ownership rate has been around 65%; the bubble pushed it to 69%. Obviously it needs to come back down to 65% before we could again have harmony among the markets. The only way for this to happen is to let nature (darwinism?) take its course.

38   DinOR   2007 Mar 30, 2:10am  

allah,

I would have simply responded to Danilo by saying there isn't enough good left in the REIC worth saving! Rookies are so quickly indoctrinated into the graft and greed it would be better (and easier) to just start over. I do appreciate however your willingness to take on that beast one nasty fang at a time. :)

39   Allah   2007 Mar 30, 2:14am  

I do appreciate however your willingness to take on that beast one nasty fang at a time.

You know me, I don't give up so easily; ask Randy H. :lol:

40   DinOR   2007 Mar 30, 2:16am  

The link Sylvie provided (and Mark referenced) really cuts to the core of the issue. Since the subs originated these loans for them to step in and "float the issue" through subsidies is a clear conflict of interest.

For Wells or CFC to step in and back fill some of these loans is like a mugger having a change of heart and giving the victim "some" of the contents of her purse back to her. The mind boggles at how many securities infractions would likely occur.

41   Allah   2007 Mar 30, 2:28am  

This is what Ron Paul has to say about the Fed and the housing bubble; supposedly he will be up for presidency in 2008.

42   Glen   2007 Mar 30, 2:41am  

How about the government as a "victim"? Think of all the lost tax revenue! How we will our gov't continue to support insane spending trajectories?

A couple of examples:

California population: 36 million
California inmate population: 170,000+
Cost per inmate per year: $43,000
Cost per year per California resident: approximately $200/year per person (or $600 for a family of 3).

I thought this was staggering until you consider this:
DOD budget: $499B
Homeland security: $70B
US population: 300 million
Cost per US resident: $1,900 ($5,700 for a family of 3)

That was scary until I looked at entitlement spending and interest on the debt. I won't even get into that topic.

When the housing bubble busts, won't California and federal tax revenues decline precipitously? I know that the feds exempt $500k/house in capital gains, but there was still a ton of tax revenue related to real estate sales paid between 2001 - 2006 (singles with > $250K of gain, couples with >$500K, smart money real estate investors cashing out without doing 1031 exchanges, flippers with holding periods

43   Allah   2007 Mar 30, 2:44am  

We could expand on allah’s suggestion. Everyone writes on a paper what they think the tax rate should be. Uncle Sam then taxes you at that rate. Everyone writes on a paper if they agree with the Death Penalty. When they are convicted, the court looks up what they wrote on the paper and that is what they get. Everyone writes on a paper what their salary should be. Everyone writes on a paper what job they should have. Everyone writes on a paper where they want to live. This could go on and on. Wow, what a wonderful idea!?

This is idiotic and has absolutely no relevance as to what I posted.

44   Glen   2007 Mar 30, 2:45am  

Oops...
Should have said "flippers with holding periods of less than 2 years."

45   DinOR   2007 Mar 30, 2:56am  

Glen,

Thanks for clearing that up, kind of left us hanging there.

All I can say is there are no easy answers. It won't just be CA with sagging revenues and the state's response to this short fall aren't clear just yet. My guess is that they (like most everyone else) are clinging to the hope that "things will return to normal".

More likely will be continued strain as floppers now begin to off-set income w/failed RE ventures. You're right though, it's awfully big to ignore and the possibility these guys will carrying forward losses for years is all too real.

46   Lost Cause   2007 Mar 30, 2:56am  

Ron Paul has no charisma.

47   Glen   2007 Mar 30, 3:14am  

Dinor,

There will be a lot of hand-wringing, for sure. My guess is that we will see a return of xenophobic immigrant-bashing, protectionism and a continuation of aggressive military campaigns. I remember the early '90s: Japan-bashing, Pete Wilson, Pat Buchanan, Gulf war I, prop 187, three strikes law, etc.. Ugly times call for ugly politics.

The process of self-examination is psychologically difficult. FBs will not want to blame themselves. Politicians can score easy points with p-o'd voters by claiming that the source of our problems is some external threat.

Instead of admitting that they recklessly spent your tax dollars when times were flush, politicians will say that the source of our budgetary problems is immigrant healthcare or some other such nonsense.

48   Allah   2007 Mar 30, 3:20am  

Ron Paul has no charisma.

While I don't agree with everything Ron Paul believes in as I don't with any other nominee, anyone who is for abolishing the printing press is sure to get my vote.

49   sfbubblebuyer   2007 Mar 30, 3:34am  

Check out the new cartoon poll at CNN.

50   Allah   2007 Mar 30, 3:49am  

Here's a new Schiff article hot off the press.

52   DinOR   2007 Mar 30, 4:04am  

"Ugly times call for ugly politics"

Man ain't that the truth. Some time back I made an effort to de-rail the argument that subprime alone should take the blame. I was soundly thrashed (not here, at Ben's). Thus far the public and many investors seem to be satisfied /this explanation. It's neat, tidy and with a corpse and a smoking gun there's little motivation to investigate further.

How will we explain things when defaults bleed over into Alt-A etc. as we are already starting to see? For now everyone is content with this version of reality but until we address the "total package" we'll continue to fill seats at "Make Millions with Foreclosures" seminars.

53   Peter P   2007 Mar 30, 4:08am  

DinOR, I firmly believe that the problem will bleed into PRIME mortgages. I suspect there will be some reconsiderations regarding the FICO scoring system.

54   Peter P   2007 Mar 30, 4:11am  

Did you guys see the Ads?

Arizona CCW Courses

Wow!

55   Allah   2007 Mar 30, 4:14am  

DinOR, I firmly believe that the problem will bleed into PRIME mortgages. I suspect there will be some reconsiderations regarding the FICO scoring system.

It has been.

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