0
0

Reaching Out to The Other Side506


 invite response                
2007 Sep 3, 4:39am   18,295 views  149 comments

by Peter P   ➕follow (2)   💰tip   ignore  

Rich Drowning

With home prices falling and subprime mortgages resetting, there will be growing pain among those who have used non-traditional financing to purchases their homes in recent months. As compassionate bloggers, we should seek to comfort them with emotional support. We need them to understand that hope is still within sight and the American Dream is still reachable.

Let's formulate a plan to show our warm hearts.

Note: We should still oppose any form of bailout because that would interfere with Free Market.

-Anonymous

#housing

« First        Comments 70 - 109 of 149       Last »     Search these comments

70   PermaRenter   2007 Sep 3, 2:59pm  

Time to call it quits...Being responsible, both financially and morally, in this world financial charade equates to being broke in the long run as wealth is transfered to debtors....

If anyone has a better idea, I would surely like to know.

71   PermaRenter   2007 Sep 3, 3:16pm  

Donald,

There is no free bailout ... read this:

http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/kasriel/2007/0824.html

THERE'S NO SUCH THING AS A FREE BAILOUT
by Paul L. Kasriel
Senior Vice President & Director of Economic Research
The Northern Trust Company
August 24, 2007

72   Peter P   2007 Sep 3, 3:20pm  

Is Patrick.net a bubble blog? I thought it is a reality parser.

73   skibum   2007 Sep 3, 3:24pm  

Well said PermaRenter.

So on top of being about 2 standard deviations below mean intelligence, Donald also seems to have skipped the lectures on "Irony" during his elite Ivy League education.

Seriously, that site is scarry.

Not as "scarry" as your asscrack after it's been reamed by the upcoming ARM reset on the home you overpaid for in the "Gold Coast."

Seriously dude, you can't play with the big boys. Go home and read up a little on economics, housing, and basic grammar. Maybe you should stop using your "reading time" trying to "find Waldo."

74   skibum   2007 Sep 3, 3:36pm  

Donald,

Your "witty" repartee is killing me. First it's gays in SF, now it's the West Coast falling into the ocean? Man, get some originality, douchebag.

75   Brand165   2007 Sep 3, 3:46pm  

Actually, it was I who wished that PA could saw off NJ at the border and drop it into the ocean. In case you're still struggling on Mapquest, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania is the state to your immediate west. We don't worry much about earthquakes there. But maybe you didn't have geography at Princeton? Or did you and JFK both get jaundice at the same time and drop out in the first semester?

76   skibum   2007 Sep 3, 4:02pm  

Right after I bought my house, a tear down sold for $1.1 million in about 2 weeks.

And thus the official peak of the "Gold Coast" real estate market was declared. It's been downhill from there!

77   SP   2007 Sep 3, 4:31pm  

skibum Says:
And thus the official peak of the “Gold Coast” real estate market was declared. It’s been downhill from there!

Speaking of stuff rolling downhill, I wonder if the "gold" coast got its name because the sewage from Manhattan washes up over there...

SP

78   justme   2007 Sep 3, 4:31pm  

>The top Democrat and Republican on the House Financial Services Committee >said investors in mortgage bonds should be liable for deceptive loans made by >banks.

In a thread long gone, I found myself joining the scolding of democrat Barney Frank, based on the above snippet from a news report.,

Tonight, I saw the aforementioned Frank in an interview on PBS, and I have to say that he came across as a much more sensible person than the above characterization seemed to imply.

I'm starting to think that the characterization above was not quite correct. I went back to the source

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601103&sid=aeC9v1sgMqoI

and read the fine print. It appears that Frank was really referring to the "packagers" and "securitizers" of the MBS bonds, and not the retail investors that might end up buying them.

Back to tonight's interview, the transcript does not seem to be up yet, but one of his causes was that hedge fund managers should be pay income tax and not the lower capital gains tax on their earnings from the funds (also known as "carry", short for "carried interest", of the fund).

Here's an older transcript hat shows some of Frank's thoughts on MBS:

http://www.pbs.org/nbr/site/onair/transcripts/070621b/

All in all, I think I won't rely on Bloomberg.com for an accurate characterization of what some Democrat might or might not stand for,

[please unmoderate if necessary, there are two web links in here]

79   StuckInBA   2007 Sep 3, 5:07pm  

Sir Donald said :
I have been predicting this bailout well before Bush’s Rose Garden Speech. Prices will not come down by more than 5%. From what I hear, Florida and California are the 2 hardest hit states in the housing market. Here in “slimey” NJ, things are better.

That 5% prediction is senseless. For each area exactly are you making the prediction of less than 5% ? From which price ? Median or same-house ?

I was at an open house this weekend. The asking price was 740K. The realtor said it's a great deal because last year he sold 3 such houses (exact same plan, in the same community) ... each over 790K. This is in a very good school district in BA.

Figure out if the drop in price is more than 5%.

80   azrob   2007 Sep 3, 5:44pm  

You guyz worry 2 much about the bail out... WHo is going to get bailed out?? People who can qualify for FHA loans... ie. nobody who:

1. has much negative equity
2. cannot substantiate income
3. has way too screwed up credit.
4. is not in a jumbo product above limits.
5. owner occupied homes only

Even if they relax the standards a bit, the average FB has so much F that he still won't qualify. Further point: by the time this thing gets organized, prices will have dropped through another 2 quarters, and we are just ramping that up now... sales have fallen below the floor here in PHX-metro, so even the stupid median price will probably begin dropping next quarter.

Bush is a tard, look at the other proposal: cut the tax bill for loan forgiveness , short sales/ foreclosures for a period of time. What do you think happens at the end of that time period? Everybody then has an added incentive to walk right then and there, rather than gamble and hold on longer.

They don't even seem to understand that it is the BORROWER that is subprime, not the LOAN!

Expect Ben to cut rates at least .5% and may 1%... But don't cry too much over that either... so a few percent of FBers manage to hold on after their interest rate adjustments because that blunts the edge of the sword a bit... so what? The rest of the world knows damn well that inflation will rise, and the long bond rate will not stay down afterwards. At the same time that ARM's are becoming extinct, fixed rates will climb!

Holy unintended consequences Batman! Back to the batcave...

81   Different Sean   2007 Sep 3, 6:12pm  

hmm, actually, I just found this in the paper today re Dubai by a coincidence... Maybe this is why SP PgDns past my posts...

Australia's Leighton buys Al Habtoor stake - Reuters

SYDNEY, Sept 3 (Reuters) - Australian construction firm Leighton Holdings Ltd (LEI.AX: Quote, Profile, Research) said on Monday it will pay about A$870 million ($707 million) for a 45 percent stake in Dubai-based Al Habtoor Engineering as it continues to expand in the lucrative Gulf market.

Leighton also said on Monday that it planned to move the headquarters of Leighton International from Kuala Lumpur to Dubai as part of the increased Gulf focus.

Al Habtoor Engineering was established in Dubai in 1970 and has more than 25,000 employees. Past projects include building Dubai's sail-shaped Burj Al Arab, the world's tallest hotel.

82   Different Sean   2007 Sep 3, 9:42pm  

hey, patrick/.net got into the LA Times again, mostly re the bailout:

Is America really pro-bailout? - Los Angeles Times

He's an econ guru now! And we're all basking in his reflected fame... it feels good, doesn't it?

83   Bruce   2007 Sep 3, 10:33pm  

DS, thanks for LA Times. Rather a nice read.

Well played, Patrick!

84   theotherside   2007 Sep 3, 10:48pm  

Eliza Says TOS… You have to add inflation to the drop in housing prices if you want to make any meaningful statement. ..And if you are getting your -2% from the median–well, we’ve all been over this. The median is easily skewed. If the jumbo loans are gone, the median may actually drop quite a bit–to something a bit closer to 417K.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

TOS says to Eliza...

1- Eliza, you have to remember that I'm just a realtor troll.

You see on bubble blogs, they use REAL price as opposed to NOMINAL prices simply to confuse people like me

2- The picture is exactly the same if you use repeat sales numbers including jumbo loans from the Case-Shiller index (the very index that haunts me in my sleep because I'm too fucking stupid to understand it)…

= = > CA experienced a 100%-150% increase in prices between 2002-2007. That's why you guys call it a bubble :-)

Conclusion: Don't listen to me. I'm a looser.

3- so tell me, who wants to buy a house from me, please i'm getting desperate :-)

85   theotherside   2007 Sep 3, 11:09pm  

StuckInBA Says I was at an open house this weekend. The asking price was 740K. The realtor said it’s a great deal because last year he sold 3 such houses (exact same plan, in the same community) … each over 790K. This is in a very good school district in BA. Figure out if the drop in price is more than 5%.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------

StuckInBA, I know that you are very smart, and you know that these little tricks are for the uninitiated…

Do you mind sharing with us how the required cash at the table and PITI compared on a:

1- Last year picture: 790K loans @ 7% on a (30 year jumbo + piggyback) minus a 160K in a CD at +4.5% (downpayment money invested in a CD, because some crazy investor was mis-pricing piggyback loans)

versus

2- Today picture: 592K loan @ 8.5% (30 year jumbo) amortized over 29 year (to compare apple to apple) plus the return that you realized on your downpayment last year (assuming it was not in your mattress in US $$) plus your rental savings…

ha ha ha...we have done this calculation before…

Bottom line:

3- Don’t be emotional, and read the posts of MALCOM…He brilliantly summarized the current situation …

4- Prices are going down but it is far from clear that buying conditions have improved for people on the sideline (need for a 20% down, PMI, higher jumbo rate if you can find one)

Ps:

5- Malcom, I only disagree on the fact that I believe that the losses on the bad mortgages will be small, that many of the bad mortgages will be reworked, and we will avoid multiple waves of foreclosures and we will also avoid a recession because the credit crunch will be contains by the feds…at worst we may have a 1 quarter long benign recession… the numbers out of the 5 Investment banks should be revealing in the next few weeks…but we shall see!!!

86   DinOR   2007 Sep 4, 12:00am  

Malcom,

I agree, where's the apology from the perma-bulls? The last several times I've run into my house/loan flipping former neighbor I've taken great pains to avoid anything bubble related. Of course if I'm willing to gloss over it, he's only too happy to get his "free pass" and excuse himself from the conversation.

He knows full well that I was 99% right and he was 100% wrong! Yet for all the touting he had done in 2005 you'd think that from a logical perspective I would be allowed equal time? Forget it. He's not about to allow that to happen. I mentioned to my wife that the next time we cross paths I just might not be as generous as I've been in the past. So I'm waiting for the usual "You're such an @sshole, why can't you let it go, look" and was pleasantly surprised when she said she wouldn't be as generous either! Made my... Labor Day.

87   DinOR   2007 Sep 4, 12:13am  

"it is the BORROWER that is subprime, not the LOAN!"

Interesting.

WRONG!....

But... interesting.

Multiple MSM sources have already made it clear that CFC had incentives in place for MB's to place many fine folks with perfectly acceptable credit into subprime loans. (If CFC did it, can we safely assume they weren't the only ones doing it...?) Hmm... In addition many specuflippers (TM) with 2 or 3 or 10 investment properties leveraged their 790 FICO to the hilt and were shifted to the subprime realm.

Moving from 69% home ownership to 70% can not begin to explain the explosion in the growth of the subprime market.

88   StuckInBA   2007 Sep 4, 2:11am  

TOS :
StuckInBA, I know that you are very smart, and you know that these little tricks are for the uninitiated…

Do you mind sharing with us how the required cash at the table and PITI compared on a:

So I call you Aristotle and you call me smart. Quid pro quo !

But in reality I am not even half as smart. Had I been, I would have realized that "howmuchamonth" is the more important number and would have purchased long ago. Now all I can do is spending time on bubble blogs and pretending that I was right. Please don't break my bubble of illusion !

89   SP   2007 Sep 4, 2:43am  

TOS shifts her weight to one plus-sized cheek and pulls out a "bottom-line" forecast:
the credit crunch will be contains by the feds…at worst we may have a 1 quarter long benign recession…

Ah so, no need for that rate-cut then. Nothing to see over here, go forth and buy, buy, buy - and don't forget to tip your nice realtwhore. She love you long time.

SP

90   goman   2007 Sep 4, 2:44am  

http://www.projo.com/opinion/contributors/content/CT_baker31_08-31-07_8G6SA6I.1c1d9dc.html

Here is the fair yet compassionate option.

And NO bailout needed and No or very little government bureaucracy and the least amount of fraud possible.

1. Give the mortgage to the mortgage holder on those distressed properties.
2. The former owner has the right to rent as long as they want at an fair appraised value.
3. The mortgage holder can sell the property but the renter gets to stay (as long as they keep paying the rent and want to stay).
4. To limit size of program cap the amount available to local median price of homes or lower.

Read the article for more information.

91   skibum   2007 Sep 4, 2:46am  

SP,

The even funnier thing about TOS' "bottom line" is that by strict definition, a recession is technically defined as at least TWO quarters of negative GDP growth.

Bottom line - TWO quarters are more than ONE quarter.

92   SP   2007 Sep 4, 2:57am  

TOS said:
Do you mind sharing with us how the required cash at the table and PITI compared on a:
1- Last year picture: 790K loans @ 7% on a (30 year jumbo + piggyback) minus a 160K in a CD at +4.5% (downpayment money invested in a CD, because some crazy investor was mis-pricing piggyback loans)
versus
2- Today picture: 592K loan @ 8.5% (30 year jumbo) amortized over 29 year (to compare apple to apple) plus the return that you realized on your downpayment last year (assuming it was not in your mattress in US $$) plus your rental savings…

Last year picture (sic): $ 4700 p.m. (5250 - 550) with a zero down FB loan.

Today picture (sic): $4600 p.m. with 20% down payment, assuming you have the credit to get it funded.

The only people to whom the "last year picture" would look good are those who cannot do real math and have to rely on Realtor-Math + howmuchamonth logic + MID.

What fool would put 160K in a CD at 4.5% and borrow 792K at 7% just to get a zero down loan?

SP

93   Peter P   2007 Sep 4, 3:00am  

To limit size of program cap the amount available to local median price of homes or lower.

That is a form of price control, right?

I think the most sensible way is to bail out the banks so that the crisis does not spread. There is no way to help "enough" homeowners without effectively nationalizing housing.

America is built on the foundation of free enterprises. Any form of gross market intervention should be frowned upon.

94   goman   2007 Sep 4, 3:04am  

Bailing out banks is a form of free enterprises?

Since when?

Pretty contradictory if you ask me.

Anyway, how is it a form of price control?

95   Peter P   2007 Sep 4, 3:08am  

Bailing out banks is a form of free enterprises?

It is easier and more effective than bailing out the homeowners. Expect some "homeowners relief" bill that has nothing to do with helping families.

Anyway, how is it a form of price control?

You were trying to limit the amounts, right?

96   Peter P   2007 Sep 4, 3:10am  

Sorry, there will not be a public vote as to whether the bailout gets passed.

As I have said, there will be a banks bailout disguised as a homeowners bailout. "Something" will be done, just not what you think.

97   Peter P   2007 Sep 4, 3:12am  

Realtors should lobby for bailing out the banks instead so that mortgages can remain affordable for new buyers.

If foreclosing families are given a break, then they will hold on to the homes. There will be no transactions/commissions.

98   Peter P   2007 Sep 4, 3:15am  

The Democrats want to help out the homeowners, not the banks.

The Democrats wants to help the homeowners as much as I want world peace. Am I going to do anything about it? I have better things to do.

You need to take a class in human nature.

99   Peter P   2007 Sep 4, 3:16am  

With me, the number should have been 99.9%.

So, you want us to... delete your posts? :)

100   goman   2007 Sep 4, 3:16am  

So it is not free enterprise, just easier. Thought so.

They are limiting the total available, not the price. What is said is not set in stone, either. If the total is not that high they could help billionaire homeowners too. Oh that is what you want with the bank bailout.

Everyone I talk to knows that the problem is two-fold, not just one way. Why should just FB suffer and not FCs?

101   Peter P   2007 Sep 4, 3:22am  

Oh that is what you want with the bank bailout.

Not really. But it is just easier and it had been many times before. Banks will still lose some. Think about it, if banks are allowed to take the full hit, many smaller banks may fail. The people will be hurt.

Why should just FB suffer and not FCs?

We should not apply value judgment in economic decisions.

102   Peter P   2007 Sep 4, 3:26am  

“The NAR and NAHB funded Democrats want to help out the homeowners.”

Sorry, they want to help potential home buyers or at most home sellers. They should not care whether existing homeowners can keep their homes.

Mortgage people may want homeowners to hold on for more refinancing. But their reputation is pretty bad right now.

103   DinOR   2007 Sep 4, 3:32am  

Let me get this straight. Back in 2005 we were all just a bunch of JBR's b/c we wanted "some" connection between home prices and what people could actually afford to pay? Next we were fitted for tin-foil hats for pointing out gross tax abuses along with deliberate under pricing to ignite bidding wars and now we're all just a bunch of wet blankets for being against a bailout? :(

O.K, I got it.

104   Peter P   2007 Sep 4, 3:33am  

That makes sense, BUT, if the inventory is flooded with subprime borrowers selling their homes, this causes prices to decline a lot. Foreclosures also bring down home prices. And what comes down along with prices? The infamous 6% commission, of course!

If they change to terms to let homeowners keep their homes, or apply any form of price control, there will be no prices and no transactions.

6% of something is still better than 6% of 0.

A bank bailout is the most sensible solution.

105   goman   2007 Sep 4, 3:36am  

Oh Banks are the People. What kind of reality do you live in? Just the other week my wife's bank fired some of their most senior tellers.

Value judgments in economic decisions. Sorry dude, I am human like the vast majority of people, not a statistic, like economists or people who take them too seriously like you think we are.

So what if bank bailouts have been done before. Doesn't make it right or the best decision either.

106   SFWoman   2007 Sep 4, 3:40am  

I'm sorry, I am saving my charitable efforts to help out those who have fallen behind on their Ferrari payments and can't afford petrol. You wouldn't expect people with modest incomes to drive Camrys, would you?

107   DinOR   2007 Sep 4, 3:41am  

That's why this is so pathetic. 6 mos. ago it was "buy now or be priced out forever" and now it's "Why a bailout makes sense!"

I mean, if we're at the point where we're actively discussing a bailout then can we at least agree that the "appreciation" from 2003 to 2006 was just so much fluff and hot air?

108   DinOR   2007 Sep 4, 3:43am  

Now it's a "crisis".

109   DinOR   2007 Sep 4, 3:47am  

"ease the current crisis and protect consumers"

Oh...! You mean the crisis YOU created! Protect consumers? Protect them from what? You?

« First        Comments 70 - 109 of 149       Last »     Search these comments

Please register to comment:

api   best comments   contact   latest images   memes   one year ago   random   suggestions