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it seems like CA has about half the years being 'good years' to buy RE and the other half the time its bad
Good: 82-87, 93-2003
Bad: 88-92,04-08+
land on a bad a year and it could wipe you out, land on a good year and you will be well positioned for the bad years. if you are lucky in the game of CA -you get to be 'trapped in your house' by prop 13 and cannot move or sell due to fear of prop tax going up tenfold. whata game.
HARM said:
Even so, I take issue with the idea that ZIRP or 1% FF rate was somehow “necessary†or “helps†the economy avoid recessions.
I would in fact argue that ZIRP "hurts" the economy by artificially reducing the cost of capital to the point where it gets misallocated.
Instead, if interest rates are higher, any venture that is careless with capital is more quickly extinguished before it can squander it on unproductive or speculative bets.
I think it's a mistake to view Lockhart at OFHEO as a problem. He may be one of the few responsible parties in this mess - appointed to clean up policy and accounting at the GSEs and that's exactly what he's done.
When it became clear the conforming limits could be raised, he registered his disappointment, yes, but also made it clear anyone thinking the GSEs would become a dumping ground for ailing jumbos will be far more disappointed than he is.
Tanta over at CR says he's a straight shooter. I can't offer much better recommendation than that. The guy's nobody's stooge.
coretexity,
And do you KNOW... what Blanche (the douchebag) Evans can Do with her sock puppet!
"So don't freak out about losing a few percent this year. You'll make it up. Housing has only lost value in one year of the last 35."
And what year would that be Blanche?
"You'll make it up"
And what DECADE would that be Blanche?
Oh and don't worry, no one is "freaking out". They have a new web-site that takes care of all this (it's called "justwalkaway")
Bruce,
I totally agree. I know it's easy to get on the 'GSE's suck bandwagon' but he clearly and forcefully made his position on the matter known well prior to it being passed!
http://www.mercurynews.com/ci_8193840
"I've obviously had to eat my 'soft landing' words," said Leslie Appleton-Young.
It would be wonderfully ironic to buy a house so that you get time to blog on a housing crash site. And if you buy multiple houses you can blog as much as Casey Serin !
Fyi: I moved because my company relo'd me, not because I was disatisfied with my old rental. In fact, in the past 14 years, I've only moved twice. And, I have not rented from a property mismanagement company in that time --only old-fashioned, buy'n'hold private LLs who like quiet, clean tenants with good references. I highly recommend this approach --especially in CA.
Oh, and, yes, Hillary really sucks. Or... perhaps she doesn't ? (Sorry --just *couldn't* resist going there.)
lunarpark,
Of course the Merc had to throw in the usual, line about how the Bay Area is faring much better than the rest of the state. It wouldn't be the Merc without mindless cheerleading, now would it?
Just got a call from an ex-colleague who is semi-retired and does software contract work on the side. The company he was at just canned a bunch of contract workers last Friday, and he also heard of contractors being let go in large numbers in other places in the South Bay.
Given yesterday's news from CSCO, this can't be good news for Silicon Valley high-tech employment numbers - although it probably won't show up in the "un"-employment data because they were on contract.
Remember the thesis about "fortress will crack when dual income tech families lose jobs"? Grab a seat. It is starting.
Hm, an acquintence in the BA is a contract worker. He writes software that's half code, half bugs, backdoors, logic bombs, etc so he is sure to get paid. He admits this freely, with an evil grin.
Now, buying/selling on Ebay is pretty skanky, but the realities of being a software contractor are not any prettier.
Playing a banjo for tips on the street comes off as quite noble by comparison!
Hmm yes yet another good point - since they're contractors and self-employed, they won't show up in the numbers, just like I don't. In fact I saw this mentioned on tickerforums or somewhere, that the self-employed are taking a big hit.
Malcolm 10:26PM - that needs to be written in gold leaf at the top of the page!
I agree 100.0000%
HARM, Randy, Patrick et al:
I'm still up for the blog party Fri 5pm. I trust Patrick has everyone's email address if anything should change.
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Fannie Mae has the implicit backing of US taxpayers. That is, Fannie Mae, a private company, assumes that US taxpayers will be forced to bail it out no matter how many bad loans it buys from banks.
But the guarantee was always implicit, never written down and specifically agreed to. Is it possible that Fannie Mae will go bankrupt, and Congress will have the courage to refuse to put middle class taxpayers on the hook for ultra expensive mortgages in California and New York?
What happens then?
Fannie Mae has very little cash of its own, but is just a conduit for packaging loans into mortgage-backed bonds. It is the holders of those bonds who will suffer the losses.
#housing