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Rise of the Bandos!*


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2008 Feb 19, 3:27am   28,136 views  201 comments

by HARM   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

*pun courtesy of CalculatedRisk

Intractable social problem: meet opportunity.
Some homeless turn to foreclosed homes

There have been several posts from yours truly contemplating this very idea, and now it looks like the word is out on the street and being put into practise. Could there be a more perfect, complementary "market-based" solution to the twin problems of: a) homelessness, and b) housing bubble oversupply?

Personally, I wouldn't object to having some of my tax dollars diverted to formalizing the "Bandos" into a legitimate form of public housing (with appropriate oversight by law enforcement and building inspectors, of course). It sure beats maintaining the status quo on both fronts: skid row/downtown areas overrun with stinky homeless people urinating, shooting up, and prostituting themselves in public; and depopulated suburban Specuvestor cities replete with mosquito-infested swimming pools and McMansions being turned into gang 'safe houses' and crack/meth factories.

HARM

#housing

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144   Peter P   2008 Feb 21, 9:07am  

Moreover, home-schooling should be encouraged.

145   Peter P   2008 Feb 21, 9:14am  

I believe that public school teachers only make about $50-80K in the Bay Area, which is really not a lot given that such positions require certain certification/training beyond undergrad education.

In a relatively free job market, why would they choose this profession?

146   justme   2008 Feb 21, 9:21am  

The problem with vouchers is that it will amplify the difference between good and bad schools. Good schools will take the vouchers, add tuition on top and start an arms race the like of which you have never seen before.

The lesser schools will decline even further. The less savvy parents will not know what to demand from their schools in return for their vouchers.

The net result will be an even further decline in uniformity, and a near total loss of opportunity for the pupils in the poorer areas.

Guess which choice the REIC (especially agents) are salivating over? That should tell you right there which choice is the right one.

147   Peter P   2008 Feb 21, 9:26am  

The problem with vouchers is that it will amplify the difference between good and bad schools. Good schools will take the vouchers, add tuition on top and start an arms race the like of which you have never seen before.

What's the problem with differences?

The net result will be an even further decline in uniformity, and a near total loss of opportunity for the pupils in the poorer areas.

If uniformity is a virtue, God would have cloned us like Imperial Stormtroopers.

148   OO   2008 Feb 21, 9:27am  

Why do you want uniformity? People are not born to be in equal in IQ, aptitude and creativity. We strive for a society of equal access to basic rights, not equal performance. We are not even born with equal opportunities, my kids will never get the same exposure and doors open to them as Bill Gates' kids, and that is fine with me.

149   Peter P   2008 Feb 21, 9:31am  

In some areas, I have more rights than the emperor of Japan, who is prohibited by law from consuming Fugu. :)

150   Peter P   2008 Feb 21, 9:33am  

Guess which choice the REIC (especially agents) are salivating over? That should tell you right there which choice is the right one.

Of course the REIC does NOT want vouchers, which empowers residents to send their kids anywhere they want.

151   Peter P   2008 Feb 21, 9:36am  

Good schools will take the vouchers, add tuition on top and start an arms race the like of which you have never seen before.

Excellent! Free Market solution!

152   HeadSet   2008 Feb 21, 9:38am  

It is hard for me to imagine that you can recruit any quality teachers at Harker at a salary below that.

OO,

My wife was an Elementary School teacher. People who go into that field know they will be low paid, money is not the draw. You may have noticed that teacher shortages are not in the districts with the lowest, pay but where the students are more unruly. I never heard a teacher tell me they quit because of the pay. They lose heart after dealing with an entity that allows a student to be flunked only once, allows no way to effectively deal with disruptive students (one of the drivers at the cab company is a burley black man who quit teaching middle school to drive cabs because he was tired of facing down tough acting students), and parents concerned more with students "rights" over student learning. Add to that having coworkers who were hired more for affirmative action than for ability or work ethic.

I accompanied my wife to the housing projects several times for Parent-Teacher meetings. The third grade kids were able to be good students, but the parent (single term intended) usually stunk on ice and was the biggest detriment to the kids education.

153   Peter P   2008 Feb 21, 9:43am  

Hopefully, the Supreme Court will get more conservative over time.

We need serious changes in the education system.

154   OO   2008 Feb 21, 9:50am  

Headset,

thanks for the explanation. But low pay is definitely deterring more good people from entering this profession. In your wife's case, at least she has a spouse, you, who is probably making market salary. If she married another teacher, or remained single, her life would be very harsh given the cost of living in the BA. I think I have read some disheartening story about a teacher who had to get by at a homeless shelter.

I think such a compensation system is sickening. I am more than happy to pay for the best talents, and what investment is more important than our offspring? Teachers have kids too. Even if they are not materialistic at all, they still need to worry about putting food on the table for their family.

I am all for paying competent teachers the best salary we can afford. Admins are the people that we absolutely don't need at all. Parents who care about the education of their kids should be allowed to pay higher tuition to make teachers happy.

I am not a believer of public education.

155   HeadSet   2008 Feb 21, 9:50am  

We need serious changes in the education system.

156   Peter P   2008 Feb 21, 9:54am  

I am not a believer of public education.

Me neither. But that should be obvious by now.

157   Peter P   2008 Feb 21, 9:56am  

For too many parents, school is just a place to dump unwanted responsibilities. Such parents have no business having children.

158   HeadSet   2008 Feb 21, 9:57am  

Why did only one line of a post print? Oh well, here goes again

We need serious changes in the education system.

Even the "bad" schools with a high percentage of underachievers have some students who get scholarships or other academic achievement. A "bad" school is really just one where the the majority of students do not take advantage of what is offered.

You will never design a system that will give a good education to an unmotivated student with apathetic parent(s).

159   Peter P   2008 Feb 21, 9:58am  

You will never design a system that will give a good education to an unmotivated student with apathetic parent(s).

But we can design a system that will ignore such influences.

160   HeadSet   2008 Feb 21, 10:01am  

But we can design a system that will ignore such influences.

How? Take kids away from bum parents and sent to boarding school?

161   Peter P   2008 Feb 21, 10:04am  

How? Take kids away from bum parents and sent to boarding school?

We can send them to special schools that are more appropriate for their aptitudes. This way, they will be unable to adversely affect other students.

162   HeadSet   2008 Feb 21, 10:17am  

Good point.

Newport News has an "Achievable Dream Academy" that takes high risk kids. Seems to work, disipline and respect is enforce by Army NCOs who volunteer their time.

163   Peter P   2008 Feb 21, 10:24am  

Newport News has an “Achievable Dream Academy” that takes high risk kids.

Yeah, we all want them to achieve the American Dream and buy a house with the latest financial innovations. It is that important. :)

164   Malcolm   2008 Feb 21, 1:09pm  

Peter P Says:
February 21st, 2008 at 5:36 pm
-Good schools will take the vouchers, add tuition on top and start an arms race the like of which you have never seen before.- Justme

Excellent! Free Market solution! - Peter

This is the typical exchange on this particular topic. It's a funny issue because both sides agree on the outcome but for some reason the side claiming to want to improve public schools doesn't like the idea of allowing bad schools to fail. The argument goes something like, vouchers will mean everyone will flee from public schools and private businesses will make a lot of money. Then I get into the prop 13 argument with people saying public schools are underfunded. With no disrespect to anyone I have to ask, because it really begs the question, if schools are so underfunded why is it that these businesses will make a ton of profits with less public money and at the same time be so offensive as to draw away all the students with superior customer service?

165   Malcolm   2008 Feb 21, 1:12pm  

justme Says:
February 21st, 2008 at 5:21 pm
"The lesser schools will decline even further. The less savvy parents will not know what to demand from their schools in return for their vouchers."

Oh no you di'ant. Are these the same parents who hate having their kids stuck in public schools with no other choices? You really believe that a parent concerned about their child's education to the point that they would yank them out of the public school, and actually shop for the best school, wouldn't have an expectation for a result?

166   PermaRenter   2008 Feb 21, 1:25pm  

http://88.80.13.160/wiki/Wikileaks

To Stop a Leak
Did Bank Julius Baer overstep when it demanded an entire Web site be disabled for hosting a handful of documents?

By Brian Braiker | Newsweek Web Exclusive
http://www.newsweek.com/id/114415/page/1

The Julius Baer Bank claimed in papers filed in U.S. District Court in San Francisco this week that a fired executive stole internal documents and illegally posted them on Wikileaks, a Web site that specializes in publishing anonymous leaks and whistle-blowers. A federal judge ordered the site's Web address blocked for posting the internal documents, which accused a bank branch of money laundering and tax-evasion schemes.

It was, by all accounts, an innovative move: when threatening Wikileaks with legal action didn't get the documents removed, the bank demanded that Dynadot, the domain-name registrar, block traffic to wikileaks.org. Curious Web surfers were, as a result, not only rendered unable to access the Julius Baer documents, but everything else posted on Wikileaks, as well. (Of course, a bevy of mirror sites and alternative Web addresses--including the original numeric Internet protocol address for Wikileaks—remained available, and began rapidly multiplying after the judge's order came down.)

Laywers for both Dynadot and the Julius Baer bank declined to comment on the case. In a statement on one of its mirror sites, Wikileaks responded: "When the transparency group Wikileaks was censored in China last year, no one was too surprised. After all, the Chinese government also censors the Paris-based Reporters Sans Frontiers and New York Based Human Rights Watch ... But on Friday the 15th, February 2008, in the home of the free and the land of the brave, and a constitution which states 'Congress shall make no law... abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press,' the Wikileaks.org press was shutdown." The court has scheduled a hearing on the injunction for Feb. 29.

167   Peter P   2008 Feb 21, 1:39pm  

I am trapped in Merced County and cant find a REpro with a firm grip on reality.

Can you find one in the Fresno area?

168   PermaRenter   2008 Feb 21, 1:41pm  

February 22, 2008
Rescues for Homeowners in Debt Weighed
By EDMUND L. ANDREWS and LOUIS UCHITELLE
WASHINGTON — Prodded in part by some of the nation’s biggest banks, the Bush administration and Congress are considering costly new proposals for the government to rescue hundreds of thousands of homeowners whose mortgages are higher than the value of their houses.

Not since the Depression has a larger share of Americans owed more on their homes than they are worth. With the collapse of the housing boom, nearly 8.8 million homeowners, or 10.3 percent of the total, are underwater. That is more than double the percentage just a year ago, according to a new estimate of the damage by Moody’s Economy.com.

Administration officials say they still oppose any taxpayer bailout for either people who borrowed more than they could afford or banks that made foolish loans during the height of the speculative bubble in housing.

But with the current efforts to arrest the housing collapse so far bearing little fruit, Washington is being forced to explore new ideas, among them the idea of a federal mortgage guarantee for troubled borrowers.

And policy makers are listening to proposals from industry and community groups to use government funds to purchase and refinance billions of dollars in mortgages now in danger of default.

Many owners are only gradually becoming aware that their homes would sell for less than the debt against them — a phenomenon, said Richard T. Curtin, director of the Reuters/University of Michigan Surveys of Consumers, that is “beginning to weigh on people, making them uncertain and nervous about the future.”

That nervousness is evident across the country, particularly in places like Memphis, a city of nearly 1.3 million people where falling home prices and negative equity are new experiences.

The housing slumps of the mid-1970s and late 1980s were confined to the coasts. The current bust, while leaving some cities relatively unscathed, has cut a far wider path and it comes just when home debt is at its highest level since World War II.

For Stuart B. Breakstone, the problem hit home when he was forced to come to the closing on the sale of his eight-year-old custom-built house with a check for $65,000. The money, out of his own pocket, was to pay the difference between what he still owed on the mortgage for his home and the lower selling price.

Mr. Breakstone, a 42-year-old lawyer, and his wife, Lori, chief of customs agents at Memphis International Airport — who together earn more than $250,000 a year — managed to extricate themselves by paying off the mortgage. But millions of others are trapped in their homes. They have jobs, make their mortgage payments on time, but cannot raise enough cash to cover the shortfall.

Some eventually default, surrendering to foreclosure. But the vast majority — embedded in their communities, their children in public schools, their reputations at stake — wait nervously in hope that prices will bottom and rise once again, eliminating their negative equity and restoring their freedom to sell or refinance.

“People can’t believe this is happening to them,” said Robert Moulton, president of the Americana Mortgage Group in Manhasset, N.Y.

In Washington, it will be difficult to engineer a bailout similar to the one for savings and loan companies in the early 1990s, because Democrats and Republicans alike cringe at the very word bailout and fear a backlash by people who never became overextended.

But with millions of homeowners already underwater and the prospect that millions more may face the same situation, Democrats and Republicans alike are scrambling for ideas to keep people from simply walking away from their homes and to help those struggling to pay their bills.

Bank of America, which is in the process of acquiring Countrywide Financial and has potentially huge exposure, has circulated a proposal to create a new federal agency that would buy vast quantities of delinquent mortgages at a deep discount and replace them with fixed-rate federally guaranteed loans.

The bank warned that tightening credit conditions were leading to “escalating levels of delinquency and default among borrowers” and “an unprecedented number” of homes that would enter foreclosure.

Administration officials have given the Bank of America plan a cold reception. But the idea is similar to one proposed by Senator Christopher J. Dodd, Democrat of Connecticut and chairman of the Senate Banking Committee.

The Federal Housing Administration, meanwhile, is examining ways to expand its new insurance program, known as FHA Secure, to help people replace their costly subprime mortgages with federally guaranteed fixed-rate mortgages.

Mortgage industry executives have complained that the F.H.A.’s eligibility requirements are so restrictive that the new program has helped only a trickle.

Credit Suisse executives said they have held lengthy meetings with F.H.A. officials and have urged the agency to relax rules that currently disqualify many borrowers.

One idea, company officials said, was to allow borrowers who had simply made six payments during the course of their mortgage to qualify.

Representative Barney Frank, Democrat of Massachusetts and chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, has ordered his staff to come up with options for a broader rescue bill. An aide to Mr. Frank said his bill would, among other things, allow the government to buy up at least some troubled mortgages.

A more modest plan is being developed by John M. Reich, director of the Office of Thrift Supervision, the agency that regulates savings and loan companies. His plan, still in rough form, would create a voluntary system under which mortgage lenders would reduce debt and monthly payments to reflect the diminished sales value of a home.

It would take the remainder of the mortgage as a “negative amortization certificate,” a lien that the investor could recoup if the house were later sold for its original mortgage value or higher.

In an interview, Mr. Reich said he hoped that most of the old mortgages would be replaced by cheaper mortgages insured through the F.H.A.

“It isn’t a bailout,” Mr. Reich said. “It is a market-driven solution.”

For Americans caught in a mortgage trap and owing more on a home than it would sell for, consumer spending and confidence are the most immediate casualties, Mr. Curtin reports. But the damage goes deeper.

People cannot move easily to jobs in other cities if they have to sell their homes at a loss. The $168 billion federal stimulus package is likely to be less effective than intended because many homeowners may simply use their government checks to pay down their debts.

Housing prices in Memphis fell by 2.5 percent last year, only the second decline since records began to be kept in 1968, and by far the largest dip, according to Chandler Reports, which gathers this data for Greater Memphis.

The Memphis metropolitan area highlights the larger national trend, with the average first-mortgage debt, at $153,764, edging above the average home price, $152,815, for the first time. And that does not count refinancing and home equity loans, as well as closing costs.

Collie Tuttle, in her early 60s, is caught in this bind. Four years ago, she purchased a newly built four-bedroom three-bathroom house in the Memphis outer suburb of Olive Branch, Miss., for $270,000. She put nothing down, relying on her six-figure income from selling furniture to pay down the mortgage, reducing it to $248,000.

But then she lost her job, and in her next one — also selling furniture, but at lower pay — she is being forced to choose between her home and the rest of her life.

“It was a big mistake on my part to buy this house,” she said. Divorced, with two grown sons, she rattles around in it alone. She had thought the house would add to her wealth.

But now, to sell it for the $269,000 a potential buyer was recently willing to pay, “I would have to come up with $6,000 from my pocket,” Ms. Tuttle said, explaining that she cannot afford to invade her meager retirement account. “All I’m asking is for enough so that I come out even.”

Her house payments and utilities come to nearly $2,400 a month. That is affordable, she said, on her present income. But very little is left over to replace her 11-year-old car, to travel, to pay down her credit card debt, or even to buy new clothes.

“I’m stuck,” she said. “I’ve tried everything and I can’t get rid of this house.”

The reluctance to sell at a loss helps to explain why the number of homes listed for sale in the Memphis area has climbed to more than 13,000 from 9,000 a year ago.

Jane and Kevin Naus, in their mid-40s, have had their home on the market since last May; their attempts to sell for a price that covers their debts are skewing their lives.

Mr. Naus took a job in Greenville, N.C., last March, at a local bank. His wife stayed behind, putting their house up for sale, just a month before prices began to unravel.

But there were no offers at the $239,000 the couple asked for their four-bedroom brick house on a one-acre corner lot, so they gradually cut the price to $220,000, barely enough to cover the $192,000 in mortgage debt and an additional $22,000 in closing costs and broker’s fees. It still did not sell.

Mr. Naus says prices are under downward pressure because of competition from the auctioning of foreclosed homes at bargain prices. There were 5,714 foreclosures in Memphis in 2007. “In our neighborhood alone,” Mr. Naus said, “five houses were sold last September and October, and four of the five were foreclosures.”

Mrs. Naus joined her husband in Greenville in December but he lost his job in January, when his division was shut down. The couple decided to stay in Greenville, to be near the family of Mrs. Naus, who has multiple sclerosis and no longer works.

Her $1,800-a-month in disability pay, however, falls short of the $1,400 in monthly payments on the Memphis house and the $700 in rent for an apartment in Greenville. The Nauses make up the difference with his severance pay, and occasional dips into their savings, which have fallen below $100,000.

“We don’t want to lose the house or cut the price,” Mrs. Naus said, “and end up owing money.”

“Basically,” she added, “we are praying that the house sells before my husband’s severance runs out.”

The Breakstones are similarly in danger of sinking, despite their high income. After forking over $65,000 on the house they just sold, they are struggling with $670,000 in debt on their present, larger home — perhaps more than the house itself is worth.

The Breakstones, each previously divorced, married in 2006, bringing three children to their union. They needed a bigger house than the one Mr. Breakstone had built.

Mr. Breakstone thought that he could sell his other home quickly, but it sat on the market for 17 months and finally brought only $170,000. He covered the shortfall by borrowing against his present home — bringing it closer to being underwater, too.

Now the Breakstones are saddled with $4,000 a month in house payments, and $14,000 more in fixed outlays, including child support, car leases, taxes, consumer debt and utilities, using up the bulk of their income.

“I used to think,” Mr. Breakstone said, “that I would pay the piper later and enjoy life now. I’ve totally reversed that view.”

Edmund L. Andrews reported from Washington and Louis Uchitelle from Memphis and New York.

169   Peter P   2008 Feb 21, 1:47pm  

The less savvy parents will not know what to demand from their schools in return for their vouchers.

The less savvy people will not know what to do.

As a result, the government should decide for everyone. Cute!

170   Malcolm   2008 Feb 21, 2:09pm  

"The $168 billion federal stimulus package is likely to be less effective than intended because many homeowners may simply use their government checks to pay down their debts."

Ha ha ha, someone's been reading the blog. OMG, weren't we all just talking about what we would actually use the money for? Holy crap! Thanks Permarenter, this is great reading.

171   Peter P   2008 Feb 21, 2:17pm  

Cash rebate is a demand-side measure. I am not optimistic about its effectiveness at all.

172   Peter P   2008 Feb 21, 2:19pm  

Instead, they should consider exempting long-term capital gains tax for investments acquired this year.

173   Malcolm   2008 Feb 21, 2:21pm  

I'm thinking maybe I'll stick it to 'the man' by using my rebate to sponsor some hungry kid somewhere in the world.

174   Peter P   2008 Feb 21, 2:23pm  

I’m thinking maybe I’ll stick it to ‘the man’ by using my rebate to sponsor some hungry kid somewhere in the world.

Or buy an ounce of gold. :)

175   Malcolm   2008 Feb 21, 2:31pm  

No, that would mean further participation. BTW, OO, I have to say it's looking like you may win the point on which way gold will go. I still think it is overpriced especially in comparison to its "purchasing power," I'd still be very cautious about buying into it at this point, but I sure wouldn't encourage people to short it if that is even possible to do.

The fact that I might be wrong on gold scares me because it is bascially a statement as to how far we've let our trade deficit go. In my latest readings it seems Chinese and Indian jewelry demand is fueling a lot of this. If they can really afford jewelry at $950 an ounce then that is truly a measure of individual wealth. Permarenter's article is basically saying 1 in 10 American households now have negative home equity and Chinese people can pay cash for their overpriced jewelry.

It could still turn but I have to concede it has gone slightly further than I thought it would. I think it will either fall short of crossing $1,000 per ounce, or it will go well above it. It is not a rational market, I still say it is a bubble of its own.

176   Claire   2008 Feb 21, 2:50pm  

BAP33 - what area are you looking in?

I would be interested to know. Thanks

177   FormerAptBroker   2008 Feb 21, 3:08pm  

OO Says:

> Just out of curiosity, how much do these teachers
> at Harker make? What about the real elite boarding
> school teachers at Philips Academy?

Over the years I’ve dated women who were teachers at Town School in SF, North School in Hillsborough (where I went as a kid) and Castilleja (where my fiancé went to HS) and none of them made a lot of money, but none of them became teachers because they wanted to make a lot of money…

> I believe that public school teachers only make about
> $50-80K in the Bay Area, which is really not a lot given
> that such positions require certain certification/training
> beyond undergrad education. It is hard for me to imagine
> that you can recruit any quality teachers at Harker at a
> salary below that.

Teachers don’t make a lot “per year” but they don’t do all that bad “per hour” since a young teacher works about half as many hours per week as a young analyst at an IB or VC firm. Many women that work at A list private schools are not doing it for the money but to meet young high achieving couples who will introduce them to their single high achieving friends so they can get married…

178   Malcolm   2008 Feb 21, 3:24pm  

"I believe that public school teachers only make about $50-80K in the Bay Area"

Only.... Ha ha, you guys kill me. No one believes me when I tell them that I talk to people from the BA who think people who make less than 100K per year are poor. That is actually a pretty good salary down here.

179   skibum   2008 Feb 21, 4:04pm  

Just out of curiosity, how much do these teachers at Harker make?

What about the real elite boarding school teachers at Philips Academy?

To add to FAB's anecdotes, the "elite" East Coast prep schools pay similarly low wages to their teachers. I have friends teaching at places like Deerfield, Roxbury Latin, and Milton Academy. Believe me, they are paid less than their peers at most public schools. And these all happen to be dudes, so they didn't go into it to get introduced to "single high achieving friends so they can get married." There's the prestige, there's the luxury of teaching to generally motivated students, and there's the romantic notion of being just like Mr. Chips or Robin Williams in Dead Poets' Society...

180   SP   2008 Feb 21, 4:38pm  

You gotta love this - the wifey showed me a post on a forum at her office intranet... some poor schlub at this (Fortune 100) company is hawking her "collection of designer handbags, some only a few months old, all of them in top condition and very sparely (sic) used". For some reason, she felt compelled to share the reason for selling - "real estate investment problem forces sale".

The address is in the Silver Creek neighborhood of San Jose. Looks like somebody just got a visit from the NOD fairy...

181   DennisN   2008 Feb 21, 7:50pm  

How do you make "six figures" selling furniture around Memphis?

182   DinOR   2008 Feb 21, 11:31pm  

"collection of designer handbags"

Good Lord. Must be SOME... collection to raise enough cash-ola to fill THAT hole-a!

Isn't there some children's nursery rhyme about an Old Woman that lived in a designer handbag?

Now how's that one go..?

183   DinOR   2008 Feb 21, 11:32pm  

DennisN,

How does one go about making six figures in Memphis, period?

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