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learn pearl code for fun!


               
2011 Feb 10, 12:49pm   15,478 views  54 comments

by thankshousingbubble   follow (7)  


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1   bubblesitter   @   2011 Feb 10, 1:58pm  

but but but I thought the bottom was 2009 ?

2   terriDeaner   @   2011 Feb 10, 2:34pm  

"Under the spreading chestnut tree I sold you and you sold me:
There lie they, and here lie we
Under the spreading chestnut tree."

3   antman   @   2011 Feb 11, 7:57am  

More specifically...."The number of Bay Area homeowners who entered the first stage of foreclosure in January spiked by almost 40 percent from a year ago as banks once again gear up the foreclosure machine after hitting the pause button."

However...."In the Bay Area, 1,364 foreclosed homes were taken back by banks last month, a 21.5 percent increase from December, but a 12.1 percent decline from a year ago."

This does not mean prices will decline another 40%... prices look to be slowly declining but possibly still close to the last bottom. We shall see what happens

4   ch_tah   @   2011 Feb 11, 8:17am  

It's a shame the article provides no information about Santa Clara County and lumps San Mateo County in with Alameda and Contra Costa.

5   ch_tah   @   2011 Feb 11, 8:53am  

Maybe this is why they left off specifics:
http://www.realtytrac.com/trendcenter/ca/santa+clara+county-trend.html
http://www.realtytrac.com/trendcenter/ca/san+mateo+county-trend.html

Houses in foreclosure:
Cupertino: 1 in 3500
Sunnyvale: 1 in 900
Saratoga: 1 in 900
MV: 1 in 1200
Los Altos: 1 in 2700
PA: 1 in 750

6   PockyClipsNow   @   2011 Feb 11, 8:56am  

Yes F&F are going to make less loans. I think we all know that means FHA will make exactly that many more loans.....and FHA is the subprime lender with weaker standards.

7   pkowen   @   2011 Feb 11, 9:00am  

bubblesitter says

but but but I thought the bottom was 2009 ?

Hey that's my line!

8   Katy Perry   @   2011 Feb 11, 10:01am  

yep that would line up with my SF /Bay area friends finally starting to verbally poop themselves this month.

9   thomas.wong1986   @   2011 Feb 11, 11:34am  

antman says

However….”In the Bay Area, 1,364 foreclosed homes were taken back by banks last month, a 21.5 percent increase from December, but a 12.1 percent decline from a year ago.”
This does not mean prices will decline another 40%… prices look to be slowly declining but possibly still close to the last bottom. We shall see what happens

Wonder how many were bought not that long ago, after the first leg of the price declined happened ? Not the homes that were purchased back in 2002 to 2006

10   bubblesitter   @   2011 Feb 11, 12:04pm  

pkowen says

bubblesitter says

but but but I thought the bottom was 2009 ?

Hey that’s my line!

That's right. I liked it so I posted it.

11   thomas.wong1986   @   2011 Feb 12, 3:48am  

We still have a long way to go... looking ONLY at post 2000 graph doesnt disclose the entire situation in the housing market. If we do go flat from here, it would be the first time prices and incomes become permanently disconnected. That is not sustainable in the long run.

12   simchaland   @   2011 Feb 12, 5:20am  

Troy, how dare you inject foreign data into this thread? You can't possibly know what is really going on here. See, the Bay Area is the most special place ever. And the "fortress," aka the True Bay Areaâ„¢, is the most specialest place ever anywhere on Earth. Prices never really go down here. Everyone wants to live here. If you claim you don't, you are just in denial. That means that demand is always highest here and prices go up forever. They aren't making any more land. Silicon Valley is the world's most innovative area in the world and never ever has any decline in economic activity so everyone there makes over $100,000 per year minimum guaranteed. Therefore the fortress is especially immune to any macro-economic forces. If you don't buy now you'll be priced out forever. Listen to the duck. He'll tell you all you need to know.

13   Â¥   @   2011 Feb 12, 5:31am  

well, the fortress is in fact different, partially if not largely thanks to the stupendous successes of goog and aapl.

Truth be told, I'd rather live in Los Altos than Bellingham, but damn if that place is not a fortress.

14   simchaland   @   2011 Feb 12, 5:44am  

Duck, that's a great hatchet job of editing my post which is only somewhat tongue in cheek. Really take a look at that last graph that you posted and look past the peak. What do you see? Draw a line from the peak to the end of the graph averaging data points after the peak and you get (clutch the pearls and gasp) a decline? Say it ain't so, Ducky.

15   joshuatrio   @   2011 Feb 12, 6:26am  

Nice commentary Dunross - very creative :)

16   dunnross   @   2011 Feb 12, 6:55am  

Yes, in fact the results of this graph's technical analysis point to data which confirms all other predictions, including those based on fundamental and historical analysis:

Low Tier Target Price = 0 (Low Tier houses & land is pretty much worthless in a Depression - even in the Bay Area - see Detroit)
Middle Tier Target Price = 40
High Tier Target Price = 70

17   joshuatrio   @   2011 Feb 12, 9:01am  

dunnross says

Yes, in fact the results of this graph’s technical analysis point to data which confirms all other predictions, including those based on fundamental and historical analysis:
Low Tier Target Price = 0 (Low Tier houses & land is pretty much worthless in a Depression - even in the Bay Area - see Detroit)

Middle Tier Target Price = 40

High Tier Target Price = 70

Nice work - I believe more colors, especially neons would really help get your point across to those who don't understand the "head and shoulders" action we have going on.

18   dunnross   @   2011 Feb 12, 9:42am  

The H&S action hasn't quite yet been confirmed, because the index didn't break below the neckline. However, we are pretty close to it, and if it does break down, prices are going down to their respective target levels. That's an 80% drop from the peak for the middle tear, which equates to prices going back to the 1975 levels (in nominal terms).

19   Hysteresis   @   2011 Feb 12, 11:28am  

TA gets a bad wrap. but it's pretty useful if, and that's a big if, you know what to look for when trading stocks(don't know how well it applies to a housing index).

claiming that list prices are increasing, so that must mean sale prices will increase is a form of technical analysis (ie chart reading).

20   simchaland   @   2011 Feb 12, 11:49am  

Syphilis says

claiming that list prices are increasing, so that must mean sale prices will increase is a form of technical analysis (ie chart reading).

Is it on the same level as when I analyze someone's birth chart?

21   nrc2112   @   2011 Feb 12, 11:50pm  

What does fortress area mean?

22   thomas.wong1986   @   2011 Feb 13, 2:28am  

nrc2112 says

What does fortress area mean?

It means "Shangri-La" a mythical place, permanently happy land, isolated from the outside world. It started around the year 2000.

LOL! Seriously, Not sure what the big deal is. Plenty of people who lived in the Bay Area over the past several decades never considered some of these towns, or cities as the fortress.

23   Â¥   @   2011 Feb 13, 2:29am  

^ basically an area where the only way homeowners leave is in a hearse.

Everybody wants in, nobody wants out.

24   thomas.wong1986   @   2011 Feb 13, 2:41am  

Troy says

Everybody wants in, nobody wants out.

A black hole, where gravity pull is so intense not even light can escape.

25   B.A.C.A.H.   @   2011 Feb 13, 4:49am  

A few times a year I look up my zipcode on foreclosure.com to form an opinion for myself about value in my neighborhoods and ones nearby. I was surprised to see among the names of "defendants" someone who used to be my boss (an engineering manager), in a neighborhood where homes are all on oversized lots and are said to be worth over 1 M.

26   B.A.C.A.H.   @   2011 Feb 13, 4:58am  

thomas.wong1986 says

people who lived in the Bay Area over the past several decades never considered some of these towns, or cities as the fortress.

It's not the past anymore. In former decades, tech field employment in the region was dominated by defense which required citizenship, so mainly staffed by Americans with the Common Sense about what is a reasonable portion of the income to spend on housing. And besides, even for the growing consumer sector, employment was mainly of Americans because in former decades the H-1 exploitation and student visa gaming the system were not so prevalent.

It's not the past anymore.

Defense employment is not dominant, it's negligible.

In the Silicon Valley area, most of the tech employment is for recent immigrants who bring their own sense of what is reasonable portion of income to pay for housing. Even today's irrational Fortress prices are bargains; Fortress neighborhoods are like the Wide Open Prairie. I expect my ex-bosses' residence, if he hasn't straightened things out, will be gobbled up by an immigrant tech worker.

Because of these wealthy foreigners, the Bay Area and particularly Fortress communities in the Bay Area, is special; and it IS different this time.

27   B.A.C.A.H.   @   2011 Feb 13, 5:46am  

Troy says

Everybody wants in, nobody wants out.

Not everybody. Just everybody among wealthy foreigners. To them, they are everybody who matters. They are creating a new reality here. It is a different place than it was back in Thomas' day, and it is a different time. It is different this time.

28   thomas.wong1986   @   2011 Feb 13, 6:45am  

sybrib says

In former decades, tech field employment in the region was dominated by defense

That was certainly true back in the 50-60-70s. By mid 70s and into the 80s (long before even the 90s) it was entirely non-defense industries. Expanding industries in Chip, Semi Equip Mfg, Software, Networking, Mainframe, storage, and etc etc. As they say, Game Changer by 81-85. Certainly higher demand, higher incomes, etc etc. But prices never doubled-tripled in a few years. Yes this is much different from back than.

No! immigrants didnt have an impact. I know that the Indians and Chinese today make a big deal out of their presence in the valley. But that is just egos gone wild. They are clueless.

We certainly had plenty of 3-4rd generational asian and non-asian natives in defense and non-defense for decades past, but that too was not a factor.

sybrib says

Just everybody among wealthy foreigners. To them, they are everybody who matters.

OK! let them overspend and watch the prices fall anyway.

29   B.A.C.A.H.   @   2011 Feb 13, 9:28am  

thomas.wong1986 says

By mid 70s and into the 80s (long before even the 90s) it was entirely non-defense industries. No! immigrants didnt have an impact. We certainly had plenty of 3-4rd generational asian and non-asian natives in defense and non-defense for decades past, but that too was not a factor.

Thomas, I agree with what you wrote. As our economy transitioned from defense-dominated to consumer products dominated tech employment, in a big way by the late '70s- early '80's, many of those workers in the new industries were former defense workers, Americans with American Common Sense about what is a reasonable portion of the household budget for housing. I was one of those defense workers who made the transition myself, in the late 1980's.
3rd and 4th (even 2nd-) generation Asian Americans are Americans, not Asians. They are not immigrants, they are Americans. I grew up with many of them, shared housing as roommates with some of them, one of them is my partner now, each of my kids has a different one of them as a godparent; and I saw most of them leave along with most of the other "locals" over the decades to places where they expected a higher quality of life outside of the Cool and Hip Bay Area. At my last HS reunion, those emigrants outnumbered those of us who are still here.
When our economy was in that transition you and I referred to, we still did not have such large numbers of foreign students gaming the system to stay in the US by getting a tech job in the Bay Area, nor did we have the H-1 exploitation. What we had was, as you pointed out, a population of Americans, including Asian-looking Americans, who mainly shared the same Common Sense about housing cost.

That was then, this is now. It *IS* different now.

30   inflection point   @   2011 Feb 13, 11:20am  

Case Schiller looks like a down trend to me.

31   evilmonkeyboy   @   2011 Feb 13, 12:14pm  

Fortress or no fortress the housing in the bay area is way to expensive compared to rent. Why buy when you can rent the same place way cheaper. The price to rent ratio in the BA is far to high so unless rent goes way up there is no reason to buy in the bay.

32   thomas.wong1986   @   2011 Feb 13, 12:28pm  

evilmonkeyboy says

The price to rent ratio in the BA is far to high so unless rent goes way up there is no reason to buy in the bay.

It seems no sense hiring in the BA either !! Bugger! Wish it wasnt happening..
but there you have it.....OMAHA!

http://careers.yahoo.com/jsearchresults.php?pagenumber=2&prev=1&next=&crumb=SiUsZARjZhT&sortfield=PostingDate&sortorder=desc&sort=&concept=&action=&submit_x=&totalrec=33&resume=&key=&reqid=&jcat=&city=NE-Omaha&proximity=&datecreated=Date+Posted&submit_x=Prev+15

33   B.A.C.A.H.   @   2011 Feb 13, 12:41pm  

evilmonkeyboy says

Why buy when you can rent the same place way cheaper. The price to rent ratio in the BA is far to hig

Evil Boy, you sound like another American with a different point of view than the people from very crowded cities in other countries, and they are the ones who are buying. In their point of view, Fortress communities along the West Coast are bargains.

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