Re: Housing to fall another 25% - Updated Case-Shiller
Probably you will find headwinds and risk in almost every worthwhile endeavor. Such is life
Originally posted by karim0028
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Again, i welcome the debate, so please dont take my responses as me saying im right and you are wrong or anything like that... I am just like you trying to reason out my thoughts and a healthy debate helps everyone...
Thank you for the clarification though I was unaware of any misunderstanding.
1) Financing affects price ceiling on purchase price and material costs going up helps put a bottom on house prices, but the real price of a home i feel comes down to how much rent it can command... As an investor why would i put money into a house (that depreciates, costs money to maintain, etc) when i can get a better return in stocks, bonds, whatever.. The way i see it; in normal markets all assets compete for capital based on ROI, risk, supply and demand, etc.... As far as can tell , there is a lot of hidden supply still about to come on the housing market... All of these In an inflationary environment with lower standards of living (meaning lower real income), the price of a house might stay the same, but if a currency devaluation happens or a fiscal crisis occurs wouldnt you be better off in something else?
I mean, look at a country like Argentina, Latvia or iceland or any country that has come to a lower standard of living (granted theirs was sudden and due to foreign currency debt, ours is not exactly the same thing) through a debt crisis, or devaluation or something along those lines... The end result being a lower standard of living for the population... Their RE markets collapse.. If you own the home outright you may be better off, but if you invested in gold or silver or foreign currency you probably came out better off than plowing cash into RE...
So are you saying that a thing will have a certain value regardless of what a thing cost? Is that more true for a house or the land it sits on or for the infrastructure which supports it or for the gold buried there?
Fix up costs add to the value of a house... But, if the house is overvalued, then it ends up netting down to where the value should be.... Go ask anyone in phoenix if the granite floors they put in brought their home values up? In the late eighties or 90s' RE had several things going for it... Strong bubbly economy, interest rates going lower, stock market boom, low house prices... My parents bought a house in Minnepolis in 97/98 for 50K (and put in another 30K in fix ups) at the time no body was chasing housing, houses were on the market and if anyone cared they bid.. It was a place to live....
I had in mind more basic structural items like roofing or windows, a proper kitchen, etc., but certainly, as you note, whether or not a property has been overdeveloped relative to the neighborhood needs be considered. How does that support your saying that past values are not so important to understanding what might be a fair current price?
I believe its 25-30% owned free and clear
I've read and surveyed about 300 houses in my own neighborhood. It is about 33%. Add those to people with enough equity still to downsize and to those who carry a mortgage even though they can afford their house without one and you can approximate an answer on who can buy with cash.
I am not being overly pessemistic I am just trying to see & list the headwinds as i see them, if you disagree outline where you see flaws, dismissing it doesnt negate it ;)... Just bc i say RE has headwinds doesnt mean it goes to zero in a hyper-inflationary seventh circle of hell , it just means that relative to other investments it doesnt seem to be the optimal thing to be invested in at the moment.....
Collapse is not pessimistic? Is okay for you to cry wolf to make a point but not okay for me to shoot the wolf to make a point?
Again, its all relative... Your income might have nominally gone up, but real income may have gone down.... If expenses rise in real terms as a percentage of nominal and real income, something has to give, no? How else can you afford something? If you make 5K/month but your electric bill goes up from 200 to 500/month i believe that would be housing negative, bc, if income (for the time being) stays where it is at and your expenses suddenly rise you only have so much income to pay your total expenses... Either in aggregate you eat and go out less or in aggregate your ability to afford the house you are in just went down.... Again, keep in mind pay raises arent as elastic as energy or other expenditures... Not everyone can go to their boss and ask for a raise every day.... When gas prices spike to $4/gallon in 08, i dont know about you but i didnt get a raise... Just made me in aggregate poorer and everyone else i work with felt the same way.....
Again that is at a certain point in time... a year later your income might go up and you can again afford the home, but at that point in time and for probably 8 or 9 months you could possibly be scrimping and saving every last cent to get by or maintain the same standard of living...
And yet when pizza was $.25 per slice, I could not afford an entire pie. Today a slice is closer to $3 and buying a pie is not a problem.
With the average student in non-bankruptable debt up to their eyeballs and for the time being diminishing job prospects, the pool of buyers is dwindiling... It doesn't mean no one is going to buy, it just means that the pool of buyers shrinks... As for psychology, at work i know 4-6 folks that are walking away from their mortgages, professionals that make in excess of 100K/year, not broke, just figured out they were shit out of luck in every gaining their original purchase price... Now, it is discussed regularly at lunch, nothing to be ashamed of... That is a shift in psychology, housing is not going to be seen as a "great investment", it will be just a house, shelter and eventually CAP rates will have to start making sense for an investor to buy....
Since when did college students graduate with their own house? I didn't even get a car. It took me years of saving after college to afford a house. Where did this entitlement come from? Can I get a refund on all that?
I don't know what luncheons you attend, but all of my friends are disgusted by what you perceive as a shift in psychology.
Are basic human needs something to walk away from? Is it human nature to evolve in a way that you don't feel better about yourself?
Sure, i didnt say that it doesnt provide an income... RE will always provide an income... But, will it be the best investment going forward that provides the best real returns, i doubt it... An imbalance 10-20 years in the making doesn't usually correct in half the time or rebound that quickly... And there is usually a bottoming out period that lasts a while....
Having just bought at an early 1990s price, just four years after peak yet at 40% less, based on rent to price, than what was had 10 years ago, before the great bubble begain in earnest, should I believe that any asset, even gold, might not drop as quickly?
Sure interest rates can go sideways for a while, but in the end they will rise and very possibly rise sharply... Why, bc of the exact thing EJ has been talking about for the last 5 or 6 years... Eventually the market will puke at accepting such low yields with the supply of treasuries being put up for sale going up each year.... It might not happen tommorrow, but i cant fathom why anyone would lend the US govt money for 30 years for such low yields when the supply is damn near infinite... What is not sustainable will not be sustained... Eventually something will give....
http://www.chartsrus.com/chart.php?i...?ticker=FUTTYX
Take a look at the link above for the 30 year treasury yield... I will leave you to make your own conclusions on where the yield will go... As i see it the downward trendline from the 1981 top has already been broken (around 99/2000, around the same time gold bottomed out) and for the last several years or so we have been in a bottoming formation.. We may have another attempt to test the 08 lows but, after that it is most likely bottomed and going higher.... Even if we go lower on yields, do you really think people will continously loan money to a govt that continues to spit out nothing but debt?
I never said rates might not eventually go up. I questioned you saying that there is only one other direction.
...I honestly dont know... It depends on your individual circumstances.. But, that doesn't sound like a bad deal.... But, we are at that point talking about different things, you are talking about your individual situation (and/or a deal you may have come across) and i am referring to a market in general... What you are doing sounds like a business deal, a business person buys/sells where ever he sees an opportunity to make money and can usually make money in any market.... The concept of buy low sell high never goes out of style You can use the same concept to trade any market... When referring to a market i believe you have to look at it overall, not individual things... Ie. its like asking i can buy gold at $500 dollars when todays market price is 1250, should i do it? Well, yeah..
I was only responding to a post above me which mentioned future Florida carnage but then responded to your response to my post. I am not a trader. I just wanted to live in an area with a lower cost of living and buy property which might produce some relatively stable income. Mission accomplished.
All i know is that my belief is that higher interest rates will/should provide headwinds for RE, i am trying to figure out how inflation will factor in to prices, but i am not there yet, bc i just dont know how inflation wil relate to incomes, psychology, housing sentiment, etc...
Thank you for the clarification though I was unaware of any misunderstanding.
1) Financing affects price ceiling on purchase price and material costs going up helps put a bottom on house prices, but the real price of a home i feel comes down to how much rent it can command... As an investor why would i put money into a house (that depreciates, costs money to maintain, etc) when i can get a better return in stocks, bonds, whatever.. The way i see it; in normal markets all assets compete for capital based on ROI, risk, supply and demand, etc.... As far as can tell , there is a lot of hidden supply still about to come on the housing market... All of these In an inflationary environment with lower standards of living (meaning lower real income), the price of a house might stay the same, but if a currency devaluation happens or a fiscal crisis occurs wouldnt you be better off in something else?
I mean, look at a country like Argentina, Latvia or iceland or any country that has come to a lower standard of living (granted theirs was sudden and due to foreign currency debt, ours is not exactly the same thing) through a debt crisis, or devaluation or something along those lines... The end result being a lower standard of living for the population... Their RE markets collapse.. If you own the home outright you may be better off, but if you invested in gold or silver or foreign currency you probably came out better off than plowing cash into RE...
So are you saying that a thing will have a certain value regardless of what a thing cost? Is that more true for a house or the land it sits on or for the infrastructure which supports it or for the gold buried there?
Fix up costs add to the value of a house... But, if the house is overvalued, then it ends up netting down to where the value should be.... Go ask anyone in phoenix if the granite floors they put in brought their home values up? In the late eighties or 90s' RE had several things going for it... Strong bubbly economy, interest rates going lower, stock market boom, low house prices... My parents bought a house in Minnepolis in 97/98 for 50K (and put in another 30K in fix ups) at the time no body was chasing housing, houses were on the market and if anyone cared they bid.. It was a place to live....
I had in mind more basic structural items like roofing or windows, a proper kitchen, etc., but certainly, as you note, whether or not a property has been overdeveloped relative to the neighborhood needs be considered. How does that support your saying that past values are not so important to understanding what might be a fair current price?
I believe its 25-30% owned free and clear
I've read and surveyed about 300 houses in my own neighborhood. It is about 33%. Add those to people with enough equity still to downsize and to those who carry a mortgage even though they can afford their house without one and you can approximate an answer on who can buy with cash.
I am not being overly pessemistic I am just trying to see & list the headwinds as i see them, if you disagree outline where you see flaws, dismissing it doesnt negate it ;)... Just bc i say RE has headwinds doesnt mean it goes to zero in a hyper-inflationary seventh circle of hell , it just means that relative to other investments it doesnt seem to be the optimal thing to be invested in at the moment.....
Collapse is not pessimistic? Is okay for you to cry wolf to make a point but not okay for me to shoot the wolf to make a point?
Again, its all relative... Your income might have nominally gone up, but real income may have gone down.... If expenses rise in real terms as a percentage of nominal and real income, something has to give, no? How else can you afford something? If you make 5K/month but your electric bill goes up from 200 to 500/month i believe that would be housing negative, bc, if income (for the time being) stays where it is at and your expenses suddenly rise you only have so much income to pay your total expenses... Either in aggregate you eat and go out less or in aggregate your ability to afford the house you are in just went down.... Again, keep in mind pay raises arent as elastic as energy or other expenditures... Not everyone can go to their boss and ask for a raise every day.... When gas prices spike to $4/gallon in 08, i dont know about you but i didnt get a raise... Just made me in aggregate poorer and everyone else i work with felt the same way.....
Again that is at a certain point in time... a year later your income might go up and you can again afford the home, but at that point in time and for probably 8 or 9 months you could possibly be scrimping and saving every last cent to get by or maintain the same standard of living...
And yet when pizza was $.25 per slice, I could not afford an entire pie. Today a slice is closer to $3 and buying a pie is not a problem.
With the average student in non-bankruptable debt up to their eyeballs and for the time being diminishing job prospects, the pool of buyers is dwindiling... It doesn't mean no one is going to buy, it just means that the pool of buyers shrinks... As for psychology, at work i know 4-6 folks that are walking away from their mortgages, professionals that make in excess of 100K/year, not broke, just figured out they were shit out of luck in every gaining their original purchase price... Now, it is discussed regularly at lunch, nothing to be ashamed of... That is a shift in psychology, housing is not going to be seen as a "great investment", it will be just a house, shelter and eventually CAP rates will have to start making sense for an investor to buy....
Since when did college students graduate with their own house? I didn't even get a car. It took me years of saving after college to afford a house. Where did this entitlement come from? Can I get a refund on all that?
I don't know what luncheons you attend, but all of my friends are disgusted by what you perceive as a shift in psychology.
Are basic human needs something to walk away from? Is it human nature to evolve in a way that you don't feel better about yourself?
Sure, i didnt say that it doesnt provide an income... RE will always provide an income... But, will it be the best investment going forward that provides the best real returns, i doubt it... An imbalance 10-20 years in the making doesn't usually correct in half the time or rebound that quickly... And there is usually a bottoming out period that lasts a while....
Having just bought at an early 1990s price, just four years after peak yet at 40% less, based on rent to price, than what was had 10 years ago, before the great bubble begain in earnest, should I believe that any asset, even gold, might not drop as quickly?
Sure interest rates can go sideways for a while, but in the end they will rise and very possibly rise sharply... Why, bc of the exact thing EJ has been talking about for the last 5 or 6 years... Eventually the market will puke at accepting such low yields with the supply of treasuries being put up for sale going up each year.... It might not happen tommorrow, but i cant fathom why anyone would lend the US govt money for 30 years for such low yields when the supply is damn near infinite... What is not sustainable will not be sustained... Eventually something will give....
http://www.chartsrus.com/chart.php?i...?ticker=FUTTYX
Take a look at the link above for the 30 year treasury yield... I will leave you to make your own conclusions on where the yield will go... As i see it the downward trendline from the 1981 top has already been broken (around 99/2000, around the same time gold bottomed out) and for the last several years or so we have been in a bottoming formation.. We may have another attempt to test the 08 lows but, after that it is most likely bottomed and going higher.... Even if we go lower on yields, do you really think people will continously loan money to a govt that continues to spit out nothing but debt?
I never said rates might not eventually go up. I questioned you saying that there is only one other direction.
...I honestly dont know... It depends on your individual circumstances.. But, that doesn't sound like a bad deal.... But, we are at that point talking about different things, you are talking about your individual situation (and/or a deal you may have come across) and i am referring to a market in general... What you are doing sounds like a business deal, a business person buys/sells where ever he sees an opportunity to make money and can usually make money in any market.... The concept of buy low sell high never goes out of style You can use the same concept to trade any market... When referring to a market i believe you have to look at it overall, not individual things... Ie. its like asking i can buy gold at $500 dollars when todays market price is 1250, should i do it? Well, yeah..
I was only responding to a post above me which mentioned future Florida carnage but then responded to your response to my post. I am not a trader. I just wanted to live in an area with a lower cost of living and buy property which might produce some relatively stable income. Mission accomplished.
All i know is that my belief is that higher interest rates will/should provide headwinds for RE, i am trying to figure out how inflation will factor in to prices, but i am not there yet, bc i just dont know how inflation wil relate to incomes, psychology, housing sentiment, etc...
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