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2012 Oct 23, 1:19pm   43,720 views  92 comments

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42   David Losh   2013 Mar 5, 3:53am  

robertoaribas says

a year?

You must be kidding. A year, in Real estate is nothing, as we saw in 2006.

I don't dispute your rents today, because it is a tight rental market. What I also know is that three of my former clients two with short sales, and one a foreclosure are now eligible for mortgages.

How's that possible?

My objection was when you took your mathmatical formula from Phoenix Arizona, and wanted to say Chino California was the same. It's not the same demographic, or economy, so that didn't play for me.

You might as well be saying the price of Real Estate never goes down, but we know that isn't true, don't we?

We also know that banks are still tight on credit, but if the price of property were to drop, and the amount of interest income were to rise a little bit they would be back at it.

In the mean time the economy has catered to the rental markets, and over all I don't see housing being a tight commoditiy in the future.

I've been doing this a long time, and timed several Real Estate markets. This time is different.

You are in Phoenix Arizona, and have done a great job there, but continue to make blanket statements based on your own experience which doesn't need to translate universally.

43   FunTime   2013 Mar 5, 3:59am  

robertoaribas says

are you claiming my renters don't exist?

There is some suggestion a few might disappear when they qualify for a mortgage. I don't know numbers but I'm having an experience similar to Losh where I suddenly know a list of people who have short-sold homes and are now waiting for their credit to recover so they can buy again. If you're making a premium off them for a year or two, though, you're making money. It doesn't sound like you're concerned that you spend a lot of time making that money, so sounds like Roberto's cleaning up right now.(literally and figuratively)

44   David Losh   2013 Mar 5, 4:02am  

PockyClipsNow says

thats not allowed by the feds.

The Fed is what is driving this market, but they have a limit. Bernanke has said so on many occasions.

I don't understand this fascination with another crash. That isn't what happens. It's a slide backwards.

Housing is a part of the over all economy that isn't growing without cheap credit, and speculation.

We saw a slide in the 1970s, and 1980s, especially the 1980s when interest rates spiked. Even in the early to mid 1990s there were some awesome deals in Real Estate, globally even.

So tell me what's going to continue to prop up this pricing?

45   PockyClipsNow   2013 Mar 5, 4:15am  

Zirp and 2% mortages will prop it up. Ez lending. 5 year foreclosure timelines, workouts, loan mods - money doesnt exist its zeros and ones so there is no limit or end in sight to the manipulations.

46   David Losh   2013 Mar 5, 7:49am  

robertoaribas says

I sold several investment homes

I sold in 2005, 2006, and 2007.

robertoaribas says

the math works the same unless for some reason paying 1500 in rent versus 1000 on mortgage feels better in Chico...

No, the math only works in a rising market. Rising rents, or property values. Buying for the sake of saving on rent isn't sound business, unless that is the place you will stay the rest of your life, but Chico? California? Come on.

robertoaribas says

I predicted the crash.

We all predicted the crash.

robertoaribas says

I expect a much better economy in the 2014

You're forgetting the debt from those wars, and ignoring banking as a driver of the Real Estate markets.

PockyClipsNow says

Zirp and 2% mortages will prop it up. Ez lending

There will be easy lending on property values that are in line with what the market will bear with higher interest rates.

Like I've said we have been here before. The economy has shifted. Housing will become less of a driver in the economy, kind of like we are seeing now. We have a recovery in spite of the Housing sector.

Rising prices aren't always a good thing, in today's case it's choking the consumer with higher debt that will need to be paid off over a longer, and longer period.

In the past inflation ate the mortage debt up, you could sell for a profit. When you pay a high price today, and prices fall your ability to move is greatly reduced.

It isn't a matter of if prices will recede, it's when. I think it will be in 2014 which will be the end of a seven year cycle started in 2007.

47   David Losh   2013 Mar 5, 9:41am  

robertoaribas says

you were completely wrong

I'm very rarely wrong.

48   PockyClipsNow   2013 Mar 5, 10:50am  

I highly doubt we will ever see high intrest rates again. Why why why would the fed ever raise them? It would cause catastrophy thus not allowed. Inflation has been beat by chindia plus automation.

49   Done   2013 Mar 5, 11:25am  

David Losh says

It isn't a matter of if prices will recede, it's when. I think it will be in 2014 which will be the end of a seven year cycle started in 2007.

I happen to agree and anticipate the end of the 2014 RE season will hold the top price for this round. Todays prices will no doubt be hard tested during the off season 2014-2015.
The real test for future home price (2015 and beyond) will be how todays prices hold up.

50   Done   2013 Mar 5, 11:40am  

PockyClipsNow says

I highly doubt we will ever see high intrest rates again.

2015 is absolutely looking to be the time int rates do come back with fiery and a true bottom in RE will be established. Perhaps below the already so called established lows... Undoubtedly price will let us know, it will speak for itself.

51   thomaswong.1986   2013 Mar 5, 3:12pm  

chanakya4773 says

The only thing that is scientific and reliable is case shiller housing index.

FWIW, shiller proved that RE prices can be influenced by irrational exuberance... hence the name of his book.

52   David9   2013 Mar 5, 3:18pm  

PockyClipsNow says

Zirp and 2% mortages will prop it up. Ez lending. 5 year foreclosure timelines, workouts, loan mods - money doesnt exist its zeros and ones so there is no limit or end in sight to the manipulations.

LOL, you may very well be correct.

53   JodyChunder   2013 Mar 5, 3:23pm  

PockyClipsNow says

I highly doubt we will ever see high intrest rates again

Could be...depends on how old you are. But I think your scenario is pretty unimaginative and improbable, because, among other things, it assumes that the American economy will never stand on its hind legs ever again.

54   David Losh   2013 Mar 6, 3:48am  

chanakya4773 says

The only thing that is scientific and reliable is case shiller housing index.

The Index is flawed, and most people know it. It encompasses a broad Metropolitan area, that has proved to be a mixed bag of both good, and bad Real Estate market places.

Which reminds me; I did go into great detail about how the Seattle Real Estate market place was vastly different than Phoenix, because we never had the price reductions Phoenix saw.

We did see massive price reduction in Tacoma to our South and some investors have been stuck there with less than stellar properties.

You can't blanket the Real Estate market.

55   PockyClipsNow   2013 Mar 6, 8:17am  

Gonna be lots more JBRs after another year or two of double digit increases.

56   yup1   2013 Mar 13, 2:51am  

As usual you dug just deep enough to support your view.

Phoenix listings are up year over year and sales are down year over year. That is a fact!

57   yup1   2013 Mar 13, 3:19am  

I will note again that I am not going to resort to name calling. I see that you cannot do the same.

My source was Redfin

http://www.redfin.com/city/14240/AZ/Phoenix

Homes for sale in Phoenix UP 2.8% year over year.
Number of homes sold in Phoenix DOWN 13.1% year over year.

Feel free to link your source.

58   yup1   2013 Mar 13, 3:21am  

It also mirrors Maricopa county

http://www.redfin.com/county/220/AZ/Maricopa-County

For sale UP 1.6% yoy
Sale DOWN 11.4% yoy

59   yup1   2013 Mar 13, 3:44am  

Roberto are you really a 14 year old girl? I ask because you act like one.

60   yup1   2013 Mar 13, 3:54am  

Bigsby says

clearly done alright for himself with his purchases irrespective of whether
prices continue to rise or not.

Irrespective of whether prices continue to rise or not? And if they fall? If they crash? If there is another global market panic?

61   yup1   2013 Mar 13, 3:58am  

Bigsby says

Why do you keep trying to poke holes in what he has done then?

I am not poking holes in what he has done. We are talking about the future and I am poking holes in his vision of what the future will be. That is what investing is about, guessing what the future holds. That is why it is so funny watching him proclaim his victory. He can proclaim victory when he has liquidated for a profit, or dies while still holding his valueable property that has funded a lavish retirement. Prior to that time he has paper profits that can rapidly become paper losses.

62   Bigsby   2013 Mar 13, 4:00am  

yup1 says

Bigsby says

clearly done alright for himself with his purchases irrespective of whether

prices continue to rise or not.

Irrespective of whether prices continue to rise or not? And if they fall? If they crash? If there is another global market panic?

Oh for crying out loud. He bought a bunch of dirt cheap properties at an historically low point in the Phoenix market. Even if the prices declined substantially from here, he'd still be well ahead. Just look at his rent in contrast to his PITI. It doesn't matter to him. He has got so much room for maneuver that it's almost laughable, and yet you are still trying to make out that he has made a bad move. No, he hasn't. Short-term or long-term he is quite clearly going to do OK for himself, and more than likely, a lot better than that.

63   Bigsby   2013 Mar 13, 4:06am  

yup1 says

I am not poking hole in what he has done. We are talking about the future and I am poking holes in his vision of what the future will be. That is what investing is about, guessing what the future hold. That is why it is so funny watching him proclaim his victory. He can proclaim victory when he has liquidated for a profit, or dies while still holding his valueable property that has funded a lavish retirement. Prior to that time he has paper profits that can rapidly become paper losses.

What's he saying? That prices will go up in the near term in Phoenix? That's a stunning and outrageous prediction. Or rather it isn't. Beyond that, I don't recall him saying much. He can sit on his investments and collect his income. It's a pretty bloody good return for the money spent by anyone's standards and to argue otherwise is bloody stupid. And he says he gets $6000 a month at the minute. He isn't claiming some kind of amazingly lavish income, but that and his pension would do very nicely for most people, would it not, so I ask again, what is it that you are trying to prove?

64   upisdown   2013 Mar 13, 4:06am  

yup1 says

I am not poking hole in what he has done. We are talking about the future and
I am poking holes in his vision of what the future will be. That is what
investing is about, guessing what the future hold. That is why it is so funny
watching him proclaim his victory. He can proclaim victory when he has
liquidated for a profit, or dies while still holding his valueable property that
has funded a lavish retirement. Prior to that time he has paper profits that can
rapidly become paper losses.

A large amount of money by investors has been put into the RE market, just like Roberto has done. They are chasing returns, playing the spread, and hoping to cash out in the future or dump it on something/somebody else if not. is it wrong? Or is it wrong because you did or didn't do the same thing?

Or are you really an alter-ego alias of Roberto that tries to reinforce his success, and does he really need to? Or not?

65   yup1   2013 Mar 13, 4:07am  

Bigsby says

Oh for crying out loud. He bought a bunch of dirt cheap properties at an
historically low point in the Phoenix market. Even if the prices declined
substantially from here, he'd still be well ahead. Just look at his rent in
contrast to his PITI. It doesn't matter to him. He has got so much room for
maneuver that it's almost laughable, and yet you are still trying to make out
that he has made a bad move. No, he hasn't. Short-term or long-term he is quite
clearly going to do OK for himself, and more than likely, a lot better than
that.

If incomes collapse? If rents collapse? Ever heard of the great depression? Ever heard of a global financial panic? Ever heard of a currency collapse? Water shortage? Dust bowl? Have you ever considered that the bulk of his gains are entirely due to things outside of his control, the Fed, FHA, FASB, extremely low interest rates. Oh for crying out load history doesn't repeat itself........

66   yup1   2013 Mar 13, 4:12am  

Bigsby says

so I ask again, what is it that you are trying to prove?

I am not trying to prove anything. He thinks that the future is bright, his rentals will stay full and the price will continue to appreciate. I think the future is bleak, good jobs are gone, incomes will continue to fall, and rents and home values will decline.

The better question is why are you looking for proof on an online forum?

67   Bigsby   2013 Mar 13, 4:15am  

yup1 says

If incomes collapse? If rents collapse? Ever heard of the great depression? Ever heard of a global financial panic? Ever heard of a currency collapse? Water shortage? Dust bowl? Have you ever considered that the bulk of his gains are entirely due to things outside of his control, the Fed, FHA, FASB, extremely low interest rates. Oh for crying out load history doesn't repeat itself........

Oh FFS, what if a giant asteroid hits the bloody planet?

His gains have come from buying at just about the perfect time in a market that overshot it's historical trend lines after the bursting of an enormous housing bubble. It doesn't matter to him what outside influences there were or are on the housing market. The fact is he bought at a very good time, and all you are doing is throwing out ridiculous what ifs in an attempt to attack his investments (whilst simultaneously commenting about how good they were - go figure).

Like I said, you, sir, really are clutching at straws and it's becoming a bit embarrassing.

68   Bigsby   2013 Mar 13, 4:20am  

yup1 says

I am not trying to prove anything. He thinks that the future is bright, his rentals will stay full and the price will continue to appreciate. I think the future is bleak, good jobs are gone, incomes will continue to fall, and rents and home values will decline.

The better question is why are you looking for proof on an online forum?

Proof? Proof of what? I own a house that I can easily afford. End of story as far as my real estate involvement goes. I simply come here for a bit of light relief, which your posts most certainly supply.

69   yup1   2013 Mar 13, 4:21am  

Bigsby says

Like I said, you, sir, really are clutching at straws and it's becoming a bit
embarrassing.

You are the one looking for proof on Patrick.net, talk about embarassing.

70   yup1   2013 Mar 13, 4:25am  

Only time will tell........

71   Bigsby   2013 Mar 13, 4:32am  

yup1 says

Bigsby says

Like I said, you, sir, really are clutching at straws and it's becoming a bit

embarrassing.

You are the one looking for proof on Patrick.net, talk about embarassing.

I'm not looking for anything (outside a spot of entertainment) from Patnet. And anyway, what is this supposed proof I'm searching for? I just thought I was here to pointlessly kill a bit of time reading froth at the mouth attacks by people like yourself on others who appear to have done a bit better with their investment decisions. But hey, you seem to have all the answers. It's just a shame that they always appear to be wrong.

72   yup1   2013 Mar 13, 4:40am  

Bigsby says

reading froth at the mouth attacks by people like yourself on others who appear
to have done a bit better with their investment decisions.

I realize that you do not agree with me which is fine. You never point out any of Roberto's "mouth attacks" which happen to be far more often than mine and are far more personal. I will point out that you know nothing about my own investment decisions.

73   Bigsby   2013 Mar 13, 4:44am  

yup1 says

Bigsby says

reading froth at the mouth attacks by people like yourself on others who appear

to have done a bit better with their investment decisions.

I realize that you do not agree with me which is fine. You never point out any of Roberto's "mouth attacks" which happen to be far more often than mine and are far more personal. I will point out that you know nothing about my own investment decisions.

I frequently criticize Roberto's unnecessary insults as a matter of fact, but in some cases, and with some posters, I can quite understand why he does it.

And yes, I know nothing about your investment decisions. Were they better than his?

74   yup1   2013 Mar 13, 4:51am  

Bigsby says

And yes, I know nothing about your investment decisions. Were they better
than his?

I have no idea I do not know what decisions he made outside of real estate.

75   Bigsby   2013 Mar 13, 4:53am  

yup1 says

Bigsby says

And yes, I know nothing about your investment decisions. Were they better

than his?

I have no idea I do not know what decisions he made outside of real estate.

They are the investments he has outlined. Were your decisions better than his? I think I can guess the answer based on your posts.

76   yup1   2013 Mar 13, 5:00am  

Bigsby says

They are the investments he has outlined. Were your decisions better than
his? I think I can guess the answer based on your posts.

As far as real estate, no. I did time the stock market fairly well though.

77   yup1   2013 Mar 13, 5:05am  

Bigsby says

And he says he gets $6000 a month at the minute. He isn't claiming some kind of
amazingly lavish income, but that and his pension would do very nicely for most
people

Do you ever get to actually retire with 15 passive income properties?

78   CDon   2013 Mar 13, 5:07am  

yup1 says

If incomes collapse? If rents collapse? Ever heard of the great depression? Ever
heard of a global financial panic? Ever heard of a currency collapse? Water
shortage? Dust bowl?

Serious question - for those who arent as much investors, but just want to someday, buy a house and get on with it, what is your answer to hedge against these risks - rent forever?

I ask because I know of at least one person who has been renting continuously since 1987, all the while citing background life risks like these, as reasons not to buy...yet.

For that sort of person, are you seriously advocating that they continue to rent until all these risks disappear before they wade into the buyers market?

79   yup1   2013 Mar 13, 5:22am  

CDon says

For that sort of person, are you seriously advocating that they continue to
rent until all these risks disappear before they wade into the buyers
market?

Some risks never disappear, but they might become small enough that you dive in. If the person you know has not owned in 25+ years they will most likely never own. Depending on where they live that might be a good decision, it might not have. In my time as a homeowner, owning has cost me more than renting would have. That is from 1993 to present. My price gains do not offset the increased cost of ownership.

80   Bigsby   2013 Mar 13, 12:10pm  

yup1 says

Bigsby says

And he says he gets $6000 a month at the minute. He isn't claiming some kind of

amazingly lavish income, but that and his pension would do very nicely for most

people

Do you ever get to actually retire with 15 passive income properties?

You have to laugh.

81   gbenson   2013 Mar 18, 8:09am  

Bah! My realtor told me that a ton of inventory is on its way! Granted that was a year ago now... :'P

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