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2012 Aug 28, 6:58am   33,447 views  70 comments

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1   PockyClipsNow   2012 Aug 28, 7:05am  

all renters = shadow buyers

Hell if/when mortgage rates hit 2% even some of the perma bear renters will buy if they can do a low down payment.

This is happening now a huge way at 3% rates.

I mean at some point, you can calculate that '2 years of squatting for free' will for sure allow you to 'get your down payment back' so if you put down 26k on a 750k starter home that is a 40 year old shack (CA of course!) then it will only take maybe one year of squatting to get that back in the event of a large down spike in pricing. Add in the 2nd year of free squatting that will cover any loan fees, repairs, maintance, etc.

So you put down 26k but get 50k 'free rent for 2 years' in the event of a buy/default real soon scenario. Looks pretty smart to me. Really the zero down bubble buyers are NOT STUPID i feel sorry for the paid cash/put large dp down bubble buyers (stupid!).

2   Eman   2012 Aug 28, 12:00pm  

PockyClipsNow says

i feel sorry for the paid cash/put large dp down bubble buyers (stupid!).

Well, a speculator on my street bought her duplex for $720k in 2005. She put $360k down and financed $360k. My brother bought an identical duplex for $325k in 2009. I bought two identical ones for $330k and $360k in 2009 as well. Talking about timing.

Those identical duplexes were selling for $375k last year. They're fetching for $400-$425k this year. The realtor that helped me acquire these duplexes has been asking if I want to sell them. He has investors that want to buy.

I will sell them, but not now.

3   David9   2012 Aug 28, 12:57pm  

I'm just one person, and have been paid to think all my life, and was a licensed Real Estate agent for one year. I have noticed distinct patterns in the available housing inventory for sale under 325k in the Los Angeles area for over 3 years now.

1.) Yes, prices are rising, multiple bids are happening, the inventory is extremely low, this is basic economics. But if there is such a shortage of housing, why haven't the house builders heard the siren? Don't investors tear down buildings in New York City? where there is no land and build to make a profit?

2.) A high HOA Fee, over $400 and $500 a month.

3.) No Stove

4.) 1 bathroom no matter how many bedrooms. (In the late 1990's this was undesirable and a small percentage of the market, not 1/3rd.)

5.) 1st and 2nd floor units with no view, usually looking onto other units or stucco. Top floor units available for sale are rare.

6.) Investor flips from cash court house steps purchases.

7.) Fannie Mae sales and short sales.

8.) Just like the movie: "I see empty houses and condos"

I want to buy because I can have contract opportunities all over the world and would prefer another base other than the Texas one I already have.

After 3 years of this pattern, 'whoever' can take this crap for sale and shove it up their ass.

4   dunnross   2012 Aug 28, 12:58pm  

According to this definition, I am a shadow buyer too, because I am waiting for prices to drop another 65%.

5   JodyChunder   2012 Aug 28, 1:03pm  

David9 says

I want to buy because I can have contract opportunities all over the world and would prefer another base other than the Texas one I already have.

You are in a pretty good spot there in Dallas. No state taxes. Low cost of housing. Nice and friendly folk.

6   everything   2012 Aug 28, 1:08pm  

People waiting for that inheritance.

RE is for investors, those with good steady jobs, income growth, good credit, and renters tired of renting who now plan on staying put.

As I stated before, I'm seeing lots of rentals going up, and I'm seeing larger expensive homes going up, not as much for the middle class, except in low income neighborhoods where the government is subsidizing the building of some single parent homes that are very small.

You would think with rates this low the market would be juiced to high heaven like it did before.

7   dunnross   2012 Aug 28, 2:00pm  

robertoaribas says

Because you know, it makes perfectly good sense to pay taxes, maintenance, suffer theft, pay someone to cut the yard and clean the pool on an empty home that creates no income...

You bet it does, because, the alternative is to show your losses, which would result in an immediate closure by the FDIC. The exact same thing was done in Japan for decades, and it is still being done over there. It's called - extend and pretend.

8   RentingForHalfTheCost   2012 Aug 28, 2:15pm  

dunnross says

robertoaribas says

Because you know, it makes perfectly good sense to pay taxes, maintenance, suffer theft, pay someone to cut the yard and clean the pool on an empty home that creates no income...

You bet it does, because, the alternative is to show your losses, which would result in an immediate closure by the FDIC. The exact same thing was done in Japan for decades, and it is still being done over there. It's called - extend and pretend.

And guess who is picking up the tab for all the empty house expenses? Yup, the taxpayer. It is only paper btw. Worthless paper for worthless wood and nails. Whatever makes you happy.

9   REpro   2012 Aug 28, 4:34pm  

Hi rent and low mortgage rate did spur building. I see new construction of rental developments; I see new houses being build. In next few months we’ll see statistics. With so many houses built in the past we don’t need that much to have market stabilized. Sluggish new household creation, slow population growth and low interest between immigrants to come to US (maybe not so for Haiti). Tenants fly from rentals; join bidding war for houses, scared of rising rent. My friendly manager (yes I have rental properties but I am also a tenant – convenience) suggested to not renew rent for one year but only 6-months as he see rent reduction on horizon. Expensive rentals start to see more vacancy now. New developments offer first month free.

10   Eman   2012 Aug 28, 5:02pm  

REpro says

Hi rent and low mortgage rate did spur building. I see new construction of rental developments; I see new houses being build. In next few months we’ll see statistics. With so many houses built in the past we don’t need that much to have market stabilized. Sluggish new household creation, slow population growth and low interest between immigrants to come to US (maybe not so for Haiti). Tenants fly from rentals; join bidding war for houses, scared of rising rent. My friendly manager (yes I have rental properties but I am also a tenant – convenience) suggested to not renew rent for one year but only 6-months as he see rent reduction on horizon. Expensive rentals start to see more vacancy now. New developments offer first month free.

REpro,

Is this observation for San Jose, or the Bay Area? Interesting development indeed.

11   bubblesitter   2012 Aug 29, 12:39am  

REpro says

Expensive rentals start to see more vacancy now. New developments offer first month free.

High end investors are loosing steam?

12   FortWayne   2012 Aug 29, 12:44am  

I think shadow buyers are people who simply can't afford to buy, which is why you are seeing investors buy and not able to sell for profit these days. Happens a lot around here.

There are certain price points people won't go past simply. And it's not like people are dumb, everyone expects interest rates to climb and prices to drop. It's inevitable.

13   investor90   2012 Aug 29, 12:49am  

Shadow buyers? Most of the so-called offers do not exist. I know a Realtor who got sick from lying for a living---he told me that. This Realtor specialized in REO's. Some of these REO's were listed and relisted for years as the banks chased the prices down. Initially, they almost always list much higher than the real market is willing to pay. Here is the story. He told me that he would frequently receive telephone calls from buyers who wanted to know what happened to their written offers. He would look in the file and fine NO OFFERS in the case file. One reason is that Realtors are trying to keep the prices and their commissions as high as possible. Another reason is that banks track the performance of the Realtors who get their assignments. If a Realtor starts bringing in offers ( even from buyers agents) lower than asking, or if they want the house to be repaired or painted...spending more money) , they will pull all listings and only use agents that get the highest dollar on sales. I have even seen a bank form used to evaluate these scum suckers. Some banks even require realtors to buy books, videos and pay "training fees" to learn how the bank wants them to sell. Realtors are "fired" if they make low offers or don't cut the mustard with the fraud. Banks blame the Realtors for not getting the prices they want....!

14   bubblesitter   2012 Aug 29, 1:03am  

I think shadow buyers are the ones already in their graves...

15   bmwman91   2012 Aug 29, 1:52am  

Roberto, I think that you have a good point. In fact, it is something that I have thought about casually, but never really put into words. The reality is that all of the would-be buyers on here that are renting and saving for houses right now, myself included, are actually enemies. We feel camaraderie because we are irritated with the market and whatnot, but in the end, at least in the SFBA, we are all in direct competition for whatever inventory there is. I bet that at least two people on here have bid against each other for a house, unknowingly. It's sort of funny to me.

16   David9   2012 Aug 29, 2:23am  

Well, here is one example of a sad, little, low end one bedroom that that has 'sold' and re-listed 13 times since 2008, might be what the Beverly Hills guy is talking about.

http://www.redfin.com/CA/Tarzana/18530-Hatteras-St-91356/unit-228/home/4061000?utm_medium=email&utm_source=myredfin&utm_campaign=listings_update

18   Jack1968   2012 Aug 29, 4:13am  

I'm so tired of people talking trash on a low down payment amount. Let me tell you when my grandparents purchased a house it was parallel to their one person household income. Suck on that for a while. Real Estate has become so over inflated, no one can afford to come up with these down payments. My parents bought a house and as soon as the bank understood what their investments were they strong armed them into putting close to 100k on a 289k house. Give me a freaking break. Anyone who has half a brain can figure out this is an absolute wealth grab for the 1% and the game is rigged. What the heck do you think all this road work is. Research the companies doing the work on the roads, they are privately owned by super uber wealthy families (the 1%). Yeah the working class stiff will get his union pay buy some groceries from Monsanto, pay his utilities to companies headed by CEO's that make in the vicinity of 45mil a year (like winning the lottery every week) but ulimately the 1% will make a fortune off the backs of the tax payers and then stuff it in a Swiss bank accounts. Nothing is being circulated back into the economy. The Banks and this whole scam to hold back inventory in order to bundle it for investors (translation-1%) are part and parcel to our country being hi-jacked. Democracy or Oligarchy???

19   jan   2012 Aug 29, 4:43am  

Well, I have a bug in the works for those trying to sell reo's. The customers that they are hoping for are not there. Jr who is living with mom and dad will inherit their house, and let mom and dad live with them. That way Jr takes over the yard work and upkeep, and mom and dad have a son or daughter to pay them small under the table rent and utilities. Jr will take on more and more responsibilities as he or she pays off student loans and moves up in a career. The american public is short circuting the banks and keeping their depreciating assets in the family never really paying off the mortgage, and treating the house as a revolving debt instrument as they did when the prices were climbing. Basic math, and extended family problem solving. touche banks

20   REpro   2012 Aug 29, 6:51am  

Jack1968 says

Democracy or Oligarchy???

Oligarchy? I think we already into this. Democracy now is a fiction in people minds. They go to vote because treat it as religion, don’t really understand what ballot says. So many important decisions are made without asking voters.
When you look what happened with small businesses; pastry shops, butcher shops, nursery, hardware stores, coffee shops, repair shops, family manufactures, it’s all like lesson from history now. Franchising is the only option left. In newest trend in franchising, “owner” does not even have equity, but is called as an “operator” on salary. The next big step is to slowly remove home ownership from hands of middle class.

21   RentingForHalfTheCost   2012 Aug 29, 4:05pm  

Darrell In Phoenix says

Jack1968 says

. Real Estate has become so over inflated,

Sit tight. Prices are falling and will continue to fall until they reach early 1990's levels.

Your too generous. Houses will fall right up to the point where even Roberto with his all cash deals will be underwater. His rent will not be enough to cover the taxes and insurance on the piles of junk. Add to it that his tenants will be high stung crackheads that can snap at anytime at the mere sight of the landlord. Collecting the rent money will become a lesson in self preservation each and every month. Then, and only then, will we be truly at a bottom. All the bottom feeding Robertos will find themselves homeless and pennyless. Only then can the real healing begin for this country. ;)

22   dunnross   2012 Aug 29, 4:47pm  

robertoaribas says

Only if I rent to you, halfabrain!

I don't think you will be in the position to choose, at that point. You will be too busy writing essays to your prospective tenants, explaining why they should rent from you and not the other 10,000 desperate landlords.

23   Eman   2012 Aug 29, 5:27pm  

dunnross says

robertoaribas says

Only if I rent to you, halfabrain!

I don't think you will be in the position to choose, at that point. You will be too busy writing essays to your prospective tenants, explaining why they should rent from you and not the other 10,000 desperate landlords.

As much as I disagree with your stance about the housing market, you can be funny sometimes.

Cheers. :)

24   RentingForHalfTheCost   2012 Aug 30, 2:20am  

robertoaribas says

Only if I rent to you, halfabrain!

I screen my landlords quite extensively. Sorry, you wouldn't make the cut. I only rent from landlords who are not investors and care more about the continued quality of their homes than the positive cash flow. They are out there and do exist, just takes some leg work to find them. Still a lot less leg work than finding a home to buy IMHO.

25   rufita11   2012 Aug 30, 2:43am  

robertoaribas says

investor90 is off his meds... what a load of made up crap! REO's sell and sell fast once they are listed, you can make up all the fiction you want, but someday, you might want to live in reality!

Not true. I've seen REOs in my area linger for YEARS, being re-listed up to a dozen times. I offered on one that took about 5 months to finally sell--below my offer. I got sick of the listing agent's games and pulled my offer.

Oh. And I live in a "fortress" area.

26   dublin hillz   2012 Aug 30, 3:29am  

rufita11 says

robertoaribas says



investor90 is off his meds... what a load of made up crap! REO's sell and sell fast once they are listed, you can make up all the fiction you want, but someday, you might want to live in reality!


Not true. I've seen REOs in my area linger for YEARS, being re-listed up to a dozen times. I offered on one that took about 5 months to finally sell--below my offer. I got sick of the listing agent's games and pulled my offer.


Oh. And I live in a "fortress" area.

San Ramon is considered a fortress?

27   rufita11   2012 Aug 30, 3:40am  

dublin hillz says

rufita11 says

robertoaribas says

investor90 is off his meds... what a load of made up crap! REO's sell and sell fast once they are listed, you can make up all the fiction you want, but someday, you might want to live in reality!

Not true. I've seen REOs in my area linger for YEARS, being re-listed up to a dozen times. I offered on one that took about 5 months to finally sell--below my offer. I got sick of the listing agent's games and pulled my offer.

Oh. And I live in a "fortress" area.

San Ramon is considered a fortress?

Not the crappy hoods near Dublin, but the ones near Blackhawk.

28   Goran_K   2012 Aug 30, 3:58am  

rufita11 says

Not the crappy hoods near Dublin, but the ones near Blackhawk.

Oh snap.

29   Tenpoundbass   2012 Aug 30, 4:11am  

PockyClipsNow says

Hell if/when mortgage rates hit 2% even some of the perma bear renters will buy if they can do a low down payment.

No they wont, by the MIP and servicing fees, will be $500 a month.
That 2% may well be a 12% mortgage by that day.

I think Jobs and economic security is holding the market back the most.
Well I know it's the single biggest factor.
And not just economic insecurity because of the way the cookie has been crumbling. But because there doesn't seem to be anyone involved with the decision making process, that gives the slightest sliver of hope to anyone other than the upper crust.

I bet if we sent Ben Bernake and Tim Geitner on a 3 month long vacation, where there were unable to make any decisions. The economy would rebound. If people with money had to actually risk their money and put it to work.

30   BayArea   2012 Aug 30, 6:32am  

Roberto, you bring up a good point in that there is no shortage of buyers either standing on the sidelines waiting or trying to buy but continually getting out-bid (I didn't say "over-bid" on purpose by the way), especially for lower end real estate.

This site has no shortage of cheerleaders that are quick to rip on real estate agents and call them liars (no opposition here). But worse than a lying agent is the cheerleader type who will never be able to buy a house and yet constantly harps on how real estate has another 65% to drop any chance they get and to anyone that will listen.

31   RentingForHalfTheCost   2012 Aug 30, 6:35am  

robertoaribas says

RentingForHalfTheCost says

robertoaribas says

Only if I rent to you, halfabrain!

I screen my landlords quite extensively. Sorry, you wouldn't make the cut. I only rent from landlords who are not investors and care more about the continued quality of their homes than the positive cash flow. They are out there and do exist, just takes some leg work to find them. Still a lot less leg work than finding a home to buy IMHO.

sure you do... sure you do...

you are an utter idiot, and you know it..

I know what an idiot is, that part is true. ;)

32   dublin hillz   2012 Aug 30, 7:12am  

Call it Crazy says

.... they don't have two plugged nickels to use as a down payment, no matter what the mortgage rate might be....

And that's a good thing - people who have no choice but to live check to check should not be buying homes.

33   FuckTheMainstreamMedia   2012 Aug 30, 3:52pm  

*grunch*

The reason you don't hear about shadow buyers is because they only come out when prices drop low enough where they are comfortable buying.

Prices would have to drop to around 10% below rental partity to appreciable increase the population of buyers, and even then the overall number is limited to those that can qualify for loans or have cash at the lower price point.

34   37108605   2012 Aug 30, 9:37pm  

Real estate has proven to me to be a sucker game for fools well-crafted by a few to make a quick buck off many. Get out of their spin cycle and maybe you will start to generate real wealth.

Remember the old saying if you don't see the sucker in the game? The sucker is YOU.

35   domara   2012 Aug 31, 2:03am  

Prices are going up. The unseen hand is guiding the market. The inventory will never hit with volume and drive prices down. Sorry guys.

36   37108605   2012 Aug 31, 2:28am  

domara says

Prices are going up. The unseen hand is guiding the market. The inventory will never hit with volume and drive prices down. Sorry guys.

I think you need to lay off whatever you are ingesting dude.

37   37108605   2012 Aug 31, 2:30am  

Darrell In Phoenix says

Sorry kiddo but prices are falling in price per square foot irrespective of location.

Worse yet, there are 25 MILLION excess empty housing units in the US today.

I live in a very high-end residential island that is extremely desirable. I see houses on every block foreclosed on and/or For Sale. I could NOT agree with you more, it is the worst I have seen it where I am in my lifetime. In this economy anyone who thinks that prices are rising or sales are increasing are in for a rude awakening if they ever snap out of their delusion.

38   Eman   2012 Aug 31, 2:30am  

Reader says

domara says

Prices are going up. The unseen hand is guiding the market. The inventory will never hit with volume and drive prices down. Sorry guys.

I think you need to lay off whatever you are ingesting dude.

Reader

Nah. You should have said. That's some good stuff you're ingesting there. Can I have some? (sarcasm) wouldn't that be funnier? ;)

39   37108605   2012 Aug 31, 2:37am  

On the other hand I would like to see it illegal to list, then reduce, reduce, reduce and realise oops this looks like shite I better take down and relist just not to show drops in pricing. It is all desperation.

40   domara   2012 Aug 31, 2:48am  

Gentlemen, you may disagree with me. I had a similar opinion a few months back. I ask you to look at what is happening in California. Prices are going up, supply is contricting and the unseen hand is buying what little supply makes it to the market. This will happen across the US. I believe you will see that prices will go up and the inventory will never come onto the market in any significant volume. You are free to tell me I am wrong in the coming months, if that is the case or write me and discuss real estate if I am right. domara@watson.com

Drop me a line if I am right, I have an ego too and love to gloat a little.

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