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“I haven’t seen a single move-up buyer this year”


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2012 Oct 17, 3:45am   10,304 views  35 comments

by gregpfielding   ➕follow (2)   💰tip   ignore  

"Move-up buyers are a key segment of the housing market but they have been missing since the crash, and they’re still missing from some parts of the region.

“I haven’t seen a single move-up buyer this year,” said Bryce Ellsworth of Windermere Ellsworth & Associates in Brentwood. That’s because the eastern part of Contra Costa County is still driven by investors and first-time homebuyers, he said."

Is there a single quote that explains the disfunction of the current real estate market any better?

I’ve worked with a few, but they are certainly few and far between.

From The Contra Costa Times, referencing the latest Dataquick report.

http://www.contracostatimes.com/real-estate-news/ci_21776708/bay-area-home-prices-jump-september

http://bayarearealestatetrends.com/2012/10/17/bay-area-median-home-price-highest-in-four-years/

#housing

Comments 1 - 35 of 35        Search these comments

1   David9   2012 Oct 17, 3:49am  

I appreciate your honesty.

2   PockyClipsNow   2012 Oct 17, 4:19am  

There are move down buyers out there.

(sell big home and buy condo, or relo to cheaper area)

3   pkennedy   2012 Oct 17, 5:35am  

Investors are grabbing everything right now, in a big last minute purchasing push.

There are probably first time home buyers in there, but they're definitely not getting many properties. It's all about the investor right now.

4   37108605   2012 Oct 17, 6:38am  

pkennedy says

Investors are grabbing everything right now, in a big last minute purchasing push.

There are probably first time home buyers in there, but they're definitely not getting many properties. It's all about the investor right now.

I say it's all about the idiot because in the end that is who is going to eat this fiasco.

5   37108605   2012 Oct 17, 6:39am  

Remember if you don't see the sucker in the game? The sucker is YOU!

6   everything   2012 Oct 17, 6:56am  

Tell me about it, I basically moved into a zero bedroom, besides my one attempt at upsizing, it's been downsize full speed ahead. The sucker to eat all this is anyone that lives in the U.S., the government or printing press, er I mean fellow taxpayer has your back, no worries for most people, bankruptcy is an option as well, it's just to easy.

7   37108605   2012 Oct 17, 7:29am  

Call it Crazy says

Based on this chart... how many people still HAVE 15% equity left??

THAT is what is so astonishing to me that they are trying in these dangerous and volatile conditions to pump and dump again. GOOD LUCK!

8   bubblesitter   2012 Oct 17, 9:12am  

Exactly!

1)Underwater owners have just put off their dream of cashing out from the next sucker.
2)Banks care less to foreclose or short sell cuz they got tons of $$ from Ben.
3)Govt. has complete control over interest rates,not banks - main condition set by Govt. before shipping out $$ bills to the banks.

Yep, let the suckers rally go on....only loosers are the underwater owners.

9   dublin hillz   2012 Oct 17, 9:15am  

bubblesitter says

only loosers are the underwater owners

What about all the bay area apartment complex renters whose rents went up about 30% in the last 2 years? What the fuck did they win?

10   dublin hillz   2012 Oct 17, 9:16am  

Call it Crazy says

Reader says



THAT is what is so astonishing to me that they are trying in these dangerous and volatile conditions to pump and dump again. GOOD LUCK!


It's the American Dream.... to be a debt slave!!!

A part of my "american dream" is to eventually be mortgage free and rent free. That is the ultimate nirvana.

11   Philistine   2012 Oct 17, 9:58am  

dublin hillz says

part of my "american dream" is to eventually be mortgage free and rent free. That is the ultimate nirvana.

Ahhh, but Taxes, Insurance, and Maintenance will build a Hell in Heaven's despite.

Unless by "nirvana" you mean death. . . .

12   MAGA   2012 Oct 17, 11:13am  

Could it be the buyers has finally realized what liers Realtors are and no longer trust them?

13   Goran_K   2012 Oct 17, 11:45am  

jvolstad says

Could it be the buyers has finally realized what liers Realtors are and no longer trust them?

They've realized that prices will crater 65%.

14   B.A.C.A.H.   2012 Oct 17, 12:55pm  

SFace says

I wouldn't characterize moving to Brentwood as moving up

Of course you wouldn't, not for you, with your American Express black. But for others who march to a different tune, maybe.

It's the United States of America, pal. A place that's more diverse than just The Fortress.

15   bubblesitter   2012 Oct 18, 12:47am  

dublin hillz says

What about all the bay area apartment complex renters whose rents went up about 30% in the last 2 years? What the fuck did they win?

Okay, landlords and owners always win. Does that make you happy?

16   gregpfielding   2012 Oct 18, 6:22am  

jvolstad says

Could it be the buyers has finally realized what liers Realtors are and no longer trust them?

Yes. I'm sure that's it.

17   gregpfielding   2012 Oct 18, 6:23am  

PockyClipsNow says

There are move down buyers out there.

(sell big home and buy condo, or relo to cheaper area)

Definitely. Some people are taking advantage of the recent bump in prices and getting out.

18   rooemoore   2012 Oct 18, 6:26am  

There are move up buyers, but they are the ones at the top of the economic food chain. Moving from a 2 million to a 5 million dollar "home".

Everyone else is staying put.

19   pkennedy   2012 Oct 18, 8:00am  

Reader says

pkennedy says

Investors are grabbing everything right now, in a big last minute purchasing push.

There are probably first time home buyers in there, but they're definitely not getting many properties. It's all about the investor right now.

I say it's all about the idiot because in the end that is who is going to eat this fiasco.

What fiasco? Investors are paying 100% all cash for these places. No loans, no borrowing. 100% cash.

They are doing this because it's the only way for them to get the deals. If they even MENTION the word "loan", the seller will simply move onto the next investor holding his big bag of cash.

The investors are willing to put down 100% cash because these properties are just MINTING money left and right. Not breaking even, not an appreciation play, they're making more than the stock market would ever give them. They aren't holding these for 1 year and hoping for an appreciation play, they're holding them as they would a long term stock. The numbers in todays market are insane. Why go to the stock market where 7% is the average, when you can easily do a 12% CAP rate return on housing? Who cares if it drops over the years, the 12-20% CAP rate is amazing.

20   Eman   2012 Oct 18, 8:03am  

gregpfielding says

Definitely. Some people are taking advantage of the recent bump in prices and getting out.

@Greg,

A veteran RE investor called me yesterday and asked me to help him pick up a property at the steps for his son, who just graduated from a medical school. He shared some insights based on his 40 years of experience. He said the housing market typically moves up for 3 to 7 years before declining. The two last years typically the frothiest.

With that said, this appears to be the 1st up year of the bull real estate cycle. Therefore, we will likely have at least 2 more years of up market before we go down again. Although most of the good deals are gone, he believes buying now still makes sense because the odds are in your favor based on history.

So take it with a grain of salt. I'm in no position to argue with a 60 something year old veteran investor.

21   Eman   2012 Oct 18, 8:04am  

PockyClipsNow says

There are move down buyers out there.

(sell big home and buy condo, or relo to cheaper area)

Pocky,

Based on my above post, your recent purchase might turn out to be a very good move.

Good luck to you. :)

22   PockyClipsNow   2012 Oct 18, 9:27am  

E-man says

PockyClipsNow says

There are move down buyers out there.

(sell big home and buy condo, or relo to cheaper area)

Pocky,

Based on my above post, your recent purchase might turn out to be a very good move.

Good luck to you. :)

thanks!

I too am a veteran of real estate. Been working in or watching it since high school.

Coastal CA real estate has huge jumps up and down but the ship turn slowly. The trends last mulitple years up then same down.

I was waiting for a sign the next up cycle would happen. Well they yoy price increases are the final straw - probably gonna be nothing but upwards prices at least until ben takes his foot off the gas (he said 3 more year of foot on gas) so I buy. Sell when you can get a fat tax free profit is the plan.

I'm wondering when investors will 'stop buying rentals' and i guess it will happen when prices increase to crush the cap rates down. That might be a few years off.

23   gregpfielding   2012 Oct 18, 9:56am  

E-man says

A veteran RE investor called me yesterday and asked me to help him pick up a property at the steps for his son, who just graduated from a medical school. He shared some insights based on his 40 years of experience. He said the housing market typically moves up for 3 to 7 years before declining. The two last years typically the frothiest.

E-man, I think that guy is naive to compare this real estate environment to anything that's happened before.

24   Eman   2012 Oct 18, 10:39am  

gregpfielding says

E-man, I think that guy is naive to compare this real estate environment to anything that's happened before.

@Greg,

I'm not in any position to determine whether or not it is naive. This is the first RE cycle that I'm going through with some sort of knowledge. I became obsess with RE since 2000, but it was never make sense to buy in the Bay Area to rent out until 2009 till now. Fortunately, I sat out through the whole bubble.

I have been compiling data going back to the mid 80's to compare the buy/rent ratio, and it appears that the last 3 to 4 years has the best buy/rent ratio in almost 30 years.

I remember in the early 90's, college students couldn't find a job here after graduation so some had to take a job oversea, my cousin included. @Troy also thought that was the end for America too, and he moved to Japan. When Troy came back, we're well into the next housing bubble.

I understand that there are reasons to be skeptical about the housing recovery. Honestly I don't know which way the market will break, but I'm not going to argue with history.

Greg, do you know Sean O'Toole of Foreclosureradar, or talk to him often? If yes, can you share Sean's take on the housing recovery....... or not...... To me, the guy is really on top of his game. :)

Thx.

25   CrazyMan   2012 Oct 18, 10:57am  

SFace says

I don't see anyone meaningful getting out now.

Well, except the big boys.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/10/17/us-foreclosed-hedgefunds-idUSBRE89G1TE20121017

26   gregpfielding   2012 Oct 18, 11:05am  

E-man says

Greg, do you know Sean O'Toole of Foreclosureradar, or talk to him often? If yes, can you share Sean's take on the housing recovery....... or not...... To me, the guy is really on top of his game. :)

I do know Sean. He is an active investor at the courthouse steps, picking up only the best buy-and-hold, lower-end properties (last I heard anyways).

He is very skeptical of the economic recovery, but I think he accepts that the current housing market is so manipulated it doesn't really matter.

27   REpro   2012 Oct 18, 11:40am  

gregpfielding says

E-man says

A veteran RE investor called me yesterday and asked me to help him pick up a property at the steps for his son, who just graduated from a medical school. He shared some insights based on his 40 years of experience. He said the housing market typically moves up for 3 to 7 years before declining. The two last years typically the frothiest.

E-man, I think that guy is naive to compare this real estate environment to anything that's happened before.

This prediction is based on the man experience. Unfortunately also shows lack of science behind his prediction.

28   rufita11   2012 Oct 18, 12:18pm  

My husband is a move up buyer. He went from Taco Bell to Chipotle.

29   B.A.C.A.H.   2012 Oct 18, 12:21pm  

Nothing wrong with buying a place to live in or having a business with a positive cash flow. Though I am not rich enough like you to spread the risks around enough properties so for little folks like me it means REITs make more since.E-man says

This is the first RE cycle that I'm going through with some sort of knowledge. I became obsess with RE since 2000, but it was never make sense to buy in the Bay Area to rent out until 2009 till now. Fortunately, I sat out through the whole bubble.

I have been compiling data going back to the mid 80's to compare the buy/rent ratio, and it appears that the last 3 to 4 years has the best buy/rent ratio in almost 30 years.

I remember in the early 90's

Recent history my friend.
I pasted this from http://feeds.feedburner.com/John_Mauldin_Outside_The_Box

A Decade of Volatility: Demographics, Debt, and Deflation

By Harry S. Dent, Jr., author of The Great Crash Ahead and editor of Boom & Bust

I watch this same demographic force move through and affect every other sector of the economy. The tool I use to do so is my Spending Wave. This is a 46-year leading indicator with a predictable peak in spending of the average household.

The Baby Boom birth index above started to rise in 1937. It continued to rise until 1961 before it fell. Add 46 to 1937, and you get a boom that starts in 1983. Add 46 to 61, and you get a boom that ends in 2007.

Today demographics matters more than ever because of the 76 million Baby Boomers moving through the economy. That's why I don't watch governments until they start reacting in desperation. Then I adjust my forecasts accordingly.

Don't Hold Your Breath for the Echo Boomer Generation
But all this talk about Baby Boomers inevitably births the question: "Surely the Echo Boom generation is coming up right behind their parents. They'll fill the holes, right?"

Let me make this clear. If I hear one more nutcase on CNBC say, "The Echo Boom generation is bigger than the Baby Boom," I might go ballistic. They are wrong. The Echo Boomer generation is NOT bigger than the Baby Boom generation. In fact, it's the first generation in history that's not larger than its predecessor is, even when accounting for immigrants.

It's not all doom and gloom, though. We will see another boom around 2020-23. But for now, all the Western countries will slow, thanks to the downward demographic trend sweeping the world. Some are slowing faster than others are. For example, Japan is slowing the fastest (it actually committed demographic kamikaze, but that's a discussion for another day). Southern Europe is next along in its decline. Eastern Europe, Russia, and Asia are following quickly behind.

Which brings me back to my point: there is no threat of serious inflation ahead. Rather, deflation is the order of the day.

30   BayArea   2012 Oct 20, 12:40am  

""I haven't seen a single move-up buyer this year," said Bryce Ellsworth of Windermere Ellsworth & Associates in Brentwood. That's because the eastern part of Contra Costa County is still driven by investors and first-time homebuyers, he said."

Greg, to be completely fair, Brentwood is the bottom of the barrel when it comes to Bay Area real estate. You saying that "move-up" buying is down may mean something. An agent who works Brentwood and surrounding areas is dealing with first time buyers and investors.

In order to "move up" to Brentwood, you would have to start off homeless or living in a dumpster behind Safeway.

I am not sure how "move-up" buyer is being defined exactly?

31   B.A.C.A.H.   2012 Oct 20, 3:39am  

BayArea,

I am a local Bay Area kid, livelong resident. (Are you?) I have been working for three decades in the Trenches (and office cubes) of "Tech".

That said, I know lotsa people for whom Brentwood would be a move up, at least inside of their own minds and inside of their own sets of values. But then, I am not a Snobby we're-better-(and smarter and thinner and prettier and wealthier and Cooler and Hipper)-than-you-kind-of-BayArean. Such attitudes like that are a lot of the reason our region is at the moment on the losing end of The Culture Wars.

That's my handle, Bay Arean, Cool And Hip. Only it stinks so much I gotta acronymize it.

32   lostand confused   2012 Oct 20, 3:57am  

Brentwood is not bad. A colleague of mine bought a horse proeprty there. Killer commute-but ok if you can work from for a bunch of days a week. He bought in 2002-so prices were not that bad.

The worst thing is Tracy. I remember looking in Tracy just before 2000. A 10 acre horse poroperty, with guest house, fencing, pastures, areana all for under 300k. Then the boom hit and they built suburbia there and a bunch of people I know bought McMansions there for 650k+. I think they are worth 250K+ now. Still too much if you ask me.

33   Eman   2012 Oct 20, 4:06am  

gregpfielding says

E-man says

Greg, do you know Sean O'Toole of Foreclosureradar, or talk to him often? If yes, can you share Sean's take on the housing recovery....... or not...... To me, the guy is really on top of his game. :)

I do know Sean. He is an active investor at the courthouse steps, picking up only the best buy-and-hold, lower-end properties (last I heard anyways).

He is very skeptical of the economic recovery, but I think he accepts that the current housing market is so manipulated it doesn't really matter.

Both you & Sean are skeptical of the economic recovery. Sean acknowledged that the current housing market is manipulated, and he accepts it for what it is. What makes you think that the manipulation will change in the near future? What catalyst do you see or guess that will change the housing supply in the near future?

As I mentioned above, I don't have the expertise like others so I let the numbers, history, and other RE veterans guiding me through this journey. If it's the wrong bet, I will lose around $100k-$150k. If it's the right bet, I will make several mil. Given the odds, I'm taking my chances with RE instead of sticking the money in my IRA. If SHTF, my IRA is going into the toilet anyways.

Life is precious. It's a journey that we only have one shot at it. I'm trying to make the most of it & have fun at the same time. So wish me luck. :)

34   Eman   2012 Oct 20, 4:11am  

BACAH,

John Maudin is a perma-bear, and Harry Dent has been wrong so many times I don't even know where to start. If an individual followed these two guys' investment advice, s/he would have been broke by now. Their track record is horrific. Thanks for sharing though.

35   B.A.C.A.H.   2012 Oct 20, 4:41am  

E-man,

Maybe you didn't read Mauldin's stuff very closely. I would not call him a perma bear, not even a bear. What he writes about the future of the USA is optimistic, about our demographics compared to the rest of the world and how a collapse in the dollar will allow conditions for a Renaissance in our Economy. He is also sipping (not guzzling) the coolaide on possible breakthroughs in molecular medicine.

Moreover, if you read his editorials carefully, you will notice that he does not make predictions. Instead, he forwards the predictions of others.

If you read Mauldin's blogs, then his book will be a waste of time (and money if you bought it). Because his book says the same thing as his blog (and the blog is continuously up to date), and the optimist in him saying how folks can come out of what he called the "Endgame" relatively unscathed compared to others. A good read in the book however is that there is a chapter telling how he got into the business he is in. Mauldin is not an economist. Immediately in my way of thinking, not being an "expert" gives him more credibility to me than an all the Nobel Economic Laureates with their Quantisms. Mauldin got his self-start very much like you did, boots on the ground in the school of hard knocks. It takes an optimist to build a business like that.

Another clue that Mauldin is not a pessimist/permabear: he and his spouse have a rather large brood of kids, including adopted ones. It takes an optimist to "elect" to do that.

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