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The Mysterious New Housing Bubble


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2012 Dec 19, 2:53pm   6,033 views  23 comments

by Bob Jones   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

http://www.counterpunch.org/2012/12/18/the-mysterious-new-housing-bubble/

The rebound in housing is now in full swing. Housing starts are up, existing home sales are gaining pace, inventory is down, and prices are on the rise. According to a recent report by Corelogic “House prices are up 6.3% year-over-year in October, the largest increase since 2006 and the eighth consecutive increase in home prices nationally on a year-over-year basis.” Many experts are now predicting that 2013 will be even better, in fact, J.P. Morgan thinks that prices could gain another 10 percent in the next 12 months. Here’s the story from the Wall Street Journal:

#housing

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1   monkframe   2012 Dec 24, 12:59am  

Excellent article. I've been wondering what's behind the obviously coordinated propaganda campaign seeking to reassure the public that the housing market is "coming back."

2   nope   2012 Dec 24, 4:37am  

monkframe says

Excellent article. I've been wondering what's behind the obviously coordinated propaganda campaign seeking to reassure the public that the housing market is "coming back."

There is no "coordinated propaganda campaign", except maybe in your head.

What we have right now are artificially low interest rates, courtesy of the fed. This is what's driving housing at present. You can borrow nearly twice as much today as you could have 4 years ago for the same payment.

This is intentional. It's the policy. It's what the fed wants to happen. The alternative was to let homeowners sit underwater for years, thus preventing move-up buying and generally keeping trillions of dollars per year out of the economy.

You can debate the approach all you want, but to pretend that there's something sneaky or dishonest going on is pure bullshit. What's happening is exactly what Bernanke said he wants to happen and what he got the blessing of the white house, treasury, and congress to do.

3   RealEstateIsBetterThanStocks   2012 Dec 24, 7:07am  

E-man says

How can it be mysterious when everyone knows about it?

"mysterious" is subjective... etc. etc.

4   nope   2012 Dec 24, 8:55am  

Yeah, if somebody is a total moron, everything seems mysterious.

5   bmwman91   2012 Dec 24, 11:39am  

Although I don't want to encourage someone's condescending attitude, I have to agree that there is nothing mysterious going on. What we are seeing is a result of openly-stated policy. The media DOES cheerlead overpriced RE both because they make a shit ton of money on RE ads, and because 60%+ of America "owns" RE and love to hear feel-good BS about how they are growing their paper wealth.

6   nope   2012 Dec 24, 1:51pm  

I think you give the media too much credit. They don't want to offend advertisers, but they don't really think too much about them.

What "they" (by which I mean mainstream, televised / printed news sources) do do, however, is draw really basic conclusions.

House prices down from peak, interest rates very low? Looks like a good time to buy a house.

Expecting the same organization that spends most of the day talking about Kidnapped Little White Girl to do a really thorough, thoughtful investigation into the real estate market is futile.

7   bmwman91   2012 Dec 24, 4:24pm  

True. TV "news" is nothing more than infotainment. Most people want to hear that housing is "good" because most people are paying on a loan for one. TV stations gotta show what sells.

8   everything   2012 Dec 25, 4:57am  

I understand the fed giving money to investors to buy/bid up the market and take it for their own. With more RE owned by heavier hands it will be a stronger/stable market. With another good bout of inflation more will be priced out for life. Still, a renters society is not bad, our national debt is basically rented, it's just the way things work out in the capitalistic societies where only certain classes (those with access to piles of money), are allowed to buy now and pay later, yet also force the lower/middle classes to absorb all the costs associated with renting/borrowing the money.

9   taxee   2012 Dec 25, 6:03am  

Let's get some naive, eager, twenty somethings to sign up for thirty years of servitude and we can call it an economy. Worked on the last bunch.

10   bmwman91   2012 Dec 25, 7:59am  

taxee says

Let's get some naive, eager, twenty somethings to sign up for thirty years of servitude and we can call it an economy.

Nope, they have a MUCH more solid demographic piling cash into it all now. The investor class has cash and they are pumping it in as fast as they possibly can. Once they own it all, they can extract rent from the people without limits. Just wait until Wall Street lobbyists push all renter-protection laws out of the books and replace them with legal indentured servitude. Welcome back to the 1920's folks.

11   taxee   2012 Dec 25, 12:43pm  

bmwman91 says

Let's get some naive, eager, twenty somethings to sign up for thirty years of servitude and we can call it an economy.

Nope, they have a MUCH more solid demographic piling cash into it all now. The investor class has cash and they are pumping it in as fast as they possibly can. Once they own it all, they can extract rent from the people without limits. Just wait until Wall Street lobbyists push all renter-protection laws out of the books and replace them with legal indentured servitude. Welcome back to the 1920's folks.

Is the insurance fraud game over already? I thought they had just perfected it.

12   rfsanders   2013 Jan 2, 2:15am  

bmwman91 says

True. TV "news" is nothing more than infotainment. Most people want to hear that housing is "good" because most people are paying on a loan for one. TV stations gotta show what sells.

I worked in TV news for a couple years. Here's what it is: A bunch of 22-year-old college grads who want to be the TV anchor, but instead work for $11/hour with no benefits -- churning out crappy scripts, working horrible hours, and missing Christmas -- until they can't take it anymore, and quit to take a "real" job.

The only reason station owners hire 6-figure anchors (and it's usually very LOW 6-figures) is to maintain the illusion of credibility. There was a time 20-years ago when local TV news had serious newsrooms. Today it's just interns and underpaid, abused college grads churning out scripts -- chasing the rainbow. Quit? No worries. There's a million more college grads who want a shot at the scam.

Newspapers are little better. Cable news might be able to hire a few more high-end producers, but it's not to enlighten --- it's to enslave. How can we attract the eyeballs to the screen just a little bit longer than CNN?

If you aren't paying for the product, you ARE the product. Nearly ALL media in the United States isn't about you --- it's about SELLING you. And that's why I can't trust anything I read, view, or hear. And I WORK in the business.

Don't trust news re: housing. Okay, end of rant. Back to housing.

13   bmwman91   2013 Jan 2, 2:34am  

rfsanders says

If you aren't paying for the product, you ARE the product.

Thanks for the post. This has to be the single best summation of TV.

14   bmwman91   2013 Jan 2, 2:54am  

Call it Crazy says

bmwman91 says

Thanks for the post. This has to be the single best summation of TV.

Not only TV, and newspapers, internet, facebook, radio, and every other media source, etc......

Indeed. This definitely reaffirms my decision to not own a TV (haven't watched it on any sort of regular basis since I was

15   monkframe   2013 Jan 3, 2:08pm  

"There is no "coordinated propaganda campaign", except maybe in your head."

That is followed by your analysis of the background of a coordinated campaign to pump up the housing market. Maybe it will work. Maybe not. I hope for the best, but I don't expect human behavior to conform.

16   JodyChunder   2013 Jan 3, 3:48pm  

Kevin says

The alternative was to let homeowners sit underwater for years, thus preventing move-up buying and generally keeping trillions of dollars per year out of the economy.

Nah. Some better alternatives might have included: mortgage modifications, including second lien reductions/cancellations or forcing the banks to agree to and expedite more short sales.

At this rate, most homeowners -- at least ones who purchased between 2000-2007 -- are still going to be sitting/squatting underwater for many years to come.

17   JodyChunder   2013 Jan 3, 3:52pm  

bmwman91 says

Indeed. This definitely reaffirms my decision to not own a TV (haven't watched it on any sort of regular basis since I was

The suspense is bugging me..."since I was..." what?? Since you were what?!!!

It's okay to not own a TV, but you don't actually want to be one of those guys who mentions it too often. I know you know the type. Like my son in Washington, who thinks he's so cool and tweedy because he doesn't own/watch 13 hours of TV a day like his old dad.

18   B.A.C.A.H.   2013 Jan 4, 2:42am  

rfsanders says

I worked in TV news for a couple years

sanders, you should write a book about your experiences, just be careful to sanitize it to protect yourself from a lawsuit.

Peter Buffington wrote such a book about working in a different "glamour" industry in his pursuit of a glamorous career as an airline pilot. It's called Squawk 7700. Your post about the TV business sounds like it has some parallels in the "pursuit of a glamorous career". Kinda makes me wonder about all the silicon "Valley Talk" which is nearly completely coming from folks who moved here from outside the region.

19   bmwman91   2013 Jan 4, 3:10am  

JodyChunder says

The suspense is bugging me..."since I was..." what?? Since you were what?!!!

It's okay to not own a TV, but you don't actually want to be one of those guys who mentions it too often. I know you know the type. Like my son in Washington, who thinks he's so cool and tweedy because he doesn't own/watch 13 hours of TV a day like his old dad.

...since I was ~18 and living at home.

Dude, it makes me super cool to talk about how I don't own a TV. Everyone can totally see how free-thinking and independent I am. And I know that most people won't get rid of their TVs, so I am GUARANTEED to remain cool and independent. You see, I do this thing where I post on the internet, and that's TOTALLY underground.

20   Goran_K   2013 Jan 4, 11:44am  

The Professor says

I don't have cable, HBO or any other broadcast. Am I missing anything?

If they offered HBO as a stream on the net, I would probably get rid of most cable. I love all the shows they have, Boardwalk Empire being my favorite.

21   JodyChunder   2013 Jan 4, 2:10pm  

The Professor says

I don't have cable, HBO or any other broadcast. Am I missing anything?

I don't have cable either, but when I'm staying in a hotel, I do watch The Weather Channel. At home I watch mostly educational and How To videos. I've been busy lately learning basic Kung Fu in my living room, which, honestly, I'm finding not to be the most practical subject for a DIY approach. It's weird. But at least this particular series has French subtitles, so I'm picking up a little culture to boot! Dropkick après moi!

22   JodyChunder   2013 Jan 4, 2:23pm  

bmwman91 says

Dude, it makes me super cool to talk about how I don't own a TV.

Don't get me wrong - I think it's a healthy thing. The last time I could say it was just after I got out of the Navy in October '73 and hadn't seen hardly any TV or movies in over 4 years. I hadn't thought about how out of touch I was til later that month when I couldn't figure out what the fuck half the trick-or-treaters costumes were supposed to be. There was even a couple of dicks with baseball bats..."I'm Wow-kin' Tawl!" (Walking Tall - this was Texas)

23   Goran_K   2013 Jan 5, 12:06am  

SFace says

Look at ROKU.

Hmm reading their website. This looks very interesting. I'd be interested in getting HULU Plus, HBO Go, and Disney (my son loves it).

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