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New real estate bubble firmly in place. Lets share tips.


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2013 Mar 6, 2:24am   29,555 views  67 comments

by PockyClipsNow   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

In all of coastal cali Multiple offers are now the norm for the under 800k or so market. Bay area especially.

I read an article (sorry cant link it on iphone) that in san fernando valley there has typically been 9000 homes listed at this time of year now there are 1400.

We all know why - they keep changing the rules and printing endless money. Fundamentals that matter are supply and availability of zeros and ones on the central banks computers(endless).

What i learned in the last bubble which ramped up for 10 years or so before the crash was not to wait it out. Get in ASAP and buy buy buy then when you got fat profits sell sell sell. I see rising prices for at least the rest of obamas term. But he isnt in charge the bankers are.

I also learned in last bubble not to kill yourself improving your flips. Just do basic paint ,carpet. Let the bubble increase the value not your own hard work.

Anyone else got tips how to behave in a multi year RE up cycle or bubble? Obviously renting is to be avoided at any cost.

#politics

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31   Buster   2013 Mar 6, 9:44pm  

I NEVER watch FOX news but actually a decent segment. I believe that this scenario described within is basically true for most real estate markets. I still don't believe that this is the primary reason for increased prices in the SFBay area. I believe that this has been primarily created by a combo tech boom and next to zero new housing being built over the last 5 years.

32   FunTime   2013 Mar 6, 10:34pm  

Buster says

in the SFBay area. I believe that this has been primarily created by a combo tech boom and next to zero new housing being built over the last 5 years.

So you think the balance between houses lost to foreclosure, sales to investors sitting empty is not the primary restriction on supply, but the slow to nothing building that has happened the last five years? That makes sense but I don't remember reading anything making that argument work.

33   MsBennet   2013 Mar 6, 11:51pm  

I agree with the Fox segment, makes perfect sense. But does it apply to SFB area? I don't know. There is pent-up growth and good salaries. I know a couple who just bought (in San Diego Area). They are young professionals and just saved 100K for their down payment in a year's time. People got money here.

34   gbenson   2013 Mar 7, 1:48am  

I think we all just need to concede that the real estate market is not based on fundamentals, and hasn't been for some time. Nor is the stock market.

So the question becomes, how to succeed in an irrational market. What are the warning signs of an implosion? There were town criers in the last market run up nearly the entire time prices were rising. They were right that it was a bubble, but it was a bubble that lasted for 6'ish years, which is plenty of time to make a small fortune.

A better discussion would be: "At what point do you know its time to pull the rip cord and bail out?"

35   PockyClipsNow   2013 Mar 7, 1:59am  

You have to track inventory in your local market like roberto-wog. When its going down prices will trend up. When its way higher and trending higher you might want to list for sale at agressive price - easy to undercut the greed heads asking top dollar in declining market.

Obviously april 15th will only make people buy MORE homes as RE has huge tax savings. Anyway theres no inventory so prices will go up up up until there is much more for sale then stop rising.

Housing is priced way too low now in this 2% mortgage world. You can live in a 500k home for about 1200 a month. You could also rent a 1 bd apt for 1200 a month. Very out of whack. Rents not going down so prices will rise, back to 06 peak in 2 years in nice areas. I see asking prices already at 06 prices.

36   mell   2013 Mar 7, 2:06am  

gbenson says

I think we all just need to concede that the real estate market is not based on fundamentals, and hasn't been for some time. Nor is the stock market.

So the question becomes, how to succeed in an irrational market. What are the warning signs of an implosion? There were town criers in the last market run up nearly the entire time prices were rising. They were right that it was a bubble, but it was a bubble that lasted for 6'ish years, which is plenty of time to make a small fortune.

A better discussion would be: "At what point do you know its time to pull the rip cord and bail out?"

With stocks you can increase your exposure to low-beta and decrease you exposure to high-beta stocks when you get the feeling that it may be time to bail. Plus a few short hedges.

37   epitaph   2013 Mar 7, 4:08am  

MsBennet says

I agree with the Fox segment, makes perfect sense. But does it apply to SFB area? I don't know. There is pent-up growth and good salaries. I know a couple who just bought (in San Diego Area). They are young professionals and just saved 100K for their down payment in a year's time. People got money here.

A young professional is able to save 100K in a year? that would require at least a 230K salary, which is reserved for directors at most companies around here, and those jobs aren't filled by young people. Don't kid yourself, the vast majority of buyers here use FHA 3.5% down or they are investors.

38   PockyClipsNow   2013 Mar 7, 4:37am  

if two IT pros who make 100k each live at home with a parent for a year, they EASILY can save 100k in a year.

Lets remember mulitgenerational households are the norm in the rest of the world. Only in america does everyone 'cant stand thier parents' and have to move out asap. its a pricey luxury.

39   Done   2013 Mar 7, 4:54am  

JodyChunder says

Because the majority of people don't know fuck about shit.

lol

A Shit Leopard Can't Change Its Spots
http://www.youtube.com/embed/24RgMIochm4

40   waiting_for_the_fall   2013 Mar 7, 4:59am  

American immigrants help their kids with college costs, so their kids don't have the debt overhead that baby boomers kids face.
With less debt to pay back, the young professionals can afford to buy a house and save for retirement.

Baby boomers are sucking the life out of their kids future.

41   edvard2   2013 Mar 7, 5:59am  

I can't believe we're right back to where we were- right in a position that got us into trouble during the recession. I bought a year ago, but I am not one bit happy about any sort of housing bubble. The reason is because I've only been in the BA for 12-13 years and I've already seen several bubbles inflate and pop. The end the SAME way every single time, which is to say they screw the economy. From the way I hear people talk about houses here you'd think the recession never-ever happened.

42   gbenson   2013 Mar 7, 6:07am  

edvard2 says

From the way I hear people talk about houses here you'd think the recession never-ever happened.

There was a recession?

43   PockyClipsNow   2013 Mar 7, 6:22am  

Yeah bubbles are stressful it puts me in an mood where i feel
Like i have to be in on it or miss out on ez money. To compare in last bubble people would buy rentals that would bleed money monthly. Now prices and rates are such that most homes will rent at profit even with a mortage. So there is huge upside left. Were only in year 2 of the next up cycle.

44   Philistine   2013 Mar 7, 11:38am  

epitaph says

the vast majority of buyers here use FHA 3.5% down

I used to think that, too. Sadly, when you go shopping for houses, you learn that many people in these hyped markets are actually putting 20% down on $700k starter homes and the 10%-or-less crowd might as well write their offers on toilet paper.

FHA is getting laughed at unless you are shopping in the Inland Empire or buying a ghetto shack for $300k.

45   thomaswong.1986   2013 Mar 7, 6:47pm  

Buster says

I believe that this scenario described within is basically true for most real estate markets. I still don't believe that this is the primary reason for increased prices in the SFBay area. I believe that this has been primarily created by a combo tech boom and next to zero new housing being built over the last 5 years

Tech boom started decades ago..go back to the 70s .. it frankly ended by 2000..
in that time we added over 400 public companies with many employees working in SFBA..
and even then prices didnt inflate to such an insane level.

but today... its different we are down to 200 public companies, not much start ups ... surplus of tech employees..greater focus on media companies and not tech and most employees work outside of SFBA in other states and overseas...

and frankly we added a shit load of housing since 2000 across SFBA.....

no.. its the new insane uninformed migrants coming here... overpaying over borrowing way way over average incomes ...

46   thomaswong.1986   2013 Mar 7, 6:50pm  

Philistine says

are actually putting 20% down on $700k starter homes

they are putting down everything they have saved as down payment !
and rolling the dice... Fools! they will lose their shirt !

47   thomaswong.1986   2013 Mar 7, 6:56pm  

edvard2 says

From the way I hear people talk about houses here you'd think the recession never-ever happened

Like its been said decades ago.. when the economy is down (sneeze), capital spending takes a major downturn (turns to a flu) for equipment/software makers as orders are canceled and shipments go off a cliff.. as such we have deep restructuring, consolidations and layoffs. people often think tech is immune .. but thats not the case... its often magnified in the SFBA.

48   thomaswong.1986   2013 Mar 7, 7:02pm  

epitaph says

A young professional is able to save 100K in a year? that would require at least a 230K salary, which is reserved for directors at most companies around here, and those jobs aren't filled by young people.

that is why afford-ability is down to 20-25% of current owners able to buy their own
home at current market prices and median incomes.. compared to 70-75% in mid 90s.

clearly we havent corrected enough even based on past historical norm...1980-90s

50   exfatguy   2013 Mar 8, 3:21am  

I can't compete with all-cash, so I'm waiting for that bubble to dry up. Since you can't sell a home with a button click like you can stocks, I can somewhat sense investors undercutting their home prices for quicker sales, leading to a quick but sharp dip down.

I saw that 60 Minutes piece of China. If that's where the all-cash money is coming from, it's only a matter of time before that comes falling down to Earth.

51   postbubblesucess   2013 Mar 8, 3:53am  

Lots of people in here said it was foolish to buy 1 year ago. They said prices were going to drop 50+%. I saw conments talking about 1970 levels. Now were hearing words like bubble. I wonder if these people will ever be homeowners. Maybe these are the non working jealous liberals sitting on their asses waiting for the Dems to give them another handout. They already got everything else, food stamps etc.... Why not give em a house? Why should we even work anymore? Maybe I'm just being racist.

52   edvard2   2013 Mar 8, 3:59am  

postbubblesucess says

Maybe these are the non working jealous liberals sitting on their asses waiting for the Dems to give them another handout. They already got everything else, food stamps etc.... Why not give em a house? Why should we even work anymore?

Wrong. I'm a working liberal who saved up a ton of cash and bought last year. WTF does liberal or conservative have to do with housing?

53   gbenson   2013 Mar 8, 4:06am  

exfatguy says

so I'm waiting for that bubble to dry up.

Good luck with that plan. I am an all cash buyer and haven't been able to get anything in 6 months because all these idiots grossly overbidding on anything remotely interesting. I don't see how it's going to stop until inventory opens up dramatically, or we start hitting numbers where speculative investors are having flashbacks of the last crash.

Anyone who bases their offers on sound math is having a really tough go of it and it's only getting worse.

I've already started moving my cash into other investments (I'm starting to give up) because I can't bring myself to play the speculation game.

54   bmwman91   2013 Mar 8, 6:56am  

This is going to be massively entertaining. The fervor is rapidly approaching 2006 levels, and we are only 1 year in. As I have said before, this next bubble is going to be the "real" one and make the last one look like a practice run. The last one was fueled by ignorance and greed with the government being largely unaware of (or just not caring) what was going on. This time, it is fueled by the same ignorance and greed, except that the government is backing it as hard as it possibly can.

While as a prospective house buyer this irritates me greatly, it is at least interesting to watch some people that I thought of as rational, intelligent folks go willy-nilly and do silly things to get into houses. Gotta love those FHA loans! Some friends can afford it fine, but I have a few that I really wonder about. The one upside, although small, is that rents in my area are continuing to soften a little. With "Rental Investnent" being the hot game of the day, rental inventory is starting to increase , especially with all of the very large new apartment complexes that are being built and aimed for completion this summer. Rents went nuts last year, with a 40% spike at one point in Mountain View (and then a 10% drop about 6 months later), so at least I am not going to have to deal with moving because my landlord wants to jack rent up $260.

I am not sure what will initiate the next crash. Wall Street is doing the exact same BS as it did last time, so there is always that time bomb. For the SV more specifically, there is the whole "pile of start-ups with unproven business models" thing, and it probably only takes one blow-up to scare VCs off of the web-media bandwagon. Who knows though. The fact that Zynga is still in business at all tells me that the whole environment is far more irrational than I realize.

The only real solution I see is leaving. I could stay and deal with the workaholic self-important masses of the SV and be a slave to my house, but get nice weather. Or, I could move elsewhere where, generally speaking, the only downside would be the weather and the people inhabiting the area aren't the equivalent of a locust plague in the fields of my happiness and peace of mind. I am stationed in Seattle for the whole month of march and my wife is coming up this weekend to hang out. We have been considering moving here for a couple of years, and I think that we'll decide once and for all this month.

55   PockyClipsNow   2013 Mar 8, 7:07am  

OK heres a tip which I have yet to try (when i do I will let you guys know if it works)

1. approach new listing that is priced 100k under market on purpose to allow listing agent maximum buyer pool.
2. Use listing agent to try and make offer -all cash and verbally say 'hey if you get me this house, i will do a fix n flip and you can list it for me'.
3. CHA- CHING

im pretty sure this is fairly common in high priced low inventory markets.

56   edvard2   2013 Mar 8, 7:11am  

bmwman91 says

While as a prospective house buyer this irritates me greatly, it is at least interesting to watch people that I thought of as rational, intelligent folks go willy-nilly and do silly things to get into houses.

It is indeed ridiculous. We bought last year but I'm pretty sure now we wouldn't be able to. It really did change that fast and for no good reason. To me this massive spike and creation of yet another bubble is a threat to the economy. It doesn't matter whether you own or rent. This is bad for everybody. All bubbles end badly. That this one seems to already be out of control is fairly serious.

57   bmwman91   2013 Mar 8, 7:17am  

edvard2 says

It is indeed ridiculous. We bought last year but I'm pretty sure now we wouldn't be able to. It really did change that fast and for no good reason. To me this massive spike and creation of yet another bubble is a threat to the economy. It doesn't matter whether you own or rent. This is bad for everybody. All bubbles end badly. That this one seems to already be out of control is fairly serious.

Yup. At the end, the only winners are the 0.1% that are driving all of this through our bought congress and Federal Reserve. This is yet another shake-down of the productive classes, and likely the biggest one yet for Americans. The oligarchy is going to push us straight back into Feudalism if nothing gets done about it.

58   David9   2013 Mar 8, 7:19am  

bmwman91 says

Yup. At the end, the only winners are the 0.1% that are driving all of this
through our bought congress and Federal Reserve.

Right on ! I wanted to quote this statement of fact because I believe it is not 'Dr. Obvious' to everyone.

59   bmwman91   2013 Mar 8, 7:23am  

For me, it hit home that there is "officially" a bubble during a cab ride to the San Jose airport last month. The driver started talking to me about RE investment and how it was so easy to make money. All you had to do was get approved for the biggest loan you possibly can and then sell in a year or two to capture the profits. The key is to buy the priciest house that you can since percentage increases on an expensive value mean more money for me, he explained. All of his family members were doing it, or working on doing it, he explained.

So, when cabbies start talking to me about how easy it is to speculate on $700k+ houses in the cities of Santa Clara and Sunnyvale, I know that it is in full swing. I have overheard similar conversations in airport lounges and on airplanes between SJC and Sea-Tac. This is reminiscent of the Joe Kennedy anecdote about how he knew to sell in 1929 because his shoe shine boy started giving him "hot stock tips." The shoe shine boy probably got his own hot tips from Joe, what with him being Catholic and all.....da-dun-CHING! Thank you, thank you, I'll be here all day!

60   lostand confused   2013 Mar 8, 7:26am  

bmwman91 says

The oligarchy is going to push us straight back into Feudalism if nothing gets
done about it.

Which might not be a bad thing-feudalistic socieities were not very kind to the ogliarchs, when they overstayed their welcomes. AF's cannibal anarchy will be real!

61   bmwman91   2013 Mar 8, 7:38am  

lostand confused says

You can still get a home in Phoenix for 160k. Good luck in CA-unless you want to move next door to the crips or the latest greatest gangsta paradise.

Don't be silly. You just need wealthy parents, or to marry someone with wealthy parents, or start a company that sells ad space on web pages.

62   edvard2   2013 Mar 8, 7:40am  

The bubble became clear to me only a few months after we bought. When we were looking there had been a large number of obviously undesirable homes that just simply stayed on the lists. We looked at a few and simply walked out. I mean- these were houses that I would no way in hell even consider. There was usually something fairly seriously wrong with them, like major foundation problems, permit issues, rot issues, weird layouts, or bad locations, like one we saw that was in the middle of a major intersection where 2 roads criss-crossed right in front of the house and there was a road behind it. Within a few months, these houses began to sell.

A house recently came up for sale 6 blocks from us. It was in fairly bad condition. It sold in 3 days. The situation sucks now. After having gone through that situation for years I still find it extremely irritating.

63   PockyClipsNow   2013 Mar 8, 7:45am  

Bubbles been around forever. Jesus was born in a barn because of housing bubble.

64   bmwman91   2013 Mar 8, 7:53am  

PockyClipsNow says

Bubbles been around forever. Jesus was born in a barn because of housing bubble.

Quote of the day!

65   lostand confused   2013 Mar 8, 8:06am  

PockyClipsNow says

Bubbles been around forever. Jesus was born in a barn because of housing bubble.

I thought the whole Jesus thing was a massive money making bubble scheme that never popped?

66   epitaph   2013 Mar 8, 8:43am  

It's a great time for Bernake to raise interest rates.

67   PockyClipsNow   2013 Mar 8, 8:43am  

lostand confused says

PockyClipsNow says

Bubbles been around forever. Jesus was born in a barn because of housing bubble.

I thought the whole Jesus thing was a massive money making bubble scheme that never popped?

Of course. Who gets laid more: an unemployed carpenter or the son of god? Religion is really that simple.

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