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2013 Mar 26, 12:11am   33,504 views  192 comments

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1   PockyClipsNow   2013 Mar 26, 3:20am  

I find it highly entertaining watching the professor school the perma bears who only utilize wishful thinking and cherry picked data.

Patrick needs to add a 'donate $1 to this user' icon on his site so we can make it worthwhile for people to be here (for reasons other than farting around at work to kill time before retiring! ha)

3   anonymous   2013 Mar 26, 3:48am  

Wfc et al are up something like 70% in the past 15 months as well,,,,

Smells more like currency devaluation then organic, wealth producing growth, but hey, pain and pleasure are more like sisters then twins, and some people are in to that kind of shit.

Hey wait a minute, what's that over there rastling round in the bushes? No, its not a snake, and no, you shouldn't set it on fire. Its the 4th branch of of usfedgov, the dark money masters, monetizing ANOTHER 85 billion in dead mort debt. On second thought, maybe you should set that snake on fire,,,,here's some math for ya

Immolation ± self cannabalization

Enjoy your own tail

http://m.newser.com/story/164956/woman-sets-snake-on-fire-burns-down-her-house.html

4   PockyClipsNow   2013 Mar 26, 4:06am  

I'll take a shot:
Los ricos son el diablo.

5   mike2   2013 Mar 26, 4:23am  

He is right. He has been right.Accept it and quiit arguing about it. A lot of energy wasted on proving who is right and who is wrong. Buy some RE if you want to or kep renting. No Big deal.

6   mike2   2013 Mar 26, 4:31am  

Not sure wherew they get there data from but I can tell you for a fact that prices incresed a lot more than 10% in the SF Bay area. More like 20%-30% in most areas. If tou yake San MAteo COunty, Marin County, SF COunty, Contra Costa County , ALameda COunty it is more like 25% increase. Maybe the outlying areas bring it down? I had a house in ROdeo, near Hercules that I bought for $80k last June. I got delayed with permits and finished fixing it up in December. I put it on the markey for $189k and had 10 offers and it is closing at $210k.

I had offers at $225k but it would not appriase at that price but it did appraise at $210k. I put $35k into it in repairs that is a 50% increase in less than a year. Rodeo is a small town off highway 80 35 minutes East of SF and Oakland.The delay helped increase the price.

7   swebb   2013 Mar 26, 4:43am  

errc says

Smells more like currency devaluation then organic, wealth producing growth,

If there is currency devaluation going on, what would be a good way to protect the wealth you have, or to capitalize on the devaluation? I think a tax advantaged, leveraged, low fixed rate loan to buy something that everyone needs (has intrinsic value) makes sense to me.

8   RichieRich   2013 Mar 26, 5:55am  

Why so many negative comments? If you can backup your findings then it's a fact. Robertoaribas is providing facts not made up BS. If you disagree with his facts then provide your own (provide source). No need for name calling or insults. I have been trying to buy a home and have put multiple offers (approx 15) but have been outbid every time, sometimes by over $100,000. Living in the BA is very competitive and if you have the money, great, but for someone like me who is just starting out, it is very difficult to compete with certain buyers (all cash investors). I will not deny that I have missed the train but at least I tried over the past few years. I am still trying to find a good deal, but, so is everyone else.....

9   Monterey   2013 Mar 26, 5:56am  

CameronCrazy says

I actually have an index to measure a lot of things. However, I need to re-do my Douchebag Index because you measure at an 11 and it’s only supposed to go to 10.

awesome! i can't wait to read his "no you're a d-bag" comeback. maybe even "the jerk store called and they're running out of you". but "you're an idiot" is his go to response.

10   anonymous   2013 Mar 26, 6:01am  

Hey, we're all friends here. I just as soon you address me by my first name, jackass!

11   Starrstruck   2013 Mar 26, 12:22pm  

Roberto cites a newspaper article.

Others call him names.

I, for one, appreciate Roberto presenting the facts and his experience in the Phoenix market.

And Phoenix is a great place to live, too!

12   Cheeseus Sonofdog   2013 Mar 26, 1:31pm  

Roberto, please present your fundamentals to justify a 23% increase in prices in just one year. Is that the normal rate of return for residential real estate? Did incomes rise 23%, or even 8.1% year over year? Did property taxes and insurance decrease? What was GDP last time prices were this high in Phoenix. Why is GDP 50% less today? Are consumers being met with lower costs for daily essentials like food and gas, or have most doubled in just a few years?

A quick search shows the median home price in Phoenix in the year 2000 was $112,000. Using the governments official inflation calculator that comes out to $151,000 in today's money. Yet, currently, the median is $242,000. Prices are way out of line, especially considering the proclaimed fear is deflation, deleveraging has yet to fully happen and bubbles usually don't go back to their highs so quickly. And per captia income in Phoenix is $24k. Yep, I am sure that $250k home is affordable and should keep rising 23% every year.

You talk like one of the internet stock traders of the late 1990's. Certain that Etoys was worth $200 and buying it at $100 meant you would double your money. At least then we didn't know how big the internet is. With real estate we have traditional values and very long charts. Just because prices fell 50% from a bubble doesn't make it a great deal if they are still 100% higher than historical values.

13   Y   2013 Mar 26, 2:09pm  

Every now and then his right hand needs a break...

MsBennet says

Roberto started a threaded so he could say "ney-ney-ney-neya, I was right you were wrong" for the umpteenth time. I guess his ego needed its daily stroking.

14   thomaswong.1986   2013 Mar 26, 3:31pm  

robertoaribas says

And yeah, i'm just as flashy as those guys you see on tv: I ride a bicycle to work, and walk my dog for fun. I'm almost purely vegan, and cook my own beans and vegetables at home... I drive a honda.

LOL! you seriously need to dig deep into some nice Angus Steak.. and get a muscle car..

mmmmm! Juicy!

15   thomaswong.1986   2013 Mar 26, 3:34pm  

Homeboy says

I think there are more people in California on this forum than Arizona

Like Arizona, Nevada and SoFla were hot for 2nd homes for retirement..lots of media attention certainly helped push prices down... but plenty of hype remained in CA.

Oddly enough, SoCal doesnt get as much attention as it had for so many decades...
SFBA seems to get the spot light more now days... I think i will shift back we lose
more jobs due to high costs.

16   Homeboy   2013 Mar 26, 3:49pm  

thomaswong.1986 says

Oddly enough, SoCal doesnt get as much attention as it had for so many decades...

SFBA seems to get the spot light more now days... I think i will shift back we lose

more jobs due to high costs.

The Los Angeles market has done better than the San Francisco market, according to Case/Shiller. Both were at 100 in 2000; now Los Angeles is at 180.23 and San Francisco is only at 147.45.

17   thomaswong.1986   2013 Mar 26, 4:25pm  

Homeboy says

The Los Angeles market has done better than the San Francisco market, according to Case/Shiller. Both were at 100 in 2000; now Los Angeles is at 180.23 and San Francisco is only at 147.45.

one should hope its not based on hype, but more on fundamentals.. time will tell how prices correct. from my view, SFBA seems to get more hypsters than prior decades.. if they all have moved back to Socal/LA.. heck i will take that all day long.. its all job killers in SFBA.

one should be careful on what "has done better".

18   ducsingle5313   2013 Mar 26, 5:05pm  

Homeboy says

Not sure what you think you're gloating about.

He just likes to gloat. It doesn't have to be about anything in particular.

What he doesn't seem to realize is that more people would take him seriously if he didn't come off as a complete wanker.

19   CameronCrazy   2013 Mar 26, 11:00pm  

ducsingle5313 says

What he doesn't seem to realize is that more people would take him seriously if he didn't come off as a complete wanker.

Apparently people with superior intellects are pretentious twats.

20   Bigsby   2013 Mar 26, 11:22pm  

David Losh says

Let's see how much debt you can pile onto an unsuspecting public. The fact is you have no clue where pricing for housing units will settle. Even though all indications are that you, along with every one else in today's market place, have paid more than properties are worth.

As his PITI is substantially lower than his rental income, it logically indicates the exact opposite.

21   David Losh   2013 Mar 26, 11:43pm  

Bigsby says

As his PITI is substantially lower than his rental income,

It's still debt, even though some one else pays it, it's an over all drain on the economy.

22   David Losh   2013 Mar 26, 11:46pm  

I actually wanted to post this article that explains the Case Shiller way of looking at housing: http://stream.wsj.com/story/economy-stream/SS-2-17745/SS-2-38872/

"What the index measures: S&P/Case-Shiller covers just 20 of the nation’s largest metros. It is value weighted, meaning more expensive homes have a bigger impact on the home-price reading. New York and Los Angeles alone account for 35% of the composite-20 index, both because these cities are large and because home prices there are among the most expensive in the country, according to Jed Kolko, chief economist at real-estate website Trulia."

23   Bigsby   2013 Mar 26, 11:54pm  

David Losh says

Bigsby says

As his PITI is substantially lower than his rental income,

It's still debt, even though some one else pays it, it's an over all drain on the economy.

I'm not quite sure why someone buying a few undervalued properties would be considered a drain on the economy.

And more to the point, you said he paid more than the properties were worth. No, he didn't.

24   Y   2013 Mar 26, 11:54pm  

so you're a guttersnipe with property??

robertoaribas says

I ride a bicycle to work, and walk my dog for fun. I'm almost purely vegan, and cook my own beans and vegetables at home... I drive a honda.

25   David Losh   2013 Mar 27, 12:42am  

Bigsby says

I'm not quite sure why someone buying a few undervalued properties would be considered a drain on the economy.

And more to the point, you said he paid more than the properties were worth. No, he didn't.

Because of the over all debt. You say under valued, Roberto says under valued, I say you would need to sell them to know for sure.

What we had, as the chart shows is a massive loss of equity. You only have equity if you capture it.

I can put up charts, and graphs all day long to disprove this under valued theory you have. This post is based on sales data, like Case Shiller.

The premise is that housing prices will crash, which I don't buy into. A deal is a deal, and Roberto either got a deal or he didn't. We'll know when the properties are sold.

Oh yeah, that rental income to pay for the property. Some one is paying the debt. Roberto made a deal, and has captured a return based on that rental income, a home buyer isn't that lucky.

You have to calculate over all payments to the value of the property. In most cases the home buyer is still paying twice the purchase price for the property through interest payments. If the home buyer ends up underwater which many have, they are stuck with the debt on a depreciationg asset.

Depreciating asset, look that up, because not all Real Estate is going up in price, or value, any more.

26   Bigsby   2013 Mar 27, 12:58am  

David Losh says

Because of the over all debt. You say under valued, Roberto says under valued, I say you would need to sell them to know for sure.

Why? If he's making far more on rental than PITI, then they are clearly a good value purchase.

David Losh says

I can put up charts, and graphs all day long to disprove this under valued theory you have. This post is based on sales data, like Case Shiller.

Then put up the charts that prove he paid too much for his purchases.

David Losh says

Oh yeah, that rental income to pay for the property. Some one is paying the debt. Roberto made a deal, and has captured a return based on that rental income, a home buyer isn't that lucky.

If a home buyer had wanted one of his properties and got it instead of him, then they too would have made a good deal. They would be living in a house at a cost far lower than renting it.

David Losh says

You have to calculate over all payments to the value of the property. In most cases the home buyer is still paying twice the purchase price for the property through interest payments. If the home buyer ends up underwater which many have, they are stuck with the debt on a depreciationg asset.

A lot of these so called depreciating assets seem to have an unusual habit of appreciating in value. And yes, you pay interest on your loan, but what does that matter if your mortgage payment is substantially lower than the rental cost? And that is not even mentioning that you'll own the house once you've paid the loan off.

Your arguments would make more sense if it was directed at someone who had paid an arm and a leg for their properties and was barely covering their PITI. That person isn't Roberto from the figures he has mentioned.

27   lostand confused   2013 Mar 27, 1:05am  

Everything in moderation. Until 1980 , we had 1 trillion in debt. Reagan tripled it in his short two terms in office. Now we are adding that 1 trillion every year . Personal credit card debt just to buy Chinese made junk that nobody needs is really not that productive.

Now housing fine, because in today's world, there really is not any serious consequence to walking away from your debts, if the market collapses. If it doesn't you get to keep the profits.

28   Bigsby   2013 Mar 27, 1:19am  

The Professor says

The problem is that the fundamentals do not support higher housing prices.

They clearly do in many areas. The BA, LA etc.. aren't the entirety of the US housing market.

29   Bigsby   2013 Mar 27, 1:26am  

David Losh says

You mean by inflation which is tame compared to the trillions of dollars the Fed has dumped into the economy.

In terms of wealth creation appreciation would need to be in excess of inflated dollars.

You don't say. And like I said, plenty of people over the years have found that their property has appreciated in value above the rate of inflation. Others have lost out. Such is life.

Are you going to post those graphs that will ruin Roberto's day?

30   David Losh   2013 Mar 27, 1:30am  

Bigsby says

Then put up the charts that prove he paid too much for his purchases.

How many do you want? http://money.cnn.com/2012/02/28/real_estate/home_prices/index.htm

This indicates that after the great bottom call that Roberto had for 2010? I can't keep track of the BS, prices fell to 2002 levels.

Just because some one pays more for a property than it is worth doesn't increase the value of the property.

I'll say it again, it is the greater fool principle.

Look it, there are always good deals, every day, in the Real Estate market place. A Real Estate transaction is between a buyer, and a seller.

Any time some yahoo starts making blanket statements about the Real Estate market place I know they don't know what the heck they are talking about.

Was Case Shiller a mistake? Sure, but it is there to sell mortgages to the unsuspecting public.

31   Bigsby   2013 Mar 27, 1:36am  

David Losh says

How many do you want? http://money.cnn.com/2012/02/28/real_estate/home_prices/index.htm

A lot more than that for starters. On what planet does that demonstrate he paid too much for his purchases? Unless you are now trying to peddle some kind of line that if he'd waited a few more weeks to buy, he could have bought them for even less, so look... he overpaid for them!!

32   David Losh   2013 Mar 27, 1:40am  

Bigsby says

And like I said, plenty of people over the years

That was then this is now.

I think you have to go back to the 1930s to see the amount of equity loss we have had in the past decade.

It makes me nervous enough to want to do something else.

And yeah, I can do this all day long with the charts, and graphs.

This shows the increases after the 2009 bottom, if you want to call it that, to a top, and then another decline.

Geez, that looks like complete volitility to me, not the safe haven investment we have seen traditionally.

33   Bigsby   2013 Mar 27, 1:41am  

David Losh says

Look it, there are always good deals, every day, in the Real Estate market place. A Real Estate transaction is between a buyer, and a seller.

Any time some yahoo starts making blanket statements about the Real Estate market place I know they don't know what the heck they are talking about.

Blanket statements? You specifically said that he (along with everyone else) had overpaid. Talk about blanket statements.

34   Bigsby   2013 Mar 27, 1:47am  

David Losh says

Bigsby says

And like I said, plenty of people over the years

That was then this is now.

I think you have to go back to the 1930s to see the amount of equity loss we have had in the past decade.

It makes me nervous enough to want to do something else.

And yeah, I can do this all day long with the charts, and graphs.

And the relevance of that to his purchases is what exactly? For someone who doesn't like blanket statements, you sure have a proclivity for making them.

35   David Losh   2013 Mar 27, 1:52am  

Bigsby says

Blanket statements? You specifically said that he (along with everyone else) had overpaid.

Yeah, that's true, you got me, because you are right, there is a deal a day in Real Estate.

You're right, I was too focused on the point at hand.

37   Homeboy   2013 Mar 27, 4:39am  

thomaswong.1986 says

one should hope its not based on hype, but more on fundamentals.. time will tell how prices correct. from my view, SFBA seems to get more hypsters than prior decades.. if they all have moved back to Socal/LA.. heck i will take that all day long.. its all job killers in SFBA.

one should be careful on what "has done better"

It was merely an observation. Although some might think otherwise, not everything written here is intended as an investment strategy.

38   David Losh   2013 Mar 27, 4:55am  

SFace says

not buying in the SFBA was disasterous, no other way around it.

Is this another crystal ball observation?

Did you read the report?

39   CameronCrazy   2013 Mar 27, 5:53am  

robertoaribas says

David: I am not missing anything. the problem is, you are not intelligent, and I am, so you don't understand 2/3 of what I write. you are a fat stupid middle aged guy

ZING!

Everyone drink when Roberto calls someone stupid.

40   skeptic   2013 Mar 27, 12:29pm  

David Losh says

"back again, with his mindless nonsense... you know david lousy brain, I bought the following homes:

single family homes:

60K rented 825, worth 100K today
76k rented 950, worth 120K today
80K rented 1100, worth 140K today"

Now I'm not saying that RE is not a good investment. However, when you state "worth 100K today" you lose all credibility. Until you sell it it is only worth its cash flow. During the bubble, people kept saying: my RE is worth this and that. We know how that worked out for them. Things are worth something at time of sale. Until then they worth nothing.

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