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1   Malcolm   2020 Apr 4, 7:22pm  

It's magnifying what was going to be a moderate downturn. This is gonna be a great ride. Keep your powder dry.
2   FuckTheMainstreamMedia   2020 Apr 4, 7:37pm  

Good.

I also hope greedy unecessarily stubborn landlords suck on it hard.
3   Malcolm   2020 Apr 4, 7:48pm  

CovfefeButDeadly says
I also hope greedy unnecessarily stubborn landlords suck on it hard.


Maybe it's tenants that are stingy. FYI, landlords don't make a killing on rents, they sometimes make a killing on the sale. Typical capitalization rates are 5-8%, with very high risk. One can usually do better buying a bond.
4   FuckTheMainstreamMedia   2020 Apr 4, 10:49pm  

Malcolm says
CovfefeButDeadly says
I also hope greedy unnecessarily stubborn landlords suck on it hard.


Maybe it's tenants that are stingy. FYI, landlords don't make a killing on rents, they sometimes make a killing on the sale. Typical capitalization rates are 5-8%, with very high risk. One can usually do better buying a bond.


Anyone who bought in LA more than 5 years ago is making a literal killing on their rental units. Rents skyrocketed.
5   marcus   2020 Apr 4, 11:02pm  

:
Is the net result of all this going to be another round of assets being picked up on the cheap by the wealthy, foreign investors, and private equity funds ?

I don't know how NoCoup and some of the other Trump Cucks can think I'm happy about this.
6   BayArea   2020 Apr 4, 11:08pm  

CCN, come on
7   HeadSet   2020 Apr 5, 6:42am  

Is the net result of all this going to be another round of assets being picked up on the cheap by the wealthy, foreign investors, and private equity funds ?

Plus the opportunity for savers to buy a residence or investment property.
8   Malcolm   2020 Apr 5, 7:03am  

CovfefeButDeadly says
Anyone who bought in LA more than 5 years ago is making a literal killing on their rental units. Rents skyrocketed.


That's the exception, not the rule.
9   Tenpoundbass   2020 Apr 5, 9:30am  

I really hope when the manufacturing coming back from China(and it is/will) wont come to our already existing over crowded over priced cities.
I hope Trump will take this opportunity to employ my only sensible plan and build up 10 back water towns, and put the factories, plants and manufacturing there. So there will be so much mass exodus from our over crowded cities. That the median price of a house will return back to $79K - $120K to commiserate with the median income.
We should all get back to fundamental Dutch Economics. Your housing should not exceed 25% of your income. Anything above that, was just a con job the previous administration and their banker overlords sold American to make them debt slaves and to give them a false sense of Home Ownership. Those idiots only owned a house for as long as they were making the upper limits of a 6 figure income. It's unrealistic to expect everyone in America to make that kind of money.

Let's torch this puppy!
10   GNL   2020 Apr 5, 9:47am  

My daughter married a trustfunder almost 2 years ago. The family owns about 6,000 rental units and over 1,000,000 square feet of commercial space. I wonder how this is going to affect them.
11   BayArea   2020 Apr 5, 9:52am  

WineHorror1 says
My daughter married a trustfunder almost 2 years ago. The family owns about 6,000 rental units and over 1,000,000 square feet of commercial space. I wonder how this is going to affect them.


Who cares, most are more concerned about the family of (4) who is living paycheck to paycheck and the primary breadwinner just lost their job.
12   Patrick   2020 Apr 5, 10:04am  

More affordable housing! Yes!

Of course the government will try to prop it up again to benefit the elite who live from the mortgage-slavery of the masses, but it's not clear that they can this time. It's just too massive a problem.

Government policy should always be to keep housing as affordable as possible, or to at least stop with the bullshit loan guarantees that are used to trap so many people.
13   BayArea   2020 Apr 5, 10:15am  

Patrick says
More affordable housing! Yes!


Yes, let’s hope!
14   FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden   2020 Apr 5, 10:23am  

APOCALYPSEFUCKisShostakovitch says
IT'S CASH OR FUCK YOU. AMERICA!


Cannibal anarchy
15   GNL   2020 Apr 5, 10:38am  

Patrick says
More affordable housing! Yes!

Of course the government will try to prop it up again to benefit the elite who live from the mortgage-slavery of the masses, but it's not clear that they can this time. It's just too massive a problem.

Government policy should always be to keep housing as affordable as possible, or to at least stop with the bullshit loan guarantees that are used to trap so many people.

I'm a real estate photographer. A Realtor client of mine, who seems like a very smart guy (made a killing in REO back in 08/09) says national average will fall to around $110,000. It's at $250,000+ now. He says REO will be double that of 08/09.

We shall see.
16   steveincali   2020 Apr 5, 10:45am  

Malcolm says
Maybe it's tenants that are stingy. FYI, landlords don't make a killing on rents, they sometimes make a killing on the sale. Typical capitalization rates are 5-8%, with very high risk. One can usually do better buying a bond.


LOL! The renters are stingy? In a lot of cases, landlords over extend themselves trying to make a profit off the backs of the poor. If greedy fucks would stop buying "rental" properties than home prices would settle to a point where the average worker could afford to buy their own place. It's the folks with too much money buying shit up that screws the housing market. No matter how much they have, the rich just need more and MORE...and as they get more the rest get less and LESS. If you're fortunately to own a place just be happy with that and give the rest a chance to buy their own place.
17   Tenpoundbass   2020 Apr 5, 10:50am  

WineHorror1 says
I'm a real estate photographer. A Realtor client of mine, who seems like a very smart guy (made a killing in REO back in 08/09) says national average will fall to around $110,000. It's at $250,000+ now. He says REO will be double that of 08/09.

We shall see.

There needs to be a federal Property tax on any more than two single family homes. You can have a second provided you spit your residence throughout the year in both.
18   just_passing_through   2020 Apr 5, 11:01am  

steveincali says
If greedy fucks would stop buying "rental" properties than home prices would settle to a point where the average worker could afford to buy their own place.


I have your TP too Steve! Because the world is a zero sum game just like you imagine it is! Muahaha!
19   Patrick   2020 Apr 5, 11:32am  

marcus says
Is the net result of all this going to be another round of assets being picked up on the cheap by the wealthy, foreign investors, and private equity funds ?


Maybe not. All those investors and funds have a lot less money than they did at the beginning of the year.

The real risk to the public is the Fed buying up mortgages again with newly printed cash.
20   mell   2020 Apr 5, 11:34am  

Fortwaynemobile says
APOCALYPSEFUCKisShostakovitch says
IT'S CASH OR FUCK YOU. AMERICA!


Cannibal anarchy


The moment AF has waited for since 2008! Ammo, M134s, Yams and FACE!
21   HeadSet   2020 Apr 5, 12:15pm  

Patrick says
More affordable housing! Yes!

Of course the government will try to prop it up again to benefit the elite who live from the mortgage-slavery of the masses, but it's not clear that they can this time. It's just too massive a problem.

Government policy should always be to keep housing as affordable as possible, or to at least stop with the bullshit loan guarantees that are used to trap so many people.



Two things must change for that:
1. Phase out the 30 year gov backed loan. Easy credit always pushes up prices.
2. Require all foreclosed property to be marked to market on the books. Right now a bank would rather keep a foreclosed property on the books at original price, rather than sell at market and take a hit in total bank "assets" and related reserve requirements.
22   Onvacation   2020 Apr 5, 3:40pm  

Patrick says
Fed buying up mortgages again with newly printed cash.

Why do we allow a private bank to control our money supply?

Rhetorical question, not expecting cogent answers.
23   Malcolm   2020 Apr 5, 5:29pm  

HeadSet says
2. Require all foreclosed property to be marked to market on the books. Right now a bank would rather keep a foreclosed property on the books at original price, rather than sell at market and take a hit in total bank "assets" and related reserve requirements.


This isn't rational. No one has a right to insist that a private business take a loss on an asset like that. The "market" always has a chance to buy the house at the trustee sale. They almost never do. The simple reason is that the amount owed exceeds what the market will bear, so the bank ends up with the house. An empty house is perishable inventory, so banks are not going to sit on a bunch of empty houses for very long. A lot of times, they cooperate with former owners and tenants, so that they can, and no one has a right to interfere in those relationships either.
24   HeadSet   2020 Apr 6, 9:12am  

No one has a right to insist that a private business take a loss on an asset like that.

I would agree if the loan were private, with no gov backing at all. Even so, there used to be laws about how much REO a bank could have, specifically to stop banks from carrying depressed assets at full value against the reserve requirement.

An empty house is perishable inventory, so banks are not going to sit on a bunch of empty houses for very long.

Many years ago, when I was actively looking for unwanted houses, I found that banks did exactly that, and sat on empty houses for years. The bank would not sell unless I offered an amount equal to the loan balance and then some. I also heard this is a "comp" issue. If the bank sold a house cheap, it lowers the values of other housing loan assets they may have, performing or not. Like a Real Estate Agent that does not like to see a "bargain" sale lowering the comps for her listings.
25   HeadSet   2020 Apr 6, 9:26am  

If you don’t have cash, don’t even think about buying, the cash buyer’s lower offer will always be accepted over your questionable financing offer.

Not just because it is questionable. Oft times a mortgage type buyer want the seller to pay mortgage related closing costs.
26   WookieMan   2020 Apr 6, 9:37am  

HeadSet says
Many years ago, when I was actively looking for unwanted houses, I found that banks did exactly that, and sat on empty houses for years. The bank would not sell unless I offered an amount equal to the loan balance and then some. I also heard this is a "comp" issue. If the bank sold a house cheap, it lowers the values of other housing loan assets they may have, performing or not. Like a Real Estate Agent that does not like to see a "bargain" sale lowering the comps for her listings.

They 100% sit on empty houses. They will also sit on pre-foreclosure properties for extra months or even years depending on the area before officially foreclosing. This is 100% fact. This industry was my life for about 3-4 years that paid the bills a decade ago.

There's also staggering mismanagement with handling short sales and foreclosures on the banks end, 3rd party vendors as the gatekeepers and real estate brokers doing stuff they were never trained to do. The little hottie 30 year old broker selling houses with her tits and ass, has zero clue how to manage a vacant asset. So they go to shit and the banks lose even more money.

If it gets bad again, banks managing these situations better are going to raise the floor on prices falling too low. Prices dropped way lower than they should have around 2008-10 due to pure mismanagement and never having experiencing what happened. I don't expect that to happen again. Though prices are likely to drop.
27   Malcolm   2020 Apr 6, 10:04am  

HeadSet says
I would agree if the loan were private, with no gov backing at all. Even so, there used to be laws about how much REO a bank could have, specifically to stop banks from carrying depressed assets at full value against the reserve requirement.


Excellent point, and I have often wondered what stops banks from doing that. Why ever declare someone in default? Just sit back and be a silent partner instead of a lender.
28   FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden   2020 Apr 6, 10:08am  

Mortgages postponed by 3 month
Stimulus checks arriving for every loser

It’s not gonna crash that much.
29   Malcolm   2020 Apr 6, 10:11am  

HeadSet says
Many years ago, when I was actively looking for unwanted houses, I found that banks did exactly that, and sat on empty houses for years. The bank would not sell unless I offered an amount equal to the loan balance and then some. I also heard this is a "comp" issue. If the bank sold a house cheap, it lowers the values of other housing loan assets they may have, performing or not. Like a Real Estate Agent that does not like to see a "bargain" sale lowering the comps for her listings.


Again, solid. The 2008 crash taught banks some of those lessons. You are forgetting that banks weren't selling to individuals like me or yourself. There were so many foreclosures that they were literally bundled in groups of 100s and sold in what are called tranches. Many were bought up under TARP and then given to select institutions to try to dispose of.
30   GNL   2020 Apr 6, 11:21am  

HeadSet says
No one has a right to insist that a private business take a loss on an asset like that.

I would agree if the loan were private, with no gov backing at all. Even so, there used to be laws about how much REO a bank could have, specifically to stop banks from carrying depressed assets at full value against the reserve requirement.

An empty house is perishable inventory, so banks are not going to sit on a bunch of empty houses for very long.

Many years ago, when I was actively looking for unwanted houses, I found that banks did exactly that, and sat on empty houses for years. The bank would not sell unless I offered an amount equal to the loan balance and then some. I also heard this is a "comp" issue. If the bank sold a house cheap, it lowers the values of other housing loan assets they may have, performing or not. Like a Real Estate Agent that does not like to see a "bargain" sale lowering the comps for her listings.

This is illegal in so many ways. Too bad they're TBTF.
31   richwicks   2020 Apr 6, 12:08pm  

WineHorror1 says
My daughter married a trustfunder almost 2 years ago. The family owns about 6,000 rental units and over 1,000,000 square feet of commercial space. I wonder how this is going to affect them.


It might bankrupt them. The people I know like this have extreme amounts of debt. They essentially work for the banks. What they worry about most is their credit rating. They are in the maximum amount of debt they possibly can be. How many landlords do you know who have actually paid off their mortgages? They never do, they borrow against property to buy more property. This works until it doesn't.

We'll see, but I think we'll be walking out of this in a very different world. I wouldn't be surprised to see massive bankruptcies. We'll see.

I think what might possibly be happening is that we're seeing a covert operation against the banking cartel. Maybe that's too much to hope for, but it's a possibility.
32   Patrick   2020 Apr 6, 12:34pm  

Onvacation says
Patrick says
Fed buying up mortgages again with newly printed cash.

Why do we allow a private bank to control our money supply?

Rhetorical question, not expecting cogent answers.


The misconception is that it's "our" money.

It's not even our country at all. It belongs to Wall Street, bankers, the US Chamber of Commerce, all of them globalists. We are only their fodder, as someone else just said.

Our only defense is democracy, but they are damn good at subverting that by dividing us.

Trump was a rare glitch in the Matrix. He was never supposed to be allowed to win, just to run as an easy punching bag for Hillary and her ilk.

They forgot to shut down democracy completely, though they do pretty completely control the press. And the people escaped their total control, for a moment.
33   richwicks   2020 Apr 6, 12:44pm  

Patrick says
They forgot to shut down democracy completely, though they do pretty completely control the press. And the people escaped their total control, for a moment.


I don't think the press is going to regain its credibility any time soon. Hell, they have to practically shove it down people's throat to get them to watch it. Most comments on youtube of a mainstream "news" program are obviously bots, which is why they never respond or show any ability to have a conversation.

I'd say George W. Bush broke the illusion when he lied the nation into Iraq, this gave an opportunity for the Daily Show to painstakingly cover all the lies of the Bush administration, then we ended up with ReBush Obama as prezdident meat puppet, all the "left wing" media fell in line to support him while he was bombing nations all over the world, and Trump finally came up and said the "fake news" is the enemy of the American people, so they lied for 3 years about Russia Collusion.

They're not recovering from this. This is the real reason the Internet was created, to destroy the propaganda systems. It took 20 years long then I thought it would, but it seems to be here, finally.
34   BoomAndBustCycle   2020 Apr 6, 1:25pm  

Can’t have it both ways. Patrick claiming this virus is a scam and nothing burger... then also claiming our economy can’t recover from 2-3 months of hitting the pause button... is just nonsensical. If the virus proves to be nothing... we will be on a v-shaped recovery by end of the summer. If it proves as the experts expect... then yeah, this will be bad.
35   richwicks   2020 Apr 6, 2:08pm  

BoomAndBustCycle says
Can’t have it both ways. Patrick claiming this virus is a scam and nothing burger... then also claiming our economy can’t recover from 2-3 months of hitting the pause button... is just nonsensical. If the virus proves to be nothing... we will be on a v-shaped recovery by end of the summer. If it proves as the experts expect... then yeah, this will be bad.


Here's how it was explained to me.

Business cannot pay their bills because they are shut down
Tenets cannot pay their rent
Mortgage owners can't pay their mortgage
Borrowers cannot pay any of their debt

This means:

Banks don't get their money
Depositors can't access their money

We'll see, but I expect we'll be in quite a different world only 2 months from now.

It doesn't matter if the virus is a scam or not, the economy is largely shut down. People live off from debt, they don't have savings. There are plenty of people that are just one paycheck away from homelessness. I'll be surprised if this isn't a game changer, and I wouldn't be a bit surprised to find out this mandatory shutdown is cover for something else.

It was just last September the Repo market broke down. This is where a bank needs a bunch of cash to make payroll, they'll have the money in 24 hours, but they need a literal over-night loan. Well, banks stopped trusting other banks balance sheets, so the Federal reserve took over the market. That is how tight credit is. These giant corporations have no savings either, they borrow against all their assets, and the banks often look the other way on their assets - to a point.

Shutting down the economy for everybody for a week is bad enough. We'll know for certain soon enough, but this is not really about a pandemic or protecting citizens. It's about a controlled implosion of the economy I suspect. Meanwhile, people are stockpiling toilet paper. You might want to think about stockpiling rice and beans.
36   B.A.C.A.H.   2020 Apr 6, 2:27pm  

richwicks says
This means:

Banks don't get their money
Depositors can't access their money


richwicks,

The roadmap is what happened with failed banks like IndyMac in the US, and other banks in places like Iceland, Cyprus, Greece during the financial crisis. Daily withdrawal limits for insured deposits.
37   BoomAndBustCycle   2020 Apr 6, 2:43pm  

I just got approved for a $100k heloc... so the market still is working for the time being. That amount will last me 3-4 years of mortgage payments if I lose my job. I won’t lose my house. Another reason why buying a home 10 years ago was the smartest decision of my life.
38   Malcolm   2020 Apr 6, 2:51pm  

BoomAndBustCycle says
I just got approved for a $100k heloc... so the market still is working for the time being. That amount will last me 3-4 years of mortgage payments if I lose my job. I won’t lose my house. Another reason why buying a home 10 years ago was the smartest decision of my life.


Great time to buy, I think you nailed it.
39   B.A.C.A.H.   2020 Apr 6, 5:33pm  

Malcolm says
$100k heloc... so the market still is working for the time being. That amount will last me 3-4 years of mortgage payments


Borrowing money to make the mortgage sounds like a perpetual motion machine or Fed monetization of debt.
40   BoomAndBustCycle   2020 Apr 6, 6:16pm  

B.A.C.A.H. says
Malcolm says
$100k heloc... so the market still is working for the time being. That amount will last me 3-4 years of mortgage payments


Borrowing money to make the mortgage sounds like a perpetual motion machine or Fed monetization of debt.
If it comes down to it... you do what you can to survive. Makes more sense then trying to sell in a down market. Small businesses and individuals with assets or cash reserves need to think out of the box if they lose a job income in the short term. If you lost your job and sold your house in 2008 for a loss and cashed out your 401k to survive you screwed up royally. If you were able to think ahead and got a large credit line and lived off it until you got a new job and maintained those assets and 401k cash in stocks.... you made out very well. I’ve thankfully kept my job... but I’m preparing as if I lost it... or will lose it.

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