0
0

Only 5 to 10% and in the long run it doesn't matter ...


               
2007 Jan 2, 5:38am   14,958 views  158 comments

by StuckInBA   follow (0)  

Happy New Year to you all ! Hope everyone had a great holiday.

There is a new kool-aid flavor in town. During the holiday parties, I sensed a different mood and encountered a new argument. Coincidentally, I also overheard a similar argument while in the line at a local Safeway.

Here is a snippet of conversation between two males, standing behind me in the line while I was paying.

First : So did you buy a house yet ?
Second : No man, still waiting. Prices seem to be coming down.
First : Oh common. They won't go down much. Maybe 5 to 10%. At the most. And you know what, in the long run it doesn't matter.
Second : Yeah, that's right.

I completed my payment and had to leave, so I do not know how it ended.

Now, it's not a completely wrong argument. But when it was made to be, I calmly pointed out that 5 to 10% of a typical BA home (800K to 1M range) is anywhere from 40K to 100K. This amount is nothing to sneeze at. Considering how long it takes to save this amount of money, IT DOES MATTER ! The discussion ended right there.

Given the most bullish scenario seems to be for prices to stay same in 2007, there is absolutely no harm in waiting. Even in that case, I will have saved more for my down payment, which would help offset any increase in mortgage rates.

Assuming many would come to similar conclusions, I think it is very safe to make one prediction. This year, buyers will not feel the pressure. There is no hurry to buy in 2007.

StuckInBA

#housing

Comments 1 - 30 of 158       Last »     Search these comments

1   GammaRaze   @   2007 Jan 2, 5:48am  

Considering that the sellers are only now starting to reduce prices and starting to panic a bit, I think all buyers should wait as long as possible.

If 2007 continues the way 2006 has been, it could trigger country-wide panic amongst sellers and restore prices closer to where they should be.

2   e   @   2007 Jan 2, 5:56am  

Now, it’s not a completely wrong argument. But when it was made to be, I calmly pointed out that 5 to 10% of a typical BA home (800K to 1M range) is anywhere from 40K to 100K. This amount is nothing to sneeze at.

Though arguably if you assume just 1% annual appreciation, a 10% drop will be made back in ~11 years. 8% in ~9 years.

3   FormerAptBroker   @   2007 Jan 2, 6:19am  

Five to ten percent matters if you put no money down and plan to flip the property...

The URL below says:

"based on what we could find on Amazon, more Flipper books have been published over the one year period ending March 2007 than we could find over the previous 20 years -- combined."

http://tinyurl.com/yxea4n

4   DinOR   @   2007 Jan 2, 6:39am  

FAB,

Priceless link, thanks! Old Robert Cote had made a comment that was.... well, in character shall we say?

5   DinOR   @   2007 Jan 2, 6:48am  

Stuck in BA,

Excellent thread. Given the evaporation of sales volume I'D have to say a 5-10% correction (even for the BA) is just so much wishful thinking. Most of the feedback we got towards year end was that frustrated sellers FS's (TM) will be attempting to "get the jump" on other FS's by re-listing as early as the 2nd week of JAN! More normally this wouldn't occur until what, March? Maybe even April?

Oh and just a quick thought from the previous thread? Mutual Fund loads aren't a "perfect" analogy b/c they A) decrease in time, B) are *not* added to the cost for the next buyer and C) eventually go away altogether. IMHO.

6   Sylvie   @   2007 Jan 2, 6:59am  

Any predictions for so cal? Wouldn't it be a larger percentage than BA? Who will hit bottom first northern or southern cal? Bring out your crystal balls...

7   HARM   @   2007 Jan 2, 7:08am  

The conversation between these math-challenged Bay Aryans is a prime example of mental accounting and the power of denial in action.

8   e   @   2007 Jan 2, 7:52am  

Here's a good example of the economics of why renting would've been better than buying this Mountain View condo:

http://www.burbed.com/2007/01/02/12-price-drop-in-1br1ba-condo-in-mountain-view/

Of course, how long this will remain true is unknown.

9   e   @   2007 Jan 2, 8:01am  

Oh and just a quick thought from the previous thread? Mutual Fund loads aren’t a “perfect” analogy b/c they A) decrease in time, B) are *not* added to the cost for the next buyer and C) eventually go away altogether. IMHO.

What makes loads decrease?

Do people even buy into funds that have loads? I thought that was rule #1.

10   MtViewRenter   @   2007 Jan 2, 8:03am  

eburbed:

That condo building is on my block. The one bedroom places leaves a lot to be desired. Though a number of units have ok-sized patios.

Re: the 5-10% comment. Maybe it's coming from a sense of easy-come, easy-go? It's not like they were financial geniuses that worked hard to earn that equity in the first place.

11   StuckInBA   @   2007 Jan 2, 8:08am  

patrickm Says:

So can Patrick or someone tell us when is a good time to buy. Since I just don’t get the mathematics or the economics of perpetual renters making out better than a purchaser of property.

Giving you a benefit of doubt. No one knows what is the right time to buy for someone else. The decision is based on both tangibles and non-tangibles.

Go to Randy's site http://capitalism2.org/ and use the bubblizer to put in your numbers. This will help you solve the tangibles part of the equation.

How much utility / pleasure you derive from owning a particular house is only you can decide. How much ownership premium is best for you ? Only you know.

12   MtViewRenter   @   2007 Jan 2, 8:14am  

[i]What makes loads decrease?

Do people even buy into funds that have loads? I thought that was rule #1. [/i]

The backend loads decrease after you hold onto it for a while. Typically, I think it decreases by 1% for each additional year you hold it. So for a 5% deferred load, it's 5% in the first year, 4% the second year, so on. But some shops don't have the graduated scale and make you hold it for a set number of years before removing the load entirely.

NIA

13   e   @   2007 Jan 2, 8:16am  

So I see what you mean over the short term, but longterm the purchaser will eventually own the property

That's why interest only loans are so popular right now - so that the purchaser never actually owns the property.

14   MtViewRenter   @   2007 Jan 2, 8:16am  

Oops, forgot how to use the italics tag properly.... Oh well.

15   e   @   2007 Jan 2, 8:23am  

troll threshold has been reached

16   OO   @   2007 Jan 2, 8:25am  

What do you guys think of the rivermark condo fire?

A potential insurance fraud since these are freshly finished condos that have little chance of getting unloaded at a price that makes sense to the seller?

I predict more "fire" on soon-to-be-finished condo projects in the Bay Area for 2007, mark my words.

17   skibum   @   2007 Jan 2, 8:29am  

you sound bitter for some reason? What have I done to hurt you? Sometimes it’s just more prudent for someone who wants to put down roots for his family to purchase a home and build equity and leave it for his offspring.

Ding Ding Ding! Troll alert, troll alert!

patrickm's first comment was possibly genuine. The second one about "longterm the purchaser will eventually own the property and the renter would have nothing" is making a false assumption that "renters" here plan never to buy, if you're generous to patrickm. Now the "SP - you sound bitter for some reason" comment seals the deal.

Are you a realtor (TM)? Or maybe you're planning to sell this spring? Getting worried about the upcoming year?

18   skibum   @   2007 Jan 2, 8:29am  

@eburbed,

You made the same conclusion, only more concisely...

19   skibum   @   2007 Jan 2, 8:33am  

cypook,

Interesting, interesting. For everyone else, here's the merc story about the fire:

http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/16368645.htm

The timing IS a bit fishy, isn't it...

20   StuckInBA   @   2007 Jan 2, 8:45am  

patrickm Says:
So I see what you mean over the short term, but longterm the purchaser will eventually own the property and the renter would have nothing.

Hmmm. I think I agree with eburbed and skibum.

But you are right patrickm. When renters are thrown out on the street by their landlords they burn the saved $ bills to protect their poor children from cold. So eventually, they end up having nothing.

21   HARM   @   2007 Jan 2, 8:54am  

in the last 50 years which period of time would you have purchased in?

Ahhh... the sweet, putrid smell of Troll. The year-round gift that keeps on giving!

Ok, ummm "patrickm" (CuriousCat, MP, LittleWorried, whatever), assuming I had a time machine and a wad full of Fed bubblebucks, I would go back as far as possible as buy as much prime coastal property as I could get my mitts on. Too bad I've never gotten my time machine to go in reverse, though. Your point?

22   e   @   2007 Jan 2, 8:55am  

Let’s do my question retrospectively, in the last 50 years which period of time would you have purchased in?

That's actually a pretty good question. If I knew that Prop 13 was going to pass, I would've bought right before then.

But being that I wasn't born yet, that would've been difficult.

23   e   @   2007 Jan 2, 8:58am  

I initially thought about arson for that too, but aren’t apartment buildings in the Bay Area usually rented? The rental market is still pretty strong in Santa Clara I heard (I don’t keep up with it though, so if someone knows otherwise, please let me know.)

Apartment Building doesn't necessarily mean rentals - it could have been a condoplex.

The only way to know for sure would be find out more about that site. I'm not familiar with that part of San Jose, other than I drove through once and wondered "This is the famous Rivermark that they keep boasting about in newspapers? There's one dinky strip mall and that's it!"

24   GammaRaze   @   2007 Jan 2, 9:21am  

Patrickm, out of the $2200 what portion is principal and how much is interest? The interest doesn't buy you the property, only the principal does. The interest is what you pay ON TOP OF what you owe for the property you wish to purchase.

If you separate out the interest and the principal and consider the former to be "not buying me anything" and if you assume that prices are not gonna go up much beyond inflation (best case I think), then you will realize how your mortgage payment is a bad idea.

25   Peter P   @   2007 Jan 2, 9:29am  

I wonder what $2200 a month can buy nowadays with 20% down.

26   StuckInBA   @   2007 Jan 2, 9:34am  

patrickm Says:

Random lets’s assume, I’m saving $1200/month on a mortgage of $2200/month by paying rent of $945.00/mth. I invest the 1200 at a return of about 8% annually. The 945 is still getting me nothing. The $2200 is getting me ownership of property ...

How much of that $2200 is giving you ownership (principal) and how much of it (interest) gets you nothing ? How much is the monthly property tax, HOA, insurance that the owner has to pay ?

The biggest mistake I have ACTUALLY seen people make is comparing mortgage payment to rent, and ignoring property tax. At 800K-1M range the property tax alone comes close to a frightening 1K per month. I am talking about people who used their stock option gains to buy expensive houses and now are getting crushed under property tax. Yes, they made a cool 1M in stock options, spent all of that in buying the house - BUT property taxes is not one time thing. They continue their onslaught every year, quite mercilessly.

The second biggest mistake I have again seen people make is NOT factor in HOA - especially if the are buying a condo/TH. Like taxes, they bleed you every month. Non stop. I have seen HOAs in the 300+ per month. The only thing certain about them is over time HOA will GO UP.

27   Paul189   @   2007 Jan 2, 9:35am  

I'm not sure where you find a 30 year fixed at 5% without paying points. patrickm do you know something I don't?

28   GammaRaze   @   2007 Jan 2, 9:37am  

Yes, patrickm, even with a 30 yr fixed at 5%, if you buy at the peak and the value of the house goes down after you bought it, you have not only overpaid for the house but also overpaid interest to buy something that is less valuable than when you bought it.

You are right when you say "at the end I will have something" but if you have paid more than what it is worth, it is a loss no matter how you slice it.

29   e   @   2007 Jan 2, 9:38am  

I wonder what $2200 a month can buy nowadays with 20% down.

http://www.dinkytown.com/java/MortgageFixedvsNegAm.html

Option "Suicide" ARM: $768,750 - a very small house in Sunnyvale

ARM Interest Only: $662,500 - a fixer upper in Sunnyvale

30 Year ARM: $512,500 - a nice 2br/2ba condo in Sunnyvale

30 Year Fixed: $447,500 - a 2br/2ba condo in Sunnyvale

30   e   @   2007 Jan 2, 9:40am  

The biggest mistake I have ACTUALLY seen people make is comparing mortgage payment to rent, and ignoring property tax.

To be fair though, the property tax could probably be covered by the tax savings on the interest portion (e.g. 100%) of the monthly mortgage payments.

As for HOA, that's a different story. In SF in one of those fancy SOMA towers, it's over $600 a month.

Comments 1 - 30 of 158       Last »     Search these comments

Please register to comment:

api   best comments   contact   latest images   memes   one year ago   users   suggestions   gaiste