0
0

Heard today from a broker: Lots of Houseowners are worried about a precipitous price drop coming.


               
2011 Jun 8, 1:24pm   34,431 views  87 comments

by woggs1   follow (0)  

Like a lot of people on here I am a renter in the SF Bay Area saving money and waiting for prices to become a little less insane. I work in the city (SF) and I absolutely refuse to commute everyday from some far off town so I can have a big house. So lately I have noticed that prices in the area I am interested in are coming down even know this is supposed to be the prime selling season. So I had a conversation with a broker today and he was saying that lots of real estate professionals, homeowners and sellers are very worried about a precipitous price drop coming soon to this area. This is something that I believed would happen but to hear it from a broker was quite shocking. Usually those guys only tell you what they think will make you buy right away. From my anecdotal experience prices are on the downswing with a few sucker buyers here and there paying top retail (that is still 20% less than 2006) . There are also lots of sellers in a dream world where they think their house is worth $700k or more but it has been has been on the market for six months with no bids and minimal price reductions. Has anyone else on here heard predictions of pending price reductions coming from the real estate industry? Maybe this guy is one of the rare honest RE professionals because I can't see how saying that prices will soon come down will help him make a sale.

#housing

Comments 1 - 40 of 87       Last »     Search these comments

1   MAGA   2011 Jun 8, 1:45pm  

Hey Neighbor (I'm in Millbrae). I rent and am debt free. :-)

2   woggs1   2011 Jun 8, 2:32pm  

APOCALYPSEFUCK says

hahahahahahaha the northern peninsula is so totally fucked, the next drop will be calamitous. When you read about this Realtor’s® suicide in the local paper, that will be your signal to buy.

Apocalypsefuck,
I don't know what you are on but I want some!!

3   FortWayne   2011 Jun 8, 2:40pm  

They didn't worry during the bubble when there were plenty of suckers to pawn off ballooned liabilities to as assets. Greedy shills only worry when the gig is up.

4   tts   2011 Jun 8, 3:24pm  

woggs1 says

APOCALYPSEFUCK says

hahahahahahaha the northern peninsula is so totally fucked, the next drop will be calamitous. When you read about this Realtor’s® suicide in the local paper, that will be your signal to buy.

Apocalypsefuck,

I don’t know what you are on but I want some!!

His drug is realtors. No really.

Every morning he wakes up and after finishing shaving his face with a rusty butterknife and gasoline, he runs out of the house and chases down the realtors in their fancy Benz's. He drags them out of their cars and beats them to death in the streets and stares down anyone who even thinks of giving him shit for it.

Which hasn't happened at all in the last few years...they've learned not to give him shit. Even the ones who haven't heard of him yet.

Then he puts their body back in their Benz and drives it home. He'll part their ride out on CL later, but for now he gets to makin' some sweet sweet realtor BBQ. Then he grinds their bones up into a fine powder and snorts it just before postin' here everyday.

He is my personal hero and as far as I'm concerned is doing God's work.

APOCALYPSEFUCK for president I say!!

5   mnsweeps   2011 Jun 8, 3:34pm  

APOCALYPSEFUCK for POTUS ....I second that..

6   ch_tah   2011 Jun 9, 3:26am  

woggs1 says

So I had a conversation with a broker today and he was saying that lots of real estate professionals, homeowners and sellers are very worried about a precipitous price drop coming soon to this area.

Did he give any time estimate as to when this precipitous drop would occur?

It seems like someone comes along every once and a while and posts that they spoke with an honest agent who told them housing was in huge trouble. See, for example:
http://patrick.net/?p=692670

Maybe, vain was right when he posted in that thread, they are just using this as a line to earn trust, and then they magically find you a house priced right within a few weeks.

7   Katy Perry   2011 Jun 9, 3:28am  

This is the newest Realturd/ broker trick IMO. They know they are turning off tons of people with the" It's a great time to buy" crap. They get your confidence by agreeing with what you all ready believe to be true. then they hit you up with a great deal they found later once you trust them.

oldest con in the book. The idea is to make sales by making "friends."

8   klarek   2011 Jun 9, 3:50am  

Katy Perry says

This is the newest Realturd/ broker trick IMO. They know they are turning off tons of people with the” It’s a great time to buy” crap. They get your confidence by agreeing with what you all ready believe to be true. then they hit you up with a great deal they found later once you trust them.

This implies that they possess self-awareness. realturds aren't sentient beings, and only possess greed and a thirst for blood.

9   StoutFiles   2011 Jun 9, 3:54am  

I still don't see how this could be the bottom when the state/local govts are in mass debt. More jobs will be cut, unemployment benefits willl be shortened, etc. This isn't the bottom, and since the majority of people feel that way, it won't be.

10   CameronCrazy   2011 Jun 9, 3:56am  

woggs1 says

STOP telling me about year over year!!!!!!

I was responding to the assertion made in the original post that “lately I have noticed that prices in the area I am interested in are coming down even know this is supposed to be the prime selling season.”

We are coming into prime selling season and prices are going UP not down.

The market is certainly heating up and I see it everywhere. I’m challenging the premise of the thread, NOT the fact that prices are lower now than June 2010.

Just because there's a *seasonal* price increase doesn't mean the year over year decline won't continue. The Fed prematurely ending its quantitative easing is indicative of a future rise in interest rates which will increase the likelihood of a major housing price decline.

11   Hysteresis   2011 Jun 9, 8:03am  

higher end prices are down this spring/summer on the peninsula.

multiple houses in the good parts of san mateo in good locations are listed in the $600k's which i've never seen. similar situation in millbrae (900+ schools with very low crime) except they're in the $700k's, when they used to start in the $800k's last year.

you could find houses for these price ranges in the past but they'd always have some major problem like being located on a major street, close to the highway, school, or apartment.

12   Hysteresis   2011 Jun 9, 8:17am  

i'm saying i see listing price lower than i've ever seen for decent houses in good locations in san mateo and millbrae.

you would not be able to find a decent house with good location in the good area of san mateo last year in the $600k's.

your redfin median stats won't show this trend until much later because it's only a few houses that show this weakness.

i saw the same thing in santa clara last summer. a handful of houses in decent locations lower than i've seen - at that time in the $500k's.
today, a year later, you can find many decent houses in santa clara in the $500k's, median $/sqft will confirm this change.

i suspect the same thing will happen in san mateo. a year or two from now you should be able to find more decent houses in the $600k-$700k range than you see today.

13   burritos   2011 Jun 9, 10:58am  

We didn't believe in realtors when the were saying that prices are only going to go up. Why would we believe them when they say that prices are only going to go down and down?

14   FunTime   2011 Jun 9, 11:10am  

mnsweeps says

APOCALYPSEFUCK for POTUS ….I second that..

Or at least the Sheriff of some mountain town...no, with his handle on the Bay Area, he must be Sheriff of Marin Co!

15   bubblesitter   2011 Jun 9, 1:36pm  

APOCALYPSEFUCK says

Snack time, Fluffy!

That's your best.

16   investor90   2011 Jun 9, 3:38pm  

APOCALYPSEFUCK says

hahahahahahaha the northern peninsula is so totally fucked, the next drop will be calamitous. When you read about this Realtor’s® suicide in the local paper, that will be your signal to buy.

Did you just invite me to a party? Wake? I am down with that...Let's party on dude. I'll even bring my own shovel and promise not step on the weeds growing around their tombstone, Here Lies "Lying (fill in the blank here)" ...maybe they will try to sell cemetary plots in hell?

17   investor90   2011 Jun 9, 3:41pm  

mnsweeps says

APOCALYPSEFUCK for POTUS ….I second that..

It looks like we have a quorum? He has my votes....and I have some extra chads for him from Florida and the other Bush.

18   rob8024   2011 Jun 9, 4:01pm  

even if this is the bottom, housing may appreciate very slowly going forward.

proceed cautiously.

19   everything   2011 Jun 9, 4:23pm  

I was worried about it, about 1.5 years ago, but I sold that big old house and I don't worry about it no more. I would definitely say that wherever you see investors paying cash for homes and then renting them out, your seeing bottom or near bottom prices in that area.
If someone says you've got price drops coming to your area, take a look at prices, are they affordable?, are they in line with incomes?, is your local economy going great?, is SF overdue for an earthquake? Lots of things to consider and take into account, especially in cities where prices can vary considerably just because you crossed the street into a different neighborhood.

20   Austinhousingbubble   2011 Jun 9, 5:13pm  

Most people think the current downtrend is the bottom, so it’s not! Down it goes! It can’t possibly go down any more!

If you're an adherent to the contrarian strategy, in which the inverse of conventional sentiment more closely approximates reality, (most people are mostly wrong about most things most of the time), then it seems to me that you must also compensate for the fact that contrarianism itself is a meme which continues to grow in popularity. Therefore, in at least some cases, the inverse of the inverse of popular opinion would better represent reality (or in the case of investing, real opportunities), which would effectively bring you full circle.

He loves me
He loves me not
He loves me

21   tatupu70   2011 Jun 9, 10:24pm  

But it's so simple. All I have to do is divine from what I know of you: are you the sort of man who would put the poison into his own goblet or his enemy's? Now, a clever man would put the poison into his own goblet, because he would know that only a great fool would reach for what he was given. I am not a great fool, so I can clearly not choose the wine in front of you. But you must have known I was not a great fool, you would have counted on it, so I can clearly not choose the wine in front of me.

22   rubyrae   2011 Jun 9, 10:46pm  

I think the reason the realtor is saying this is because the banks up to now have only been releasing about 18% of their inventory. This is a drop in the bucket. However they can no longer hold the flood gates back. I have also heard from a realtor and someone in the banking industry that a good deal of the shadow inventory will be released soon. Once that happens the supply will outweigh the demand and prices will plummet. Prices are not going up and will not stabilize until the market has corrected itself. This market can not be corrected until we start putting at least 70% of the homes onto the market for resale. The banks and Govt are trying to control the market and price points by holding back inventory and keeping the interest rate steady.

23   ohomen171   2011 Jun 9, 11:22pm  

Germans are very cautious people about making public pronouncements. When they say something is going to happen, they do so after careful research, thought and consideration. Deutsche Bank recently publicly predicted a further 40% drop in housing prices in the state of New York. I would take this seriously and I think it applies to other sensitive housing markets like California.

24   nah415   2011 Jun 10, 12:44am  

I have two friends who are real estate agents and they BOTH told me not to buy anything for at least a year. And my brother was interested in investing some money and a mortgage broker/investor friend of his told him not to buy any real estate for a couple of years. That was a first and reinforces the idea that there is a lot more pain coming down the pike.

25   Hysteresis   2011 Jun 10, 1:13am  

nah415 says

I have two friends who are real estate agents and they BOTH told me not to buy anything for at least a year. And my brother was interested in investing some money and a mortgage broker/investor friend of his told him not to buy any real estate for a couple of years. That was a first and reinforces the idea that there is a lot more pain coming down the pike.

one of the realtors (been in business for 30 years) on the Orange County redfin forums is pretty down on real estate.

he was neutral/bullish in 2010 but after looking at the data he admitted his 2011 forecasts were wrong. hard for most people to admit a mistake, easier to live in denial. he did the right thing.

26   FuckTheMainstreamMedia   2011 Jun 10, 1:27am  

everything says

out 1.5 years ago, but I sold that big old house and I don’t worry about it no more. I would definitely say that wherever you see investors paying cash for homes and then renting them out, your seeing bottom or near bottom prices in that area.

What if you have a market dominated by greedtarded investors whose only concern is that they turn 3% a year on their illiquid "asset"?

27   corntrollio   2011 Jun 10, 5:06am  

woggs1 says

The interesting think I am seeing is that there are still houses selling for top dollar, usually those houses have been “shined up” with granite and stainless steel, and the yard redone. These were bought on the cheap by investors usually at auction or short sale and superficially cleaned up. IMO those type houses are being bought by uninformed suckers who believe whatever their agent tells them.

I've seen some of these pergraniteel masterpieces. Sometimes they have crappy foundation work, poor construction, bad remodeling/additions, etc. It's impressive what people get fooled by.

28   rocketjoe79   2011 Jun 10, 6:20am  

We stopped paying in Elk Grove, CA on Oct 2010, moved in April. The house has lost value every month throughout the process. At the silly peak, this 3br/3ba 1880 sqft home could have sold for $375k. Today it's valued at less than $200k. I can only expect it will keep dropping. My combined mortgages were $2400. Now I'm paying $1600 a month for a bigger place and better amenities. We just walked away. At age 54, I may never buy again.

29   klarek   2011 Jun 10, 6:24am  

rocketjoe79 says

My combined mortgages were $2400. Now I’m paying $1600 a month for a bigger place and better amenities.

Why didn't you just rent in the first place if it was that much cheaper?

30   bubblesitter   2011 Jun 10, 7:01am  

klarek says

Why didn’t you just rent in the first place if it was that much cheaper?

Like he knew the value was going to go down, huh? but he is better off then few people on this forum who bought in 2008/2009 knowing that they will be under water very soon. LOL.

31   tatupu70   2011 Jun 10, 7:20am  

bubblesitter says

klarek says


Why didn’t you just rent in the first place if it was that much cheaper?

Like he knew the value was going to go down, huh? but he is better off then few people on this forum who bought in 2008/2009 knowing that they will be under water very soon. LOL.

LOL is right. So someone whose home has lost 1-2% of its value is worse off than someone who lost their entire down payment and now has a foreclosure on their credit?

32   klarek   2011 Jun 10, 7:39am  

bubblesitter says

Like he knew the value was going to go down, huh?

I meant if it were so much incredibly cheaper to rent rather than own, why didn't he do that instead? I keep hearing people say, years after they bought, that "oh I can't rent my place out because I'd be negative a thousand per month cashflow". Um yeah, so why didn't you take a second to look at rental equivalents on craigslist before making a six-figure purchase?

Just pointing out how thanks to the rats working in the RE industry, home buyers do all the pertinent research AFTER they buy.

33   bubblesitter   2011 Jun 10, 7:46am  

klarek says

I meant if it were so much incredibly cheaper to rent rather than own

Well, most loosers did not look at that(rent) angle at all. Back then it was like "buy at whatever price you can get".

34   Austinhousingbubble   2011 Jun 10, 9:57am  

But it’s so simple. All I have to do is divine from what I know of you: are you the sort of man who would put the poison into his own goblet or his enemy’s? Now, a clever man would put the poison into his own goblet, because he would know that only a great fool would reach for what he was given. I am not a great fool, so I can clearly not choose the wine in front of you. But you must have known I was not a great fool, you would have counted on it, so I can clearly not choose the wine in front of me.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JSCid-iOoe0

35   B.A.C.A.H.   2011 Jun 11, 3:02pm  

klarek says

rocketjoe79 says

My combined mortgages were $2400. Now I’m paying $1600 a month for a bigger place and better amenities.

Why didn’t you just rent in the first place if it was that much cheaper?

Klarek, rocketjoe was sharing his perspective and what hapened. People don't wanna hear the "why didn't you this... why didn't you that?..." Sounds like being a nag and doesn't offer any solutions nor suggestions on how to improve.

36   klarek   2011 Jun 12, 4:59am  

sybrib says

klarek says

rocketjoe79 says

My combined mortgages were $2400. Now I’m paying $1600 a month for a bigger place and better amenities.

Why didn’t you just rent in the first place if it was that much cheaper?

Klarek, rocketjoe was sharing his perspective and what hapened. People don’t wanna hear the “why didn’t you this… why didn’t you that?…” Sounds like being a nag and doesn’t offer any solutions nor suggestions on how to improve.

When people make statements to justify their behavior or choices, like it's some sort of epic discovery that renting remained cheap while housing prices doubled, it's worth asking why this wasn't done before they bought. I'm not nagging, it's a legitimate question.

37   Teddybearneil   2011 Jun 12, 7:22am  

Interesting thread. Hopefully the prices will move down to 2000 levels and stabilize at that level, that would be equilibrium. My impression is also that the prices are kinda trending up. People are still buying homes way beyond their means in the Bay Area.

38   elliemae   2011 Jun 12, 9:03am  

Teddybearneil says

People are still buying homes way beyond their means in the Bay Area.

As a social worker, I can't imagine attempting to live in the Bay Area. I have a 3br house on an acre with a payment of $800 (piti); I couldn't even rent a place that's affordable out there.

39   B.A.C.A.H.   2011 Jun 12, 9:16am  

Ellie, my PITI more than yours but actually if you scaled for the wages around here, it's probably less than yours.

But most of my neighbors are hardworking people in the trades, not elites like engineers / finance. Even the "semiskilled" who aren't in the trades, are hardworking.

There's an awful lot of folks on this blog who don't want to associate with folks like my neighbors, unless to exploit them as tenants or customers.

It is true that some of the kids of these folks bring down the campus API scores of the local schools. But contrary to the thinking of those Fortress Residents who genuflect to the gao tao culture, it does not always mean that opportunities are lacking here for children of Tiger Parents. Some would call me a Tiger Parent, both my kids enrolled in (and completed) all the AP classes they could handle, and if they could've handled more, the school had 'em.

If you don't mind sharing your block with hardworking hispanics; if you don't mind sending your kids to a public K-12 where a portion of the kids "pull down" the "campus average" API, it does not have to be a whole lot more expensive to live here.

Maybe it is even cheaper. I don't have, and we don't really need, AC. And we only turn the heat on occasionally from mid-Nov to about mid-March. Another cost savings might be public transit. I use it a lot because I penciled it out; often it is cheaper than driving my vehicles and during busy commutes it can be more convenient.

40   tts   2011 Jun 12, 11:02am  

Teddybearneil says

Interesting thread. Hopefully the prices will move down to 2000 levels and stabilize at that level, that would be equilibrium. My impression is also that the prices are kinda trending up. People are still buying homes way beyond their means in the Bay Area.

No, look at the 15 or 20 yr charts. Equilibrium is around 1996 or 1998 prices, not 2000. The problem is the wages and cost of living. Wages keep stagnating while the cost of living rises which pushes down affordability.

Without funny money loans people can only spend what they make. Home prices will fall until they get in line with what people make, its just that simple.

Comments 1 - 40 of 87       Last »     Search these comments

Please register to comment:

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