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Sheeple


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2011 Jun 18, 2:27pm   43,339 views  181 comments

by HousingBoom   ➕follow (1)   💰tip   ignore  

In late 2010, I think 4 of my coworkers were laughing at me because I said housing will double-dip. They all thought prices would stay flat or drop only a couple of percentages. Well, it's June 2011 and prices already fell 5.5% from Jan to Mar 2011. They look at that and now say that it won't fall anymore even though sales numbers are double-digits in the red.

The sheeple are so brainwashed it's mind boggling! I think it's hopeless guys. America will never wake up to reality until the ESPN is shut down or until the economy totally collapses!!

OMG I'M ANGRY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Thanks for letting me vent!!!!

#housing

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1   bubblesitter   2011 Jun 18, 3:08pm  

HousingBoom says

ESPN is shut down or until the economy totally collapses!!

I like it. I like how you create a thread and disappear. :)

2   HousingBoom   2011 Jun 18, 3:31pm  

bubblesitter says

HousingBoom says

ESPN is shut down or until the economy totally collapses!!

I like it. I like how you create a thread and disappear. )

I'm still here!

3   clambo   2011 Jun 18, 6:59pm  

People who have a vested interest in their hope will not lose it because the thought it too depressing sometimes.
My friend here wanted to sell his house/land for a huge amount at the top, his wife said NO.
He wanted to cash out, go to a no tax state or low tax state and relax. Instead he works about 6.5 days/week because he has no savings and must reverse mortgage his house when he wants to retire.
He gets angry if I mention all of the empty commercial real estate here, the falling values, etc. and tells me to buy silver and land here.

4   tatupu70   2011 Jun 18, 11:17pm  

Seriously--why does that make you angry? If you think the stock market is going to correct and your coworkers don't--does that piss you off?

And why the gratuitous shot at ESPN?

5   klarek   2011 Jun 19, 1:02am  

Nomograph says

I don’t get it either. . . why are you so angry? Is there something in your personal life?

You forgot, AM talk radio.

6   waiting_for_the_fall   2011 Jun 19, 1:56am  

I feel sorry for the people I know who bought last year, after I warned them that prices would continue to fall.
One guy I know put more than 20% down to get into a 50 year old Fremont home. That 8k cash back for buyiing a home was too much to resist! His wife was pregnant, so I think he was sort of forced into buying to make her happy.

I tried to talk him into getting a 30 year fixed, but he said it was $250 more per month than the 5 year fixed he had. I told him prices would continue to fall and he wouldn't be able to refiance, but he refused to listen. I said what would he rather do, pay $250 more per month now and keep his house, or lose it when he can't refinance? He just stared at me blankly, like I was crazy.

When he tried to refinance this year, the price of his house had dropped so much, he didn't have enough equity and couldn't find a lender to refinance his home. The house appraised too low.

We don't talk about his house anymore.

7   mnsweeps   2011 Jun 19, 2:03am  

waiting_for_the_fall says

When he tried to refinance this year, the price of his house had dropped so much, he didn’t have enough equity and couldn’t find a lender to refinance his home. The house appraised too low.

We don’t talk about his house anymore.

fool and his money is quickly parted..he deserved what he got..

8   bubblesitter   2011 Jun 19, 4:00am  

HousingBoom says

until the economy totally collapses!!

..or as AF says, until western civilization totally collapses!!

9   DrPepper   2011 Jun 19, 12:31pm  

No sense in being angry if you yourself didnt buy. I made the mistake of buying in 2008. Now I'm screwed. But at least one friend listened to me and chose not to buy in 2009. If she had she'd be on her way to being underwater too.

10   kmo722   2011 Jun 19, 1:37pm  

I don't think I've seen real estate "flatline" for an extended period ever.... that's because its a very costly asset with lots of emotions and other factors tied to it.. its normally either appreciating or depreciating in value... so, I don't buy the flatline thing at all...

the question is which will it be.. up or down ? what will jobs and wages be doing in the foreseeable future ? going up or down ?

Here in DC, with potential $2T in cuts coming, I don't see jobs and wages going up ... so, real estate has topped here as well... just like in SFBay area... jobs and wages will be under pressure for the foreseeable future and so will real estate prices..... another 15-20% haircut is coming...

11   corntrollio   2011 Jun 20, 5:55am  

kmo722 says

I don’t think I’ve seen real estate “flatline” for an extended period ever…. that’s because its a very costly asset with lots of emotions and other factors tied to it.. its normally either appreciating or depreciating in value… so, I don’t buy the flatline thing at all…

Are you sure about that? The housing bust in LA/SF in the 90s had a decent flatline. It still had seasonal bumps, but it was largely nominally flat during the later stages. This is not atypical for the housing market -- a housing bust often has a sharp decrease, followed by a longer flat nominal period where inflation helps income catch up with prices.

In this case, we've seen massive government stimulus that helped prop things up a bit, and the efforts are still ongoing. It's anybody's guess what our overlords will do next. We haven't seen normal interest rates yet, and organic sales are still not up to their normal numbers, and distressed sales are still pretty heavy on the market, and I'm not sure how all that will react if there aren't as large subsidies given to housing.

12   klarek   2011 Jun 20, 11:59pm  

Nomograph says

klarek says

You forgot, AM talk radio.

Wait, let me guess . . . you’re angry at the rest of the world too?
Let other pens dwell on guilt and misery — Jane Austen

No, just helping you out. Your sermons usually have a part about talk radio to pad your sanctimonious bullshit.

13   wtfcapinv   2011 Jun 21, 12:20am  

In this case, we’ve seen massive government stimulus that helped prop things up a bit, and the efforts are still ongoing. It’s anybody’s guess what our overlords will do next.

This is because half the "stimulus" is propping up prices in Europe to save the Euro.

The end game is China joining the first world and allowing their currency to float so foreign exchange markets can punish them. Until then it is inflation forever.

14   Homeboy   2013 Nov 17, 3:17am  

egads101 says

hey, good advice you gave here, in 2011! Home prices in fremont have tanked hard over the past 2.5 years right?

please, keep making fun of my advice on other threads, you cocksucker!

Actually, it does look like prices in Fremont dropped by a good $70-80K in that time frame. So if his friend HAD waited a year, he probably wouldn't have ended up underwater.

15   waiting_for_the_fall   2013 Nov 17, 3:32am  

Homeboy says

Actually, it does look like prices in Fremont dropped by a good $70-80K in that time frame. So if his friend HAD waited a year, he probably wouldn't have ended up underwater.

The person I was talking about a few years ago had to put more than 30% down on the home. During the dip in prices, he couldn't refinance and was very stressed out and worried. He took a part time job to add extra money for paying down his mortgage.

He's doing ok now, but all that money he put on the home was his retirement savings. I think this is the strategy a lot of people are doing now: using retirement savings or taking a 401k loan for buying a house. It's a risk, but some people feel it's worth it.

16   tatupu70   2013 Nov 17, 7:53am  

Bubbabear says

This luny is predicting 2015

Actually that loony predicted 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, and now 2015.

17   Homeboy   2013 Nov 17, 10:28am  

Don't like median charts? O.K., Case/Shiller then:

And yes, I know that's not for Fremont, because Case/Shiller doesn't DO a chart for Fremont. However, only the deepest-in-denial permabulls fail to acknowledge that the tax credit created a false surge and that prices dipped afterwards.

18   Homeboy   2013 Nov 17, 10:43am  

waiting_for_the_fall says

He's doing ok now, but all that money he put on the home was his retirement savings. I think this is the strategy a lot of people are doing now: using retirement savings or taking a 401k loan for buying a house. It's a risk, but some people feel it's worth it.

I don't necessarily think that's a bad strategy. I know someone who had to raid his retirement account to come up with a down payment, but he got into the market at a good time. I don't think he could afford the house he's living in if he had to buy it today.

19   ttsmyf   2013 Nov 17, 10:54am  

HousingBoom says

The sheeple are so brainwashed it's mind boggling! I think it's hopeless guys. America will never wake up to reality until the ESPN is shut down or until the economy totally collapses!!

My best idea is to get the real price history in people's faces ONGOINGLY.
http://www.showrealhist.com/RHandRD.html

20   Bigsby   2013 Nov 17, 12:40pm  

Homeboy says

Don't like median charts? O.K., Case/Shiller then:

And yes, I know that's not for Fremont, because Case/Shiller doesn't DO a chart for Fremont. However, only the deepest-in-denial permabulls fail to acknowledge that the tax credit created a false surge and that prices dipped afterwards.

That graph looks a bit different to other Case-Shiller graphs I've seen for the same period...

21   Homeboy   2013 Nov 17, 2:20pm  

egads101 says

no dumbshit, the question is not whether or not he bought the precise mathematical bottom: waiting for the fall "felt sorry for him" cause he made such a huge mistake; turns out waiting for the fall was wrong.

Sorry, but I felt compelled to stand up for him against the permabear pile-on, because the advice WASN'T wrong. In 2010, waiting a year wasn't a bad idea at all. There was plenty of opportunity to buy in 2011 without the tax-credit feeding frenzy. And the advice to get a fixed-rate loan was spot on.

What do you have against buying at the bottom?

And why are you so angry?

22   wave9x   2013 Nov 18, 8:38am  

Unless he was buying a house in 2010 with the intent to sell it before 2012, the advice not to buy in 2010 was dramatically and horribly wrong. Anyone who heeded that advice made a huge mistake.

Those who made incorrect predictions need to be identified and called out whenever and wherever possible, to prevent them from causing further harm to others. I was almost a victim of these types, but fortunately came to my senses in late 2011.

23   Homeboy   2013 Nov 18, 9:13am  

wave9x says

Unless he was buying a house in 2010 with the intent to sell it before 2012, the advice not to buy in 2010 was dramatically and horribly wrong.

Bullshit. Buying in 2010 and selling within a year would have been the absolute stupidest thing you could do. Are you smoking crack?

You're saying that waiting until 2011 to buy would have been "dramatically and horribly wrong", yet that's exactly what you did?

Wow, you can't make this stuff up.

24   Bigsby   2013 Nov 18, 11:58am  

Figures you can't argue with, though I'm sure some will.

25   Homeboy   2013 Nov 18, 1:47pm  

egads101 says

You of course miss several points:

No, I didn't miss anything. You just didn't understand me.

egads101 says

1. while the median price may have been lower, negotiating power on individual deals was better earlier.

You have nothing to back that up other than your own say-so, which is not an objective source. My experience was completely different than yours. I got outbid at least 50 times between 2009-2011, then finally had an offer accepted in early 2012 that I didn't think had a snowball's chance in hell of being accepted. It's a MUCH better house than anything in the same price range I looked at in 2009-2010. In fact, I had tried to buy a smaller house, with a smaller lot, on the same street in 2010 and they got another offer $60,000 OVER asking price.

I'm quite happy with my purchase, and I owe it to the fact that I stayed in the game and kept trying, as discouraging as it was, and I didn't panic and make a hasty decision that I would have ended up unhappy with.

26   Homeboy   2013 Nov 18, 1:52pm  

egads101 says

2. risk/reward. As you can see, from how fast the market went up, the far bigger risk was missing the buying opportunity, rather than buying it for 30K too much, because it went down just a little bit more.

Eh, how much of a risk would it have been? He still would have had a year and a half to find something. The REAL problem was the permabears who were still calling a crash in 2012. As soon as you have several months of uninterrupted year-over-year increases, it's a good guess that it's time to get in. And I totally agree with you on that. Anyone who was still trying to wait it out by mid 2012, or is STILL trying to wait it out, completely missed the boat.

27   waiting_for_the_fall   2013 Nov 18, 2:37pm  

The guy I knew in Fremont bought his home for over 600k. Prices dropped and he couldn't refinance. He told me he couldn't refinance and had to make more money quickly to pay down his loan so that he could refinance. With all the government manipulation of interest rates, he probably refinanced this year into a 2.5 15 year fixed using Harp.

How long can the government intervention last?

28   Homeboy   2013 Nov 19, 12:54pm  

egads101 says

WTF? what the hell is there to feel sorry for? Had he listened to your advice, and NOT BOUGHT a home, he might be looking to kick you repeatedly in the balls today!!!

It seems as though you are interpreting the advice given as, "NEVER buy a house". I'm not sure where you're getting that. I didn't read it that way at all. Perhaps "waiting" will clarify that for us.

29   waiting_for_the_fall   2013 Nov 19, 2:30pm  

Bobby is clearly off his meds again. The rants are getting more and more funny, and bizarre.

Look at how many times I post and how many times blabber mouth Bobby posts. I don't have time to spend all day on a message board ranting to buy now or be priced out forever.
Some people actually work for a living instead of lounging around all day trolling message boards.

My Fremont friend does not own a 1+ million dollar home.
This is Fremont we're talking about here, not Palo Alto. The home is worth $700k. He made 100k above what he paid and worked long hours at a part time job for several years to pay extra on his mortgage. He sacrificed time with his newborn, time he will never get back. All that work and sacrifice to buy a home. As I said before, some people think it's worth it.

Let's see how Bobby will spin this response into his bizarre fantasy land where he is always right, always the best adviser, best investor, smartest person you will ever meet, and the only person that has anything good to say, ever. We're all just jealous of him, right Bobby?

egads101 says

WTF? what the hell is there to feel sorry for? Had he listened to your advice, and NOT BOUGHT a home, he might be looking to kick you repeatedly in the balls today!!!

That's kind of hard to do since I don't have balls...

30   Homeboy   2013 Nov 19, 6:14pm  

Bigsby says

Discounting the fact the Y axis is stretched, the two charts still don't look the same. The composite 10 and 20 are almost identical in your graph. That isn't the case in the other graph.

Ooh! It must be a conspiracy.

Does the chart go up or down between line A and line B?

What is your point?

31   Homeboy   2013 Nov 20, 3:59am  

"Here is a chart showing prices fell from 2010 to 2011"

"Your chart is wrong - here is the correct chart"

"But that chart ALSO shows that prices fell from 2010 to 2011"

"I wasn't arguing about that"

32   Homeboy   2013 Nov 20, 4:06am  

Y'all a bunch of trolls. Just sayin'

33   tatupu70   2013 Nov 20, 5:21am  

Homeboy says

I showed that prices fell in Fremont by 15% from 2010 to 2011, and that's
what you heard? Dude, put down the crack pipe.

Dude---it was just a joke. I think everyone understands what you are saying.

34   Homeboy   2013 Nov 20, 12:29pm  

egads101 says

you don't buy a fucking chart. You buy an individual house.

Dumbest comment I've read this week.

egads101 says

THAT is how bad the banks were doing selling in 2009...

I don't give a crap what your index shows, by late 2010, I was bidding $5K over list and waiving my inspection to get my offers accepted.

Hey dumbshit - the chart says prices went UP in 2010 and then went DOWN in 2011. I said 2010 wasn't as good a year to buy. Now you just said you had to waive inspections to get an offer accepted in 2010. Thanks for proving my point! LOL!

35   Homeboy   2013 Nov 20, 12:45pm  

Bigsby says

I didn't find a chart that looks slightly different. I posted up the standard graph.

What you have written is meaningless. You have no evidence to back up your contention that yours is "standard" and that mine is "non standard". I posted a chart and you posted another chart. Yours happens to be from the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. If you want to be that nitpicky, here is the REAL chart:

It doesn't look like mine OR yours. In fact, yours is MORE wrong, because ONE of the lines is smooth while the other is rippled. What did you call it? "Manipulated"? But yours wasn't even "manipulated" consistently. At least the 2 lines match in contour in my chart.

But who gives a fuck? Your whole diatribe is a red herring, as ALL the charts back up my contention that prices fell from 2010 to 2011. I asked you if you agree, and you refuse to answer. You're just trolling. You picked some irrelevant nitpick to draw attention from the subject, but you aren't even right about your irrelevant nitpick. LOL.

36   Homeboy   2013 Nov 20, 12:48pm  

Bigsby says

especially considering the poster you are defending was predicting substantial post 2011 price drops.

I wasn't aware that he made any such prediction. Can you link to a source, please?

37   Homeboy   2013 Nov 20, 1:15pm  

egads101 says

the fuck it is... look at the graphs:

Every one of those graphs, save one, shows an upsurge in prices in 2010 that didn't last, (commonly referred to as the 'dead cat bounce') indicating that 2010 was not the best year to buy. The one exception is DC, and nobody here was talking about DC. So again, thanks for proving my point!

38   Homeboy   2013 Nov 20, 1:16pm  

egads101 says

It says, to three sigma accuracy, FUCK YOU!

Shouting obscenities at me does not help your case.

39   Homeboy   2013 Nov 20, 1:19pm  

egads101 says

Homeboy says

Bigsby says

especially considering the poster you are defending was predicting substantial post 2011 price drops.

I wasn't aware that he made any such prediction. Can you link to a source, please?

oh,homeboy, you mean you are too fucking stupid to read the title post on THIS THREAD?????

That's not the same person, genius. Now why don't you stop embarrassing yourself?

40   Homeboy   2013 Nov 20, 1:42pm  

egads101 says

you're correct, you had to read 3 posts down... clearly too much to ask for you to do!!!!!

Um, no - I already read that post. Nowhere in that post does she "predict post 2011 price drops". Egads, I'm seriously starting to think you have some sort of learning disability in addition to your obvious emotional problems.

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