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Posts tagged ‘real estate bust’

23
Sep

Housing Bust – Who is Really to Blame?

Housing Bust

Being in the front lines of the residential real estate market for many years it’s always been quite clear to me that it was government policies that precipitated the housing bust. Talking with many Californians about the disaster in the real estate market, it would seem that many have a short-term memory deficiency.

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17
Sep

Home Foreclosures Likely to Rise

Banks have stepped up their actions against homeowners who have fallen behind on their mortgage payments, setting the stage for a fresh wave of foreclosures. Read more »

16
Sep

Home Foreclosures

San Diego real estate – home foreclosures

San Diego real estate 9-2011

San Diego real estate

Being in the trenches … the front line of local San Diego real estate activity, it’s hard for me to believe that we just passed through the “Summer of recovery” at least it was according to this administration’s proclamations.

Although many of the real estate reports for San Diego indicate that sales have increased last month, they also show that home prices have continued to fall. The sales increase in my opinion can be totally attributed to normal seasonal factors. What is really troubling, is the fact that during our seasonally strong traditional marketing period which just ended last month, home prices in San Diego were still in decline. Read more »

30
Mar

Financial Crisis – Housing Bust – Just Another Trillion or Two

San Diego California housing marketThe financial/housing crisis is far worse than we are aware of as yet, and it will get worse than it is once all the bail-out and freshly printed money has been distributed. Too much cheap money that was not always fairly earned got us into this mess, and the solution of more of the same will not help us recover.

Now it's toxic debt, some unknowable evil, and we're going to own it. We need the geniuses that created it to stay on at fortune-sized payscales. Washington is really looking out for us. Quick, another trillion or two.

Since trillions are being conjured up regularly, let's do what they say we can't: Hand money to real people to pay off their bills and debts. We're creating debt to pay debt anyway. 

Money is a token of useful production. Financial engineers adjust that real money in their attempts to deal with credit and produce products that enable us to save or borrow, as we wish. As long as the engineered money is proportional to the whole, fine: but the past years have seen a disproportionate amount being constructed into houses of straw, arid landscapes and other items of apparent but worthless value. Now we are having to account for it, and until we do, we can expect more financial pain. Let's use this time to return to a system where real values matter, and in doing so make the politicians and financiers aware that we expect them to contribute real value too.                              San Diego real estate

 

Recent Related Posts:

Housing Gains

It’s the Economy That Needs Fixing Not Special Interests

National Association of Realtors Real Estate Forecast 

 

6
Mar

Timeline of Our Financial and Housing Crisis

It's ironic that excess spending (buying homes well beyond any realistic debt to income ratios, home equity loans exceeding 100% of value, etc.)  got the economy into this mess and now many believe unbelievable excess spending will get us out of this depression.

But, far more ironic is the fact that the same politicians that were warned about just this situation, and chose to ignore the warnings, are the very people now still in power who are saying they have the right ideas on how to fix the problem.

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San Diego real estate agents

 Recent Related Posts:

The Greater Depression – Jim Rogers Interview

Eternal Optimism Meets Reality or Know When to Fold Them

Housing Bust –Ideas to Cure & Prevent in the Future

 

 

 

27
Feb

Housing Bust –Ideas to Cure & Prevent in the Future

 

Yale economics professor Robert Schiller on ideas to cure and prevent the current housing & mortgage collapse.

 

Robert Schiller is an academic, and best-selling author. He currently serves as the Arthur M. Okun Professor of Economics at Yale University and is a Fellow at the Yale International Center for Finance, Yale School of Management. Shiller has been a research associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) since 1980, was Vice President of the American Economic Association in 2005, and President of the Eastern Economic Association for 2006-2007. He is also the founder and chief economist of the investment management firm MacroMarkets LLC.

Shiller is ranked among the 100 most influential economists of the world.

 

 

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San Diego housing

Related posts by other bloggers: 

You Call This a Housing Bust? – The Money Times
- You Call This a Housing Bust? We all know about the bust-up of the U.S. housing market. Defaults are up, credit is gone, the stock market is down, and we all feel poorer. And all of that means few want or can afford a new home. …

Russ Lemmon: Housing bust has left development a ghost town …
- What was supposed to be a gated community with $500000 homes has turned into a modern-day ghost town. The only residential units in The Fountains at Amber Lakes are the five original model homes — all of which currently are occupied.

San Diego real estate blog » Housing Bust – Who Really Lit The …
- Housing Bust – Who Really Lit The Fuse & How To Cure It! by bob711 — published on February 15th, 2009. San Diego real estate market – housing bust. There has been lots of finger pointing and conjecture over whom or what started our …

Housing Bust Update | Mother Jones
- Byline: Kevin DrumDek: HOUSING BUST UPDATE….The latest from ground zero of the housing bubble:For the first time in the current housing downturn, the majority of Southern California homes sold in October ? 51% ? had been foreclosed, …

15
Feb

Housing Bust – Who Really Lit The Fuse & How To Cure It!

San Diego real estate market - housing bust

There has been lots of finger pointing and conjecture over whom or what started our housing melt-down. Was it social engering, Democrat favoritism, Republican lack of regulation, or something else?

I believe the question can be put to rest by facts from one of the most liberal newspapers, the venerable New York Times. On September 30, 1999, the New York Times ran a story by STEVEN A. HOLMES, titled: Fannie Mae Eases Credit to Aid Mortgage Lending.  I’ll quote a few key parts of this story that will illuminate the true cause of our current housing/economic bust:

“In a move that could help increase home ownership rates among minorities and low-income consumers, the Fannie Mae Corporation is easing the credit requirements on loans that it will purchase from banks and other lenders.”

“Fannie Mae, the nation's biggest underwriter of home mortgages, has been under increasing pressure from the Clinton Administration to expand mortgage loans among low and moderate income people and felt pressure from stock holders to maintain its’ phenomenal growth in profits.”

''Fannie Mae has expanded home ownership for millions of families in the 1990's by reducing down payment requirements,'' said Franklin D. Raines, Fannie Mae's chairman and chief executive officer. ''Yet there remain too many borrowers whose credit is just a notch below what our underwriting has required who have been relegated to paying significantly higher mortgage rates in the so-called subprime market.''

“In moving, even tentatively, into this new area of lending, Fannie Mae is taking on significantly more risk, which may not pose any difficulties during flush economic times. But the government-subsidized corporation may run into trouble in an economic downturn, prompting a government rescue similar to that of the savings and loan industry in the 1980's.”

As we all now know, the prior quote from Mr. Holmes’s article proved to be quite prophetic.  Quite prophetic.

It seems ironic that a Democratic administration put us on the melt-down path, and now another Demetronic administration with a number of the same lawmakers still in place, is devising a plan to pull the economy out of the second worst economic decline in history.

The housing market is now at the center of our economic woes. However, housing does not need a knee-jerk government response of throwing billions at it with hope of turning it around, or at least finding a bottom. In San Diego, CA and other ‘bubble’ cities, we have seen a marked pick up in home sales over the past few months. I attribute this to two main factors: exceptionally low mortgage rates combined with many bank owned/foreclosed homes priced to move.

On October 1, 2008, I published a blog post entitled  #1 EZ Fix to The U.S. Housing Market.  This was my simplistic, but in my opinion, a totally effective way to stop the declining home values and build a base for future housing appreciation.  Further. we can do it without direct government expenditures. Below is what I said in that post.  I still believe that it would work today, especially in light of the natural pick up sales over the past few months:

The U.S. government’s Wall Street bailout package, or should I use the PC correct term of “Government Rescue Program,” is not only a bad deal for the U.S. taxpayer, but in my opinion, totally unnecessary.

Last week, the largest Savings and Loan in the United States, Washington Mutual, was taken over in one day in a very, very smooth transaction.  Combine that with the fact that in most real estate boom cities last month, real estate sales showed a dramatic increase.  Of course the increase was due mainly to buyers purchasing bank owned and REO properties, but these two examples show that our free economic system works.  When the price is right, buyers will step up and in many cases, purchase properties above the current asking price.

I think the general public, and Realtors in particular, have to a acknowledge that the boom years of 2000 to 2005 took real estate prices to artificially high levels due to the easy money, easy loan qualifying standards.  Rather, should I say “lack of credible standards?”  Now we are going through the payback period.

For the government to come in now with this huge bail-out, would just prolong the housing decline.  I would rather see the government stand aside and let the market forces determine the true area average home selling prices.

For those who think a government intervention is the only way out, I would say do it without direct taxpayer money.  The undisputed key to this recovery is housing.  If the government truly wants to ignite a fire under the housing market, I personally would propose a very simplistic approach that would have immediate results.

The government should pass a bill that allows any home purchaser, owner-occupied or investor buyer, who buys a residential property within the next two years and holds that property for a minimum of three years (and a maximum of ten) to be free of federal capital gains taxes upon selling the property.   The potential, tax-free profits on my idea would be a huge incentive for investors to jump back into the residential housing market.  This increased demand would clear the built up housing inventory in a matter of months for most areas.

If the government is going to rescue anyone with this new bill, the rescue efforts should be directed not at Wall Street, but at Main Street.  The problem today is declining home prices and the built-up inventory of properties for sale.   Many buyers are standing on the sidelines.  Most investors are totally out of the real estate market.  My proposal will solve these problems without spending taxpayer funds.                                                                  San Diego real estate market blog

 

29
Jan

Housing Market … No Bottom in Sight

housing marketThe Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller home price index, reported that prices of existing single-family homes in 20 major metro areas continued their rapid descent in November, down 18.2% year-over-year. The index has declined steadily for 28 consecutive months.

The 20-city composite index set a new record for price declines, down 18.2% from a year earlier, compared with October's 18.1%. The metro areas with the biggest year-to-year price declines were Phoenix (-32.9%), Las Vegas (-31.6%), and San Francisco (-30.8%).

David M. Blitzer, chairman of the index committee at S&P, said in a news release: "The freefall in residential real estate continued through November 2008. Since August 2006, the 10-City and 20-City composites have declined every month."                             San Diego California real estate

26
Jan

Home Sales Up … Home Prices Drop

San Diego homesThe New York-based Conference Board's monthly forecast released today, showed that existing home sales rose 6.5 percent in December, as the median home sales price plunged 15.3 percent. The decline is the largest year-over-year drop in records going back to 1968.

The Conference Board also said unemployment could rise to 9 percent from 7.2 percent as the country remains in an intense recession through spring.                                     San Diego Realtor

 

 

22
Jan

Home Prices to Fall 29% in 2009 – National Association of Home Builders

home pricesAt building industry trade show in Las Vegas, David Crowe of the National Association of Home Builders said: "We have consumer confidence at or near a historic low, and it will probably deteriorate in 2009. The nation has an excess "overhang" of 6.2 million homes for sale, about 1.5 million too many." Crowe said he expects prices to fall another 29 percent this year and new home sales to decline 14 percent.       

Also, Mr. Sullivan, chief economist of the Portland Cement Association said: "I see another full two years almost before a significant gain."  Mr. Sullivan was one of the first industry economists to predict the current downturn.                                                                                   San Diego Realtors