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Posts tagged ‘San Diego real estate bubble’

6
Oct

San Diego Real Estate Market … What Did You Expect?

San Diego Real Estate MarketSan Diego real estate is very scarce. Most of San Diego open space is owned by the military/Government/parks. So, San Diego real estate can never really go down much in value. If you don't buy a home in San Diego now, the rising prices will never let you purchase as good a value.

Act now! It's 2004 and you can still buy your San Diego home with no down payment, no need to prove employment, the option to pay or not on an irregular basis, below market interest rates for the first few years, monthly mortgage payments low enough that it will cheaper to buy a home than rent an apartment.

Already own a San Diego home?  Why not get a home equity loan 25% more than the home is worth and go on that dream vacation and you can buy a speed boat on your return.

The San Diego media 'financial' commentators were all on board the real estate hype train;after all how could they say anything that would upset their real estate developer advertisers/sponsors?

What did the Government expect would happen with these types of enticements? The newspapers, media 'talking heads' Realtors, banks, appraisers, all fed the fire. Anyone who would even question the San Diego housing market excesses was immediately ridiculed and instantly labeled a 'bubble head' for their lack of 'true vision.'

The truly sad part of this lament is the fact that in late 2005, even after the San Diego month after month real estate sales figures were off double digits, and after most real estate developers were offering huge cash incentives, the main-stream media still did not raise any red flags. Instead it was 'just a return to normal' or “a great time to buy without the pressure of multiple offers." 

So, for those who still blame this all on sub-prime loans, take off your rose-colored glasses and maybe you'll see that the real reasons were much more complex but founded on greed and the herd instinct. If we learn anything from this, it should be that basic economic principals cannot be ignored. When the siren call of a 'new paradigm' is again sounded, heed the lesson of the great 2005 San Diego real estate bubble.

A few prior related posts:

San Diego Home Sales Up … San Diego Home Median Price Drops

Government Bail-Out – Risk & Reward

Southern California Home Prices Drop 34% in August

#1 Key To Purchasing Real Estate in the San Diego Market

The San Diego California Real Estate Great Depression

Yale Professor … House Price Decline Could Be Worse than Great Depression

 

 San Diego real estate agents

 

26
Sep

San Diego Home Sales Up … San Diego Home Median Price Drops

San Diego home salesCALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (C.A.R.) reported home sales increased 56.7 percent in August in California compared with the same period a year ago, while the median price of an existing home fell 40.5 percent.

For San Diego real estate, C.A.R. reported that the August median home price was $375,090, off 2% from July.For the year-to-date one year period the San Diego median home price was down 37%. The good news was that San Diego existing home sales for the year-to-date period was up 60.5%.

The San Diego August 2007 median home price was $595,070. This was  $219,980 less than today's median home price.

“There has been no meaningful change in the level of activity since late last fall,” said Ian Shepherdson of High Frequency Economics. “The NAR estimates that 35 to 40% of all sales are of distressed property, so underlying private activity is weaker than the headlines, and there is little sign of imminent improvement.”

I believe this huge jump in San Diego existing home sales shows that WITHOUT GOVERNMENT INTERVENTION, when home prices in an open market look attractive, sales will increase!    San Diego home sales

17
Sep

#1 Key To Purchasing Real Estate in the San Diego Market

San Diego California real estate market - www.brokerforyou.com

If you were listening to the real estate "rose-colored glasses "crowd, in 2006 you would have heard "It's not a slowdown and there is NO bubble. The San Diego market is just going back to 'normal.' It's an excellent time to buy with out the market frenzy of multiple offers & buyers paying over the asking prices."

In 2007 you would have heard, "It's a normal correction to a buyer's market. Many great San Diego home buys, compared to the past year or two, are available if you act fast.

In 2008 (early August '08) the headline in the San Diego Buying Guide read: "Buyers are out in record numbers." Question: Record numbers compared to what time frame? Perhaps a more appropriate headline would have been: "San Diego buyer’s activity increasing because of demand for foreclosure & short sale properties at 40 to 50% below their 2005 highs."

Therefore, in my humble opinion, the #1 key for buying a home in San Diego today, is waiting patiently for the market to tell you that it has bottomed. I'm not talking about a one or two month blip here, or the Industry talking heads saying to act fast, but real, documented facts of a bottoming process occurring.

Sure, you might lose some of the upside, but you would be able to sleep at night. Buying simply because property looks cheap as opposed to last week, last month or the last year, is the majority thinking. With that reasoning, you would be have been buying all the way down in 2006, 2007 & 2008.

I would venture to say the vast majority of San Diego home buyers in the first quarter of this year have seen their 'great buys' suddenly not looking so great. Not considering closing cost, I'd guess the majority who purchased property in the last quarter of 2007 or first quarter of 2008 who had to sell today, would suffer a significant loss. As just one example, the July '08 condo average re-sales for the San Diego Zip code 92115 showed a value drop of over 50% vs. July 2007.

A few of our recent past posts on the state of the San Diego real estate market were:

 

San Diego California Home Sellers Lose Big

The San Diego California Real Estate Great Depression

Believe the local San Diego ‘experts’ that subprime delinquencies are slowing?

San Diego County Foreclosures up 125% from 2007

Jumbo Financing and the Impact on The San Diego Real Estate Market

Another Look at the June Rise in Pending Home Sales

San Diego real estate home sales

 

17
Jul

San Diego Real Estate … The Coming Next Wave of Foreclosures

San Diego real estate foreclosuresThe first wave of foreclosures occurred due to the re-setting of some "sub-prime" loans. These loans were predominantly the 80/20 loans that were used to assist buyers to obtain property with no down payment. Later in the cycle of the origination of these loans, the documentation requirements were lessened considerably, so that by 2005, buyers were able to obtain 80/20 loans to purchase property with little- to no-income documentation. Buyers speculated on properties increasing in value and had little regard for the payments. As the loans re-set (usually 2-3 years later), the buyers found themselves unable to make the payments or unable to refinance, and the properties ended up in foreclosure.

Here's what we need to understand about these loans:

1. Is that they were spread across the United States (demographic and geographic distribution) and

2. There were a lot of them done for buyers buying new homes. In San Diego, we are seeing the results of these loans as properties in newly constructed developments (Eastlake, San Marcos, Condo conversions, etc.) are defaulting in high numbers. However, the buyers of these properties generally DID understand that the loan would convert or "adjust" after an initial 2-3 (in some cases 5) year period. Further research suggests, however, that these buyers were not necessarily defaulting due to rising payments (the Fed has reduced short term rates significantly, thereby reducing the impact of the adjustment) but rather were defaulting to rid themselves of a negative equity position.

Many buyers in San Diego County who purchased properties in the $500k range and borrowed the entire $500k, and now find the property worth a current estimate of $400k are choosing to walk away from the negative equity position, regardless of ability to handle the payments. Research by the Federal Reserve has deemed these "unpreventable" foreclosures in that the property cannot be refinanced and the borrower is not compelled to keep the property with no hope of any short term appreciation.

However, the impact of these resets is nothing compared to the upcoming impact of the "option ARMs" that are going to reset in 2009 – 2011 (peaking in 2010).

 San Diego real estate blog

During the housing heyday, borrowers quit even asking about rate, and asked instead "what are the lowest payments you can get me for this home." Lenders responded by offering the option arms with a 1% (or other similarly low) start rates but with a "real" rate tied to the LIBOR or to US Treasuries or other indexes. The use of these loans peaked in 2005. These loans were predominantly used in Southern California and other high cost housing areas and were used with a much greater frequency than in more "affordable" areas in middle America (not near the geographic diversity as the sub prime loans). Here's where it gets tricky. While folks with the 2/28 loans knew an adjustment was coming, many option arm borrowers are NOT aware that an adjustment is coming. Almost ALL option arms are structured in a similar fashion. They have a feature where they "re-cast" every 5 years. This means that at the end of the initial 5 year period, the initial start rate (often called the "teaser" rate) goes away. The loan will then reset or re-cast and the payments will be based on a full amortizing loan amount for the remaining 25 years of the loan. Many of the people with this type of loan simply do not know or understand that this will happen.

Here's an example. Let's say that a buyer purchased a property in 2005 for $550,000. If they put 10% down, they would have a loan amount of $495,000. With an initial "teaser" rate of 1%, they would have minimum payments for the 1st year of $1592 per month. If the "fully amortized" or "real" payment was based at say, 6.5%, the loan balance would go up by over $1500 per month. So, where would the buyer be at the end of the first year? Assuming that the buyer made only the minimum payment (which most do), the minimum payment can only increase by 7.5% of the PAYMENT AMOUNT. So, the $1592 payment become a $1711 payment. However, the buyer owed an additional $18,000 more than the $495,000 because of the negative amortization. What happens next? 

In the 5th year, the minimum payment will be just over $2100 per month. Assuming that the "real" rate is in the 6.5% range over the initial 5 yrs (which looks pretty realistic based on current rates), the loan balance would have increased to approximately $550,000. What happens now?

This is the interesting part because even many savvy and educated buyers and borrowers simply do not know. What happens is this: The loan at that point "re-casts" and becomes amortized over the remaining 25 years at the current rate. If we continue to use the 6.5% as a reference point, the payment will go from $2100 to over $3700 a month!! Thats right, a $1500 per month increase ($550,000 at 6.5% for $25 yrs yields a pmt of $3713).

Meanwhile, the median value of a home that was worth $550,000 in 2005 might only be $400,000 in 2010 (assuming a decline of 25% in value. Per today's San Diego Union Tribune, the value of the average SD home lost 25% in the last year alone, so the $400k estimated value figure might be generous). Now, imagine how many people with a $400,000 property and a $550,000 loan are going to hang in there after finding out that their payment is going up $1500 per month?

This will be the next wave of foreclosures. These loans and properties are in all areas of San Diego, not just the newly constructed properties on the outskirts of town. The fallout of these foreclosures in San Diego will hit higher end and coastal areas and everywhere in between. YIKES!   Many thanks to our guest author, Mr.Greg Brooks Southwest area manager San Diego Mortgage Network for this enlightening post. *Ed notes: The next bank with possible trouble??… I've been told Downey Savings & Loan was a major player in the option arm business and about a year ago their non-performing loans were at appx. 1.3%. In June 2008, it's said that Downey's non-performing loans are now appx. 15%!                                      San Diego real estate blog

4
Jul

San Diego Real Estate Bubble … What Bubble?

San Diego real estate blogIt's Always A Good Time To Buy Real Estate…right??

In 2005, the media ‘talking heads’ adamantly asserted that a San Diego housing bubble was a myth.  In the Spring of 2006 they said the ‘minor correction’ was over and in the Spring of 2007 said it was time to jump on the great home values.  Most recently they were predicting a likely turnaround for the Spring of 2008.  Yes, the industry ‘insiders’ have had a perfect record for being wrong.  But, wait … the Spring of 2009 may see our long awaited turnaround.  Just don’t bet your house on it!     San Diego real estate agents