- This topic has 14 replies, 8 voices, and was last updated 17 years, 6 months ago by no_such_reality.
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July 2, 2007 at 4:28 PM #9431July 2, 2007 at 9:05 PM #63478patientrenterParticipant
Not much to oppose… ZB, your general views about housing are largely shared by most other piggingtonians. There might be a little controversy around the edges, but not in the center. As SD Realtor has just said in another thread, we’re mostly now just watching for specific data to better judge when to strike… er, buy our specific little piece of paradise.
Patient renter in OC
July 2, 2007 at 9:05 PM #63533patientrenterParticipantNot much to oppose… ZB, your general views about housing are largely shared by most other piggingtonians. There might be a little controversy around the edges, but not in the center. As SD Realtor has just said in another thread, we’re mostly now just watching for specific data to better judge when to strike… er, buy our specific little piece of paradise.
Patient renter in OC
July 2, 2007 at 10:06 PM #63496NotCrankyParticipantI think your post is very nice. I also think it proves we need a seperate section for housing bubble stuff somewhere behind the religion,public school,liberal-neocon ideology thread topics. Just kidding. Maybe we should try the big chunk about to be ripped out slow decline thing again?LOL
July 2, 2007 at 10:06 PM #63551NotCrankyParticipantI think your post is very nice. I also think it proves we need a seperate section for housing bubble stuff somewhere behind the religion,public school,liberal-neocon ideology thread topics. Just kidding. Maybe we should try the big chunk about to be ripped out slow decline thing again?LOL
July 2, 2007 at 10:11 PM #63505bubble_contagionParticipantIn 2005 inventory peaked in October, in 2006 in July. Will 2007 be like 2006 or like 2005? Why the difference? My feeling is that 2007 will be more like 2005 but it is just a guess. A lot of people gave up selling in late 2006 to wait out the rebound. This didn’t happen. Now these same people have to compete with foreclosure and “need to sell” inventory from the ARMs resets. Big price drops could be around the corner but don’t count on it. The housing market has proven to be very resilient and an imminent crash has been called since 2004.
July 2, 2007 at 10:11 PM #63558bubble_contagionParticipantIn 2005 inventory peaked in October, in 2006 in July. Will 2007 be like 2006 or like 2005? Why the difference? My feeling is that 2007 will be more like 2005 but it is just a guess. A lot of people gave up selling in late 2006 to wait out the rebound. This didn’t happen. Now these same people have to compete with foreclosure and “need to sell” inventory from the ARMs resets. Big price drops could be around the corner but don’t count on it. The housing market has proven to be very resilient and an imminent crash has been called since 2004.
July 2, 2007 at 10:45 PM #63517SD RealtorParticipantPretty insightful post bubble_cont… I agree with your analysis but I think the sellers who are not “must sell” will hide back in their turtle shells… Some will not but I think most will… So to me I see 2007 mimicking 2005 in the sense that inventory will be higher later in the summer like 05…
SD Realtor
July 2, 2007 at 10:45 PM #63570SD RealtorParticipantPretty insightful post bubble_cont… I agree with your analysis but I think the sellers who are not “must sell” will hide back in their turtle shells… Some will not but I think most will… So to me I see 2007 mimicking 2005 in the sense that inventory will be higher later in the summer like 05…
SD Realtor
July 3, 2007 at 6:59 AM #63550PDParticipantThere are still lots of people out there who are hanging on by their fingernails and waiting for prices to go back up. Eventually, they are going to either be forced to sell or will realize that prices are not going to recover any time soon.
July 3, 2007 at 6:59 AM #63604PDParticipantThere are still lots of people out there who are hanging on by their fingernails and waiting for prices to go back up. Eventually, they are going to either be forced to sell or will realize that prices are not going to recover any time soon.
July 3, 2007 at 9:40 AM #63587BugsParticipantI subscribe to the point of diminshing returns theory when it comes to sales volumes vs. inventory. I think that after a certain point of adding more inventory it no longer matters how much excess inventory we have. What’s the difference if we have 12 times as many listings as monthly sales or 9 times as many? Too many is too many, and the only sales that do go off will be the ones where the sellers were sufficiently desperate that they were willing to accept those losses.
What’s really relevant is the number of “must sell” listings vs. the sales volumes, ’cause that’s the combo that will drive the pricing structure towards equilibrium between supply and demand.
July 3, 2007 at 9:40 AM #63640BugsParticipantI subscribe to the point of diminshing returns theory when it comes to sales volumes vs. inventory. I think that after a certain point of adding more inventory it no longer matters how much excess inventory we have. What’s the difference if we have 12 times as many listings as monthly sales or 9 times as many? Too many is too many, and the only sales that do go off will be the ones where the sellers were sufficiently desperate that they were willing to accept those losses.
What’s really relevant is the number of “must sell” listings vs. the sales volumes, ’cause that’s the combo that will drive the pricing structure towards equilibrium between supply and demand.
July 3, 2007 at 9:59 AM #63597no_such_realityParticipantGood points Bugs. The listings even if they are not selling have a peer pressure of conformity. If everybody else is listing at $800K, even if they aren’t selling, must people will think the market is at $800K, instead of seeing the 1 in 10 that is selling at $700.
For “must sell” inventory, I wonder if we won’t get an additional spike this fall. When I look at the ARM reset chart, I see the option ARMs sitting out starting at month 30 and going on. To my knowledge, most option ARMs were written with 5 or 7 year reset windows and equity reset that trips at 110% or 115% of value which is the timebomb on the option ARM. People using the option ARM minimum payment, that’s the majority why else do you get an option ARM, hit their loan limits on average in 29 months.
I eyeball the teal, map that to a 60 month original reset period and then move it up to a 29 month equity reset, and that teal hump that starts as a small trickle in month 30, slides all the way over to month 1. Which puts currently about at where the teal part starts to get thick and then get real thick this fall/winter.
I think the chart would have been made using the time bound reset parameters and not the optional reset parameters of excess equity burn.
http://piggington.com/arm_reset_timeline
Anybody else have thoughts on that?
July 3, 2007 at 9:59 AM #63650no_such_realityParticipantGood points Bugs. The listings even if they are not selling have a peer pressure of conformity. If everybody else is listing at $800K, even if they aren’t selling, must people will think the market is at $800K, instead of seeing the 1 in 10 that is selling at $700.
For “must sell” inventory, I wonder if we won’t get an additional spike this fall. When I look at the ARM reset chart, I see the option ARMs sitting out starting at month 30 and going on. To my knowledge, most option ARMs were written with 5 or 7 year reset windows and equity reset that trips at 110% or 115% of value which is the timebomb on the option ARM. People using the option ARM minimum payment, that’s the majority why else do you get an option ARM, hit their loan limits on average in 29 months.
I eyeball the teal, map that to a 60 month original reset period and then move it up to a 29 month equity reset, and that teal hump that starts as a small trickle in month 30, slides all the way over to month 1. Which puts currently about at where the teal part starts to get thick and then get real thick this fall/winter.
I think the chart would have been made using the time bound reset parameters and not the optional reset parameters of excess equity burn.
http://piggington.com/arm_reset_timeline
Anybody else have thoughts on that?
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