Home › Forums › Housing › Another SD housing market prediction by a smart man, here are some excerpts:
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May 26, 2006 at 9:25 AM #25958May 26, 2006 at 9:28 AM #25959AnonymousGuest
Your neighbor is a great example that being rich and being intelligent are mutually exclusive. How can he only charge $3400 in rent for a 1.2M property, it simply does not add up. Doing some quick math, if he bought the property with a mortgage the monthly payments would be almost $6000 per month. If he bought the house with cash, and we assume the market stays flat, the income in real terms is basically zero. But of course anyone that doesn’t live in a cave must realize real estate is not going to be flat, but is on its way down.
This guy is a moron.
May 26, 2006 at 9:38 AM #25960AnonymousGuestI didn’t read the book, does Talbot say that “no regular people will have jobs” following a 50% drop, or is that your comment?
I can’t see any reason why a 50% drop in San Diego prices would cause a calamity. That would basically return real estate to 2001 levels, which were already overpriced. The only people who should really be hurt are those who bought in the last 2-3 years, flippers, and a lot of real estate and construction people will be out of work. I don’t see that as a calamity and don’t see how it will hurt too many people outside of real estate related industries.
And for those that are ruined financially, maybe they will move out of San Diego and there will be less competition for jobs and houses for the rest of us (and less traffic). Not sure that this is a bad thing.
May 26, 2006 at 9:40 AM #25961PDParticipantI agree, he is a moron. The property taxes here are 1.2% and the assoc. fee is something like $350 a month. He has made a ton speculating here in the last few years and is convinced that nothing matters except appreciation.
May 26, 2006 at 10:36 AM #25963powaysellerParticipantHe was smart 3 years ago. As I said before, (impatience showing?), you cannot predict when irrational exuberance corrects. Excesses go on for much longer than anyone thinks possible. That doesn’t mean the person who saw the excess was wrong.
This reminds me of the alcoholic uncle. You know he’s an alcoholic, everyone does, but he is in denial. He loses his job, his wife, gets a DUI. You keep thinking he hit bottom, and he will quit drinking. But to him, it’s not bad enough. Then one day, something happens, he has a revelation, and comes to his senses. Markets are like that too. Just because he kept drinking after the wife left him doesn’t mean that you were wrong to call him an alcoholic.
May 26, 2006 at 10:39 AM #25964powaysellerParticipantI agree. Prices dropping 50% will bring them back to where they would be if this crazy appreciation had not happened.
Chris, I’m interested, which of Talbott’s ideas do you dispute? I dispute his assertion that inflation has been burned out of the economy.
As far as the fallout, what he says is entirely possible. The entire MBS market is at risk, because of stupidity of the managers at Fannie Mae. In my opinion, they should be in jail! The whole liquidity game was a dangerous experiment. It will end in a mess. A big global recession, unless they come up with another asset bubble to prolong having to balance the global economy.
May 26, 2006 at 10:46 AM #25965carlislematthewParticipantIf it is indeed the case that he was predicting an imminent crash 3 years ago (according the previous post, at least) then we was NOT a smart man three years ago.
My comment was tongue in cheek and the implication is that someone is smart when they agree with you, and a fool when they don’t.
In addition, I was not debating with you regarding the end of the bubble and if it is possible to predict the end – I happen to agree with you. I was, however, making a comment in reply to a post that stated that the author predicting an *imminent* crash 3 years ago.
May 26, 2006 at 11:11 AM #25966AnonymousGuestDead and poway
Do you really think that 10 Trillion dollars can get taken out of the US economy, and not have widespread unemployment? That is the equivalent of the DOW going negative. The total Cap of NYSE is less than 10 Trillion. So, it is hard for me to believe that we could have the equivalent of that much of a wipeout, and not have record high unemployment. Here in OC, close to 50% of the new jobs since 2000 are in RE. A huge RE depression, would leave most of these people out of work.
Do you think there is another industry or industries, that would be strong enough in the midst of a national depression, to absorb that many job seekers? There is a domino effect in our economy, things do not stand alone. Layoffs at 7/11 and Burger King, accountants at Big 8 firms, and attorneys(not a displeasing thought) would also lose jobs. Tons of small businesses would go under.
We are completely built on one asset class right now. If it implodes, the effect is alot bigger than what you are talking about.
I just think you are not being realistic. Make no mistake, a 30% drop will create the largest recession we have ever had. Even that is going to be an awful time for us here economically. I do think that could happen. I just model all of my views on history. A 50% drop is a “it will be different this time,” view. It is that because we have never had anywhere near that previously. There are always ways of justifying why it is different this time. However, history has shown us that most of the time, it is in fact not different.
I look at that argument the same way I look at the bulls argument, for more upside appreciation. Just my opinion, I could be wrong. Maybe I am too optimistic.
Poway, mostly I agree with his comments, but the conspiracy theory aspect to it is not based on facts. Asset bubbles are caused by the most basic human emotions such as greed. I do not think you can isolate one symptom like that and blame it. If everyone were conservative, and prudent, these huge peaks and valleys in prices would not occur.
However, I like it though, because I make a living off those peaks and valleys in trading.
May 26, 2006 at 11:14 AM #25967PDParticipantAre you saying a 30% drop in only a few markets will cause the recession?
May 26, 2006 at 11:26 AM #25969AnonymousGuestPD
Yes if it occurs in the markets with the largest asset value like here (LA, OC, SD), San Fran, NYC, Boston, Dc etc..You are talking about a massive amount of erosion of net worth. Far more, in fact no comparison to what the stock selloff eroded. Housing makes up a far higher % of personal net worth than stocks nationally.
If just SD dropped 50 and nothing else moved, then no problem nationally. I do not see how that could happen in isolation like that. I just want folks to take the emotion out of this.
We all agree a drop is imminent, but I do sense a general almost rooting for it tone. My basic point is, be careful what you wish for. Have a plan, but base it on hard numbers, not emotion. Then execute it when the time arises. Do not get to tied up in the negativity that will abound on this drop.
I love buying huge drops in things, because most people, even those who planned to do it, get scared when they are in the midst of it. It is not easy to do, yet it is opportunity knocking.
I just think people are under estimating how bad things will be if even a 30% drop occurs, that is a huge drop for an asset essentially “rigged” to go up over time. I remember how OC was during the last crash, and the drop was only about 20% basis the median.
Just my opinion
May 26, 2006 at 12:09 PM #25978lostkittyParticipantSo is this why no one seems to be getting too excited about Florida and Phoenix? Their situations look even more dire than San Diego’s, but maybe it is because the same staggering amount of $$ isnt inolved? Wouldnt have the same effect on the larger economy? Am I following you correctly?
May 26, 2006 at 12:46 PM #25980powaysellerParticipantNo one can time an event. Never trust a financial advisor who claims they can. You can know what will happen with a great deal of certainty, but not When. I think Talbott took that strong stand because he was either overconfident, or he wanted to sell more books. If he would have said, “Sell Sometime, I just don’t know when, but it will be sometime eventually”, his title wouldn’t be as catchy. Nonetheless, just because his timing is off, doesn’t mean I don’t buy his premise.
The important thing I look at: does this guy’s argument make sense? Can what he predicts come to pass?
I agree with you that economists should admit that they don’t know when an event will come to pass.
May 26, 2006 at 12:51 PM #25981powaysellerParticipantGood point, and one made by Chris J. also. Don’t let an economist manage your money. They do have interesting insights into the economy, because they spend all day tracking trends, and can put the time into forecasting. But their track record on predicting the future is really bad.
Talbott would have done better if he’d advised people to check the real estate leading indicators before selling: days on market (untampered version, if there is one), inventory, affordability index. And buyer psychology. Anyone who made a decision based on his book definitely lost money. Talbott emailed me that I should buy Ibonds with my money. He actually believes the government CPI!
After that, I learned not to let an economist manage my money. I bet their personal portfolios underperform the market by a lot!
May 26, 2006 at 1:09 PM #25983PDParticipantA handprinted sign I saw on a street corner today (the misspelling was theirs):
Real estate investor needs apprestice – 20k mo
May 26, 2006 at 1:24 PM #25984pencilneckParticipantAnyone please correct me if I’m wrong, but I wouldn’t think a direct correlation between number of sales and price should exist without bringing supply into the equation.
For example, over the last 50 years the price of gasoline has dropped (when adjusted for inflation) even though the sale of gasoline has increased greatly. This is due to more production, more competition, etc. However, small adjustments to the supply available creates large adjustments to the price. Changes in price will eventually create some adjustments to sales.
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