View Full Version : The Housing Bubble - Everyone's talking


logybogy
July 11th, 2005, 08:46 AM
This is an interesting article, more detailed than the typical garbage you find in the Herald about bubbles. I really think there is a risk of a self-fufilling prophecy. The more people talk about bubbles, the more nervous people get, and sooner or later the crash everyone is talking about will happen.

I think there are a lot of things insulating the Miami market from a steep downturn in prices. I think single-family homes will continue to do very well because of high demand (most people want to raise a family in a house with a backyard) and lack of supply (lack of land, few homes on market thanks to save our homes).

The place I see that could crash in Miami is overvalued projects in poor locations.

*Locations without direct ocean/bay water views

*Locations in ghetto areas attempting gentrification with drug dealers and prostitutes across the street

Waterfront locations in Brickell, Miami Beach, Downtown, Sunny Isles, Aventura will be fine.

Elsewhere, I am not so sure. I think there is a lot of overvalued crap condos without direct water views in poor ghetto locations selling for too high.





The Housing Bubble—Everybody’s Talking
By Fred Dattolo August 2005

Only months ago, more than a few economists ridiculed the notion of a national housing bubble. Now everybody’s talking about it.

Last year, the Trumpet published an article that proved all the signs of a classic bubble were extant in the current housing market (“The Biggest Bubble Ever,” November 2004). We advanced what many considered to be a contrarian view—that when enough regional bubbles start popping so that their impact is felt nationally, no one will question that a genuine national housing bubble exists.

They haven’t started popping yet, but notice what the Wall Street Journal recently disclosed: “[T]he latest data suggest that real-estate values in the nation’s fastest-growing markets are getting so large that the distinction between them and the national market could become meaningless.” Quoting a chief economist at the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., the article continued: “A slowdown would not only hurt these markets, but the U.S. as a whole” (June 20, emphasis ours).

The newest data further confirm that many homebuyers (aided by accommodating lenders) are stretching more than ever to purchase an otherwise unaffordable home, further inflating the bubble. During the second half of last year, almost two thirds of new mortgages issued were of the risky adjustable-rate (arm) or interest-only variety. So far this year, an estimated 20 percent of new U.S. mortgages are the interest-only kind—an astounding indication that borrowers are stretched to their limits.

In California, interest-only loans accounted for 61 percent of new home mortgages in January and February—compared to less than 2 percent in 2002! A conventional 30-year fixed-rate mortgage for a median-priced home is out of reach for 82 percent of California households, even though interest rates remain very low by historical standards.

“The situation with interest-only arms is just one of several very scary things going on in the mortgage industry,” according to the president of a market-research firm based in New Jersey. “The rise of interest-only loans, combined with other factors … are likely to cause foreclosures to rise … ‘possibly dramatically’” (Wall Street Journal, May 18).

In a bid to keep business booming, lenders and bankers shovel out these loans almost like the free suckers you can pick up at the bank teller window. Business Week makes these claims: Lending standards are looser, especially with adjustable loans whose rates will probably rise; loans are riskier—some loans now allow borrowers to skip payments in some months; and appraisers are pressured to deliver high-end appraisals under veiled threat of otherwise being snubbed. So as it feeds on itself, the bubble gets bigger and bigger.

Speculation

The latest feeding frenzy is accentuated by the rise in speculative activity by buyers who are not interested in purchasing a home to live in but purely as a money-making investment. Prices are climbing so fast that many are now “flipping” their properties—selling them quickly—and making thousands of dollars on a single property in just one month or less. Others are holding them longer hoping for much bigger gains.

Some will buy 10 or 20 homes at a time. A Phoenix homebuilder estimates that as much as 60 percent of local new housing developments are owned by investors. In South Florida, sales to investors are as high as 80 percent in some subdivisions. Many of these buyers don’t care if their rental income is less than the mortgage payment because home prices are climbing much faster than the amount they lose each month.

When the sizzling market finally cools, it will be this flood of speculators who, having the freedom to act (compared to owner-occupiers), will quickly sell their houses to maximize profits. This could easily trigger a downturn in housing-related activity and prompt a downward spiral on home prices. When others (for example, elderly retirees wanting to downsize) seek to jump on the bandwagon and “cash in” on their houses before it’s too late, this roller-coaster ride will have reached its pinnacle and begun to plunge down the other side. The question is: How far will it go?

The Potential Plunge

Since 2001, a whopping 43 percent of all net private sector jobs created have been in housing-related industries! Today, more than 60 percent of bank assets are tied to mortgages. And thanks in large part to inflated housing equity, American households borrowed $1 trillion just in 2004 to buy houses and other goods! Far too many assume they can count on rising home equity to bail themselves out of debt. This has the potential to be a huge disaster. Here’s why.

The Federal Reserve has flooded the economy with new money (doubling bank deposits in just eight years), but much of the excess liquidity found its way into housing rather than business investment, which would have theoretically boosted industrial production and raised wages. Nevertheless, consumer spending continued and has been the engine that has kept the U.S. economy moving. How? The spending has been supported to a great extent by borrowing on inflated home equity, rather than tangible increases in production and wages. In 2004, “household debt increased more than twice as fast as disposable income” (Daily Reckoning, June 20). In other words, it is a debt-fed consumption that continues to sustain the economy. That simply cannot continue.

As we stated in our November article, “The wealth that was created is an illusion—not based on real productive activities” (op. cit.). The Economist agrees: “The housing boom was fun while it lasted, but the biggest increase in wealth in history was largely an illusion” (op. cit.). Rich Americans have already discerned that the handwriting is on the wall. The Wall Street Journal reported that wealthy investors (in general more savvy and informed than the average person) “cut back on their real-estate investments last year, suggesting that the wealthy believe the [housing] market has become overheated …. The drop is a contrast to everyday consumers, who continue to buy up homes and drive up prices” (June 13).

The Burst

A housing bubble bust could have severe consequences for the heavily entangled banking system, heavily invested mutual funds and pension funds, hundreds of thousands of housing-related jobs, and the typical American consumer who is debt-heavy and savings-light. In the face of a hard reality check, the jolt to the American economy could affect millions of Americans—and the repercussions would be global in scope.

Probably the most significant development to date is that everybody’s talking, because “talk and high prices are the main things that end bubbles. The intensity of talk about the high prices right now is enormous, suggesting an emerging change of public thinking that may signal the end of the bubble” (Wall Street Journal, June 2).

As we pointed out last November, “[T]he U.S. economy has been perking along largely because it’s been propped up by the greatest housing bubble ever known. When it starts to unravel, it will likely lead to the biggest bubble bust in world history, hurtling the U.S. economy into chaos. … The shock waves could lead to a major global recession like we’ve never seen” (op. cit.). As extreme as that sounds, it’s becoming an acknowledged fact of life, even in respected business magazines.

“The global housing boom is the biggest financial bubble in history. The bigger the boom, the bigger the eventual bust” (Economist, op. cit.). The same article said, “[T]he day of reckoning is closer at hand. It is not going to be pretty. How the current housing boom ends could decide the course of the entire world economy over the next few years.”

We proffer the same advice to you now that we did in November. Prepare now to reduce your standard of living.

ChuckScraperMiami#1
July 12th, 2005, 02:29 AM
Very Interesting Logybogy :hi: , I'm still talking about the still low ( lowest this year ) Interest rates that is still holding our bubble here in Miami together and maybe flying higher over the next 2 years, I say, Go Cranes :laugh: :cheers1: !!! :cheers:
:whisper: check it out at www.interest.com :fiddle:

Dale
July 12th, 2005, 06:11 PM
The bubble that was the South Florida Forum has pretty much burst.

Is there really this little in the way of news to report ? Or do some of you just have jobs ? ;)

elmwood
July 12th, 2005, 06:33 PM
I'm a bit jealous of homeowners who bought a few years ago in areas where prices are skyrocketing; they're earning massive equity, and even if the bubble bursts prices probably won't fall below their original purchase price.

Then I look at the home I bought last year -- a renovated and expanded house in a stable middle-class neighborhood -- paying $71 a square foot, with a 30 year 5.5% fixed rate mortgage, and feel a bit relieved.

rider_of_rohan
July 12th, 2005, 10:24 PM
Dale I was thinking the same thing lol, must be the summer air.

ChuckScraperMiami#1
July 13th, 2005, 02:22 AM
The bubble that was the South Florida Forum has pretty much burst.

Is there really this little in the way of news to report ? Or do some of you just have jobs ? ;)

Dale :hi: , my friend, I know what your getting at, its that time of the year, summer vacations for some of us Miami folks, Working overtime for others, and trying to get by another busy hurricane season for the developers.

Yes, Dale :wave: , its quiet here now as many developers are waiting on what happens with these storms, and then in late September, the groundbreaking begins on about 30 new Condo Tower projects, when they know we can make it another 9 months without a hurricane scare.
Developers are funny sometimes :fart: , they know when is the best time to start construction on a winning project after the hurricane season is almost over. Its what I found out about MET 3 groundbreaking :) , they are just waiting on what's going to happen if another Hurricane Andrew :devil: happens and scares the buyers away from Miami.
Like I said many times before, Check out the City of Miami in March, 2006, it will be the highest construction Peak here in Miami's History with more than 50 Tower construction Cranes in the City Limits alone. WOW, Go Cranes !!! :banana: :cucumber: :carrot: :pepper: :banana2:

The Mad Hatter!!
July 13th, 2005, 09:52 PM
yea the forum has been a bit slow,anyone know g.b. for onyx2

ChuckScraperMiami#1
July 14th, 2005, 12:27 AM
yea the forum has been a bit slow,anyone know g.b. for onyx2

Yes Uptown Mad Hatter :hi: , its after the hurricane season, a start late this fall, 2005 on Onyx 2 Condo Tower :soon: , probably about the same time as Met 3 in December. Its all about the hurricane scares away buyers from our city for now, All new developers are waiting for a Late Fall Construction Start in late October and November, when the hurricane season quiets down, and more Tower Construction cranes can go up ,without worrying about taking them down for a hurricane warning. :hammer:

Uptown :rock: , Its that time of the year, its getting boring in the development news as summer vacations are happening in the construction Industry. :cheers:

DrT
July 14th, 2005, 03:58 AM
Thanks Logybogy for the thoughtful article.
I am concerned that most forumers, and the public, are so cavalier about the increasing unaffordability of housing for Americans.
Greenspan has engineered the greatest inflation of all time and flooded the world with us dollars (The Economist, "Still gushing forth", February 5, 2005).
After the "burst", we will be selling all of these luxury condos to the chinese as vacation properties -- they will find them cheap I'm sure and since it is a world market, prices may not plummet, it is just that WE will not be able to afford them with our American job paychecks; we will be paupers in our own country like the Argentines ----- DrT
(No offense to Argentina, but inflating the currency is a trap governments fall into to temporarily create the illusion of prosperity, almost every country succumbs to this temptation.)