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  #1  
Old 05-21-2005, 06:45 AM
CamusEatsSumTum CamusEatsSumTum is offline
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Default real estate questions....

I think someone questioned you publicly here before, and I think its a good idea because the posters here are more intelligent here than in other sections of this website.

My first question has to do with inflation in real estate prices and this so-called bubble.

Has there previously been a real estate crash that we can study?

How exactly are real estate prices set, similar to stocks, that a house is worth as much as someone will pay for it, so for there to be a crash, several people would have to lower the price of the house they are selling.

Ive read that recently several investors have entered the real estate market which is responsible for the boom: Why would these investors decide to sell at a lower price, as opposed to just holding their appreciating asset and renting it out?

How can you judge whether a property is at a good price? Is it in relation to the amount it would cost to rent a similar property. How do you figure the rent of a property? Is it a percentage of a properties total value?

sorry if these questions are too vague or stupid or broad based.

if you have any book recommendations that would be great.
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  #2  
Old 05-21-2005, 11:32 AM
deathtoau deathtoau is offline
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Location: Northern Virginia
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Default Re: real estate questions....

[ QUOTE ]
My first question has to do with inflation in real estate prices and this so-called bubble.

Has there previously been a real estate crash that we can study?

[/ QUOTE ]

Japan in the past couple of decades. The real estate bubble there destroyed their whole economy and created one of the longest prolonged recessions since the Great Depression. They still haven't fully recovered.

[ QUOTE ]
How exactly are real estate prices set, similar to stocks, that a house is worth as much as someone will pay for it, so for there to be a crash, several people would have to lower the price of the house they are selling.

[/ QUOTE ]
It is a matter of supply and demand. People can set their property value at what ever they want to, but it only sells if there is a buyer willing to meet the seller’s price. If there is a vast oversupply of houses on the market, then the prices would fall because buyers have more options and can hold out for a better deal.

[ QUOTE ]
Why would these investors decide to sell at a lower price, as opposed to just holding their appreciating asset and renting it out?

[/ QUOTE ]

Most real estate investors as well as home buyers are leveraged up to their eyeballs. Between short term ARM mortgages and interest-only loans, the monthly payments can explode higher when interest rates return to the typical levels. These higher monthly payments are going to lead to a rash of property owners going into default which will result in a large number of foreclosures which will result in a glut of homes on the market etc. etc. etc. The end result will be the collapse of the real estate bubble just like the collapse of the dot com bubble.

The real bet now is figuring out when not if the crash will come.
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  #3  
Old 05-21-2005, 06:01 PM
midas midas is offline
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Default Re: real estate questions....

Camus

In the early 90's the loose credit standards of the S&L's cause a real estate bubble which burst in the early 90's taking down several banks.

Buyers and sellers set the price of real estate.

Real estate bubbles also occur when investors drive up the prices of real estate without actually occupying the building. I believe this is happening in Las Vegas right now. Investors get into trouble when they can't afford to carry the cost of the investment (taxes, interest, insurance) and are forced to sell cheap or are forclosed by banks who then sell cheap. Usually in a real estate bubbles the cost of buying is much greater than the cost of renting.

A property is a good price if it trades at or near recent comparables but these prices can vary widely just like stocks. A safe real estate investment thesis is to buy where land is scarce (ocean front, dense suburbs) and income levels are high (NY, LA , Boston and SF)
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  #4  
Old 05-22-2005, 09:21 AM
RYL RYL is offline
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Join Date: Aug 2004
Posts: 92
Default Re: real estate questions....

[ QUOTE ]
I think someone questioned you publicly here before, and I think its a good idea because the posters here are more intelligent here than in other sections of this website.

My first question has to do with inflation in real estate prices and this so-called bubble.

Has there previously been a real estate crash that we can study?

How exactly are real estate prices set, similar to stocks, that a house is worth as much as someone will pay for it, so for there to be a crash, several people would have to lower the price of the house they are selling.

Ive read that recently several investors have entered the real estate market which is responsible for the boom: Why would these investors decide to sell at a lower price, as opposed to just holding their appreciating asset and renting it out?

How can you judge whether a property is at a good price? Is it in relation to the amount it would cost to rent a similar property. How do you figure the rent of a property? Is it a percentage of a properties total value?

sorry if these questions are too vague or stupid or broad based.

if you have any book recommendations that would be great.

[/ QUOTE ]

Hey... I was gonna ask these questions!!! [img]/images/graemlins/smile.gif[/img] [img]/images/graemlins/cool.gif[/img] [img]/images/graemlins/grin.gif[/img]
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  #5  
Old 05-22-2005, 08:34 PM
DesertCat DesertCat is offline
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Location: Scottsdale, Arizona
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Default Re: real estate questions....

[ QUOTE ]

Most real estate investors as well as home buyers are leveraged up to their eyeballs. Between short term ARM mortgages and interest-only loans, the monthly payments can explode higher when interest rates return to the typical levels. These higher monthly payments are going to lead to a rash of property owners going into default which will result in a large number of foreclosures which will result in a glut of homes on the market etc. etc. etc. The end result will be the collapse of the real estate bubble just like the collapse of the dot com bubble.


[/ QUOTE ]

There is a great article in Fortune this month about the real estate bubble. It quotes one "investor" who owns a bunch of houses, but is only renting a few of them since he's planning to flip. He's already got major negative cash flow (something like $5,000 per month), and says if prices go down he's just going to hold on to them and wait until the rebound (he figures a year or two!).

This guy seems to have relatively deep pockets from some big wins but most real estate investors don't. They can only hold on so long before they or the bank dumps their properties at cut rate prices. And if the market takes five years to recover (late 80's, early 90's California), even Mr. Deep Pockets is up a brown creek with no paddle.
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  #6  
Old 05-23-2005, 01:16 AM
crazy canuck crazy canuck is offline
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Default Re: real estate questions....

There was a very good article in Economist last year about real estate bubbles (forgot which month). They mention that one way to price real estate is by summing up the future discounted rent. This is identical to valuing a stock based on future discounted earnings. So based on this, the article concluded that real estate is overvalued.

The article also mentions that people are more reluctant to dump their property if it drops in value compared to a stock. So there is a possibility that the bubble will not burst but instead there will be a gradual decrease in price over many years.

It is also mentioned that the real estate market is less efficient financial markets (forgot the exact reason tho).
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  #7  
Old 05-23-2005, 03:17 PM
laserboy laserboy is offline
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Default Re: real estate questions....

[ QUOTE ]

My first question has to do with inflation in real estate prices and this so-called bubble.

Has there previously been a real estate crash that we can study?


[/ QUOTE ]

Real estate prices in some areas of Japan have fallen over 90% since the early '90s. Toward the end of the mania, people were actually taking out 100 year "legacy" mortgages to get into houses. Of course we have now one-upped them here in California through use of interest-only loans (which were used in over 60% of home sales here last year) and negative amortization loans.

[ QUOTE ]

Ive read that recently several investors have entered the real estate market which is responsible for the boom: Why would these investors decide to sell at a lower price, as opposed to just holding their appreciating asset and renting it out?


[/ QUOTE ]

A "homeowner" could be forced to sell under a number of circumstances. For example, relocation or job loss. One of the primary drivers of the Southern California housing crash of the early '90s was the meltdown of the aerospace industry which left many people unemployed and unable to make their housing payments. Keep in mind that, in bubble areas such as Las Vegas and Orange County, the majority of jobs that have been created over the last 5 years have been in the real estate industry. A downturn in housing will be exacerbated by massive job losses in the real estate industry.

Homeowners who have overextended themselves could also be forced to sell once their ARMs lapse into fixed rate mortgages or when interest rates rise. There was an article in the WSJ a few days ago detailing how an ARM holder's monthly payments could double once their ARM terms lapsed and if interest rates were to rise a mere 2 percentage points.

Also, if housing prices dip significantly enough, a number of people will just walk away from their homes and let the banks forclose. Most new homebuyers in California buy homes with zero or very little money down and many are using interst only loans. These people have very little equity in their homes. If it gets to a point where they still owe $600K on a house that is now worth $500K, abandoning the home and letting the bank forcloes becomes the more attractive option. This was prevalent in past housing crashes in Southern California and Texas.

Now in a healthy housing market, yes, a homeowner would be able to rent out the property for positive cashflow while the market recovered. But a rental property in todays market does not generate positive cash flow because home prices and rents are so out of whack with each other. I rent a two bedroom apartment in Southern California for less than $1500/month. To buy and maintain an equivalent condo in this area would cost over twice as much per month. If I were to buy putting no money down, as many people are doing, it would cost even more. So in addition to price depreciation, homeowners would also be getting hosed on monthly cashflow.

[ QUOTE ]

How can you judge whether a property is at a good price? Is it in relation to the amount it would cost to rent a similar property. How do you figure the rent of a property? Is it a percentage of a properties total value?


[/ QUOTE ]

Home prices and rents are dictated by the market. When purchasing an investment property, you should consider metrics like capitalization rate and price/rent just as you would consider price/earnings in a stock. In a healthy market a decnt capitalization rate would be 10%+. In my area you would be lucky to get 5% on a residential property. 5% a complete joke. People are taking massive losses on cash flow only because they believe that some sucker will pay them a higher price for the house somewhere down the line. It's basically a gigantic Ponzi scheme.
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  #8  
Old 05-23-2005, 04:19 PM
Carl_William Carl_William is offline
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Default Re: real estate questions....


I agree with essentially everything you in your post except:

[ QUOTE ]
It's basically a gigantic Ponzi scheme.

[/ QUOTE ]

"gigantic" is an excellent adjective; but "Ponzi scheme," connotes criminal intent. "Giantic musical chair game" or "greater fool" would be a better way to describe the game.


People running Ponzi-schemes" have can go to jail, but the real estate market bubbles are just greater fool games.
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  #9  
Old 05-23-2005, 05:07 PM
laserboy laserboy is offline
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Default Re: real estate questions....

If I were in charge, sending home refinancing spam would be a crime punishable by death. [img]/images/graemlins/grin.gif[/img]

But you are correct. The people most responsible for the real estate bubble will walk away with millions laughing their way to the bank. Fannie Mae's CEO for instance. It was a great scam while it lasted.
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  #10  
Old 05-23-2005, 07:05 PM
Dan Mezick Dan Mezick is offline
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Default Re: real estate questions....

RE prices crashed in 1987 approx. 30% and did not recover in any meaningful until around 1998. 30% off with 10 years to recover is your basic risk based on that as a baseline.

A trend in motion tends to stay in motion. Folks have been naysaying RE for over 5 years now. Any RE crash will certainly have huge macro effects and kill the US economy.

This RE crash scenario is a highly unlikely scenario; a more likely scneario is no appreciation for 3-7 years.
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