[Edited on September 28, 2008 at 9:55 PM. Reason : ]
9/28/2008 9:55:21 PM
9/29/2008 2:15:09 AM
10/17/2008 10:20:08 PM
Some interesting points. Neither Canada nor Australia are or have suffered anything similar to what is transpiring in America. I suspect it has something to do with having more sensible laws. Of the three, America is the only one that leds homeowners deduct mortgage interest on their taxes, distorting housing markets and wasting resources. America is the only one that does not grant automatic recourse for lenders to recover negative equity from the borrower. Only America discourages pre-payment penalties which would otherwise discourage house-flipping. The American laws seem designed to fuel speculative furver (by dumping all potential losses upon the lender). And then, when a speculative bubble does burst, it dumps all the losses upon the lenders. Worse than that: it strongly encourages home owners to make the matter worse by walking away from the house, forcing the bank to sell in a hurry, while if the occupant had stayed around long enough to sell the property it would have sold for much more.
10/18/2008 12:17:00 AM
These record low mortgage rates will lead to more housing crisis in coming years, according to "Mr. Mortgage"http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2008/12/low-rates-spur-new-wave-of-defaults/and not directly related to the previous link, but interesting and relevant nonetheless, here is the Case-Shiller inflation-adjusted home price index for over 100 years. Looks like we have a lot more "correction" to come
1/3/2009 11:29:01 AM
^^ Exactly. Homes only appreciate with inflation. In fact they actually depreciate because you have to consider all of the upkeep that goes into maintaining a houses utility (new roofs, plumbing, etc)Its curious to me why most people believes homes have magical powers and are put on the planet in order to make people rich. Sure some local housing markets will appreciate due to desirability of the area (job market, prestige, commercial growth, etc) are going to appreciate but there will be other areas that offset that (Michigan, rural NC, etc)
1/4/2009 11:42:01 AM
^,^^^ Good points. Stanford economist, John Taylor, (known for the "Taylor rule") makes a very convincing argument for the role monetary policy played. (see full pdf here: http://www.stanford.edu/~johntayl/FCPR.pdf)One of the most interesting pieces of evidence he provides:
1/5/2009 7:28:41 PM
This wasn't new thread worthy, but this seemed like the most relevant thread to put this in:http://finance.yahoo.com/news/As-Housing-Prices-Plunge-cnbc-14355008.html "McCusker, a public relations executive, and his wife, a school teacher bought their home in July of 2005 for $462,500 with a 30 year fixed loan at 6.3 percent. But today, the home has a value today of $433,000. "We have good jobs, never missed a mortgage payment, "says McCusker. "But I can't get any help. There's something wrong with that." Wrong? Yes, you are a greedy asshat who feels entitled1. You overpaid, bought at the peak2. A house is not an investment with a guaranteed return3. You have a fixed loan at a historically (relatively) low rate but you are greedy and want to refinance. And you expect folks to help you save money when you made a bad business decision How does anyone argue that a bank should give a loan to someone for an asset that is worth less than the loan?
2/13/2009 1:56:21 PM
2/13/2009 1:59:52 PM
Agreed, historically, houses appreciate, but our current culture of instant gratification creates expectations of home ownership resulting in huge returns immediately.If this couple keeps doing what they're doing, in 30 years, their home *will* have appreciated in value. Right now, in 2009, it doesn't look pretty. The whole mentality of "the government needs to do something about this right now" is what irritates me.
2/13/2009 2:02:54 PM
we're f'ing screwed[Edited on May 3, 2009 at 6:07 PM. Reason : .]
5/3/2009 6:06:05 PM
why option adjustable mortgages are bad
5/3/2009 6:17:23 PM
In the golden days people bought houses not to sell and make money off of or as an investment....most of the time it was a money losing purchase but you know you have your own place..and we have dropped about to where it was at the beginning....that last boom to bust took 20 years for the prices to get back to where they were....and I seriously doubt houses will go up in value to match what they lost in 5 years, lets try 20 years....looking at the history of housing prices, that is how long it took the last time.Many of them were way overvalued to begin with and will never be worth that again.[Edited on May 3, 2009 at 10:02 PM. Reason : w]
5/3/2009 10:00:50 PM
1. Canada never had restrictions on interstate banking, so Canadian banks spread their assets and liabilities across Canada, and it doesn’t matter if a local housing market goes bust.2. Canada never had Glass-Steagall restrictions separating commercial banking from investment banking, and the investment banks in Canada joined the retail banks some years ago.3. Canada doesn't have mortgage interest deductibility for income taxes. So paying down your mortgage in Canada is a tax-free investment, and most people want to pay down their mortgages.4. Except in Alberta, mortgages in Canada are fully recourse. You can’t just walk away from a negative equity home and hand the keys to the bank; the bank will come after you for the difference.5. If a Canadian investor wishes to take some risk, the New York-based banks may be the most efficient means of doing that (added by Tyler Cowen).http://mjperry.blogspot.com/2009/05/banks-and-housing-markets-canada-vs-us.html
5/8/2009 9:43:39 AM
another view of what's to comehttp://www.calculatedriskblog.com/2009/06/option-arms-paying-98-month-on-350.html
6/11/2009 11:29:00 AM
The wife was watching property virgins last night. They were in Vancouver, the original air date of the show was March but who knows when they shot it. This couple found a home that was listed at 450,000. They really wanted it and there were 4 others putting in offers on it. So they offerred 531,000 for it.Mind boggling.
6/11/2009 12:29:02 PM
http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2009/06/most-subprime-lenders-werent-covered-by-cra/data backing up the fact that the Community Reinvestment Act was not a direct cause of the housing crisis
6/28/2009 12:07:00 AM
^ you expect actual facts to change the opinions of the blowhards who have jumped on the CRA bandwagon just so they can blame the crisis on Democrats and poor people? ha, why would they change their minds now? they've been saying the same thing for 2 years, without any actual data to back them up the whole time. never the less, here are a couple more take-downs of the CRA theoryhttp://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2009/06/cra-thought-experiment/
6/28/2009 10:25:30 AM
Here's How The Community Reinvestment Act Led To The Housing Bubble's Lax Lending
6/28/2009 10:48:02 AM
6/28/2009 10:49:23 AM
I dunno joe, it looks like even hooksaw is finally admitting the CRA wasn't the problem. From his own link
6/28/2009 10:53:26 AM
^ You're an idiot--cherry pick much? I read it, but you didn't. [Edited on June 28, 2009 at 11:08 AM. Reason : You suck at life.]
6/28/2009 11:07:59 AM
I absolutely read it and he draws conclusions that don't at all make sense based on the fact presented. I'll give you just one example because I could give you 20 and you'll still never change your mind
6/28/2009 11:27:41 AM
6/28/2009 12:31:38 PM
Reading through that Business Insider blog, I felt like John Carney was repeatedly being owned by the statements he was attempting to refute.
6/28/2009 1:36:11 PM
Yeah, I was like, this is a ton of words to say so little to address the points you are making.You also have to wonder what a former corp lawyer is doing as a small time blogger. Maybe he got burned out and wanted a change of pace. Maybe he just doesn't know what the fuck he is talking about?
6/28/2009 1:44:03 PM
My money is on Barryhttp://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2009/06/100000-cra-challenge/Btw, as I mentioned above, why did a corp lawyer turn semi-pro blogger? Apparently, he doesn't have 100k lying around to go head to head with Barry on this, meaning, he didn't get wealthy as a corp lawyer. Fail.[Edited on June 29, 2009 at 10:22 PM. Reason : .]
6/29/2009 10:19:24 PM
f'ing CRA and Fannie/Freddie and Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton, forcing these poor speculators to flip houses for millions in profit http://www.heraldtribune.com/article/20090719/ARTICLE/907191031#
7/26/2009 10:59:35 AM
The above is not inconsistent with the CRA/Fannie/Freddie theory.UT economist, Stan Leibowitz, has an interesting take http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1211822[Edited on July 26, 2009 at 12:34 PM. Reason : .]
7/26/2009 12:32:54 PM
^ ok, sure.... whatever. anyway, i'm sure you can find someway to blame this on Fannie/Freddie/CRA also. oh, wait, here you go, i'll do it for you - maybe the gov't didn't hold a gun to the homeowners's heads and force them to refinance, or force the banks to give insane refinancing mortgages, but they fostered an environment where such activity was encouraged, nay, even rewarded!
7/28/2009 10:19:51 PM
At this point, with as much ink that has been spilled about the housing blowup, anyone that tries to pin the majority of the blame on any one entity simply shouldn't be dealt with when discussing it. It's asinine.
7/28/2009 10:42:10 PM
Somewhat on topic: interesting WaPo article on why loan modifications generally haven't been taking off:http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/27/AR2009072703065.html?nav=rss_email/componentsThe short answer? Spending money modifying loans to avoid foreclosure is only profitable for those who actually would avoid foreclosure. Which means those who actually can't make their payments (rather than those who could if they actually got their act together, and those that can't or won't no matter what). In fact, looks like plenty of loan-mods have already gone re-delinquent.
7/29/2009 7:18:04 AM
yeah, and the fact that the vast majority of loan modifications don't actually adjust the principle. Any of the modifications that just adjust the interest rate or change from an ARM to a fixed or whatever are just delaying the inevitable. To make them work, the principle must be adjusted to the current market value, and the bank has to eat the difference (or get it subsidized or whatever)
7/29/2009 1:06:59 PM
4/16/2010 11:25:13 AM
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE63F3JX20100416?feedType=RSS&feedName=topNews
4/16/2010 11:58:26 AM
Not sure if this is the best place for this, but....http://blogs.reuters.com/james-pethokoukis/2010/08/05/an-august-surprise-from-obama/
8/5/2010 10:50:31 AM
oh joy, rewarding more irresponsible behaviour! hot damn!
8/5/2010 1:56:15 PM
If that is true, there needs to be riots
8/5/2010 2:09:13 PM
^^^ Fuck.[Edited on August 5, 2010 at 2:12 PM. Reason : ]
8/5/2010 2:11:49 PM
yeah, riots and forcing people to forclosure, that's the ticket to economic prosperity
8/5/2010 6:08:19 PM
Thats a really fucked up way to look at it. The thing about this entire ordeal that pisses me off the most is how undemocratic the stimulating of the economy has been handled. First, we shoveled money at the banks and this was meant to benefit us all because the alternative would be massive whole scale layoffs as companies couldn't get the liquid money they needed to pay people. The idea that this would have actually come to fruition is really fucking dubious. I can't see large multinational employers just wholesale firing people because they couldn't get overnight funding to pay their payrolls.After they did that, they started targeting cars, homes, appliances, homes, and the unemployed. So, if you weren't in the market for any of those and you were lucky enough to keep a job...well, you haven't gotten a god damned thing since this administration took over.Wouldn't it be...oh, I dunno...a little more democratic to take the sum total of all that has been spent and give it to Americans evenly and let them decide where they want to blow the money?
8/5/2010 6:17:37 PM
8/5/2010 6:26:29 PM
8/5/2010 7:21:15 PM
My wife and I just put our house on the market. I have owned it since 2002. We are going to be upgrading considerably from the current house, but I am only looking at distressed areas (areas where homes are abnormally priced because of the defaults in the area). I am going to do my best to minimize downside exposure. The homes we are looking at, you can't even build them with free labor for what they are asking. There are some unfortunate people in the neighborhood that are trying to sell their house for 200k more than a larger foreclosed house next door. Bad for them, but good for me.And we are doing 10% down, and will probably have PMI waved (through my mortgage company). Not sure why you guys were arguing with a 19 year old that almost certainly doesnt own a home.
8/6/2010 4:44:06 PM
8/6/2010 5:27:15 PM
8/7/2010 8:11:05 AM
So long as the federal government continues to actively distort the housing market, I wouldn't touch it. Well, they are distorting all markets, but it's easier to say "ok, they are printing money, that will likely flow into commodities and real producers (think emerging markets)" than to try and figure out what will happen to housing given direct targeted programs. Everything I have read says there is still a shit ton of shadow inventory that will continue to come onto the market at a slow pace (so the banks can slowly write down their bad debts) and this will serve to suppress home prices. I'm sure you're looking to generate some income and down the road if this economy really turns around you'll make additional profit from the appreciate of your home values, but its simply too risky right now so long as the federal government is fucking it all up.
8/7/2010 10:09:43 AM
Even if I could buy a house right now, I wouldn't. There's a very good chance that home prices haven't hit bottom, given that the bad debt was never dealt with in a meaningful way.The housing bubble had many causes, but one of the reasons it got so big is because people felt that a home was an investment, rather than an expense. Real estate agents were routinely telling people that they could buy a house, then sell the house years later, and retire off the money. In retrospect, it sounds ridiculous, but that was the attitude back then. It just makes no sense...houses lose value over time, just like anything that suffers from wear and tear. Sure, you can maintain the home, or make improvements to it to increase its value, but those are expenses as well.The sooner we get over the whole "everyone needs to own a house" mentality, the better. More people would be able to own homes if the government weren't propping up home prices, but until that stops, there are many people that are better served by renting. Renting should not be looked down on; it's the only rational decision for many individuals.
8/7/2010 10:31:22 AM
8/7/2010 12:57:37 PM
8/10/2010 1:18:39 AM