Irvine Housing Blog |
SoCal home buyers sit on the sidelines due to falling prices Posted: 18 Jul 2011 03:30 AM PDT Potential home buyers are aware of the resumption of falling prices, and many are wisely choosing to wait and see what fall and winter brings. Will affordability bring out the contrarians?
Irvine Home Address ... 4591 KIMBERWICK Cir Irvine, CA 92604
You've got a lot of money You got a lot of money Up until this summer, I had not seen any evidence of kool aid intoxication wearing off. The masses were still overly eager to buy houses from fear of being priced-out or from greed to get the free HELOC money. With the economy no longer officially in recession and unemployment declining, there was a slim possibility of a spring rally picking up where the tax credits left off. Unfortunately for sellers, that isn't what happened. Credit is still tightening because lenders have not stopped losing money or underwriting bad loans. With each tightening standard, more potential buyers are either eliminated from the buyer pool or forced to lower their bids and their expectations. However, it isn't tightening credit and inflated prices that seem to be stopping the kool aid from flowing. It looks like buyers simply stopped drinking the stuff. Buyers have stopped buying by choice. People realize that prices are too high, credit will continue to tighten, and if they wait, they will get a better home at a lower price. There is little other explanation for the dismal spring rally and the dramatic decline in sales volumes when sales should be rising. This slowdown has hit every sector of the housing market, but it has been particularly brutal on homes selling for over $500,000. This really shouldn't be a surprise. Buyers can't afford them. I have heard from multiple sources, including a report from a local company that tracks sales, that the Irvine Company has experienced a dramatic decline in sales from May 15 onward. Rumor is that many outside experts and consultants have been brought in, and nobody can figure out what the problem is. Is it product design? Is it marketing? Is it the economy? Is it financing? The truth is actually pretty simple: the prices are too high. Local wages don't support them. Attempts to illicit a herd-following response from clueless foreign cash buyers have failed. I even heard that one buyer backed out of a sale based on what they read on this blog, not that the source of truth matters much. Don't be shocked if the Irvine Company mothballs Laguna Altura like they did Orchard Hills. Further, their plan to build several thousand rentals will blunt any potential rental rate increases, keep rental parity calculations down, and further weaken housing demand. Without the lure of mortgage equity withdrawal, buyers are reconsidering the value of home ownership. Buyers are no longer willing to stretch to absurd extremes to buy properties they can't afford, and even if buyers were willing, lenders are not ready to play along. The result is a continuing slump in sales and a full-scale buyer revolt with many choosing to sit on the sidelines. In the long term, this is a good and necessary step for the market. When the housing bubble popped, the market needed to make a psychological adjustment to reality and abandon the fantasies of unlimited free spending money coming from their house. This psychological adjustment would correspond to a pricing adjustment as people stopped stretching. When the market finds its new equilibrium, it will be back on a stable footing and ready to appreciate again. But this time, the appreciation will be slow and measured by the growth in local incomes. And until unemployment abates, that growth in income will be very tepid. We aren't out of the woods yet, but when the double dip starts to wane, prices below rental parity will be common, and I will become much more bullish, albeit in a different way than the lunatics from the housing bubble. Southland housing market warms up in JuneThe number of sales of new and previously owned homes in rises 11.6% from May, and the median price increases 1.8% to $285,000.By Alejandro Lazo, Los Angeles Times -- July 13, 2011
That sounds really bullish. Unfortunately, May was one of the worst on record, and June was still well below historic norms. This was a statistical blip.
People have good reason to wait. Prices still haven't fallen below rental parity in many locations, and with little reason to fear being priced out, many prudent buyers are waiting for prices to fall further. And prices will fall further.
Notice the order in which data is being presented. The minor good news is followed, and downplayed, by more serious bad news. This presentation was very common at the beginning of the housing collapse.
John Walsh embraces his perceived role as market cheerleader. How does the market look less dysfunctional that it did a year ago? Everyone was cheering the rally a year ago. It wasn't until the tax credits expired and prices resumed their downward momentum that market cheerleaders suspected anything was wrong.
Notice how well the lenders are managing their inventory. Despite the fact they have an enormous shadow inventory, they foreclose on and resell nearly 33% of resales every month, and they rarely deviate from that percentage even by a fraction of a percent.
Analysts who believe any slowdown in foreclosures is related to any news event are wrong. Lenders are managing the percentage of sales of foreclosed home. They know if they push through any more than a third of the total sales, prices drop. They are trying to liquidate while protecting the value of their assets.
Another realtor who doesn't know what's going on. There is nothing streamlined about the short sale process. Short sales are extended negotiations between the second lien holder and the seller. The second mortgage holder has nothing of value, but they have learned to play chicken with borrowers to try to get them to sign side agreements to pay at least part of the debt. Borrowers are not becoming more amiable to short sales because they are unemployed. Borrowers are trying short sales because it is the only way to sell their homes. Many others simply walk away. At least those who short sell have some limited control over when they leave their houses. Those that drag out the process can get free housing for quite a while.
She is right about modifications being a joke.
See comments on the Irvine Company above.
realtors are now experts on who is creditworthy? If people can't get financing, then by definition, they are not creditworthy. Anyone who was breathing was considered creditworthy five years ago, and now people need real income and proven ability to make payments.
There is end in sight. The market will drag along the bottom for another three years. The lowest tier of the market will strengthen first, then the chain of move ups will finally give strength to the upper tier last. The window of opportunity for affordability is starting to open now in Orange County, and it will remain open for the next three to five years. Single family detached below rental parity in IrvineWe have seen many undesirable condos trading at or below rental parity, but finding single family detached homes at those price levels has been elusive. As one might expect, these prices levels will be seen first in the least desirable neighborhoods with low HOA or Mello Roos. Today's featured property is in El Camino Real which has no HOA or Mello Roos.
In my opinion, the front elevation on this house is remarkably ugly. However, the inside is well done (although that center island is completely out of place). What jumped out at me about this property was the low cost of ownership. For a buyer putting 20$% down and avoiding private mortgage insurance, this property only costs $2,200 per month to own. There aren't many four-bedroom homes in Irvine renting for $2,200 or less, and none with a nice interior like this one. Someone will buy this property even knowing prices are likely to go down because owning this one is less expensive than a comparable rental, particularly if they know they are going to stay put for five years or more. Renting should cost a premium over ownership. Renters have freedom to move and no maintenance responsibility. Only kool aid intoxication makes people pay a premium to own. Once the premium for renting gets high, many will opt to purchase to save money even in a declining market. Such is the power of rental parity. Contrarians who buy because it's cheaper to own than to rent will buy and cause prices to bottom. The owner's of this property bought it back in the 1980s. I estimated their purchase price from their tax bill, but it may be a bit less than I show. They have doubled their mortgage to $417,000, but they didn't go so overboard as to make this a short sale. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Irvine House Address ... 4591 KIMBERWICK Cir Irvine, CA 92604 |
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