Irvine Housing Blog |
Society greatly benefits from the housing bust Posted: 28 Sep 2011 03:30 AM PDT Far from being the end of the world, the pain of the Great Recession caused by the housing bust will have long term beneficial effects on society -- assuming we learn the right lessons.
Irvine Home Address ... 34 BROOKSTONE Irvine, CA 92604
The fact that prices are falling is not a bad thing, not that loan owners who rely on HELOC income would agree. Financial market implosions purge irresponsible and unsustainable habits from the populace. HELOC dependency serves no one, not even the sheeple who got to enjoy it for a time. The unceremonious fall from entitlement is inevitable, and although the fall is emotionally devastating, getting off the HELOC heroin is better for borrowers in the long term. Falling prices bring affordability to the prudent who understand valuation and their cost of ownership. Many people have put off their purchases because they understand the power of rental parity. Those people will be rewarded with lower debts, and the ability to move without feeding a black hole on their family balance sheet. The lower debt service payments will benefit the local economy as money that used to go to a lender is now circulating in the local economy to buy goods and services. The housing bust has a good sidePublished 03:15 p.m., Friday, September 23, 2011
Housing woes are still the primary cause of our weak economy. An entire industry is sitting on the sidelines. Construction related unemployment is over 30%, and new home sales continue to set record lows. Realtors and mortgage brokers are similarly hurting as lower prices and lower transaction volumes have caused sales commissions to plummet. None of these industries is forecast to improve in the near term.
Apparently, I am not the only one who noticed. You don't read much about rampant HELOC abuse in the mainstream media.
i am always shocked when I read about the stupid things some people did to destroy their security in retirement.
The only way out for many struggle families is strategic default. Those with the most financial distress have already walked away, but those who are barely getting by are continuing to hold on with hope that rising prices will give them equity again soon. Unfortunately for them, prices will fall, and even with the lower balance of an amortizing mortgage, many households will be years before they have equity again. When the music stopped, the wealth effect geared into reverse. Families pulled back on spending. They began to "de-leverage" their finances -- that is, start paying off their debt. Construction workers, landscapers, salespeople and others living off the bubble lost their jobs.
The housing bust in California has enabled many renters to buy properties closer in to employment centers. The commute through the valley on the 91 is no longer a necessary price to pay to have a nice house for many who work in Orange County.
The mainstream media is so caught up in the distress of loan owners that they completely fail to mention the befits current buyers are obtaining. For the first time in a decade, people are able to buy houses with a lower cost of ownership than a comparable rental. One must feel for the homeowners who now owe more on their mortgages than their homes' value. Some borrowed recklessly, but many just got caught up in a frenzy whipped by powerful interests. The real-estate industry peddled homes as no-lose investments. Deregulated lenders became debt pushers (while passing the risks onto others).
It's natural for people to want free money. When a Ponzi virus is released into the financial system, it spreads because it's human nature to want something for nothing. People wanted house prices to continue to rise in order to fund their spending. People were willing to push prices every higher to obtain the free money that came from ownership. The system worked until the pipers stopped the music and demanded to get paid. The damage this Ponzi virus did to the US economy is evident in this recession that goes on and on. The government tells us the recession ended two years ago. Does it feel that way to you? It doesn't if you work in real estate. The Great Recession will finally end, and prosperity will return. When it does, I hope we have learned the lessons of history. So far, I haven't seen any of the causes of this debacle cured through preventative legislation. Our collective memories will only last so long, and when the Siren's song of free money beckons, the next Ponzi weed will find a fertile soil in which to germinate. Happy Birthday IHB!The Irvine Housing Blog turned five years old yesterday. Welcome to the Irvine Housing Blog!
Kitchen is ready for your personal touch and upgradesThis house has no kitchen. The previous owner must have ripped it out and sold it before moving on. The bank took this property back at the end of June and has no idea what to do with it. The strategy right now is to find an all-cash buyer who will put in their own kitchen. This all-cash buyer must be willing to pay $337/SF for a property which backs onto the the Culver/Warner intersection. Never going to happen. This property might fetch $525,000 if the kitchen were in place, but nobody looking to profit on the flip would touch this place for $484,900, and given its inherent negatives, I don't foresee many all-cash owner occupants willing to buy this place. Either the bank is going to have to lower its price significantly, or they are going to have to spend the money to put in a kitchen and hope for the best. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Irvine House Address ... 34 BROOKSTONE Irvine, CA 92604 Two presentations this evening Wednesday, September 28, 2011We still have seating available for tonight's presentations. I hope to see you at the offices of Intercap Lending (9401 Jeronimo, Suite 200, Irvine, CA 92618). You may still attend if you have not provided an RSVP; however, if the crowd is too large, you may have to stand in the back. |
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