18th February 2008

Looking for closure

posted in News, Pop Culture |

I thought, also, of titling this one, "The Wheels On The Bus Go Round and Round…", hoping to pass that hideous earworm on to my faithful readers.  But then I realized that would be cruel, and besides I had already given this post a title.  And then I realized that I could do both.  Bwahahaha!

Life has changed greatly in the past two and a half years.  Two and a half years ago, after a years’ worth of cruising my local real estate market and doing up a spreadsheet that showed the average asking price and average per-square-foot for houses in Hippy Dippy Enclave In The Woods, I googled "housing bubble" and found housing bubble blogs galore.  What a relief!  It wasn’t just me who was thinking that things were totally cockeyed in the world of real estate!

At the time, I thought many of the prognostications on the bubble blogs were a bit out of whack.  Commenters were gleefully anticipating the housing crash, and crowing that it would spread throughout the economy, ushering in a recession at the least and a depression at the worst.  I would raise a skeptical eyebrow as I read those particular prophecies.

In the meantime, it’s been like watching a movie when you’ve already read the book.  Everything–every damned thing–that those bubble bloggers and their commenters had laid out as the expected playing out of the bubble bursting has come to pass.  It’s pretty eerie.  What’s also eerie is that…well…the comments were full of common sense, and one kept wondering just why the mainstream media kept playing up the drumbeat of "it’s a whole new world out there!  Housing prices will never go down!"  The majority of economists cited by the MSM seemed equally purblind.

So I watched with amazement as the housing boom came to a screeching halt, and then as sales and prices started plummeting around the country.

One of the things that the bubble bloggers were talking about, way back when, was the coming tide of foreclosures.  They talked about "jingle mail"–where buyers who were negative on their mortgages and suddenly slammed with higher rates on their ARMs, would decide to just mail the keys to the house back to the lender, rather than fight against foreclosure.  And they said the immense number of foreclosures would bring the housing market down ever further, even quicker.

Well.  Let’s look at some things:

  • 77% of the houses sold in Stockton, CA, in January were foreclosure sales (okay, in re-reading the story, it’s not clear whether that 77% is of all houses sold in Stockton, or of the houses sold by one particular broker).  In the Sacramento, CA, area there were 1,815 homes sold in January, but almost as many–1,782–foreclosures were recorded in that area in the same month.  Sit back and think about that–it’s just astonishing.
  • Realtors are offering "foreclosure tour" buses, where the real estate salesperson grabs a list of foreclosing houses off the database, rents a bus, fills it with people who want to buy, and just spends a day shepherding these people from house to house, vacant, empty, owned by the bank.  The bank which is desperately trying to forestall further bleeding from the money accounts, and offering what seem to be bargain-basement prices.  Of course, some of these houses are going to be in dreadful neighborhoods, and some of the amazing deals will turn out to be money pits.  But there they are:  Pismo Beach, CAStockton, CASan JoseLas VegasPalm Beach, FLPhoenixOrlandoMichigan.
  • Of course, someone has decided to cash in on the foreclosure business by offering a "how to put on a foreclosure bus tour!" seminar.  A few years ago, it was "how to make money fast, fast, fast by flipping real estate!"
  • RealtyTrac claimed that there were 2,203,295 foreclosure filings across the country last year, on 1,285,873 properties, with more than 1% of all households across the country in foreclosure.  This was up 75% from the year before.  (Why are there more filings than properties?  I’d guess either some folks managed to close the door on the foreclosure wolf, or else some folks had more than one filing put on their property–people with multiple mortgages, perhaps.) 
  • And homeless people have started moving into foreclosed houses as squatters.

The bubble blogs claimed that mortgage brokerage companies would start going out of business…and, sure enough, at the start of 2007 they started being able to track the bankruptcies.

But now it’s spreading.  The way that mortgages got purchased, chopped up, and resold as "investment vehicles", it turns out that a wide variety of financial investment companies find themselves holding the bag on loans going belly up.  The media has been playing up the "subprime mortgage" as the main culprit–mortgages handed out to poor credit risks.  But reports lately have shown that the same problems are showing up in the "more prime" mortgages as well…because what was risky was not just handing out money to people who could show they were breathing, but the fact that adjustable rate mortgages were the name of the game, people were mortgaging up to 100% of their new property, and people were taking out home equity lines of credit on their properties’ perceived value.  Now that housing prices are dropping, you’ve got ordinary everyday "good credit risks" who have discovered that their various mortgages and HELOCs have interest rates going up and they suddenly can’t pay what they were able to pay previously.

You’ve got real estate sales people who were making six figures two years ago who have had to quit the real estate business and get jobs.  You’ve got homebuilding companies that are either suddenly holding huge "sales" or else simply vanishing, even in Small Mountain University Town.  Even the companies that insure the financial investment companies against housing market losses are suddenly tottering.  Mortgage companies, trying to contact the mortgagees who flinch away from the phone ringing these days, are disguising their pleas to please pay up as wedding invitations (yes!).

And two years ago…two years ago, people were standing in line when new home communities opened their sales office doors, with prices ratcheting up $25,000 within a day as the hordes swept in.

What a difference two years makes.

There are currently 8 responses to “Looking for closure”

  1. 1 On February 18th, 2008, Blog Antatonist said:

    Husband and I talked about this when they started offering home loans “regardless of credit history” and with “no down payment!” etc. That’s not the entire cause, of course, but it sure didn’t help.

    You wouldn’t believe the number of brand new homes standing empty around here. For years they couldn’t put them up fast enough. It was really disconcering, because it seemed like any blank piece of land was in peril. Suddenly, it’s all ground to a halt. There are huge, huge homes sitting empty and unfinished, entire shopping centers going unleased, subdivisions plowed and paved, but no new homes being built.

    We seriously considered moving when our income increased, but we decided to stay in our small-ish home. I’m so glad we did. And I’m also glad that husband had the foresight to refi our ARM before the feces hit the rotary oscillator.

    We have lots of friends and acquaintances who are scrambling to cover mortgages they couldn’t really afford in the first place.

    Sad. But hopefully, we’ll learn something from all this.

  2. 2 On February 18th, 2008, anon said:

    It’s really amazing because my boyfriend (34) and I (29) watched as several of the couples we are close friends with here in Los Angeles bought property in the past five years, aghast (but also a bit jealous) when one couple bought a $535,000 1,000 square foot condo on a 10-year interest only loan. A year ago, desperate to get into the market, I would search 2 bedroom condos and find $400,000 as the very bottom of the barrel — and only in far-reaching undesirable suburbs.

    Now, you can get a 2 bedroom 2 bath condo in a close, desirable suburb for $275,000. A year ago the same condo could have gone for $450,000+. It’s completely insane, and we find ourselves actually feeling proud of ourselves for not diving in, but afraid for those friends who did.

  3. 3 On February 18th, 2008, GrannyJ said:

    Closure — where’s the fore?

  4. 4 On February 19th, 2008, Ron Holland said:

    From Wolf Laurel in NC mountains - I believe Merrill Lynch is correct about the arrival of recession in the United States. The housing downturn is negatively impacting property sales in second home communities in Florida. This is also slowing sales in NC mountain resorts that depend on Florida buyers.

    Still the downturn in prices and building of inventories is starting to attract second home buyers from Florida looking for cool temperatures in our mountains. Also the dramatic decline in the dollar combined with weakness in American real estate markets are beginning to interest some bargain hunting European investors.

    Ron Holland, Broker/Realtor with Wolf’s Crossing Realty. See http://www.ronaldholland.com Ron markets resale mountain and ski resort properties in NC in Wolf Laurel and The Preserve at Wolf Laurel.

  5. 5 On February 19th, 2008, carosgram said:

    Interesting post! I have been in awe as I read about the prices people were paying for houses, wondering what kind of jobs they had that they could afford them. Around here they has been no housing bubble because our economy is in the toilet. It actually is a nice area but very provincial and the people have not made the transitions to a new economy. They are still waiting for steel, auto and chemicals to make a comeback here. We have a declining population. However, it does mean that you can live well on much less money than other places. Is there a bubble up north where you are omegamom?

  6. 6 On February 19th, 2008, Crimson Wife said:

    The house next door to my parents’ is in foreclosure. The owners walked away from their mortgage because the house is now worth less than what they paid for it a few years ago. My dad’s considering buying it to renovate & then hopefully the market will have picked up by the time he’s finished fixing it up. It all depends on how cheap he could get it and what exactly would need to be done.

  7. 7 On February 20th, 2008, Miss Cellania said:

    When I bought this house, they gave me a ARM that adjusted every five years. Five years later, rates were DOWN and I was eager to adjust. By then, the mortgage had been transferred twice as banks bought other banks. They told me I could get the new lower rate, but I would have to pay closing costs again! I didn’t have the money to do that at the time, and it made me quite angry. So I continued with the original rate, but threw my enegy into paying off the mortgage in full before the next five year adjustment.

    Compared to what happened a few years later, I consider myself extremely lucky.

  8. 8 On February 20th, 2008, ruralaspirations said:

    I was reading bubble blogs for my region (southwestern Canada). So far here we have not felt any reactions to what is happening in the US. Some say it’s inevitable, others say we’re protected as we didn’t have the mortgage lending habits that got people into trouble down there, and our economy is still very strong. As a family looking to buy our first home we go back and forth on the issue a lot. I don’t want to see a recession here, but I confess I’d be pretty happy to see a downturn in prices…houses in my city are over $700, and those are 1960’s bungalows.

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