Posted on 08/21/2005 11:40:06 PM PDT by ex-Texan
These days, "Get Rich Quick" has been the mantra for too many people trying to cash in while buying real estate speculatively. With so much "free" money still flowing from the Federal Reserve, it has become a real estate speculator's dream world.
These so called speculators have purchased over 3 million residences, practically with their eyes closed, with the sole intention of flipping them like pancakes to the next guy, marked up 25 percent or more. However, signs are beginning to appear that indicate this game of getting rich quick may soon be over.
Less than 20 percent of Californians can now afford a home with a fixed rate mortgage. The Federal Reserve is still raising variable interest rates. In 2004, when the housing bubble was really gathering steam, the National Association of Realtors calculated that 23 percent of homes purchased were for investment, and 13 percent were for second homes. With housing prices in some markets rising 20 to 40 percent in the past year - and 50 to 100 percent or more since 2000 - buying a house on spec looked like a sure thing to make a quick profit.
But this housing deck of cards, in an already over-heated market, could have a domino affect. Why?
Home sales run about 9 million a year (this includes housing starts of 2 million and existing home sales of 7 million). If over 20 percent of homes purchased are investor properties, it appears that practically all new housing starts in America are accounted for by speculative buying. If second home buyers are added into the equation, speculative and investment buying of real estate (not owning to live in) actually exceeds total housing starts!
There are problems associated with owning second homes and investor properties. Unless these properties are rented out, they yield no cash income and become cash vampires, sucking the owner dry because of escalating taxes, maintenance, the Alternative Minimum Tax, and higher floating-rate mortgage payments.
Let's look at the economics of a "poster property" in San Diego called Park Place. The New York Times reported recently that a one bedroom condo is being offered for $719,000. A prospective buyer would expect to pay about $3,775 a month for a mortgage, plus maintenance fees, taxes and insurance. These additional costs can bring the monthly out-of -pocket total to well over $5,000 a month, or $60,000 a year. However, a renter, who would benefit from the same granite countertops, hardwood floors and fantastic views, can rent a nearly identical unit for only $2,400 a month, or $28,800 a year. At these price levels, the speculator who bought in could run an annual negative cash flow of close to $31,000 if they were forced to rent because no buyers could be found.
Today's inexperienced housing investors may not realize that the hard costs (tax, insurance and maintenance) along with the soft costs (revenue lost due to vacancy, and property management services so you don't have to become the landlord) can easily eat up over 30 percent of rental income before even making the mortgage payment.
In looking at some cities with major price appreciation (New York, Boston, San Diego, Miami, to name a few), in today's world it just doesn't seem possible to buy a house or condo and expect to make an economic return renting it out! Nationwide, there are over 3.8 million vacant units available for rent. In some communities, the over-supply of rental units on the market has pushed the average rent down as much as 20 percent. There remains a surplus of rental units.
First quarter 2005 statistics indicate, nationwide, there are 440,000 new homes for sale and 2,400,000 used homes for sale. By recent historical standards, these numbers account for a 4-month supply and do not look worrisome.
However, given what is really going on, this is about as safe as saying "if you see ice on a pond, it must be safe to walk on".
The latest HUD statistics show that of the 107,775,000 occupied housing units, 74,488,000 - or over 69 percent - are owned (not rented). This level of home ownership is at an all time record high. In achieving this record home ownership, the following has occurred: Sub-prime buyers now account for more than 10 percent; Another 10 percent can only buy with a "negative amortization mortgage" (very popular in California where 40 percent of mortgages are negative amortization); Up to two-thirds of mortgages are Interest Only ("IO") or Adjustable Rate ("ARM"); Second homes now account for 8 percent of mortgages; and, 38 percent of homes this year have been purchased with less than 5 percent down (if this doesn't reflect scrapping the bottom of the barrel for homeowners, nothing ever would). Yet, household earnings haven't kept up!
If housing speculators stop buying, who's left to buy? The average American with a job has already bought. America has been creating new homes faster than new jobs, and it has been the home speculator, and second home investor, holding up the market for at least the past year. (The latest reports show that the time it takes to sell a home has increased, and price rises have been trailing off.)
One of the biggest problems I see for our housing speculator is the forward supply of new homes they have already been locked into. Certainly, on the east and west coasts and in Las Vegas - and other frothy vacation and major markets - high rise after high rise are coming out of the ground. Ivana Trump (long divorced from "the Donald") is marketing the Trump luxury brand name for a high-rise building going up with her name in Las Vegas where units will begin at $550,000 and top out at $35 million for the penthouse. (In South Florida alone, my wife and I recently drove south from Fort Lauderdale to South Beach and we counted over 50 new developments in various stages of construction on the coast road). There are twelve high-rises going up in West Palm Beach, and another twenty four jumbo projects in downtown Miami. Every single one of these projects is priced out of range for the middle class buyer.
There is another "dark side" to speculating in real estate. Hundreds of thousands of units that have been sold in advance by developers to speculators. This method is used by developers so they can get the construction finance they need. The speculator is responsible for the purchase but he won't actually "buy" the unit until the project is complete and the unit has a Certificate of Occupancy. Therefore, the sale will not be counted as a sale until the date of closing! (Moreover, the developer has gotten the speculator to sign an agreement preventing him from reselling the unit for at least a year - after the speculator has taken occupancy - so the developer won't be selling against himself. This leaves the speculator holding the bag, but they seem willing to take the risk.
It could get interesting over the next six months as interest rates continue to go up and thousands of high-priced housing units come on the market that have been artificially snapped up by the get rich quick crowd. It may pay to simply sit back and watch the slaughter from a distance and stay short some home builders and sub-prime mortgage companies.
bflr = bump for later reading
Quote: What amazes me is it's only 4 or 5 years after the last bubble and all the same rhetoric is being rehashed.
There are at least 2 new TV shows about home speculating. One is called "Flip this house" and the other is similar but I forgot it's name.
Yes. Many mortgage agreements have that provision. If the value of the home goes below the amount of the mortgage they can pull the mortgage. I think all interest only agreements have that clause.
During the last bubble in Massachusetts they pulled so many mortgages that the housing market collapsed. The banks didn't want to pull them because there was such a glut of houses on the market they couldn't get their money out. The Feds came in and forced the issue because they were getting stuck with failing banks, the Bank of New England for one.
It was a GREAT time to buy. Those times are coming again. Cash will be king.
Thanks. Although a very worrisome piece of information.
I remember the real estate collapse in NYC in the early 1990s. Folks were mailing the keys to their condos to the banks with polite notes, basically saying, "Catch me if you can."
Hmmmm... what if gas prices don't "retreat"?
The same thing that Will Rogers once said about land also applies to petroleum. I can only foresee prices going _higher_, not lower. Of course, I could be wrong....
Actually, I expect the housing bubble to burst long before the petroleum bubble (if there indeed _is_ one). I expect to see gas prices at $10 per gallon before I'm gone, and I'm not that young anymore.....
- John
That's part of the problem as I see it. (That and the fact tha the agents forget who they are working for as soon as you sign the papers).
This ia another sector ripe for being totally replaced by the Internet, and you are starting to see it already.
We've been seeing some of the effects from uneducated speculators around here recently, and the effects are quite funny (probably not for the speculators, but certainly for the locals). Some bigwig investor from the bay area or LA will buy a house for $500,000 unseen and turn it over to a property management company to rent out for $2,000+ a month. Since the average wage around here is still below $40k, the house will sit empty and unoccupied for months (in one case a block from my home, more than a year because they're demanding $2,600 a month and the AVERAGE around here is $1,200). By the time they do flip their houses, they've typically lost a substantial portion of their profits to both mortgage payments and home devaluation caused by long term neglect.
For the people that actually live here, we may shake our heads and laugh at these idiots, but these homes can become problematic. They often get trashed by criminals, they become hangouts for neighborhood kids, they're occupied by the homeless and druggies, and the meth labs LOVE them. The property management firms don't usually do anything more than mow the lawn every month or so, and replace broken windows that face the street (non street facing windows get boarded over).
I've seen stunning 4000 sf suburban minimansions reduced to something out of an inner city slum because an investor putchased it without looking at the rental market and the house became derelict. I know of several other investors who've lost their homes to fire and vandalism. An empty house attracts criminals.
Blame Congress. It's all their fault.
What did the banks know about The Housing Bubble? When did they know it? Did they know about it when they pushed Congress to amend the Bankruptcy Act?
Having grown up in Boone since the mid '60's, it's truly amazing. The very things that made Boone so attractive to me as a kid are gone now. We never locked our houses and cars even in downtown while shopping until the early 80's. ASU had a student population between 6,000/7,000 then and crime was practically unheard of except for drag racing and a few drunks fighting. I think there were 8 killings (all adults) in 5 years in Watauga and immediate surrounding counties 1965-170. A lot more people died from running off the mountains in fog and rain or icy roads than murder, and if someone killed someone , they knew them and most likely a score needed settling.
Kids, teenagers, college students and the poor walked everywhere until they were able to catch a ride. No one had a need to go to the gym with the walking, hiking, shoveling snow, snow skiing, trout fishing, gardening, raising livestock, splitting wood, then going to work/school. Most fat folks existed because of bad knees or ankles for the most part or past 75 years.
A kid could hitchhike anywhere without worry. We never passed up a hitchhiker when it was cold. We never new when it could be us stranded in the 'Boonies' at night or in subfreezing weather. I wished the f'n tourons hadn't decided to stay. I wish the majority of the FReepers could step back to 1965 to Boone, NC when I was only 8. They'd get fighting mad about the changes now in society. They'd simply cry.
And this is a problem because??? If people are stupid enough to buy houses they cannot afford, get themselves in over their heads and pile up debt, they deserve to take a beating financially.
Enjoy your 600% high property tax bill now that you bought at the top of the market.
In CA, stuff appears to be falling out of escrows and homes are sitting.
I think the bubble is starting to hiss a little.
Hope to God you didn't finance with an interest only loan.
Good luck, and don't forget the new bankruptcy laws go into effect in two months, so you can't leave your debt. :-)
Is that old trailer without the wheels in the back of the picture the guest house?
You have the money in bonds paying X% and you are paying Y% on your mortgage, where X is about 4 and Y is at least 5. Am I off?
Good post!
One additional point: all the talk about the Fed managing interest rates overlooks one very large fact - that the Fed has NO control over LONG-TERM interest rates - the market decides that.
And the market might decide that 8 or 10%, or 20% for that matter, is necessary to make a market. Then watch the Big Clearance Sale of mini-mansions.
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