Bubbles Bubbles Real Estate Troubles
There‚s an old saying: if it looks like an elephant, walks like an elephant, and has „I‚m an elephant‰ tattooed to its rump, the odds are overwhelmingly in favor of its not being a duck-billed platypus. Judging from recent activity, it‚s high time the real estate market got itself an „I‚m a bubble‰ tattoo, despite the desperate assurances of Alan „I didn‚t know it was a bubble‰ Greenspan,
Real estate is a subject better left to those who know something about it. In other words, not me. But when two-thirds of GDP is dependent upon on Mr. and Mrs. Consumer and this charming yet heavily indebted couple is three-thirds dependent upon forever-increasing housing „values‰, I take notice when the market grows especially bubblicious. Why? Because when everything hinges upon this bubble, the fall-out of its deflation has the potential to paint a dark shade of ugly on the financial world I live in.
In these inflationary times one can‚t necessarily be faulted for putting some money into the ultimate tangible: property. But nowadays it appears that many folks aren‚t simply investing. They‚re speculating, just like they did during the latter stages of the stock market bubble.
The New York Times reports that in the first eleven months of 2004, 8.5% of mortgages were taken out by people who did not intend to live in those homes. That figure was up 46% from 2000 and other cities are showing even bigger numbers. In Miami it stood at 11% and 12% in Phoenix. „It seems that real estate always goes up,‰ said one couple interviewed by the Times.
Sound eerily similar to comments made about the stock market in the 1990s? Nothing, I repeat NOTHING, always goes up.
Reportedly some brokers in Miami get their clients into special VIP sales events before developers offer their properties to the public. Sound eerily similar to the lust to get the inside leg on the IPO craze during the late 1990s?
Consider www.getpreconstructionprofits.com which touts the opportunity to profitably flip properties before they‚re built, sometimes „...nothing more than a sketch of the final property‰. Of course, „get rich in real estate‰ schemes are nothing new. But tell me this doesn‚t have „bubble‰ written all over it. Flipping sketches of property for profits sounds an awful lot like buying the worthless paper of profitless Internet companies in the late 90s, does it not?
Whatever the bubble, be it stocks, tulip bulbs or real estate, the behaviors and offers tend to be remarkably similar. The vehicles change, but speculative psychology doesn‚t.
According to the National Association of Realtors, investors and second-home buyers made up a full third of last year‚s market. The NAR‚s chief economist David Lereah says: „What we‚re seeing is that real estate is...a viable alternative to stocks and bonds... they‚re placing money in real estate, which has proven to be a stable and wealth-building asset.‰
Indeed. But there is NOTHING stable about a market where 20% a year is considered normal, as in California‚s LA County, among TOO many others. The New York Times reports that the 2004 median sales price in Westchester County rose from $564,000 to $645,000. Said one real estate agent: „More and more families are seeing the residential real estate market as the best and safest place for their money.‰
„More and more families‰: sounds a lot like the „more and more investors‰ in the latter stages of the stock bubble. And „more and more families‰ don‚t make money speculating in the long run. Sure, everybody banks a temporary profit in a hot market but they give it right back in the ensuing bear. The dirty little secret of the securities and futures industries is that 80% or more of investors lose money. You think the numbers will be better in a hyper-leveraged real estate bubble? Did investors suddenly wise up and learn how to speculate profitably over the past few years? I doubt it.
It‚s always the same story. Times change, investment vehicles change, but people do the same silly things over and over again: make a profit in a hot market, leverage it up repeatedly to make bigger profits until one day they find themselves at the top of the market holding their biggest position ever. And buyers are nowhere to be found.
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Everybody makes temporary profits in a hot market. Like the old saying goes, in a strong enough wind even pigs fly. But when that wind dies down, the pigs usually find themselves lost in a cornfield in the middle of Kansas without so much as a bus token to get them home.
But bubblicious behavior isn‚t the exclusive domain of Mr. and Mrs. Consumer. „Fannie Mae‰ is leveraged to the hilt, holding virtually nothing to get it through a significant real estate downturn. And as bond underwriter Eric Englund reports, Fannie Mae‚s debt to equity ratio is a stunning 43 to 1. That‚s 43 times more debt than equity.
It‚s hard to hedge a portfolio the size of Fannie Mae‚s for obvious reasons. But worse, whoever‚s holding the other side of the hedge gets killed in a downturn. And it‚s big enough that the repercussions would sweep through the credit markets like Rosie O‚Donnell through a cake shop. It‚s a time-bomb waiting to explode and a dip in the real estate market could light the fuse.
What‚s being done about it? Nothing. The government touts the benefits of home ownership while Fannie Mae rolls out 40-year mortgages under the guise of helping the wee, poor, disenfranchised folk to participate in the „ownership society.‰ Who lives in a home for forty years these days, long enough to pay it down and actually own it?
Where‚s the ownership in interest-only loans? Ownership doesn‚t even start until 15 years into the mortgage and by Fannie Mae‚s own admission, most folks move or refinance after 5-7 years.
It‚s not about home ownership. It‚s about expanding debt because in a bankrupt nation the only way to service ever- expanding debt is by ever-expanding the debt! AND THAT‚S A BUBBLE. Unfortunately, every credit bubble always hits a limit and deflates, leaving financial ruin in its wake.
The danger of this bubble popping, and it will pop, is the fall-out to the economy as a whole. Folks seem not to mind too much taking a flyer in the stock market, having their heads handed to them on a plate, and then moving on. But when the house drops in value, the psychological reverse wealth-effect can (and will) take a heavy toll on our consumer-driven economy.
When the bubble will top out is anyone‚s guess. The nature of a bubble is such that it tends to run higher and longer than any rational person might figure. It all hinges on interest rates. The Fed did a wonderful job of inflating a new bubble to mitigate the impact of the collapsing stock market bubble. Unfortunately for them, this bubble is 100% dependent on low interest rates, something which the Fed can‚t deliver upon forever.
New home sales took a dive in January causing the inventory to rise by 17% from the previous year, the highest level since June 1996 and a level which has historically indicated trouble for the market, according the Rick Murray of Raymond James & Associates. The median price fell 13.2%, the first slide in 14 years. Signs of a top? Perhaps. Or perhaps as they used to say in the late-1990s stock bubble, „a buying opportunity.‰
Call it what you will, but there comes a point at which most folks are priced out of the market and buyers become scarce. Any investor can afford a few shares of Acme Internet & Bowling Ball at $300 a share during a stock bubble. Few investors can afford a $600,000 mortgage on a 2-bedroom shack overlooking a brick wall, particularly when the assessed value drops to $450,000 after the bubble peaks. A real estate bubble running out of buyers is a far more dangerous animal than a pricked stock bubble. Don‚t get stuck holding the bag. Leave it for the „real estate always goes up‰ crowd.
Mark M. Rostenko Editor The Sovereign Strategist |