The people who bought properties as flips in 2007 had to put their own money into the transaction. All of these people made a small fortune by starting out with a larger one.
One of the myths of the real estate bulls is the rich-foreigners-will-save-us fallacy. This myth has a hint of racism to it: foreigners must be culturally superior to have the money to come to the rescue of us poor Americans. Whenever I see this argument raised, I always link to a post done by Rich Toscano at Piggington.com called The Dumb Money. As stated in the article, "Far from being a positive fundamental, a sudden excess of foreign
participation in an asset market is indicative of ill-informed
speculative money at work. When the foreigners really start piling on,
it's always a good sign that the end of the bubble is nigh." As you might have surmised, today's featured property was a flip attempt by someone with a non-Westernized name (as was yesterday's.) The stupidity of this particular flip is breathtaking to me. It was purchased as REO for well over what the lender paid, and now it is being offered for much less. The entire loss is going to be the flipper's money.
If the property looks familiar, it is because we have featured it before: Brookside Comp Killer.
There were people attempting flips in 2007. There were looking for their own Sugar Shack to sweeten their lives. Prices in our area were still at or near the peak, but all the signs were pointing to a downturn which was already underway in many markets. Residential real estate markets are dominated by amateurs because professionals do not bother with the headaches of what is generally a poor investment. Non-professionals by and large have no idea what they are doing, and they only make money when they get lucky because the emotions of speculators always lead them astray (remember Speculation or Investment?) Today's featured property was purchased after the collapse of subprime was front page news in March of 2007. Our would-be Donald Trump either wasn't watching the news, or he truly believed the subprime containment BS put out by the media. This guy actually put some of his own money into the deal, so it wasn't just gambling with the lenders money. You would think if someone was going to put their own money in the deal they might have a clue about what he was doing: apparently not.
Some people still have not figured out there is an epic price crash taking place. When you look at the asking prices in Irvine, people are still of the opinion their houses are worth at or above peak prices. The fact is that prices have dropped more than 20% and they continue their downward descent. Even when confronted with neighboring properties selling for less, people lapse into denial and believe "my house is worth more." I guess $15,000 in pergraniteel can add $150,000 in luxury value to a property. Who knew?