Author Archives: IrvineRenter

Valuation of Lots and Raw Land

Valuation of Lots and Raw Land

The valuation of land used for residential housing is mysterious and often misunderstood. [1] The valuation of lots and raw land requires a detailed knowledge of construction and marketing costs as well as a good estimate of the sales price of the final product: a residential housing unit. In short, the value of a lot is the total revenue (sales price of the home) minus the costs of production and the necessary profit. Land value is a residual calculation.

Irvine, California, has been almost entirely developed by a single land owner, The Irvine Company, as a large, master-planned community. The development has been wildly successful. The median income of buyers on The Ranch is 30% above the Orange County median. This translates into higher home prices and higher land values. The Irvine Company makes a profit by selling its land to builders who build and sell houses in the community. Once the forces governing land value are understood, it becomes obvious why the Irvine Company is protective of house prices in Irvine, and why The Irvine Company wants to maximize salable density on its land holdings like any other developer would.

Land Price as a Residual Value

The value of a piece of land is whatever is “left over” after all the other costs of production and profits are subtracted from revenue. This is a key point. Land for residential home use has no intrinsic value. It is a commodity useful for the production of houses just like lumber or concrete. A finished lot is a manufactured product, and it is subject to many of the same market forces as commodity markets. If land or lots become scarce, the price increases; if this commodity is plentiful, the price decreases. If the sales price of the final product increases revenue–like in a bubble–the value of land increases; however, if revenue decreases–like after a bubble–the value of land decreases. For a given price level, if the cost of house construction increases, the value of land decreases; if the cost of house construction decreases, the value of land increases. This last point is often confusing as the inverse relationship between building cost and land value does not seem intuitive, but since land value is a residual calculation, this relationship is the reality of the marketplace. The value of a piece of land used for residential housing is directly tied to the revenues and costs of house construction.

Individual Lots

The equations which govern the valuations of large parcels are very similar those which determine the value of an individual lot; therefore, to better understand the valuation of large parcels, one should fully understand how to evaluate an individual lot. The market value of an individual lot is equal to the revenue it could generate when a residential housing unit is built on it minus the cost of creating that revenue (construction cost, marketing, profit, and other costs). Sales revenue will largely be determined by what can be built on the lot and how much that unit would sell for in the market. The dimensions of the lot, building codes, and the local zoning ordinances create constraints on what can be built. Most often there is some variety in choices available to construct on a given lot. Each of these options has a revenue potential and an estimated cost. Builders produce the combination which yields the greatest profit.

Imagine a 6,000 Square Foot (SF) lot that is 60' wide by 100' deep. A typical lot such as this would have a front setback of 20', side setbacks of 5', and a rear setback of 30' leaving a 50' wide by 50' deep building envelope for the house foundation. This site could comfortably accommodate a 2,000 SF single-story house (some area is lost by not making the house a perfect rectangle). For the sake of making the calculations easy to follow, assume this house could sell for $1,000,000 (peak prices in Irvine were around $500 / SF).

An individual speculator would be paying retail prices for house construction. This would be upwards of $150 SF. The cost of construction would be around $300,000 (2000 * 150 = $300,000). There would be a 6% sales commission (1,000,000 * 0.06 = $60,000), plus financing costs, overhead costs, and other miscellaneous costs which will add up to about 10% of the project cost (1,000,000 * 0.1 = $100,000). Therefore, your revenue minus expenses would be $1,000,000 – $60,000 – $100,000 – $300,000 = $540,000. This is how much money would be available to pay for a lot at the breakeven point. Since a speculator would want to make a profit, the lot is discounted from $540,000 until an amount is reached to compensate for the risk and the headaches that go along with the project. Perhaps the speculator would want to make $120,000 (approximately 12% of sales price) in order to do this work? If so, the speculator would be able to offer $420,000 ($540,000 – $120,000 = $420,000) for the lot. If they are the highest bidder, they get the lot, and the project is theirs. (This same basic calculation also works for tear-down projects known as “scrapers”).

Multiple Lots

Production homebuilders control the price of larger parcels with multiple lots because they have the larger sums required to complete the purchase, and they can bid higher than individuals and still make a healthy profit. Production builders have a much lower construction cost than any individual because they are geared up for mass production. They have the buying power to squeeze costs down far lower than any individual working on their own or with a custom home builder. Production builders’ costs in the California market in 2007 averaged around $85 per square foot (SF). [ii]

A note about the numbers: part of the process of selling a large parcel to a production homebuilder is coming to an agreement as to the costs to complete the infrastructure of the project. In order to facilitate this negotiation, both parties often turn to a neutral third party to establish costs. Specialized consulting firms meet this need. These firms provide cost estimates with much more detail than what is presented here, but the numbers are reflective of a typical situation.

The following exercise is an example of how a production builder would analyze a 100-lot subdivision in which it believes homes could be sold for an average of $1,000,000 per unit.

Equation 2: Value of Hypothetical 100-Lot Subdivision

Revenue

$ 1,000,000

Sales Price

Costs

Fixed Costs

2,000

Average House Square Footage

$ 85

Average Cost per Square Foot

$ 170,000

Average Cost of Physical Structure

$ 40,000

Average Per-Lot Cost of Infrastructure

$ 210,000

Total Average Fixed Construction Costs

Variable Costs

$ 120,000

12%

Profit Margin

$ 50,000

5%

Marketing

$ 30,000

3%

Overhead

$ 50,000

5%

Finance

$ 30,000

3%

Other

$ 280,000

28%

Total Variable Costs

$ 490,000

Total Costs (Fixed plus Variable)

Residual Lot Value

$ 510,000

(Revenue minus Costs)

100

Number of Lots

$ 51,000,000

Finished Lot Land Value

The production builder can pay more for each lot because of its advantage in construction costs. Notice the very large dollar amount builders were paying for finished lots during the peak of the bubble. After the bubble peaked, the value of the land began to drop quickly. The builders were forced to take “impairment” write-offs because they overpaid for land, and the asset on their books was no longer worth what they paid for it. [iii] Land prices are particularly sensitive to changes in housing prices.

Density and the Value of Land

A builder bids for land based on the potential number of units to be built. The size and configuration is not as important as the unit count: builders pay for lots, not land. Therefore, sellers of land (like The Irvine Company) want to maximize salable density. Developers and builders want to get the highest number of units per acre they can possibly sell. Density is a multiplying factor. For instance, if the million dollar home in the production builder example required a full acre of land, the land value would be $510,000 per acre; however, if the builder can fit 5 homes on the acre of land and still obtain the $1,000,000 sales price, the value of the land would be $2,550,000 or 5 times as much. For obvious reasons, landowners like high densities. The Irvine Company is widely known in the industry for creating innovative high-density product. This is born from the necessity to increase unit yield to maximize land value.

House Price and the Value of Land

The Irvine Company, or any land developer, is very motivated to see home prices increase rather than decrease because land prices are extremely sensitive to changes in house prices. The residual land value calculation reveals that only 28% of the costs vary with the sales price of the final product. The other 72% pays for the fixed costs of construction and provides residual land value. Assuming the final sales price covers the fixed costs (residual land values for residential construction can go negative,) of each additional dollar, $0.72 falls to land value. In other words, owners and developers of land make $7,200 per unit for each $10,000 increase in house sales price. If a piece of land is being developed at 5 units per acre, the land developer would make $36,000 per acre for each $10,000 increase in house sales price. From 2000 to 2006, the median sales price in Irvine increased over $400,000. This added $1,440,000 in land value to every acre of land the Irvine Company could develop at 5 units per acre. With the thousands of acres of developable land in their portfolio, this added up to a great deal of money.

Irvine’s Woodbury

Woodbury is an Irvine Company Village of 4,270 units started in 2004. [iv] As this Village is constructed on a 1 mile square, it sits on 640 acres for a density of 6.67 dwelling units per acre (DU/AC). Based on the discussion above, the total land value of the residential portion of the Woodbury Village can be estimated:

Equation 3: Valuation of Woodbury Community at Peak House Pricing

Revenue

$ 722,928

Sales Price at 2006 Median

Costs

Fixed Costs

2,000

Average House Square Footage

$ 85

Average Cost per Square Foot

$ 170,000

Average Cost of Physical Structure

$ 40,000

Average Per-Lot Cost of Infrastructure

$ 210,000

Total Average Fixed Construction Costs

Variable Costs

$ 86,751

12%

Profit Margin

$ 36,146

5%

Marketing

$ 21,688

3%

Overhead

$ 36,146

5%

Finance

$ 21,688

3%

Other

$ 202,420

28%

Total Variable Costs

$ 412,420

Total Costs (Fixed plus Variable)

Residual Lot Value

$ 310,509

(Revenue minus Costs)

4,270

Number of Lots

$ 1,325,871,379

Finished Lot Land Value

Woodbury is worth $1.3 Billion dollars–that is Billion with a “B.” If the Irvine Company could have built out this village for an average home sales price of $722,928 (the median at the end of 2006,) that is how much they would have made (the land was purchased so long ago that their land cost basis is nearly zero). If prices crash 50% from the peak, Woodbury is worth $214 Million dollars–that is million with an “M.” A 50% reduction in house price means an 85% reduction in land value.

Why is land value so sensitive to home prices? As discussed previously, variable costs are only 28% of the home sales price, and land value is a residual calculation. Everything that is not a cost falls to land value; therefore, 72% of any increase or decrease in the price of a home flows directly to land value. In essence, this makes land an extremely leveraged commodity. If the value of a house changes by $10,000, the value of the lot it sits on changes $7,200. Multiply that times the 6.67 units per acre, and you can see how each $10,000 change in the value of a house changes the value of an acre of land in Woodbury by $48,024. Since Woodbury sits on 640 acres, the total value of Woodbury changes by $30,735,360 for each $10,000 change in the sales price of a home.

Equation 4: Valuation of Woodbury Community after 50% House Price Decline

Revenue

$ 361,464

Sales Price

Costs

Fixed Costs

2,000

Average House Square Footage

$ 85

Average Cost per Square Foot

$ 170,000

Average Cost of Physical Structure

$ 40,000

Average Per-Lot Cost of Infrastructure

$ 210,000

Total Average Fixed Construction Costs

Variable Costs

$ 43,376

12%

Profit Margin

$ 18,073

5%

Marketing

$ 10,844

3%

Overhead

$ 18,073

5%

Finance

$ 10,844

3%

Other

$ 101,210

28%

Total Variable Costs

$ 311,210

Total Costs (Fixed plus Variable)

Residual Lot Value

$ 50,254

(Revenue minus Costs)

4,270

Number of Lots

$ 214,585,689

Finished Lot Land Value

Landowners Capitulate

Sellers and land developers do not control the market; they only control the “ask.” Potential buyers determine the “bid.” If bids do not reach the ask, there is no sale (which is why volumes decline dramatically after the peak). If this were not true, sellers and developers could just decide all houses must sell for $10,000,000. In 300 years when those prices may be reasonable, they will start selling homes again. Sellers cannot hold to peak prices forever. Holding to the peak prices of yesterday is a fool’s game many homeowners play. If these properties are heavily leveraged, the debt service consumes their cash reserves, and the property ends up in foreclosure. It is no different for owners and developers of raw land and lots. What is true for the Irvine Company is true for all owners of raw land. The Irvine Company example provides a glimpse into the economics of land development everywhere.

Summary

The people who were actively investing in land development during the bubble made more money than most of us can imagine. The extreme sensitivity of these investments to changes in home sales price resulted in properties obtaining sales multiples of 10 times or greater in just a few years. [v] Many homeowners who either accidentally or by design timed the market well made huge windfalls during the bubble; however, the real action was in land development.


[1] Many in the academic community do not seem to understand the true nature of land prices. In their paper The Price of Residential Land in Large U.S. Cities (Davis & Palumbo, 2006) Morris A. Davis; Michael G. Palumbo talk about residential land prices as being a determinant of house prices rather than the other way around. This mistake concerning the valuation of land is prevalent in the general public, but it is surprising to see academics continue to respond to this fallacy.

[ii] The author has worked with many builders in Southern California. At one time, the author shared an office with the former Division President of Taylor Woodrow Homes who at the time was the President of the Orange County Building Industry Association. The $85 SF is anecdotal, but it is a reliable number from multiple sources.

[iii] There were numerous news stories in 2007 of impairment charges from various national builders.

[iv] The Village of Woodbury information can be found on the Irvine Company website: http://www.villagesofirvine.com/VILLAGES-AND-RESIDENCES/Woodbury-Overview.aspx

[v] The author was involved with the analysis of a project that was purchased as raw land for $10,000,000 in 2001 in Riverside County, California. The owner sold the project to a major homebuilder in three phases in 2004 and 2005 for a total of $95,000,000.

IHB News 2-13-2010

High end sellers seem to believe prices have already recovered back to peak valuations and are appreciating wildly.

24 PRAIRIE Irvine, CA 92618 kitchen

Irvine Home Address … 24 PRAIRIE Irvine, CA 92618

Resale Home Price …… $1,480,000

{book1}

They were sitting

They were sitting on the Strawberry Swing

Every moment was so precious

Cold, cold water bring me 'round

Now my feet won't touch the ground

Cold, cold water what ya say?

When it's such…

It's such a perfect day

It's such a perfect day

Coldplay — Strawberry Swing

IHB News

The IHB News section of the weekend open thread is a place I consider an open forum for anything I want to say. If you want to read about real estate, skip this section today and go down to the Patrick.net links.

My copy of Garner's Modern American Usage arrived, and I set about finding my usage errors. I am begrudgingly dropping downpayment as a single word. I think it is a great compound, but I am not with the mainstream on this one, so I am breaking it up. I admit to three years of persistent and foolish misuse of downpayment for down payment. However, I will still use cashflow. Garner doesn't mention it, I like it, so I will keep using cashflow.

I am also going to start providing links to definitions for any uncommon word or uncommon use of a common word I looked up to write a post. Actually, this is one of the greatest strengths of the Internet and the blogging media; bloggers can make very obscure references and provide immediate lookup assistance with a hyperlink. It is also a good way to see if I am using too many of them….

After completing The Unceremonious Fall from Entitlement, I was spent, and I still have not fully emotionally recovered. I must admit, I cannot sustain that level of writing and prolificacy. It isn't that I am unwilling to put in the time and energy, I am, and I do, but when I tune in to complex emotional issues, sort through the meanings and present it coherently, it takes time and often more energy than I can muster.

I want to thank SK who left this gem in the astute observations:

I was also especially struck by your definition of wealthy people and their preferences, think you got it absolutely right.

Heres a very nice definition of being free, in case you like it as much as I did (unfortunately its not original)

The most precious sort of freedom you will not hear talked about in the great outside world of winning and achieving and displaying. The really important form of freedom involves attention, and awareness, and discipline, and effort, and being able truly to care about other people and to sacrifice for them, over and over, in myriad petty unsexy ways, every day. That is real freedom.

When I read that definition of freedom, I wept; I felt the meaning beneath the words because recently, I have been feeling more freedom and abundance in my life.

Today's featured song is one of my son's favorites, and like many of Coldplay's songs, it just makes you feel good.

I hope you are enjoying this perfect day.

Housing Bubble News from Patrick.net

Realtors, lenders, government screwed California; now doing it again (pinnaclenews.com)

Fitch Says Prime Jumbo RMBS Near 10% Delinquent (housingwire.com)

California Housing Losses By County and City (Jas Jain)

The Housing Double Dip Began In December (businessinsider.com)

Losses Per Square Foot For Southern California (Jas Jain)

Money pit: What buying a foreclosure really costs (money.cnn.com)

Fannie, Freddie Exist To Lose Money, Keep House Prices Artificially High (businessinsider.com)

Five decades of failed housing subsidies are enough (washingtontimes.com)

Housing Crisis Getting Uglier in 2010 (cbsnews.com)

Early signs of a 'double dip' in housing prices (marketwatch.com)

Foreclosures

Slumburbia (blogs.nytimes.com)

Foreclosures surge on the way? (news.yahoo.com)

Millions approaching retirement 'in denial' over pension income (thisismoney.co.uk)

Every single human being should short U.S. Treasury bonds (Mish)

The Poor Are Better Off Renting (online.wsj.com)

Mortgage applications fall despite low interest rates (news.medill.northwestern.edu)

A look back…

Housing Bubble? That's Crazy Talk (Full of shit in 2002) (thestreet.com)

Fed's Greenspan Doubts 'Housing Bubble' Thesis (Full of shit in 2004) (thestreet.com)

Market facts puncture myth of 'housing bubble' (Full of shit in 2005) (bizjournals.com)

Underwater and walkaway

American mortgages: Return to lender (economist.com)

40 percent of South Florida mortgage holders 'underwater' (sun-sentinel.com)

One-Fifth of U.S. Houseowners Owe More Than Properties Are Worth (bloomberg.com)

House Underwater? Walk Away from Geithner's Perverse 'Relief' Plan (alternet.org)

Strategic Default: Smart For Wall, Smart For Main Street (gather.com)

Miscellaneous

Forget the Mortgage, I'm Paying My Credit Card Bill (usnews.com)

Talking Aboot Canada's Housing Bubble (blogs.wsj.com)

Freddie, Fannie escalate insane purchases of their own crap loans (reuters.com)

The Unceremonious Fall from Entitlement (irvinehousingblog.com)

How a New Jobless Era Will Transform America (theatlantic.com)

False Profits: We Will Be Suffering from Fed's Ineptitude for a Long Time (alternet.org)

Alan Greenspan's Does Not Admit Error (theawl.com)

Sales of million-dollar-plus houses way down (sfgate.com)

Jumbo Mortgage Serious Delinquencies Rise to 9.6% (bloomberg.com)

Phoneix Real Estate Prices Still Falling On Foreclosure Sales (nuwireinvestor.com)

Ken Lewis: If I'm Going Down, Paulson and Bernanke Coming With Me (nymag.com)

Million-dollar houses in California suffer further sales drop in 2009 (latimes.com)

Large parts of California still in bubble (doctorhousingbubble.com)

LA area foreclosures jumped in 2009 (lacanadaonline.com)

Federal effort to help homedebtors revives risky mortgages (nctimes.com)

Mortgage banker group's massive losses on own mortgage for D.C. offices (washingtonpost.com)

Baby boomers trapped in bad housing market of their own making (chicagotribune.com)

Geithner Says U.S. Will "Never" Lose Its Aaa Debt Rating (businessweek.com)

Fed "might" buy more mortgage bonds with more counterfeit money (washingtonpost.com)

24 PRAIRIE Irvine, CA 92618 kitchen

Irvine Home Address … 24 PRAIRIE Irvine, CA 92618

Resale Home Price … $1,480,000

Income Requirement ……. $308,195

Down Payment Needed … $296,000

20% Down Conventional

Home Purchase Price … $1,351,000

Home Purchase Date …. 10/29/2007

Net Gain (Loss) ………. $40,200

Percent Change ………. 9.5%

Annual Appreciation … 3.7%

Mortgage Interest Rate ………. 5.05%

Monthly Mortgage Payment … $6,392

Monthly Cash Outlays …..….… $8,600

Monthly Cost of Ownership … $6,430

Property Details for 24 PRAIRIE Irvine, CA 92618

Beds 4

Baths 3 full 1 part baths

Home Size 3,577 sq ft

($414 / sq ft)

Lot Size 6,044 sq ft

Year Built 2007

Days on Market 13

Listing Updated 2/9/2010

MLS Number P720861

Property Type Single Family, Residential

Community Portola Springs

Tract Sera

Retreat to the comfort of Beautiful Portola Springs. Situated on Cul-de-Sac, this 2007 Standard Pacific built home has it all! Gracious Interior upgrades include Crown Molding, Baseboards, Oil-Rubbed Hardward and Granite Counters. Hardwood Flooring is Complemented by Stone and Granite in bath areas.Gourmet Kitchen has Professional Stainless Steel Appliances, Oversized Island that seats 4 opens to Great room with French door,Fireplace and Custom Built-in Entertainment Center. Private Office/Den. This plan offers separate living quarters featuring First Floor Master Suite with Double French doors extend your private living area to serene lush landscaped yard or relax in private interior courtyard. Oversized Master Bath with Dual Vanity, Natural Stone Shower, His and Her built in Dressers and Huge Walk in Closet. Upstairs Quarters bedroom 2 has private bath, juliette balcony,Bdrm 3&4 have Jack n Jill bath,retreat. Upstairs Laundry.Professional landscape includes Fireplace and Fountain.

Can anyone identify a pattern to the capitalization above?

BTW, does anyone think this owner has a prayer of selling for a profit?

MLS Challenge Threatens realtors with Extinction… in Canada

Apparently, the Canadian version of the National Association of Realtors is not as powerful as our domestic lobby. The Canadian Federal Competition Bureau blasts Canadian Real Estate Association's Multiple Listing Service.

Flippers are buying properties for significant discounts from resale comps and selling them quickly for a profit. Today's featured property was purchased less than a month ago, and the flipper stands to make over $100,000.

12 FOXHILL Irvine, CA 92604 kitchen

Irvine Home Address … 12 FOXHILL Irvine, CA 92604

Resale Home Price …… $769,000

{book1}

Take me to the action, take me to the track

Take me to a party if they're bettin' in the back

I've been working all my life, can't afford to wait

Let me call my wife so I can tell her I'll be late

I want the easy, easy money

Easy money, I could get lucky

Oh, things could go right

I want the easy, easy money

Easy money, maybe this one time

Maybe tonight

Billy Joel — Easy Money

Flipping properties at auction isn't terribly complicated; determine resale comps, buy for much less at auction, and sell in the resale market. As lenders crank up the foreclosure factory, Trustee Sales become more common, and thereby, so do Trustee Sale flips. The good news is that these properties are making it to the market, the bad news is that there still are not enough of them to change pricing — at least not yet. Lenders and homeowners hope it stays that way.

Canadian bureaucrats take on the Canadian Real Estate Association

As we cope with our market issues, Canadian bureaucrats are squeezing excess from realtor commissions. If you remember the series I did no selling a home, the second post was on cash listing services.

12-2-2009 — Sell a Home: For Sale By Owner

12-1-2009 — Sell a Home: Cash Listing Services

11-30-2009 — Sell a Home: Conventional Brokerage Listing

The Canadian Real Estate association banned them by changing their rules of access to the MLS. It was a brazen anti-competitive move, and Government bureaucrats are fighting back.

MLS challenge could change the way houses are sold

The federal Competition Bureau has launched an aggressive attack on the Canadian Real Estate Association, challenging its rules governing the Multiple Listing Service and calling for a radical change in how homes are sold in Canada.

“Our concern is that [CREA] are improperly and unlawfully leveraging [their control over MLS] in order to impose these restrictions and to deny competitive forces and to deny good old-fashioned market competition,” said Competition Commissioner Melanie Aitken. “This case is focused pure and simple: Let consumers have the choice, let agents have the opportunity to satisfy and serve those choices.”

I can't believe the CREA had the nerve to try this, and I hope the Canadian Government does something about it.

The MLS has been around for more than 50 years and only registered agents are allowed to list homes on the service. The MLS trademark is owned by CREA, which has nearly 100,000 members, and each real-estate board operates the service in their region. Roughly 90 per cent of all residential real-estate transactions in Canada involve MLS data.

The bureau has asked the federal Competition Tribunal to strike down a series of rules CREA adopted in 2007 that tightened the MLS listing requirements.

Ms. Aitken said the rules stifled competition because they restricted the type of services real-estate agents offered, which resulted in higher fees for consumers. Agents who wanted to offer a wider range of services, such as flat fees instead of traditional commissions charged by full-service agents, have been excluded from the MLS by CREA, she added. “What that means is consumers don't have any choice, it's either all [services] or nothing,” she said.

The charges levied by the Canadian Government are clear, and despite the legal maneuvering through shifting requirements, the transparent and anti-competitive nature of the changes are obvious and intentional.

…“This is big news for us,” said Steve Neil, a Vancouver agent who runs HomeBuyAndSell.com and has pushed for changes. “There is no question it will change things in the next several years.”

Discount brokers, who mostly operate online, have long argued that CREA's rule changes were designed to put them out of business and protect full-service agents who rely on commissions, which average about 5 per cent in total on a residential sale.

Is the CREA clinging to a number already 1% below ours?

Before the 2007 changes, some discount brokers offered to list homes on MLS for a fee, typically less than $700. The homeowner then handled the sale.

The CREA changes required all agents to inspect homes before listing them on the MLS and work with other agents throughout the sale. As a result, discount brokers say they could no longer offer their low-fee services and had to charge more to carry out the various CREA requirements.

Mr. Neil, for example, charges customers $299 to list their home on MLS, plus $79 for each week the house is listed. When the house is sold, he charges a fee of 0.25 per cent of the sale price. Mr. Neil said if the bureau wins its case, he would likely lower his fees and change his services.

“We would offer probably a sort of à la carte -type menu of services; if [customers] want them they can pay for them,” he said. He also believes several American online services would expand into Canada.

The trend is toward online listing, and ultimately realtors will lose control of the MLS. As this occurs, you will see significant pressures on commissions on the listing side of the transaction. It may take longer here in the US, but realtors will endure some of the industry purging experienced by travel agents… you do remember travel agents, don't you?

12 FOXHILL Irvine, CA 92604 kitchen

Irvine Home Address … 12 FOXHILL Irvine, CA 92604

Resale Home Price … $769,000

Income Requirement ……. $160,137

Downpayment Needed … $153,800

20% Down Conventional

Home Purchase Price … $615,000

Home Purchase Date …. 1/15/2010

Net Gain (Loss) ………. $107,860

Percent Change ………. 25.0%

Annual Appreciation … 300.5%

Mortgage Interest Rate ………. 5.05%

Monthly Mortgage Payment … $3,321

Monthly Cash Outlays …..….… $4,090

Monthly Cost of Ownership … $2,940

Property Details for 12 FOXHILL Irvine, CA 92604

Beds 4

Baths 2 full 1 part baths

Home Size 2,522 sq ft

($305 / sq ft)

Lot Size 5,400 sq ft

Year Built 1975

Days on Market 11

Listing Updated 2/3/2010

MLS Number P720033

Property Type Single Family, Residential

Community El Camino Real

Tract Dc

Beautiful Newly Remodeled Home in one of the most sought after areas of Irvine. Open & Spacious Floor Plan. Very quiet neighborhood with a serene view of the greenbelt. Living Room with Cathedral Ceiling & Fireplace. Brand New Gourmet Kitchen with Granite Counter Tops and Stainless Steel appliances including a refrigerator, dishwasher & range. Expansive Formal Dining Room. Master Suite with it's own private Bathroom. All Bathrooms have been fully remodeled. Spacious Ladscaped backyard that is great for entertaining. Lowest Association fee and no Mello Roos. Assocaition Tennis Courts, Pools, Racketball Courts and Spa. Excellent Schools and Superb Location. Move-In Turnkey Condition. This One won't Last!

Irvine Housing Blog No Kool Aid

I hope you have enjoyed this week, and thank you for reading the Irvine Housing Blog: astutely observing the Irvine home market and combating California Kool-Aid since 2006.

Have a great weekend,

Irvine Renter

Free Wine, Food and Gifts Plus a Tour of an Epic Real Estate Disaster

Astoria Central Park West begins liquidation sales today with a big event for the public from 6 to 9 PM. They are featuring wine tasting, cocktails, hors d'oeuvres, desserts and gift bags as well as tours of model units.

Irvine Home Address … 401 Rockefeller, Irvine, CA 92612

Resale Home Price …… $400,000+?

{book1}

You sit and you stare and you wait and you wonder

You think "Maybe it's me and I'm being a fool."

You start to believe it's a curse that you're under

So let me out

Or let me in

And tell me how, we can win

Cause I really wanna know now

Before I begin

To let you go (to let you go)

So let me know

I'd rather be wandering hungry and homeless

Than here in the warmth of a silent defeat

You've gotta be honest with me and be ruthless

Ben's Brother — Let Me Out

Honest and ruthless; I can do that. Lennar and its equity partner want out of this disaster, and they would take the hungry and homeless — if they qualified for a loan. For years, we have stared with wonder, "What fools will buy there?" and live in the warmth of silent defeat like those in the North Korea Towers. We are about to find out because Astoria Central Park West is opening for tours and sales.

I first profiled Astoria Central Park West on April 4, 2009. In that post, I noted, "… Astoria at Central Park West is a clear loser — (for) the ownership entity that developed this property (Lennar has only a small investment). None of these units sold at the peak, and now that we are nearing a long, flat bottom, these units are hitting the market. The early buyers will be knife catchers, but in a couple of years, some of these units will be good buys — at about $300,000 to $350,000." The properties for sale now are floors 7-10 which should carry a premium to the lower floors. I wonder how many of the 3rd floor units they sold for $519,000? I wonder how those owners feel about the new and lower prices? Perhaps I will ask again when they sell floors 11-15….

With this profile, the grand opening gets much more exposure than it received through the concerted efforts of its marketing department. No other resource reaches thousands of people specifically interested in Irvine real estate, but they do have to give up control of the message. If an extra hundred or more people attend due to this post, do you think they will thank me? I won't hold my breath.

Astoria front Astoria People

Irvine Home Address … 401 Rockefeller, Irvine, CA 92612

Resale Home Price … $400,000+?

Income Requirement ……. $83,296

Downpayment Needed … $14,000

3.5% Down FHA Financing

Home Purchase Price … $750,000

Home Purchase Date …. 7/1/2006

Net Gain (Loss) ………. $(374,000)

Percent Change ………. -46.7%

Annual Appreciation … -16.4%

I don't know what the actual asking prices are on these units as the liquidators sellers have been careful not to publish detailed information that might discourage people from attending. The numbers I have used above are based on their website as well as rumor and speculation, and they could be very wrong.

I heard through various industry sources that Lennar had projected an average price point of around $750,000 for these units. As I have pointed out on numerous occasions with the North Korea Towers (Marquee at Park Place), cashflow valuations support about half of 2006 price levels. The North Korea Towers are likely worse due to the extremely high HOA dues, but then again, prices there have not hit bottom yet. I don't know what the HOA dues are at Astoria Central Park West, but they will likely be quite high too.

Current bids from all-cash or heavy-cash buyers at the North Korea towers are in the $350,000 to $400,000 range. Of course, none of those transact because lenders are unwilling to take the $500,000+ write-offs necessary to exit the building. Someone yelled fire (probably me), and lenders decided to stay and burn. The asking prices for the Astoria units are starting in the low $400,000s, and I would not be surprised if Lennar seduces some of the bidders from the North Korea Towers who may be enamored with the Park Place, but are tired of waiting for short-sale approval.

All Sizzle, No Meat

The website for Astoria Central Park West is slick and beautiful, but it contains almost no useful information.

If you click on the plans tab, you are shown a floor-by-floor overview of the units, but unit detail is completely absent. It is like looking at a subdivision map without the house floorplans; few care about the arrangement of units, but many would like to know how these units lay out. Putting the overview without the unit detail frustrates a potential buyer looking for information.

The features tab contains the obligatory picture of a barefoot couple lovingly enjoying their shoebox. I appreciate evocative words, but "sophisticated bathrooms?" Bathrooms don't seem like something that can be sophisticated. Sophisticated: 1 (of a person, ideas, tastes, manners, etc.) altered by education, experience, etc., so as to be worldly-wise; not naive ; 5 of, for, or reflecting educated taste, knowledgeable use, etc. Do sophisticated people in their sophisticated bathrooms have sophisticated bowel movements?–I assume it smells great, right?

If you never noticed all the bare feet in new home ads, you will now (sorry). Some marketing consultant long ago noticed that bare feet suggests the comforts and coziness of home. Doesn't the couple in the picture look like they have the life all of us want?

The sizzle on the website is real; the photo gallery shows many spectacular pictures of first-rate photography. IMO, they made a mistake by putting the inside unit pictures below the scroll line where most won't see them, but the photos themselves are marvelous.

The financing tab had an interesting surprise:

Builders often buy-down the interest rate to artificially lower the payments for early years. Personally, I think the practice is egregious differing in no way from the subprime 2/28 programs that proved so disastrous. Lennar and their partner obviously do not care about the long-term viability of ownership of buyers; any who use their advertised financing will not be living there 7 years from now. The the builder bought down the interest rate on an ARM which is taken out at the bottom of the interest rate cycle; this interest rate is going to rise, and it is going to make future payments unaffordable. I suppose these will appreciate so much over the next 7 years that it won't matter, right? Bubble thinking is not dead.

While we are on the subject of financing, I want to share a recent email I received. The subject was, "WE CAN SAVE YOUR DEAL"

I can honestly say that if an IHB client needed a 60% DTI to complete a deal that I would strongly advise them to pass rather than commit to a lifetime of debt servitude or near-certain foreclosure. As long as these lending practices persist, lenders will continue to lose money, and we will continue to have inflated, unmoving prices.

Astoria Central Park West

From 6 to 9 PM Astoria Central Park West is featuring wine tasting, cocktails, hors d'oeuvres, desserts and gift bags as well as tours of model units. I may see you there, but you won't notice me in disguise.

The Unceremonious Fall from Entitlement

Many cling to lifestyles of the Great Housing Bubble unable to accept reality of living within the confines of their wage income. Today we examine the inevitable and ignominious fall from entitlement.

80 FAIRLAKE 21 Irvine, CA 92614 kitchen

Irvine Home Address … 80 FAIRLAKE 21 Irvine, CA 92614

Resale Home Price …… $1,200,000

{book1}

Frozen in a timeless gaze

Nothing left, you fall from grace

What's the point in killing time

Waiting for your time to die

Leave the lies for yesterday

Sick – sick – fall from grace

Venom – Fall From Grace

The Great Housing Bubble cultivated a gentility of entitlement, a sordid societal residue, a system of reliance, a conviction among people that they may possess anything they wish just because; deserving without earning; Grace.

Divine acceptance is given; whereas, worldly possessions are earned — a basic truth lost through possessory entitlement. Few construct and contribute to the greater good, and many expect easy money from lenders, Governments, housing and stock markets or free-money Ponzi Schemes. We are impaired by our lender's failure and our Government's response to the crisis our lenders created; a wound that lingers as a festering sore no bailout balm can remedy.

The emotional fall from Grace has barely begun. The amend-pretend-extend dance will continue until lenders tire of paying the piper. Shadow Inventory contains the new entitlement class; while unemployed renters sleep in shelters, unemployed homeowners squat in luxury, sustain false lives on lender largess, and exalt their status in preparation for the unceremonious fall from entitlement.

The Unceremonious Fall from Entitlement

When famous people fall, it makes news, but when plebs fall, no notice is given; no ritual is performed. The silent souls quietly abandon their perceived privilege while the raucous proles forcefully defend their binding birthright through procedural delays and faithlessly modified promises. In the end, all fall to the support of their own resources and suffer to the degree they resist reshaping their lives to reflect reality.

We witness this fall as HELOC abuse posts, short sales and Trustee Sales. Like forensic examiners, we follow clues in the property records looking for what methods were used and what motivated homeowners to borrow and spend their family homes. This work is consequential because unless we see conditions for what they are, unless we see people's defective reasoning and overriding emotional gambits for what they are, we may fall victim to the same Siren's Song.

Who will fall, and how much will they suffer?

Suffering is a spiritual concept; suffering is a negative judgment of experience exacerbated by attachment, delusion and aversion. Suffering and attachment directly relate; each soul suffers in proportion to the attachments formed to objects, people, beliefs and ideas, or anything the mind's grasping can't bear to lose or give up. Are you aware of your own suffering?

Homedebtor suffering directly relates to their over-indebtedness and HELOC dependency; each suffers in direct proportion to (1) their debt-to-income ratio, (2) the magnitude to which they consistently outspend their wage income, (3) and the extent to which they must have that which they must lose. Rapid appreciation and HELOC spending to supplement lifestyle is not coming back, and all who hold their breath will give up, pass out or walk away. In the interim, they suffer. Quietly and anonymously they hatch fantasies of golden geese and high-flying home prices not to be.

Profiles in Entitlement

Prosaic descriptions of entitlement provides a skeletal structure, but to put meat on the bones we must examine the stories of individuals and families caught up in the compulsion for kool aid. I have profiled dozens of HELOC abuse posts over the years, and each one tells a story of greed and foolishness. If you want a deeper understanding of the motivations of various profiles in HELOC abuse, I recently encapsulated this phenomenon in the post HELOC Abuse Grading System.

The profiles selected each illustrate an aspect of consumer entitlement directly opposed to (1) wealth creation and accumulation or (2) personal responsibility and strength. The names and details have been changed or omitted to spare the guilty gratuitous embarrassment; I seek not to punish but to enlighten and inform.

Borrowing is weak

Dependency is weak, and borrowing is dependency; therefore, borrowing is weak. This simple deductive argument speaks to an oft-ignored truth; borrowing is weak. Saving and borrowing are dualistic opposites like strength and weakness, slavery and freedom.

The inescapable truth greets each debtor the moment their lender says "no." If a saver and a borrower each want something, the saver is in complete control of a purchase decision, whereas the borrower is utterly dependent upon lender approval. Have you ever been standing in line and watched someone's credit card be denied payment? Did the wouldbe purchaser seem strong and powerful to you? Did you cringe with embarrassment? I have — from both sides of the interaction.

The aging socialite

A reader emailed me about the property that became the post HELOC abuse Hollywood Style. The property was purchased in the early 70s in Hollywood for about $150,000. The property was owned by a frugal couple that paid down their debts. The husband died in the late 90s leaving the wife with a beautiful and historic property with millions in equity.

I can imagine the husband's state-of-mind and heart on his deathbed; he knew he provided well for his family, and although his wife might outlive him for quite some time, he was leaving her comfortably and securely set up for life. The inner peace he felt is something I covet for my own death. So should we all.

If there is an afterlife, and if we have the ability to look in on loved ones after we pass, I hope for this man's spirit that he resisted the temptation and rests in peace. Watching his wife either through foolish choices or bad advice spend the family fortune and be forced to abandon the family home — a home that had millions in equity at the moment of death — watching that from afar with no ability to intervene is more akin to hell than to heaven.

For the widow, she must move out of her stately mansion, destitute and alone with only memories of her life of entitlement and glamour to comfort her, or torture her, as she lives out her life in relative obscurity after her unceremonious fall from entitlement. Hopefully for her, California's social entitlement will survive to provide a minimal level of support.

The spendthrift landlord

Entitlement isn't always over the top, sometimes it is just flippant; a thoughtless attitude toward spending where people just obtain any object of desire at any time for any cost — and doing it like a big shot who is above it all.

A friend of mine (whom I am overdue to meet for coffee) told me this story of his now former landlord, a flippant spender quickly approaching his day of reckoning.

The owner had three properties; the one my friend rented was his original property purchased in the mid 90s for about $150,000, and a few months after my friend moved in, the owner received a Notice of Default on his $650,000 Option ARM. It turns out the owner used that money to buy another investment property and a $2,000,000+ Coto mansion at the peak in 2006. Based on the property records, we surmised he was facing about a $40,000 monthly nut on properties deeply underwater and precipitously declining in value.

What always struck my frugal friend was the cavalier attitude the owner had toward spending. The landlord would stop buy by in his pimped out truck, brag about decadent spending, and promise to fix items and fail to follow through. It was obvious that discretionary consumer spending took priority over other financial obligations including mortgages. Where is this guy's next cash infusion going to come from? What lender wants to pour grease down that gutter?

Outspending the Joneses

Truly successful and abundant people are unconcerned with impressing the neighbors or keeping-up-with-the-Joneses. Most inwardly flourishing people live joyous lives and keep a low profile because real wealth prefers anonymity to ostentation. However, the spiritually impoverished elevate themselves above others and seek to elicit jealousy. The jealous procure a fleeting power; addicted to the soul-drain of another, the jealous seek an endless charade of consumerism and comparison, and they pine for those ephemeral emotional payoffs when the jealous believe other people want what they have.

The compulsion toward jealousy leads some to recklessness as we witnessed in Ashes to Ashes; Dust to Dust where one family took out and spent $865,500, or in The Ultimate Post where the family absconded with $1,090,000 in lender money. Somebody has to be the trend setter, someone has to be the Joneses everyone else is keeping up with. When the Joneses are freebasing on lender crack, they set a very, very high bar. With no truly wealthy people spending such prodigious amounts, the Joneses actually surpass the spending of the wealthy they ostensibly emulate.

Is this wise behavior we should all imitate? Is the pleasure of spending and jealousy worth losing the family home? Carpe Diem?

The inconceivable owner

I remember a comment years ago from a married woman in her early 30s who could not conceive a scenario where she would not be owning a house in two years at most. WTF? Entitlement demanded she be housed in the property of her choosing in 18 to 24 months, and no matter the means or the outcome, it was going to happen. Let me provide images of her — absent a home — for her deficient imagination:

  1. She could realize she cannot afford a home — not likely, but at least possible. Kudos if she does.
  2. Her husband may realize she cannot afford the home and say no — not likely, unless he has a spine. Ditto above if he does.
  3. Her family may not be given access to sufficient lender funds to obtain the property she feels entitled to, which means a lender has determined she cannot afford a home — a very likely outcome in the aftermath of the bubble. And wisely so as lenders just lost a trillion dollars lending too much.

It never occurred to this woman that the enablers of her entitlement may choose not to enable it further. Some lender may reveal her entitlement to be an illusion created in her own mind. Also, it never occurred to her that having the object she is entitled to could cause so much pain. Nobody who purchased in 2006 who has a rational understanding of the situation is rejoicing their good fortune.

The sophisticated financial manager

In the heyday of securitization, paper-pushers were tieing up any available, consistent cashflow and providing the owners with a huge, one-time infusion of cash. It was Enron accounting applied on an unprecedented scale. Emulating corporate titans, individuals embarked on personal Ponzi-Style finance and sought ways to liberate their equity for more productive and more indulgent pursuits. The money-changers eagerly embraced this new sophistication among the proletariat, which has come to view debt as something serviced rather than retired, something maximized rather than minimized, something chic rather than shunned.

The most egregious example I found was HELOC Abuse Laguna Beach Style where the owner took out over $5,000,000 in mortgage equity withdrawal. What did he do with that money? Was he saving a business? Was he partying and having a good time? Several not-so-astutely observed nothing wrong with the owner's behavior, as it was between the borrower and the lender. That sounds very reasonable until the lender looks to you and me to pay the loss.

In the recent post, Will Government Exit the Mortgage Market on Schedule? The property owner relayed the following open message:

“This gentleman makes a lot of assumptions – some of which are correct, and some of which are not. My business is largely about buying low, selling high, and utilizing equity to drive cash flow. The property has been a rental for 11 years. There are better opportunities, so I am selling to purchase some all cash deals. Good investors will use HELOC’s, but in this case there is nothing utilized on the 2nd. The other important aspect is to drive the total cost of your debt down among all the investments that you own – that is why this has been refinanced. Other properties are held all cash. Just funny how he interprets without all the data.”

I replied to the intermediary:

As for his statements about financial management, I think he is crazy, but if he feels good about it, good for him. He implies he took great care with the management of his cost of debt, but appears he was not as successful in managing the total amount of debt since the amount obviously ballooned out of control. Based on what he owes he is not going to net much cash out of this deal, and the only thing he really accomplishes is getting out from under the debt, which is a good thing. He extracted his cash and now he moves on. I don’t see where this improves his wealth much.

Why do people borrow themselves to oblivion? Because they can! Lenders enable this foolishness because they are siphoning borrower cashflow; lenders would prefer lifelong addiction, but if a few flame out, so be it. As long as wouldbe borrowers view this foolishness as reasonable, responsible and refined, it will continue. Crazy!

California's social entitlements and obligations

No discussion of entitlement is complete without discussing Our HELOC Economy. California's debt rating is among the worst of sovereign entities. Lenders simply don't believe in our willingness to raise taxes or cut spending to balance our budget. We are borrowing in the belief that tax revenues will return to bubble levels, and they won't. We are broke, and we are over borrowing because we want to maintain our entitlements.

I don't know what form it will take and who will get cut, but we will come crashing down to the level of support our economy sustains. It may be bond vigilantes making our debt so expensive we are cut off from borrowing. It may be a wise and concerted efforts among politicians to reign in our budget through thoughtful cuts and painful but necessary tax increases… (giggles to self). Or it may be that the economy replaces mortgage equity withdrawal with real productive output and State revenues improve… (not likely, but such denial is current status quo). Start watching California bond yields for signs of our upcoming political crisis.

Status and Entitlement

In the post The Grand Illusion, I discussed the pursuit of status:

Status is an internal perception about what people believe other people think about them. It has nothing to do with what other people actually do think about them (as if that mattered anyway).

For instance, I think the women on the The Real Housewives of Orange County are soulless gold-diggers. My derision is only eclipsed by my disrespect for the way they live, what they believe, and what they represent. However, they think I, and everyone else who knows them through the show, believes they are something special, something to envy as if they really have it "going on." They have status. Not because people regard them highly, but because they think people do. But I digress…

For people who don't have the internal strength to base their self worth on what they believe about themselves, they end up basing their self worth on their perceptions of what other people think about them. Once they have given their power away to others in this manner, people will expend tremendous amounts of time, energy and money in a vain attempt to influence other people — hence we have fancy cars, opulent houses, designer clothing, and all the other trappings of conspicuous consumption. In my opinion, this is a sickness (their mind control fails on me.) It is a consuming disease which fed on the borrowed money made available during the housing/credit bubble.

The Real Housewives of Orange County as form of entertainment sickens me as it appeals either to pure schadenfreude or ignorant emulation. Most watch and feel superior — how could you not — but some actually watch looking for role models or a how-to manual for being pretentious — a ghastly side effect our sons and daughters pay with their souls.

As you might imagine, I don't watch much TV, and I will probably not watch Thursday night's episode; however, if you feel like an overdose of schadenfreude, you can tune in and watch one pretending family endure the unceremonious fall from entitlement. Apparently, one family has been moving from one entitled situation to another, failing to pay any of their bills, and now they are facing eviction with cameras voyeuristically capturing the ceremonious, theatrical and educational fall.

80 FAIRLAKE 21 Irvine, CA 92614 front 80 FAIRLAKE 21 Irvine, CA 92614 kitchen

Irvine Home Address … 80 FAIRLAKE 21 Irvine, CA 92614

Resale Home Price … $1,200,000

Income Requirement ……. $249,888

Downpayment Needed … $240,000

20% Down Conventional

Home Purchase Price … $460,000

Home Purchase Date …. 4/29/1994

Net Gain (Loss) ………. $668,000

Percent Change ………. 160.9%

Annual Appreciation … 6.2%

Mortgage Interest Rate ………. 5.05%

Monthly Mortgage Payment … $5,183

Monthly Cash Outlays …..….… $7,100

Monthly Cost of Ownership … $5,160

Property Details for 80 FAIRLAKE 21 Irvine, CA 92614

WTF

Beds 3

Baths 2 full 1 part baths

Home Size 2,320 sq ft

($517 / sq ft)

Lot Size n/a

Year Built 1984

Days on Market 12

Listing Updated 2/4/2010

MLS Number S603569

Property Type Condominium, Residential

Community Woodbridge

Tract Lk

One of a kind! Exquisite lakefront home with breathtaking 180 degree lakeview! Lakeview from almost everywhere. Owner spent $150K for numerous upgrades: Travertine flooring, Marble faced fireplace, Wood shutters, Custom paint,Custom leaded glass windows, Granite kitchen countertop, Beautiful kitchen cabinets, Stainless steel appliances, Granite tops in all bathrooms, Spa/tub in master bath, Recessed lightings, Mirrored closet doors & much more. Vaulted ceilings, Large masterbed with area for office, Breakfast nook, Inside laundry room, Large patio to enjoy the living on the lake.

Are there any rules of capitalization that realtors follow? It just seems random to me. "Wood shutters, Custom paint,Custom leaded glass windows" Why are any of those words capitalized? Is the writer treating commas like periods and capitalizing the first word after each one?

The British know how to joke about entitlement: