Author Archives: IrvineRenter

The Art of Speculation

The Art of War — Sabaton

Speculation is a battle. The forces of greed and fear drive the financial markets, and the speculator attempts to profit from these moves. Speculation is not investment, although most do not understand the distinction. Speculation is the battle of the individual against the herd. For those who understand it and have learned to move against the emotional forces of fear and greed, there is opportunity to profit. For those who follow the herd, there are brief moments when profits are available, but few have the discipline to take them. Most speculators are slain by the market.

Like many others, I have a disdain for pure speculative flips.
People who buy properties, make no improvements, and attempt to resell
it for a profit simply inflate market prices. There is no value added.
People who rehab old or run down properties do a community service, and
they earn the money they make. However, flippers are merely financial
parasites profiting by constricting supply at reasonable price points.
Of course, flipping is a dying art, and those who are attempting it now
are losing money which makes for great schadenfreude.

Flipping is much more difficult now, not just because prices are
dropping, but because the constriction of credit and the tightening of
financing terms makes it much more costly and difficult to do. The
Option ARM with 100% financing was the ideal tool for the flipper. It
allowed him to enter the market with none of his own money, it
greatly reduced the carrying cost of the property, and it gave him downside protection in the event prices fell. With these conditions in
place, it is no wonder speculative flipping became the pastime of every
would-be Donald Trump in California.

Another behavior enabled by loose credit during the bubble was
cash-out serial refinancing. With the ability to get access to cash
from the property without selling it, there was no need to sell the
property, and many speculators held their properties and withdrew their
cash as needed. Houses were treated like savings accounts earning a
very high return. Of course, they were not withdrawing free money, they
were adding huge amounts of debt, but since the debt service costs were
low, and since nobody thought they would ever have to pay this money
back out of their income, cash-out refinancing became the rule rather
than the exception.

Today’s featured property is an example of a speculative cash-out
serial refinancing flip-flop. The speculator bought the property with
100% financing using a 1-year ARM, took out some cash, refinanced with
an Option ARM, took out some more cash, and now they are walking away.

23 Muir Kitchen

Asking Price: $599,000IrvineRenter

Income Requirement: $149,750

Downpayment Needed: $119,800

Monthly Equity Burn: $4,991

Purchase Price: $740,000

Purchase Date: 7/9/2004

Address: 23 Muir, Irvine, CA 92620

Beds: 4
Baths: 3
Sq. Ft.: 2,109
$/Sq. Ft.: $284
Lot Size: 4,500

Sq. Ft.

Property Type: Single Family Residence
Style: Other
Year Built: 1977
Stories: 2 Levels
Area: Northwood
County: Orange
MLS#: S544309
Source: SoCalMLS
Status: Active
On Redfin: 11 days

What a fantistic Value in Northwood. Very inviting front yard with nice
landscaping brings you into this 2 story 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath with
seperate family room, formal livingroom and dining room that can be
called a great room. Laminate flooring in the living areas and
staircase and ceramic tile in the kitchen/family room. There is track
lighting in the living areas and celing fans in bedrooms. The forth
bedroom is really a den and can be used as a bedroom. Guest bath has
granit countertops as does the kitchen. There is an in ground jaccuzi
in the patio/deck. Master bedroom is huge with marble floored master
suite and a great balcony and a walking closet. There are vertical
blinds in living areas and a cozy riverstone fireplace adorns the
living room.

fantistic, seperate, celing, granit?

If the “forth” bedroom is really a den, then it should be advertised as a 3/2.

This property is sporting a 20% discount off its 2004 purchase price and represents a significant discount from neighborhood comps.

  • It was purchased on July 9, 2004 for $740,000. The owner used 100% financing — kind of. She obtained a $592,000 first mortgage, when she bought the property and put down $148,000.
  • One month later on August 27, 2004, she obtained a second mortgage for $173,000 and cashed out $25,000 (I wonder how much she kicked back to the appraiser?)
  • On 5/5/2005 she opened a $58,900 HELOC and got some more cash.
  • On 9/27/2005 she refinanced with an Option ARM with a 1% teaser rate for $640,000. She opened another HELOC for $80,000 at the same time.
  • On 11/10/2005 she opened a stand-alone second for $173,000.
  • And finally on 10/27/2006 she opened another HELOC for $250,000.
  • The total of the first and second mortgages is $813,000. If the HELOC was used to pay off the second mortgage, the total debt rises to $890,000. If the HELOC was an add on, the total debt on the property is $1,063,000. I doubt Washington Mutual gave the huge HELOC without paying off the second, but you never know.
  • Total mortgage equity withdrawal was $250,000 not including the recapture of her downpayment.

When speculation pays that well, it isn’t a surprise many people were doing it. Of course, she has to deal with the consequences to her credit, but for $250,000 in free money…

.

If you know the enemy and know yourself, you need not fear the result of a hundred battles. If you know yourself but not the enemy, for every victory gained you will also suffer a defeat. If you know neither the enemy nor yourself, you will succumb in every battle.

I stand alone and gaze upon the battlefield
Wasteland is all that’s left after the fight
And now I’m searching a new way to defeat my enemy
Bloodshed I’ve seen enough of death and pain

I will run, they will hunt me in vain
I will hide, they’ll be searching
I’ll regroup, feign retreat they’ll pursue
Coup de grace I will win but never fight

That’s the Art of War
That’s the Art of War

Breaking the will to fight among the enemy
Force them to hunt me they will play my game
And play by my rules I will be close but still untouchable
No more will I see suffering an pain

They will find me no more Ill be gone
I will have them surrounded
They will yield without fight overrun
Coup de grace I will win but never fight

That’s the Art of War
That’s the Art of War

The Art of War — Sabaton

Columbus Lost

Columbus Stockade Blues — Brother Oswald

One of the myths about Christopher Columbus and his voyage to discover a quicker trade route to the East was that he had difficulty getting crewmen to serve because they believed the world was flat, and if they sailed far enough, they would fall off. Similarly, one of the myths about residential real estate is that prices always go up, and if they rise too high, they will not fall off. The people who bought in Columbus Grove did so right at the peak, and the continuing activities of the builders finishing off the community pushed their resale prices off the edge of the flat earth. The drop there has been remarkable.

The Columbus Grove experience shows what happens when large amounts of must-sell inventory is concentrated in one place. When prices become extremely inflated, and the market finally starts to fall, it creates a downward spiral that does not abate until prices are at fundamental valuations. However, the rate of decline is largely dependant upon the amount of must-sell inventory in specific areas. So far, the areas that have fallen the quickest have been those with large percentages of subprime loans (Santa Ana,) large numbers of new homes (Columbus Grove,) or both (Riverside County). This does not mean that the neighborhoods like those in Irvine are immune from the crash, it will just take longer here, and since it will take longer, they may not fall quite as far on a percentage basis because rents and incomes will be increasing as prices fall (we hope). Irvine and other neighborhoods will fall in time, most likely when all the Alt-A and Prime ARMS reset.

22 Honey Locust Kitchen

Asking Price: $880,000IrvineRenter

Income Requirement: $220,000

Downpayment Needed: $176,000

Monthly Equity Burn: $7,333

Purchase Price: $1,226,000

Purchase Date: 8/31/2006

Address: 22 Honey Locust, Irvine, CA 92606

Beds: 5
Baths: 4
Sq. Ft.: 3,168
$/Sq. Ft.: $278
Lot Size: 7,500

Sq. Ft.

Property Type: Single Family Residence
Style: Mediterranean
Year Built: 2007
Stories: 2 Levels
Area: Columbus Grove
County: Orange
MLS#: S537818
Source: SoCalMLS
Status: Active
On Redfin: 61 days

Great Value Columbus Grove’s Fine Home. Highly upgraded with dark wood
floors, designer carpet and travertine & tile floors throughout.
State of the art family kitchen with oversized island with
wine/beverage cooler, 6 burner stove, granite counters and stainless
steel appliances. Custom wought iron stair case, wood shutters and
custom window shades throughout. Master Suite with retreat &
romantic fireplace, spacious walk-in closet with custom organizers,
luxurious jetted bathtub. 4 Bedrooms upstairs, 1 main floor bedroom
& bath, office/den downstairs. Desirable floorplan for a growing
family with 3 car garage. Oversized Great room/Family Room with
fireplace. Corner house at the end of cul-de-sac. Great Irvine Schools
and Association Club house, pool, BBQ & Parks. Close to the
District Shops and Restaurants. So much for the value.

IMO, the front elevation is ugly and boxy.

This property is being offered for 28% off its peak purchase price. Since fundamentals have not caught up much in the two years since this was purchased, it is probably only a little more than half way to its bottom value. This property was at least 100% overvalued at the top, so a full 50% haircut is in order to get the price back to sanity. Maybe in 2 or 3 years if incomes have gone up, this property might be worth $700,000, but on a breakeven cashflow basis today, it is probably only worth $600,000.

The owner actually put some of his own money into this deal. The property has a $980,700 first mortgage and a $184,000 second mortgage leaving a 61,300 downpayment. That loss probably stings a bit, but it is the lender who is getting really hosed. If this property sells for its asking price, the total loss will be $398,800 after a 6% commission. Greenpoint Mortgage originated the loan. There is no telling who owns that toilet paper now.

In many ways, this former loanowner is one of the lucky ones, he has escaped his debtor’s prison. The rest of the neighborhood is trapped, and 15-25 years from now when values get back up to the peak prices they paid, they might be able to get out…

.

Way down in Columbus, Georgia
Want to be back in Tennessee
Way down in Columbus Stockade
Friends all turned their backs on me

Go and leave me if you wish to
Never let it cross your mind
If in your heart you love another
Leave me little darling, I don’t mind

Last night as I lay sleeping
I dreamt I held you in my arms
When I awoke I was mistaken
I was peering through the bars

Many a night with you I’ve rambled
Many an hour with you I’ve spent
Thought I had your heart forever
Now I find it’s only lent

Columbus Stockade Blues — Brother Oswald

I Was Wrong, It's Worse…

Y.M.C.A. — Village People

With 100% financing available in the Great Housing Bubble, it is a wonder all the Y.M.C.As didn’t close down. If you are down and out, all you needed to do was fill out a liar loan application and move into your new house. Wait a few months, and you could open a HELOC and start spending all that free money. What could be better?

Today’s featured property is representative of stress at the high end of the market. Most of the properties I have profiled to date have been at the low end because this is where the market stress is the most acute. The big push in prices occurred because many people took out 100% financing to buy starter homes. More expensive homes were generally move-up properties, and the buyers transferred the equity from the sale of their starter home. This puts many of them in a somewhat stronger financial position, so the acute stress of the credit crunch hasn’t impacted them to the same degree. Plus, many of these borrowers used Alt-A loans which are not due to reset until 2009-2011. A great many of these borrowers have taken on huge debt loads well in excess of their incomes, and many will collapse when their resets hit. This hasn’t happened yet, but it will.

5 Villager Kitchen

Asking Price: $999,888IrvineRenter

Income Requirement: $249,972

Downpayment Needed: $199,977

Monthly Equity Burn: $8,332

Purchase Price: $1,150,000

Purchase Date: 3/14/2007

Address: 5 Villager, Irvine, CA 92602

Beds: 5
Baths: 4
Sq. Ft.: 3,027
$/Sq. Ft.: $330
Lot Size:
Property Type: Single Family Residence
Style: Mediterranean
Year Built: 2002
Stories: 2 Levels
Area: Northpark
County: Orange
MLS#: S521208
Source: SoCalMLS
Status: Active
On Redfin: 196 days

Unsold in 90+ days

BEAUTIFUL 5 bedroom, 3.5 bath executive home on cul de sac in
prestigious North Park Square. Gorgeous kitchen with Granite counter
tops and full backsplash. Large center island has cook top with eating
bar that overlooks the spacious Family room with stacked stone
fireplace, custom built media center and separate custom work center
with bookshelves. Enjoy music through surround speakers located on the
interior and exterior of the home. Too many upgrades and custom
features to list. Gorgeous pool with two cascading waterfalls coupled
with a separate area with a custom fireplace makes this home perfect
for entertaining or relaxing.

How did they come up with that asking price. Is the next price reduction going to be down to $888,777? It might sell there…

Did you realize they were giving out 100% financing on $1,150,000 properties in March of 2007? No wonder the median didn’t really drop until the credit crunch hit. Today’s owners (occupants who have stopped paying rent to the bank,) used 100% financing, and now they are walking away. This isn’t as common at the high end, but it still occurs. If this property sells for its asking price, Countrywide is going to lose most of the second mortgage they provided. The total loss after a 6% commission will be $210,105. I wonder if gobbling up Countrywide is giving Bank of America indigestion.

.

Several people have asked about the accuracy of my post Predictions for the Irvine Housing Market.
I have the DataQuick numbers through April of 2008, so we can take a
look. First, when I first made the chart below, I did not have accurate
numbers. The base number I used of $687,000 was incorrect.

Irvine Housing Market Prediction Chart

Using the three-month moving average of prices, the real number was
$723,750. With this new, more accurate number, we can compare the
projected drop with the real figures.

Well, it is even worse than I imagined. When I first suggested that
Irvine’s median home price might decline 12% in a single year, it was a
bold prediction. Prices had never dropped that much in Irvine — ever
— much less in a single year. Given the condition of the market, I
felt the number was conservative, but to see it actually drop more than
my prediction is remarkable. I guess the bulls should be glad, it isn’t
as bad as bad can get:

Irvine Market Decline Extreme

.

Young man, there’s no need to feel down.
I said, young man, pick yourself off the ground.
I said, young man, ’cause you’re in a new town
There’s no need to be unhappy.

Young man, there’s a place you can go.
I said, young man, when you’re short on your dough.
You can stay there, and I’m sure you will find
Many ways to have a good time.

It’s fun to stay at the y-m-c-a.
It’s fun to stay at the y-m-c-a.

They have everything for you men to enjoy,
You can hang out with all the boys …

It’s fun to stay at the y-m-c-a.
It’s fun to stay at the y-m-c-a.

You can get yourself clean, you can have a good meal,
You can do what about you feel …

Young man, are you listening to me?
I said, young man, what do you want to be?
I said, young man, you can make real your dreams.
But you got to know this one thing!

No man does it all by himself.
I said, young man, put your pride on the shelf,
And just go there, to the y.m.c.a.
I’m sure they can help you today.

It’s fun to stay at the y-m-c-a.
It’s fun to stay at the y-m-c-a.

They have everything for you men to enjoy,
You can hang out with all the boys …

It’s fun to stay at the y-m-c-a.
It’s fun to stay at the y-m-c-a.

Y.M.C.A. — Village People

Open Thread 8-23-2008

Simply the Best — Tina Turner

This week in the comments, we joked about new lending programs for the next real estate bubble. MalibuRenter, the gentlemen who helped with the content editing of my upcoming book, makes a living patenting financial products (among other things). The following is an idea for a new patent (tongue in cheek).

Lending during the Great Housing Bubble was too messy. There were too many loan programs. Since real estate always goes up, and since people want immediate access to this appreciation to spend it like income, a new loan product which readily provides this money is in order. The Option ARM was a major innovation. By allowing for negative amortization, people were able to add to their loan balance and effectively “cash out” their equity. The problem with this loan program is that it didn’t go far enough — people still had to make payments, and they had to get HELOCs to extract the remainder.

The new loan program I am proposing is called the “Pay You” loan, or PU for short. The PU loan has no payment of any kind. The total amount of interest each month is added to the loan balance. Further, appreciation in excess of this monthly interest is sent to the borrower each month. Rather than pay for an updated appraisal each month to determine value, an automated reappraisal system which looks at the current pricing of comps can accurately determine the current market value. Since homes now pay cash to owners each month, home ownership would be very desirable, and home prices should rise steadily far in excess of the monthly interest cost. With automated appraisals, little additional servicing costs would be required. Also, lenders would find the monthly service fees an attractive feature, so they would readily peddle the PU loan to any borrower who wanted it, and since borrowers are actually being paid to own their home, everyone would want to enroll in the program.

These loan programs would be very attractive to investors because the interest income would be booked as profits, and since the balance is growing each month, the interest income gets compounded. The main problems investors in mortgage loans have is that borrowers often pay back these loans early, and the balanced decline over time. Therefore, they do not receive the rate of return reflective of the stated interest rate. With the PU loan, investors actually get a greater return due to the compounding effect. The early payback is not a problem because even if a borrower sells a home, they will quickly buy a new one to get back on the home appreciation gravy train. The PU loans may even allow for assumability and portability so the loan doesn’t need to be closed out when a buyer wants to move up or sells. It is a panacea.

Now we just need home prices to always go up…

.

I call you,when I need you my hearts on fire
You come to me, come to me, wild and wild

You come to me, give me everything I need
Give me a lifetime of promises and a world of dreams
Speak the language of love like you know what it means
And it cant be wrong, take my heart and make it strong, baby

Chorus:
Youre simply the best, better than all the rest, better than anyone, anyone
Ive ever met!
Im stuck on your heart, I hang on every word you say
Tear us apart, baby I would rather be dead

In your heart I see the start of every night and every day
In your eyes, I get lost, I gte washed away
Just as long as Im here in your arms I could be in no better place…

Simply the Best — Tina Turner

Infatuation

Infatuation — Rod Stewart

Remember during the bubble rally when everyone was in love with real estate? Turns out it was an infatuation. The fickle homeowners who sought to possess real estate at any price are now dumping their lovelorn properties en masse. Of course, it is easy to become infatuated when something or someone is making your dreams come true. All people had to do was buy a property and begin extracting and spending all the free money it provided. Now that the market has reversed, and people are saddled with crushing debts, and the property is no longer providing free money, it is easy to see why the object of their infatuation has lost its luster.

Today’s featured property is another casualty of the low end of the market. There is much less denial at the low end, and much more carnage — for now. The married woman who bought this as her sole and separate property has some of her own money in the game, so she showed more resilience than those who bought with 100% financing. You see, with any market price collapse, it starts with the weakest hands — those that paid way too much and have little incentive to hold on. When these people sell, it drives prices lower and distresses a whole new group of market participants — people like today’s owner that have some money in the game, but not very much. The people who put 5%-10% down who are currently underwater will be the next group to give up. Of course, this will distress those who put more money down or purchased even earlier. Eventually, all of those who are overextended or deeply underwater will give up and capitulate to market forces.

Asking Price: $354,720IrvineRenter

Income Requirement: $88,680

Downpayment Needed: $70,944

Monthly Equity Burn: $2,956

Purchase Price: $525,000

Purchase Date: 10/11/2006

Address: 22 Claret #42, Irvine, CA 92614

Beds: 2
Baths: 2
Sq. Ft.: 1,145
$/Sq. Ft.: $310
Lot Size:
Property Type: Condominium
Style: Cottage, Craftsman
Year Built: 1980
Stories: 1 Level
Floor: 1
Area: Woodbridge
County: Orange
MLS#: S544801
Source: SoCalMLS
Status: Active
On Redfin: 1 day

New Listing (24 hours)

Chateaux Condo in desirable Village of Woodbridge. Private atrium off
kitchen, detached 2 car garage! Eat in kithcen, inside laundry. 2nd
bedroom is a den and currently being used as a 2nd bedroom.

Chateaux Condo? What kind of pretentious bull$hit is that?

The fact that the garage is detached is something to get excited about?

kithcen?

2nd
bedroom is a den? So this isn’t even a true 2 bedroom…

If this property sells for its asking price minus a 6% commission, the total loss on the property will be $191,563. The seller will be losing her $105,000 downpayment (or $55,000 if she maxed her HELOC,) and IndyMac (now us taxpayers) will be losing the rest.

I posted the chart below on Monday, but it is worth a more careful look. If you really want to understand the housing bubble psychology demonstrated by today’s losing speculator, it is encapsulated in the figure below.

Behavioral Finance Theory

The whole point of boiling down posts to laughable ideas like infatuation is to underscore the psychological aspects that inflated the bubble. There is no rational justification for paying $525,000 for this property other than you believe it will continue to appreciate in price. Collectively, the more people that believe in perpetual appreciation and act on those beliefs, the more prices will rise. This does require enabling on the part of lenders, and with the virtual elimination of standards during the bubble, there were no barriers to market entry, and no limits to how high people could bid up prices. It was incomprehensible to people in 2006 that prices could drop 50%. Surely if prices had detached from fundamentals, they couldn’t have detached that much. Well, they can, and they did.

I hope you have enjoyed this week at the Irvine Housing Blog. Come back next week as we
continue chronicling ‘the seventh circle of real estate hell.’ Have a great weekend.

🙂

.

Early in the morning I cant sleep
I cant work and I cant eat
Ive been drunk all day, cant concentrate
Maybe Im making a big mistake

Caught me down like a killer shark
Its like a railroad running right through my heart
Jekyll and hyde the way I behave
Feel like Im running on an empty gauge

Oh no not again
It hurts so good
I dont understand
Infatuation
Infatuation
Infatuation
Infatuation

Infatuation — Rod Stewart