Author Archives: IrvineRenter

Southern California's Cultural Pathology

Southern California is a beautiful place. The weather is perfect, there is a lot to do, and the people are generally friendly and keep out of your business. For those reasons and many others, I have chosen to make Southern California my home. However, Southern California is not perfect. The culture is infected with pathological beliefs that have led us to the huge problem with house affordability and the impending disaster in our real estate market.

What do I mean by Cultural Pathology? There are certain beliefs if widely held and acted upon by a group of people leads inevitably to collective suffering and/or destruction. One example we all see is in the American auto industry. Before imports hit our shores the American auto industry used to believe the quality of their product did not matter, people would buy their product irrespective of quality. For many years, the industry was successful despite this pathology. This belief allowed offshore competitors to enter the market, build market share, and finally take over the industry. The American auto industry’s belief system has had a pathologic effect on their business which has caused much suffering in Detroit, and it may ultimately lead to the bankruptcy and destruction of our major automakers.

The best treatise on the pathology of cultural beliefs was George Orwell’s novel 1984. In Orwell’s vision, a totalitarian State had convinced the populace the following:Big Brother

  • WAR IS PEACE
  • FREEDOM IS SLAVERY
  • IGNORANCE IS STRENGTH

Although these statements are clearly contradictory, in the story the slogans do make sense to the State. For example, through constant “war”, the State can keep domestic peace; when the people obtain freedom, they become enslaved to it, and the ignorance of the populace is the strength of the State. Just as Orwell’s Big Brother convinced the populace the above contradictions were true, Southern Californians (with a little help from their own Big Brother, David Lereah, president of the National Association of Realtors) have convinced themselves the following:David Lehereah

  • APPRECIATION IS INCOME
  • CREDIT IS SAVINGS

  • DEBT IS WEALTH

Just as these statements are contradictory and ridiculous, the proof that these statements are believed is that they are reflected in the actions of Southern Californians. For example, through borrowing against one’s increasing home values, appreciation is turned to income; when people obtain more credit, they spend it like available savings, and a large amount of debt used to finance a large, opulent home makes one wealthy. Ask any homedebtor in Southern California, and they will tell you that makes perfect sense.

The problem is rooted in a basic misunderstanding of what separates the rich from the poor: the habit of saving. You have heard the expression, “the rich get richer and the poor get poorer.” It is more accurate to say the rich save money and the poor spend it: in the end, the rich will have money, and the poor will have none. This is not one of life’s inequities, but rather of of life’s simple truths.

When you hear your average Joe tell you he wants to be rich, what he is really saying is he wants unlimited spending power. He wants the ability to spend like the rich people he sees wearing Rolexes and driving BMWs to their mansions in Shady Canyon. This is why, when given the chance, poor people will emulate the rich by spending beyond their means in order to be rich. Of course, in the process, they spend themselves poor.

Appreciation is Income

Look at the difference between the behavior of rich and poor when it comes to home price appreciation. The rich view home price appreciation as adding to their net worth. If lower interest rates allow them to refinance, they will restructure their debt to pay off the loan more quickly in order to increase their wealth. Poor people view home price appreciation as income; free money for them to spend. If lower interest rates allow them to refinance, they will restructure their loan to pull as much home equity as possible and reduce their payment as much as possible so they can spend more. If any net worth happens to accumulate, they obtain a home equity line of credit and spend the appreciation as quickly as possible — it makes them feel rich even though it really makes them poor.Don’t Buy Stuff

Credit is Savings

So how do the rich and poor deal with credit? The rich don’t carry consumer debt. Why would they pay interest on a credit balance when it almost always costs more than the income they earn on their savings? The rich will use credit sparingly and most often pay off any credit balances each month as the bill comes due. In contrast, the poor carry as much consumer debt as they can afford to service. Whenever they receive an increase in a credit line, they believe they have more money to spend, just like it was savings. In a strange way, a credit account is like a savings account, only it has a negative balance. In a savings account, the saver earns money; in a credit account, the spender loses money. Again, the rich have savings, and the poor have credit.

Debt is Wealth

There are a great many Southern California residents who live in big houses, and they believe that makes them rich. To them, the possession and use of an expensive house makes them wealthy even if they have no equity in the property. The rich buy less home than they can afford and work to pay off the debt in order to maximize their net worth. Money HouseThe poor stretch their finances to possess more home than they can afford with loan terms which never retire the debt, or in the case of negative amortization loans, actually increases their debt held against the property. This ensures they either never gain any equity or only gain it by appreciation, and as mentioned previously, if prices appreciate they quickly withdraw the gain to fuel more consumer spending.

It’s a California Thing

So what happens when you give poor people money? They spend it. I’m sure you have all heard the stories of people who won the lottery and managed to spend themselves into bankruptcy a few years later. These stories are classic examples of the pathology of the beliefs of spenders. A great many Southern Californians are spenders. This is why I contend that Southern California has a strong cultural pathology. The reason our house prices have been bid up to such dizzying heights is because there is a high percentage of our population in Southern California that subscribes to the spending habits I have described. They went out and borrowed as much money as they could with suicide loans, bought up all the real estate they could get their hands on, and in the process drove real estate prices into the stratosphere. In other areas of the country, reckless spending is not so trendy, and home prices have not been bid up so high.

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I grew up in the Upper Midwest in a rural farm community. Pretentious displays of conspicuous consumption are less common in the Midwest, and consumerism is often viewed with contempt rather than envy. In short, there is a smaller percentage of the general population in the Midwest with the aforementioned pathologic beliefs. To prove this, I would like to profile Minnetonka, Minnesota, a suburb of Minneapolis with very similar income and demographics to Irvine. According to Sperling’s Best Places, the median income in Minnetonka, Minnesota is $84,024, and the median income in Irvine, California is $84,253. I think that is close enough to be a good comparable. The median home price in Minnetonka is $305,600 and the median home price in Irvine is $689,000 (92620 Zip Code). If my thesis is correct, one would expect to find a much higher percentage of home loans utilizing exotic loan terms in Irvine as compared to Minnetonka. Remember the Map of Misery?

Map of Misery

In fact, according to the map, in 2006 the Minneapolis area had 8.7% of its loan originations were negative amortization, while Orange County had 32%. In all of California more than 80% of loan originations in 2006 were either option ARM or interest-only. Here we have two groups of people with the same median income, and with the same access to credit making very different choices. Potential homebuyers in Minnetonka and Irvine faced the same decision on taking out a suicide loan and buying more house than they can afford or chosing to live within their means. Very few in Minnetonka chose to overextend themselves, so they did not bid up the values of their houses. Orange County (and the rest of Southern California) chose to utilize exotic financing and thereby real estate prices were bid much, much higher. The high utilization of exotic financing was the cause of the price increase not the result of it. Nobody was forced to buy.House of Cards

So if we accept the premise that Southern California has a high percentage of its population with the spending habits I have described, so what? Everyone here in Southern California is spending freely, feeling rich, and enjoying life. What is the problem? Where is the pathology? Isn’t it true Californians are just more financially sophisticated than the rubes back on the farm in the Midwest?

It is pathologic because it is not sustainable: It is a house of cards. There is an inevitable Day of Reckoning when all debts must be paid. Charles Ponzi (see image below) was the most extreme example of the pathologies illustrated in this post. So extreme was his activities, that the term Ponzi Scheme has become synonymous with the use of ever increasing amounts of investment or debt. Chuck PonziThis scheme is also encapsulated in the expression “robbing Peter to pay Paul.” At some point, the debt becomes so large that no lender is willing to loan more money and no greater fool can be found to bail them out, and the whole system comes crashing down. However, while the debt was building, the debtor became accustomed to a certain lifestyle and level of spending. When the credit is cut off, the debtor can no longer spend, and a great deal of suffering ensues (See Dr. Housing Bubble).

We are quickly approaching the Day of Reckoning in our housing market. In my view this will be Armageddon for California debtors: the spending will stop, they will lose their homes and with it their illusion of wealth, and they most definitely will not be enjoying life. The cause of all the weeping and gnashing of teeth will not be some exogenous event, but rather a direct result of the circumstances they themselves created.

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For a refresher read: Financially Conservative Home Financing

P.S. Go back and click on the images.

Enter the Flipper

Entrada Kitchen

Asking Price: $739,000

Purchase Price: $605,000

Purchase Date: 1/10/2005

Address: 20 Entrada E, Irvine, CA 92620

Beds: 3IrvineRenter

Baths: 2

Sq. Ft.*: 1,561

Lot Sq. Ft.*: 4,275

Year Built: 1979

Stories: 1

Type: Single Family Residence

Neighborhood: Northwood

$/Sq. Ft.*: $473

MLS: S480099

Status: Active on market

On Redfin: 18 days

Craigslist, Redfin, Zillow

Since there is no agreed upon definition of a flip, I will profile this one anyway.

Lush grass

From Redfin “Lovely single level detached home at the end of cul-de-sac just steps from a park. Spacious and open floor plan with liv & fam upgraded with new pergo floors, new cabinets, new granite countertop, new sinks & faucets, new sliding doors & all new windows, new stove & microwave, new recess lights and new light fixtures. Quiet and green backyard with grass & lushes. 3-patio off of liv, kitchen and master BR. Superb amenties offered by HOA. No mello roos and low HOA fee. Great family neighborhood.”

I managed to find a picture of the backyard. There seems to be only one lush passed out back there, so the description may be incorrect.

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Perhaps this isn’t a flip. Perhaps they needed to sell for any of the reasons people have. Since this is Irvine, they must be entitled to a greater than 20% gain simply because they owned real estate. I appears this unit is empty, so I would not be surprised to see quick price reductions to find the market and stop the financial bleeding.

Entrada

Maybe they will get it, or maybe they missed the peak, and they will wait a very long time before getting their price.

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Entrada, by Mary Rosenblum

A.K.A. the flipper before this house sells for asking price.

Chantilly Lace

Chantilly Kitchen

Asking Price: $675,000

Purchase Price: $624,500

Purchase Date: 8/19/2005

Address: 75 Chantilly, Irvine, CA 92620

Beds: 2

Baths: 2.5

Sq. Ft.*: 1,824

Year Built: 2005

Stories: 2

Type: Condominium

Neighborhood: Woodbury

$/Sq. Ft.*: $370

MLS: P525538

Status: Active on market

On Redfin: 265 days

Chantilly Lace Flower

The word “Chantilly” brings up many historical and artistic references ranging from a picturesque region in France, to orchids, fine lace, and classic music from the Big Bopper. There is a certain “feel good” quality with Chantilly. However, I don’t think our homedebtors are feeling particularly good about the dead weight they have been carrying for most of the last year: 265 days on the market. Wow!

I know this isn’t rocket science, so what advice would you give someone who has been trying to sell their house for almost a year? Lower the price, perhaps?

Therein lies the problem: They are a flipper, so they have no equity. If they sell for their asking price of $675,000 assuming a 6% commission, they will make exactly $10,000. Of course, they may not be paying a 6% commission. Do you think their relative/realtor will kick back some of the commission?

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Chantilly Lace Font

From Redfin: “REDUCED, REDUCED. OWNER IS MOTIVATED WILL CONSIDER ALL OFFERS!!!!!!!Just like new. 1 year old Charming 2bd + office downstairs or possible 3rd bedroom, 2 bath condo. New paint throughout, stainless steel appliances. Spacious bedroom and master suite. Spacious floor plan with great room appeal. French doors go out from kitchen/eating area to balcony. Cozy courtyard. Best priced home in the area. Agent related to the seller. [emphasis mine] OWNER IS MOTIVATED TO SELL.”

Do realtors realize how lame it is when they write in ALL CAPS and put in 7 exclamation points for emphasis? They are ANNOYING!!!!!!! OBNOXIOUS!!!!!!! IRRITATING!!!!!!! AGGRAVATING!!!!!!! Pardon my rant… It needed to be said…

Chantilly bedroom

This seller must be motivated. They are willing to sell real estate without making a huge profit. It has only taken them 265 days to give up their profit. How MOTIVATED!!!!!!!

Just think, for $675,000 you can live in a two bedroom condo with a great view of your neighbor’s bedroom. You better hurry, at only 265 days on the market, this one is going FAST!!!!!!!

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Chantilly lace and a pretty face

And a pony tail hanging down

That wiggle in the walk and giggle in the talk

Makes the world go round

Chantilly Lace (YouTube): by The Big Bopper (Wiki)

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Road to Chantilly

Road at Chantilly (Web Museum): by Paul Cézanne (Wiki)

The English Garden

Garden Gate Kitchen

Asking Price: $655,800

Purchase Price: $625,000

Purchase Date: 9/1/2006

Address: 206 Garden Gate Lane, Irvine, CA 92620

Beds: 2IrvineRenter

Baths: 2.5

Sq. Ft.*: 1,200

Year Built: 1998

Stories: 2

Type: Single Family Residence

Neighborhood: Northwood

$/Sq. Ft.*: $546

MLS: S469456

Status: Active on market

On Redfin: 98 days

Paisley Place Front Paisley Place Inside

Asking Price: $595,000

Purchase Price: $575,000

Purchase Date: 1/30/2006

Address: 54 Paisley Place, Irvine, CA 92620

Beds: 2

Baths: 2

Sq. Ft.*: 1,050

Year Built: 1999

Stories: 2

Type: Single Family Residence

View: Hills

Neighborhood: Northwood

$/Sq. Ft.*: $567

MLS: S476148

Status: Active on market

On Redfin: 42 days

In my opinion one of the most notable features of this bubble has been the increase in price of entry level housing product. I suspect this is a result of sub-prime lending and/or exotic financing terms. Back when you could not afford to finance more than 3 or 4 times earnings, entry level housing was priced at $200,000 or less. During the rally when 10 to 12 times earnings could be easily borrowed, $200,000 properties where bid up to $550,000. Nobody was actually making any more money, they were just borrowing a lot more. Once the limit of borrowing was reached last year, the rally fizzled. Now that credit is tightening, those who bought at the top are having difficulty finding buyers. The result of all this borrowing is properties like the two I am featuring today.

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First, I want to say this is one of my favorite neighborhoods in Irvine. It features architecture reminiscent of a small English village with quaint cottages. There are few visible garages, the sidewalks are detached from the street, and the trees make for a great street scene. It is very close to Canyon View Elementary in Northwood. If prices were not ridiculous, I would buy in this neighborhood.

Garden Gate

These two flips are showing signs of stress. They are overpriced and hoping a greater fool comes along to save them. 206 Garden Gate Lane has been on the market nearly 100 days. If they get their asking price of $655,800 assuming a 6% commission, they will lose $8,548.

The flipper at 54 Paisley Place gets their asking price of $595,000 assuming a 6% commission, they will lose $15,700. Does anyone want to go up there and pay well over $500 per square foot for some 8 year old properties when you could buy 75 Chantilly, a nearly new, much larger 2 bedroom over in Woodbury for $370 per square foot? I think I will pass.

How Bad Could Bad Get?

Many people when they first discover bubble blogs think housing bears are tinfoil-hat-wearing crackpots with extremely pessimistic outlooks on life. There are perma-bears (Roubini, Shiller, Fleckstein) as well as perma-bulls (Watts, NAR, Kudlow). The truth is generally somewhere in between. I learned long ago that extremists are never happy people because they seldom get their way. As the Buddha noted, it is the "middle path" that leads to happiness. I have spent my voting life as a independent/Libertarian voting for whoever I believed to be the best candidate, most generally a moderate. However, there are times when what is perceived as an extreme is actually the correct view. As Barry Goldwater noted, "…extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice! … moderation in the pursuit of justice is no virtue." Many who read my post "Predictions for the Irvine Housing Market" thought the scenario I described as extreme. It only looks extreme because the psychology of the bubble as skewed the collective perspective of the market. That Predictions post was moderate; this one is extreme.

We have been witnessing a great deal of bad news lately, the impact of which cannot be good. If the perfect storm continues to form over our local housing market, things could become much worse, much faster than even the most bearish among us think possible. Have any of you noticed the carnage in Sacramento? For the doomsday scenario to take place, we would need the following: Foreclosures, unemployment, rising interest rates and tightening credit, and a decrease in home ownership. The combination of these forces could make the price collapse a catastrophe.

Foreclosures

We all know the wave of foreclosures is coming.

Foreclosures

And it should continue unabated for 5 more years.

Loan Reset Calendar

There isn't much more to say. It is not bad yet, but it will be very bad, and it will go on for a long time.

Unemployment

We know layoffs are coming to Irvine/Orange County. New Century went bankrupt along with numerous other sub-prime lenders based in Orange county. People are already losing jobs. I think it is save to speculate this will have ripple effects through the local economy. Even if unemployment remains low, how much will incomes decline? Mortgage brokers, realtors and others in the REIC have been living on the transactions created by the borrowing of those about to go bankrupt. They may find other work, but the $250,000 a year days are over. The only mystery is how bad the unemployment problem will become. Right now, things don't look good.

Rising Interest Rates and Tightening Credit

We know mortgage interest rates are near historic lows.

Mortage Rates 1963-2006

The large number of foreclosures will make lenders more cautious (either that or the losses will put them out of business). Increased lender caution will result in a tightening of credit and an increase in interest rates to compensate them for the increased risk. An increase to 8%, which is near the historic norm, would seem to be likely. If lenders become very cautious, an overshoot to 10% or more could easily take place. Interest rates have not begun to rise yet, and many are holding out hope that the FED will save them. It won't. Due to the increasing risk premiums, the best one can hope for is a lowering of the FED funds rate to compensate for the increased risk premium. We will have to wait and see.

Credit is already tightening. This cannot be denied. The increased cost and decreased availability of credit will have a severe impact on demand.

Impact of Tightening Lending Standards

Credit Suisse estimates the most recent credit tightening just eliminated 21% of the borrowers in the market. This is assuming further problems in Alt-A or prime loans do not force credit to tighten even further (in other words, credit will tighten further.) This will crush demand and it will also put an end to serial refinancing. The inability to refinance is what will cause all the resets shown in the previous chart to go into foreclosure. Which leaves us with the most important question: Who is going to buy all of these houses in foreclosure?

Decrease in Home Ownership Rates

Ownership rates in Orange County have risen 2.8% between 1994 and 2005. This is actually behind the rest of the country where homeownership rates have increased nearly 5%. This is a direct result of lending money to those borrowers previously excluded from the housing market either because the borrower did not have the downpayment, or they lacked good credit.

Homeownership Rates

Home ownership rates will decline as homeowners lose their homes in foreclosure. With foreclosure comes bad credit; those with bad credit just got eliminated from the buyer pool. Therefore, people who lose their house to foreclosure will move into a rental, and the previously owner-occupied home will likely enter the rental pool. (A popular misconception is that rents will go up. The number of rentals will increase along with the number of renters.)Mr. Housing Bubble

There will be some new buyers (like many on this board) who have cash and good credit; however, this group is small in number, far smaller than the number of foreclosures about to hit the market (if you don't believe me, ask yourself how many potential buyers you know with cash and good credit.) This means a significant number, perhaps a majority, of the houses due to hit the market due to foreclosure will be purchased as rentals.

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If the bulk of the houses going through foreclosure are going to be purchased as rentals, prices will have to decline to the point where a rental generates a positive cashflow. Prices are double that today! Home prices will have to decline at least 50% for properties to make financial sense as rentals, so if this is the fate of the bulk of the upcoming foreclosure inventory, prices will decline at least 50% before buyers will enter the market and adsorb this inventory.

Conclusions

Foreclosures, unemployment, rising interest rates and tightening credit, and a decrease in home ownership are all required in some measure to create the doomsday scenario. Do I think this will happen? Probably not, but it could. Did anyone think the NASDAQ could drop from 5200 to 1200 from 2000-2003? Did anyone think housing prices in California would drop from $200K to $177K from 1991-1996 in our last "correction?" Did anyone think real estate prices in Japan would drop 64% between 1991 and 2005? When bubbles collapse, they often drop lower and last longer than anyone thinks.

Today we do not have any of these conditions to an impactful degree. Maybe these conditions will not develop further; however, all indications are that these problems will develop and get worse. So how bad could bad get? Ask them in Sacramento, their party is just getting started.

Irvine Market Decline Extreme

Market Decline Extreme Spreadsheet

Get this party started on a Saturday night

Everbody's waiting for me to arrive

Sending out the message to all of my friends

We'll be looking flashy in my Mercedes Benz

GET THE PARTY STARTED by: Pink