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Home business models

Ignored in the Big Shitpile

by Dana Blankenhorn
December 18, 2007
in business models, business strategy, crime, Current Affairs, economy, futurism, investment, law, politics, regulation, Scandal
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Mr_housing_bubble
There are three big problems, laid on top of one another, in the financial mess known as the Big Shitpile:

  1. Bad loans were mixed with good ones and sold as securities, even options.
  2. Millions of adjustable rate mortgages are re-setting to higher rates over the next three years.
  3. Homes are priced at twice their value.

There are a lot of "solutions" being proposed by both parties for the first two problems. (Picture from Bayareahousingbubble.)

No one is even talking about the third, because its implications are too massive to contemplate.

But this is the stark reality. What we’re reading now, even the pessimists’ argument, is not yet even realistic.

When any bubble bursts, the actual value of things gets cut in half. Usually it over-shoots this mark, then it resettles at the halfway line and starts proceeding upward again, slowly.

  • This is what happened to the NASDAQ after the tech bubble burst. It fell from 5,000 to under 2,000, but now trades at around 2,600.
  • This is what happened to the Japanese stock market after it peaked in 1987 at around 37,000. It now trades at about half that value, and investors are happy to be there.

This is also what happened in the 1970s, the last time we had a housing crash. Homebuilding stopped in most markets — at least those outside the oil patch. The price you could get for an existing home fell to much less than its replacement cost, and stayed there. Renting made sense.

That is where the U.S. housing market is headed. That’s where it has to be headed in order to regain free market equilibrium. That’s the way markets operate.

But you’d never know that from the nonsense being proposed right now:

  • Easing the pinch on some "sub-prime" borrowers does not make more credit available for new mortgages. 
  • Enabling refinancing of adjustable-rate debt doesn’t make the value of the underlying home any greater.
  • Giving developers incentives to price some homes below-market is useless.
  • A moratorium on foreclosures sounds nice, but it’s just delaying the inevitable.

Here is what is inevitable. Many, if not most, home mortgages taken
out over the last decade are going underwater. That is, the principal
amount is going to be more than the value of the underlying asset, at
least for a time. All this value has to be written-off. That’s how you
make housing affordable, by letting its price drop to an affordable
range.

This is going to be a drag on Americans’ income, and the banking
system, for several years. It just is — there’s no way around it.
People are going to have to pay off loans used to buy assets which have
depreciated. They have to start thinking of this as rent, and homes as
being more like cars than diamonds. Getting folks’ heads around this
sad fact is the real test of leadership.

Just as borrowers have to be forced to pay the piper, forced by
strict enforcement of bankruptcy loans to pay-off on bad deals, banks
have to be allowed to hold this kind of paper. This stretches out the
time during which they’re taking losses, and allows the impact of that
to be depressive rather than destructive.

Home lending will, as a result, return to something approaching
normal. That is you don’t get the loan unless you can pay it back,
principal and interest, over 30 years, without it taking more than 25%
of your disposable income. If you can’t meet the standard you don’t get
the loan. You get a smaller loan. You get a smaller house, one you can
afford. Returning to these standards will extend the length of the
housing depression (and it’s not a mild recession, but a depression)
but that needs to be the goal, a normal market.

What we’re looking at is five years of continuing losses for those
who lent money on stupid terms, on all those who borrowed more than
they could afford, and on the economy as a whole. The market exacts its
penance in all things, you pay a price for all speculation, and I
believe the market is right.

This is just one of many penances we will have to make, all of us,
for the crimes of the last decade. Our currency is going to suffer.
We’re going to have to take jobs making things. The world will remain
suspicious of us, and force us to dis-arm. That’s the way it is.

If you really want to do something useful, change the Constitution so the person who gets the most votes, from now on, wins.

Tags: economic outlookforeclosure crisisforeclosureshousinghousing bubblehousing crisishousing markethousing outlookU.S. economy
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Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn began his career as a financial journalist in 1978, began covering technology in 1982, and the Internet in 1985. He started one of the first Internet daily newsletters, the Interactive Age Daily, in 1994. He recently retired from InvestorPlace and lives in Atlanta, GA, preparing for his next great adventure. He's a graduate of Rice University (1977) and Northwestern's Medill School of Journalism (MSJ 1978). He's a native of Massapequa, NY.

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Comments 5

  1. Patricia Mathews says:
    17 years ago

    Right. They’re starting already. I bought my house in 1998 and other houses in the neighborhood are now (the realtors are sending me fliers boasting) going for twice what I paid for mine.
    Mine is paid off. But then, I was content with a small square footage; I do not like or need high ceilings and all these bells and whistles, and status is not an issue for a retired office worker who never had any to begin with.
    Next item to worry about: fuel costs.
    And yes, we’re in a massive bubble and bursting it indeed deserves the D-word rather than the milder Recession which many commentators cannot even say. Sigh. Where’s the old, canny Alan Greenspan when we need him?

    Reply
  2. Patricia Mathews says:
    17 years ago

    Right. They’re starting already. I bought my house in 1998 and other houses in the neighborhood are now (the realtors are sending me fliers boasting) going for twice what I paid for mine.
    Mine is paid off. But then, I was content with a small square footage; I do not like or need high ceilings and all these bells and whistles, and status is not an issue for a retired office worker who never had any to begin with.
    Next item to worry about: fuel costs.
    And yes, we’re in a massive bubble and bursting it indeed deserves the D-word rather than the milder Recession which many commentators cannot even say. Sigh. Where’s the old, canny Alan Greenspan when we need him?

    Reply
  3. Lee Matthews - Financial Concepts West says:
    17 years ago

    “That is you don’t get the loan unless you can pay it back, principal and interest, over 30 years,…”
    There is no need to wait 30 years to pay back a 30 year term mortgage. More and more homeowners have found a way to accelerate their home’s equity:
    Today’s Real Estate market means that folks can no longer count on appreciation to build home equity. Those who realize that they need to pay down their current mortgage debt are looking for alternate ways to aggressively (yet safely) build equity.
    And they’ve discovered a perfect online system to do that; they can focus on their wealth accumulation goals while accelerating their equity simply by using a Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC) to ‘power’ this ‘financial solutions’ program.
    A typical 30 year loan (of whatever type) can be paid down in 1/3 to 1/2 the time — it’s a great way to save *huge* amounts of income by eliminating a mortgage amortization front-end interest load. (On a million-plus dollar home, I’ve personally seen where this particular program will save the homeowner $750,000 in interest charges!)
    And the best thing – homeowners don’t have to refinance their existing mortgage or make (little or no) adjustments to their lifestyle.
    I’d be happy to provide further details…

    Reply
  4. Lee Matthews - Financial Concepts West says:
    17 years ago

    “That is you don’t get the loan unless you can pay it back, principal and interest, over 30 years,…”
    There is no need to wait 30 years to pay back a 30 year term mortgage. More and more homeowners have found a way to accelerate their home’s equity:
    Today’s Real Estate market means that folks can no longer count on appreciation to build home equity. Those who realize that they need to pay down their current mortgage debt are looking for alternate ways to aggressively (yet safely) build equity.
    And they’ve discovered a perfect online system to do that; they can focus on their wealth accumulation goals while accelerating their equity simply by using a Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC) to ‘power’ this ‘financial solutions’ program.
    A typical 30 year loan (of whatever type) can be paid down in 1/3 to 1/2 the time — it’s a great way to save *huge* amounts of income by eliminating a mortgage amortization front-end interest load. (On a million-plus dollar home, I’ve personally seen where this particular program will save the homeowner $750,000 in interest charges!)
    And the best thing – homeowners don’t have to refinance their existing mortgage or make (little or no) adjustments to their lifestyle.
    I’d be happy to provide further details…

    Reply
  5. kortingscode smulderstextiel says:
    12 years ago

    smulderstextiel kortingscode

    Walra, Cinderella en Beddinghouse textiel met extra kortingscode van Smulders

    Reply

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