Also with Ben free-falling interest rates, Large Investors in the Housing Industry will step in and buy beat up homes prices with Ben's cheap money; rent out the properties for 5 years and
...But Ben (Bernanke) doesn't lend money into the housing market. Not a dime. And with the banking system essentially bankrupt, will there really be an appetite to take risk on mortgage securities in a market that has a couple years of depreciation behind it?
The idea that "large investors" are going to be able to get loans is ludicrous as well. At least joe-sixpack with a 20% downpayment has some skin in the game, and has a job that can provide some income to support the mortgage. "large investors" are dependant entirely on the rental market (which, with a surplus of houses in the marketplace, will perform very poorly), which means that risk premia will necessarily be even higher for them.
Practically speaking, this means that property probably will have to have net cashflow, on an unlevered basis, of somewhere close to 10%, before anything resembling a 'bottom' will have been hit. Right now, net cashflows are somewhere between 2 and 4%, so there's a long ways to go down.
then sell them and make a good profit.....and the housing cycle repeats.
Maybe 20 years from now. Interest rates are going nowhere but up in the sector. Too much leverage on overvalued assets always has disasterous consequences.