Quote from traderdragon2:
Avg detached home in san diego: $835K
Median household income: 55K
= 15 times median household income
10% down = $83K, good luck!
Required mortgage: 751K
@5.75% interest = $4382/month + taxes + utils
>= $52K/year just for the home
problem?
Lets do it backwards.
3.5X standard loan to income ratio
3.5 * 55K = 192K for a home
Current home price = 835K
Doesnt work. That gap will never close due to crazy california premium caused by weather, low property taxes, and stupid crazy california laws that allow you to walk away from a home and owe the bank nothing. Only the home can be taken as collateral. So its practically risk free buying, especially with almost nothing down.
Quote from Cutten:
Most really bad busts have also had hits to employment and correlated with recessions. However there have been some that had no such problems - it was just excess speculation, and oversupply, which caused the problem. A good example is the Florida bubble and crash in the 1920s during a booming economy.
Recently you had lending standards far more lax than normal, even for boom times. People with no job or income were able to acquire multi-million dollar portfolios, with no money down. In some cases they actually got *cash back* for buying properties. That is a huge number of forthcoming foreclosures that will be dumped onto the market en masse by panicky lenders. Add to this the record numbers of new condos in the pipeline, way in excess of the market's natural year on year demand for new properties. Supply is high and will go on getting higher in 2008, 2009, 2010 until all the current projects get built out and every flipper has ditched his property portfolio.
The kicker is that the real estate industry is a large proportion of GDP. In recent years every Tom, Dick & Harry has set up as a realtor, developer, or condo flipper. Many of them are going to be unemployed by this time next year. Their discretionary spending will disappear, and in many cases if they refinanced their home equity they are going to end up homeless too. Think of all the money these RE related people spent on luxury goods, real estate, restaurants, nightlife, big ticket consumer items etc. If they feel the pinch, which looks likely, this will affect a huge chunk of the economy - knock on effects could cause a recession with rising unemployment.
Quote from jamis359:
It's easy. You need only a few things: the median family income, the median single family home price and an online mortgage calculator. The underlying theory is simple: incomes and available lending leverage drives home prices.
Quote from jamis359:
It's easy. You need only a few things: the median family income, the median single family home price and an online mortgage calculator. The underlying theory is simple: incomes and available lending leverage drives home prices.
Let's do Las Vegas for example.
1. Find the median family income. It varies depending on source, but $56,000/yr came up, and I ran with that number.
2. Assume that by 2008 that traditional 10% down 30-yr financing is the only thing that lenders will touch. Forget ARMs, no doc, no downs.
3. Plug $56k and 10% down into an online mortgage calculator. Max home price at those terms = $210,000.
4. Compare affordability to current real estate median price. Currently for Las Vegas it's about $295,000.
5. Market price has to fall to meet the bid. Therefore, the median home will need to drop from $295,000 to $210,000 for the market to function normally again. That's about a 28% drop from today.
Quote from blackjack007:
yeah yeah sure, whatever. according to your formula, san francisco homes should be selling for $350k but the average is $800k. so the prices need to drop by more than half.
Quote from Cutten:
Often when boom turns to bust, the price bottom is not reached at fair value, but at a significant discount to it.