Monday, May 29, 2006

"People don't believe in the laws of supply and demand anymore"

From Barrons:

The Big Glut
By ROBIN GOLDWYN BLUMENTHAL

"IT WOULD SEEM TO HAVE IT ALL: four bedrooms, a guest house, a pool and a rock waterfall. But the vacation home in Naples, Fla., hasn't been drawing much interest from buyers, so the seller recently threw in that most modern of amenities: the $1 million price cut. That's brought the asking price down a full 25%. "If you want to sell, you've got to go back to '04 prices," says Chip Harris of Coldwell Banker Previews International, which is handling the property."

"The market for second homes could use a second wind. After a long string of double-digit annual price increases, a number of second-home meccas across the country are suddenly suffering from plunging sales volume and burgeoning inventories of unsold homes. Result: Naples-style discounting is starting to spread. It hit the town of Pocasset, on Massachusetts' Cape Cod, just as retired executive Jack Reen was trying to sell his four-acre, six-bedroom beachfront home. He cut the price several times, for a total of 42% off the listing price, before striking a deal at $3.95 million. Reen takes a philosophical view of the experience, noting that the original price was set at the top of the market. "Calling the tops and bottoms is impossible," he says."

"Though the official figures on sales prices have yet to reflect the current round of cuts, interviews with real- estate pros and others strongly suggest that the averages are deteriorating in a number of key markets. Just look at green and hilly Litchfield, Conn., about a two-hour drive from New York City. It was a magnet for Wall Streeters during the past five years, and prices climbed accordingly. But in the past 10 months, prices in the lower end of Litchfield's market -- homes of $300,000 to $600,000 -- are down 12%-14%, and volume is falling at the next level up, says Stephen Drezen of the local Portfolio Properties Group."

""People don't believe in the laws of supply and demand anymore," says Alan Skrainka, chief market strategist at Edward Jones. "We're not saying it's a bubble, but we're saying prices are overstated and will likely correct 20% to 25% over four or five years.""

"He rejects a notion advanced by housing bulls that shore communities in Florida and California will be protected because of the limited supply of coastline. "Japanese real estate and land prices went down for 15 years and Japan is an island," Skrainka says."

"On the East Coast, signs of a glut have been turning up all along the coastline of New Jersey. In an effort to move inventory, brokers in the upscale summer resort of Stone Harbor have been sending out postcards to vacation renters, proclaiming a three-bedroom condo to be "the perfect investment opportunity" at just $739,000. That's about what many of the would-be buyers might have paid for their first homes."

""The market is definitely in a correcting phase," says Timothy Richards of Ocean City, N.J., who recently retired as a realty broker and began a second career as a developer. He says buyers are waiting to see what happens with mortgage rates. "Whenever financial markets are in transition, we go into a holding pattern," he adds."

12 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

The Crash has begun!

BOYCOTT HOUSES!

The price floor is caving in.

bababababa

Booooooooooyaaaaaaaa

Bob

5/29/2006 09:47:00 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

If you can live with the lack of culture and a little more commute time, Kearny is just on the other side of the meadows from JC. I'm pretty sure it has midtown direct service now. The housing stock is pretty old, with lots of big 1920's multiple family houses, but there have been condos cropping up over the past decade or so as well. You're sure to get more for your money there.

jw

5/29/2006 12:04:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Did anyone go to Open Houses this weekend? I saw a ton of signs, but people were heading to the beach (as were we), and the open houses did not appear to be drawing any attention.
I wonder if this weekend is supposed to be a big weekend for attracting buyers at the shore, and how the results were.

5/29/2006 03:45:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Complete Boycott.

Spent time at the Beach.

Bob, love your posts.

KBR

5/29/2006 07:35:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Let`s see if Housing sales and starts, mortgage applications goes up despite the rise of FED RATES and Mortgage Rates !!!

5/29/2006 07:51:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Went to an open house this weekend. I noticed that I was the third one on the sign-in sheet, and funny enough, the realtor's name appeared first,then someone else, then my name. The size of the lot 40X100 scared me with taxes of just under $10,000.

5/29/2006 08:10:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Anon 4:45

Didn't go to an open house, but we took the real estate section to the beach...does that count?

My sister and I had some good laughs.

I actually saw several people reading the real estate sections.

What does that mean? A lot of people find this situation entertaining?

5/29/2006 08:46:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

http://tinyurl.com/nqr37

"...in a panel of 95 metro areas over 23 years...

"...the error-correction specification for house prices and income commonly found in the literature may be inappropriate."

Does anybody know if AREUEA data is biased(funded by Freddie, Fannie and some Mtg.Co $)?

5/29/2006 08:59:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Saw a "1-4 Open House" sign and planned to do a drive-by after an errand.

Finally drove by at 3:15PM and all the signs and baloons were gone.

Apparently no Greater Fools were showing up, and the bored realtor decided to call it a day early.

Another Open House Boycott success story!

5/29/2006 09:27:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

The best place to live in Hudson County is by far Bayonne. Often hailed as "the Short hills of hudson county", Bayonne is hard to beat for quality of life, school system and relatively affordable rents. You should be able to rent a very nice apartment in a 2 or 3 family house for $1200 per month.

5/29/2006 10:32:00 PM  
Blogger grim said...

Asking rents are very different from the rents people are actually paying. These folks can ask whatever they like. But like home prices, rents are negotiable.

Those Craigslist flipper rentals are a great example. Many of those new "investors" are recent buyers. They are likely bleeding cash trying to get renters. I've seen some ads up on CL for months.

A good approach would be to offer at least a year lease with a number of months rent paid up-front. Dangle the carrot, so to speak. You'll likely get a much different reception when the landlord has a $10,000 check in his or her face.

grim

5/30/2006 06:33:00 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hallo I absolutely adore your site. You have beautiful graphics I have ever seen.
»

6/09/2006 02:19:00 AM  

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