May 17, 2012

We’ve come full circle in the housing industry.

Check out this blog post on Calculated Risk.  http://calculatedrisk.blogspot.com/2008/07/housing-cartoon-from-1993.html

News editors shouyld just dig up old cartoons out of the archives of the early 1990s and they will have plenty of material for the state of the housing and finance markets.

Aloha from Maui Hawaii

Thunbs DownMy blog has been sparse on purpose. I am in Maui for the first time. Unfortunately I have to work will on this trip, but being a Realtor 2.0 or maybe 3.0 I was able to handle the work load through email, text, my cell phone and laptop. Winforms with Docusign enabled me to get an escrow open this week while away from the office and the fact that I have full Acrobat, I was able to make things run smoothly.

Outside the 3 hour time lag from the west coast everything else seems to be just fine.  My Thumbs down picture is reaction in dealing with one of the local Simi Valley Real Estate companies.  The owner of said company has seen fit to block all incoming emails from Keller Williams agents.  Said Broker is scared to death that the big bad Keller Williams wolf is going Huff & Puff and blow his house down.  How that relates to my trip is that it makes it very difficult to open escrows and transfer docs that need to be signed.  Compound that with an agent that still has an AOL email for a secondary email address and you get my big Thumbs Down!

Patrick and ToadAfter surviving the road to Hana and exploring the seven pool, we decided the next day to lay low and be read for the incredible Kupanaha Maui Magic Show at the Kaanapali Beach Hotel by World Class Magician Jody Baran & Family,  I am ready for tomorrow’s fishing trip dreaming of some coveted Ahi Tuna.  If you travel to Maui please make sure to contact Andrea Bedal (866) 888-6284 at www.mauis-best.com.  A few of the activities Andrea set us up with included Parasailing, Luau and the Magic Show at excellent prices. 

My kids are having a blast and It’s almost time to go home.  Night time is especially fun for the boys as they explore the Hotel grounds for toads and geckos.  Snorkeling today revealed the treasures of the reef just 150 yards off the beach.  We will round up Sunday with Surfing at Thousand Peaks.  Hopefully the kids will be worn out to sleep well on the Red-Eye!

Down and Out with a Virus

Well I am just emerging form a battle with an upper respiratory virus.  I should be fully back by Thursday.  I’ve been working from home.  The only blogging I have done over the last few days has been on Real Estate industry stuff over on ActiveRain.  I did manage to squeak out a video blog on Trulia Voices that is on my YouTube Channel.  I am working on my next video Blog report on  Ventura County growth control, SOAR and why I believe Ventura County and especially Simi Valley to be a great place for longer term Real Estate investments.  Stay Tuned!!

Recongnition from Trulia is welcome

Follow this link to see the original blog post

Trulia Voices Video Comments on the Rise?

I am a big fan of Trulia. I have been thinking of ways to cut through the noise of other Real Estate professionals that answer on Trulia Voices to better help those who are asking questions. My biggest concerns with some of the answers I see are:

1. Real Estate Professionals answering questions that are not from the area the question is referencing.  i.e. A Real Estate professional in New York answering a real estate question about Simi Valley.

2. Real Estate Professionals trying to be more than they can be. i.e. Soliciting business in areas too far away to serve. There has been an agent in the city of Orange (Orange County California) soliciting business in the Ventura county area through Trulia.  While there is nothing illegal about this (as our real estate licenses cover the entire state of California), my legitimate concern is that this Real Estate Professional (like others) does not have local knowledge and in one answer it was clear that he had no knowledge of current market conditions. It’s better when you get far enough away from your true trade area, that we can find an agent to refer your business to.  I recently referred my client to a real estate professional (I knew and trusted) in the Huntington Beach area.  Sure I could have driven there and sold them the house, but in the best interest of those I served I knew a local expert that could take great care of them and provide them important local knowledge.

3. Real Estate professionals that answer…”Find a local Real Estate Professional, blah, blah, blah”.  People who come to Trulia are trying to do research on their terms and at their own pace or they live far away and Trulia is more convenient.  They are smart enough to know to contact a local professional.

These three issue have driven me to find a way to hopefully stand out and be a real Trulia Voice!

Video Blog: Trulia Voices Answer on House Flipping

This is a great question that was asked on Trulia. The answers were pretty interesting and the format of Trulia really does not give the best environment to handle questions like this in the matter of detail these questions deserve. Below is the link to the original question, followed by a Video Blog response. Whether you can agree or disagree, please comment in below.

My husband and I are thinking of flipping a house in the Thousand Oaks, CA area…is now a good time?

Death by Powerpoint

I have nothing to add. I think this video covers it all!

Huell Howser California’s Original Video Blogger

Huel HowserIf you have ever watched public TV in California over the last 30 years on a Saturday or Sunday, then you will have no undoubtedly encountered Huell Howser. The greatest thing about Huell’s show is that he is a good ol’ boy from down south and his program “California’s Gold” is all about exploring California. Huell’s boyish curiosity and witty expressions “Amazing” made weekend afternoon TV fun.

If Huell was just starting out today he’d be a leading video blogger.

Four reasons why MY future in Simi Valley Real Estate is bright!

The following Blog post Jump Start the Housing Industry by Mandating Blackberry Usage by Matthew Ferrara & Co is something I have been talking about for long time. Yeah, I am more of a techie than most, but these tech tools are being used by the public and they are being used more by the public than by my colleagues in real estate related activities.

1. Latops are mandatory tools in this business and not just any laptop will do. I’m talking about small & light notebook style laptops not the boat anchor media center laptops rookie computer users purchase for their first laptop. This has been a mandatory tool for several years now.

2. A PDA cell phone is mandatory. At minimum a Blackberry. The iphone is moving in on our industry and will take over with the RE.net crowd when the next upgraded release hits the streets (which is soon). In the Southern California Area the Palm Treo is still a stong tool as the Supra ibox keysafe system works only with pda phones that have infrared capabilities. However even with the the lack of infrared capability on the Blackberry and iphone, both these phone features make some compelling trade offs. Still the iphone is light years a head of the Blackberry and is the front runner the RE.net crowd if you are willing to drop the Supra ibox compatability issue.

3. This entry should really be a subset of number two. Text messaging, picture, video capture and email needs to actually be used on these PDA phones. Youtube, Flickr and other services make it too easy to upload photos and video on the fly.

4. Paperless online transaction management systems and skills. This still takes some computer skill, like feeding the documents in the scanner and scanning them into a PDF file and then uploading those files to software designed to securely monitor and give access to those documents. This will be the mandatory system in just a few years Arizona is taking the lead on this one; it should be now, but Realtors have always lagged. All the consumer printer manufacturers still make all-in-one printers with a fax machine probably because there are so many Realtors that refuse to scan-to-email. I have not even touched on electronic signature packages which will make tablet PCs obsolete.

The four areas I touched on above are not James Bond type systems. Everything above can be purchased for very reasonable prices. The cost to be a Realtor is a fraction of what it would cost to open a franchise or start up any other business, so the cost is very a poor excuse. The costs for a PDA phone, Laptop and software it is still under $2,500.00. Has anyone checked to see what it costs to open a Subway Sandwich franchise lately?

When I look through the listing data on the Simi Valley – Moorpark Multiple Listing Service or when I call other agents to show their property or get feedback when they show my listings, it is painfully evident that I have the easy upper-hand in this business. My future is bright!

The Perfect Real Estate Storm

During the last several years we have lived through a Real Estate Boom, unlike most have ever seen.  Simi Valley Housing prices were rising at double digit rates year by year.  Homes sold with multiple offers in days and Sellers had the upper hand in 99% of the negotiations.  Fast forward to today and most of us ask what happened?

George Clooney starred in the film The Perfect Storm (2000), which is the story of the crew and the disappearance of the fishing boat, the Andrea Gail.  The Andrea Gail launches out and has an epic swordfish catch.  These seasoned commercial fishing veterans navigated those seas before and were experienced in working in very hostile conditions.  The difference this time as opposed to all the other times they went fishing was that this event could only happen under very particular conditions and the probability for these conditions to converge simultaneously was historically rare.

Alright where the Real Estate  Connection?  In 1991 three storm fronts converged and created the disastrous storm off Massachusetts that claimed the Andrea Gail.  Similarly, over the last several years 4 conditions converged and hit Southern California that caused the real estate market to erupt into a storm.  These four conditions were:

  • Low home prices
  • Good income to home price ratio (Affordability)
  • Low Interest rates
  • Loosening of Loan qualification requirements

Home Prices – The recession of the early 1990s combined with our local economy created very low home prices.  When the Berlin Wall came down, defense contracts dried up which impacted Simi Valleyand the San Fernando Valley with many lost jobs.  While this was happening the Northridge Earthquake hit further affecting the prices of homes in the San Fernando and Simi Valley areas.  Simi Valley’s depressed Real Estate Market was created in part by these unique conditions.

Income to home price ratio – During the mid to late 1990s inflation was extremely low.  The Consumer Price Index was moving at a snail’s pace.  Jobs began to recover, incomes were increasing and our depressed real estate market made homes very affordable under these conditions.

Interest Rates – As the 1990s came to a close 30 year mortgage rates were dropping. As mortgages pushed to 7.0% and lower, a typical buyer’s monthly payment was now lower on larger loan amounts, which meant that buyers could pay more if competing with other buyers for the same property.  Lower payments created opportunity which led to increasing competition for homes available for sale.

Loosening of Loan qualification requirements – Lenders began to change their qualification standards.  100% financing, fewer income documentation requirements, and lower credit requirements brought even more buyers to market.

The overall effect of the above conditions made money cheap which meant payments went farther.  Cheap money created a large pool of buyers, a large enough pool that began to outweigh the available inventory.  This cheap money and low inventory made bold buyers; bold enough to bid over asking prices for homes.  As interest rates dropped into the 5.0% range and just about anyone could qualify for a loan; the prices of homes shot up at unprecedented double digit rates.  Soon inexperienced people looked like real estate tycoons as they rode the wave.  What was to come was inevitable; inevitable, because at some point, the potential buyer’s monthly payment to income ratio would eventually become unsustainable.

This unsustainable ratio is where we are today.  The income to monthly payment ratio is no longer in sync.  Affordability has been jeopardized today due to the rapid increase in home prices and the slower moving increase in incomes.  Consider that the price of gasoline, eggs, milk and other goods has doubled in this time, the income-affordability ratio is impacted to a greater extent.

Additionally the four conditions of The Perfect Real Estate Storm resulted in over 20% of all buyers using 100% financing.  In the first time home buyer category, 40% of the purchases were with 100% financing.  This made sense to many borrowers as they figured their home would increase in value as much as 20% and they could either sell and capture a profit or refinance into a better loan with this new gifted equity.

Almost in reverse order outlined above, lending requirements are no longer loose, but very strict.  Many buyers who once qualified for loans (they should have never been qualified for) have been knocked out of the market.

Considering most first time buyers do not have large reserves or down payments, these tighter lending practices will make it more difficult for buyers to obtain financing.  Even in the move-up market, sellers in 2006 and 2007 do not have enough equity from the sale of their existing home to afford the down payment on a move up without having to look to savings to make up the difference.  Keep in mind that the U.S. Commerce Department’s Bureau of Economic Analysis dished out some discouraging news recently, saying that Americans spent more than they earned in 2005 more specifically a negative savings rate of 0.5 percent for the year. This is the first time that this has happened since the Great Depression.

The low savings rate and the lower equity available for move-up buyers were resulting in Jumbo mortgages on almost 50% of every purchase.  In areas like Simi Valley, FHA lending has increased the conforming rate limit to $729,00 but with only a 3% down payment required sellers now have to be concerned that the monthly payments on these larger mortgages are affordable to their prospective buyers.

Those waiting around for the fast paced biding wars of a few years ago will be in  for a long wait.  The Bear Sterns collapse is an indicator that this is not over just yet.

So why all the bad news?  Well this is not bad news, I’m giving you the facts and if you plan on selling your home in these market conditions you need to be armed with the facts so you can make the proper decisions.  The question I have is who will you choose to be the captian in your wheelhouse during these turbulent times.?

Doctors Note Meet Up In Northridge, CA

Great meet-up this morning (5-8-08) in Northidge California with some great people on the front end of internet techonolgies.  The name was for the idea that if you wanted to get out of work you needed a Doctor’s note.

The discussion revolved around Social Networking/Web 2.0 implemented in business.  In the picture Douglas E. Welch is sharing how he uses streaming online TV broadcasting and podcasting.  Jeff Turner (not seen) is taking the picture and later set his MacBook Pro to broadcast our meeting on ustream.tv.