Seattle Bubble

News & discussion about real estate & the housing bubble in the Seattle area.

Seattle Bubble - News & discussion about real estate & the housing bubble in the Seattle area.

Entries Tagged as 'misdirection'

2007 Not as Rosy as NWMLS Claims

By The Tim on January 23rd, 2008 at 2:35 PM · 28 Comments

The TV and radio news stations are all blathering yesterday and today about the 2007 year in review report put out by the NWMLS. Most of the reporting is similar to what you can see at the Seattle Times, where they printed a short, unattributed blurb that basically parrots the positive spin put out by the NWMLS. For all I know it’s a direct quote of some press release. They also published a colorful pdf of their own to drive the upbeat message home.

With all the dismal national news about home sales, wasn’t 2007 supposed to be the year the local real-estate market died?

Well, surprise. Although home sales indeed were down 14.5 percent in King County and the number of for-sale homes was up almost 9 percent, prices more than held their own.

Compared with 2006, the county’s single-family home prices climbed 7.1 percent last year, according to the Northwest Multiple Listing Service’s annual report released Tuesday. King County’s condominium prices appreciated 12.4 percent.

Over at the P-I Aubrey Cohen has a more skeptical take on the release, with his story titled Two sides to ‘07 housing market:

Overall, home prices posted healthy gains — 5.5 percent for houses and 10.3 percent for condominiums in Seattle and 7 percent for houses and 12 percent for condos in King County, according to data the Northwest Multiple Listing Service released Tuesday.

Look closer, and there’s one market from January through July, when steady year-over-year increases in home inventory and declining sales didn’t keep the median King County house price from posting double-digit increases.

Then came August, when skittish lenders tightened mortgage standards, making it harder to get a loan, and investors pulled out of the mortgage market, driving up rates on jumbo loans — those above the $417,000 threshold for mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The Seattle area’s high home prices make for a lot of jumbo loans.

Of course, none of the press write-ups bother to link to the actual NWMLS report (pdf), but are instead content to repeat out-of-context quotes such as the one about prices rising seven percent.

Anyone who has actually been paying attention to the market knows that something is fishy about that 7.1% figure. To figure out what’s behind that number, take a look at page 19 of the report. Basically, they arrive at that figure by comparing the median price for all sales in 2007 with the same figure for 2006. In a market that is consistently and steadily headed in a single direction, that kind of comparison would make sense. However, in today’s volatile market, such a statistic is totally meaningless.

Allow me to attempt to demonstrate the specific problem with comparing entire-year median prices between 2006 and 2007 graphically.

2006 vs 2007: Sales
Click to enlarge

During the first half of 2007, closed sales were down from the same period in 2006, but “only” by about six percent. From July to August, the slowdown accelerated to over a twenty-two percent decline in closed sales versus 2006. The net result is that the entire-year median for 2007 is more heavily weighted toward the first six months than the 2006 entire-year median.

2006 vs 2007: Prices
Click to enlarge

The sales imbalance wouldn’t really be an issue, except that in the first half of 2007, while sales were only slightly down, prices were up from 2006 an average of ten percent. Then, in the second half of the year while sales plummeted, prices were up only four percent (on average), and as we all know, finished the year negative. So when the price drops finally began in earnest, the declining volume of sales caused these lower prices to effect the entire-year median less and less each month.

People occasionally accuse Seattle Bubble of “skewing the data” to fit a preconceived notion of market declines. Obviously I am biased, but it looks to me like that is exactly what the NWMLS is doing by touting this entire-year median number as if it provides an accurate reflection of the 2007 market.

(NWMLS, 2007 Review, 01.2008)
(Aubrey Cohen, Seattle P-I, 01.23.2008)
(Seattle Times, 01.23.2008)

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John L. Scott: “Now Is A Smart Time To Buy”

By The Tim on January 15th, 2008 at 11:14 AM · 120 Comments

A number of people pointed me toward a “white paper” recently released from real estate brokerage John L. Scott titled “Why Now Is A Smart Time To Buy” (pdf). It purports to be “an objective assessment of the housing market as it stands at the end of 2007″ designed “to help home buyers assess the facts of the real estate market objectively.” With a title like that, it sure sounds “objective” to me…

Let’s have a look inside.

Three factors caused this decade’s housing boom to spiral upwards: 1) a run-up in home price valuations that spurred a high sense of urgency in home buying and selling; 2) poor lending practices, which caused many homebuyers to secure loans that they ultimately couldn’t afford over the long term; and 3) speculative purchases of homes also increased, with buyers investing in real estate with the hope of a quick return-on-investment.

Actually it doesn’t start off too bad. That’s an accurate assessment of the boom, with a rare admission that speculative purchases played a part, implying that this is even the case in our area (since Seattle is where JLS is based).

Like the dot com bust, the housing market has begun to correct itself after a number of years of unwise purchasing, but unlike what the media would have us believe, a correction in the housing market doesn’t equate to a crash. Unfortunately, the ongoing negative news about the troubled areas in the U.S. has caused a ripple effect, with home buyers and sellers on a national level exercising caution before making a decision.

Ok hold on. Did you catch what they said just there? “Unfortunately… buyers and sellers [are] exercising caution…” (emphasis mine). Huh?!? How is it “unfortunate” that people are being more cautious? Oh, right. John L. Scott sells real estate, so they would prefer it if all caution was thrown to the wind. Also, they’re blaming the downturn on “negative news.” That is so laughable it’s not even worth a detailed rebuttal. Here’s a hint though guys: it’s the other way around—the downturn is real, so the news is negative.

The rest of the paper focuses on superficial points that are unlikely to sway any but the most gullible (page numbers refer to the number printed on the page, not the actual pdf page number):

  • We’re not as bad as Arizona and California! (p. 2)
  • High inventory means more choices for buyers! (p. 2)
  • Mortgage rates are low! (pp. 2-3)
  • Did we mention we’re not as bad as California? (pp. 3-4)
  • Subprime is like practically non-existent. For reals. (p. 5)
  • We are so much better than other places in the US like, say… California. (p. 6)
  • Never mind the fact that you could wait a year and buy at a lower price—real estate is a long-term investment. (p. 7)
  • Here, look at some historical price drops in which the factors of the preceding booms were nothing like they were recently. Those weren’t so bad, so this drop won’t be bad either! (p. 8)
  • In summary: Buy, buy, buy! (p. 9)

Take a few minutes to read through the pdf. It’s not that any of the things they’re saying are necessarily untrue, it’s just that this is definitely not an “objective assessment.” It’s quite clearly a marketing document intended to dupe cautious home buyers into throwing their money into a freshly-declining market. I hope nobody takes this document seriously.

I’ve added this paper to the library for future reference.

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Misdirection Master Strikes Again

By The Tim on April 16th, 2007 at 7:19 AM · 6 Comments

In what is becoming a bit of a regular occurrence, Seattle’s #1 real estate cheerleader yet again wields her powers of misdirection in response to a probing reader question.

Q: There is an entire group of people today who’ve never gone through a major recession. How will home prices be affected if we do have a recession like the pullback of 1974?

A: The recession of 1974, caused by high inflation and an oil crisis, took the wind out of the housing market. Homebuilding dropped 33 percent, according to Time magazine’s Dec. 9, 1974 cover story. The Federal Reserve clamped down on the money supply. Mortgages became harder to afford.

But if we were to have a repeat of 1974, much more would happen because recessions cause widespread economic damage.

Exactly what that meant for house prices is hard to know because data from that decade is sketchy.

We can say, however, what the local fallout was from two milder, more recent recessions: 1990-91 and 2001-2003. The rate of appreciation fell, but house prices in general didn’t. Here are the numbers:

After rising 28.9 percent in 1990, King County single-family home prices basically flat-lined for the next three years, rising just 1.2 percent in 1991, 0.1 percent in 1992 and 1.7 percent in 1993. Then they began rebounding, culminating with 10.1 percent appreciation in 1999.

It would appear that whenever the answer to a question is a bit too difficult for Ms. Rhodes to swallow, she decides to answer a completely different question that wasn’t even asked. In this case, the question she appeared to be answering was actually “what is a recession, and how would Seattle be affected in a very mild one?”

Of course, the answer to that question is both reassuring and ultimately useless.

(Elizabeth Rhodes, Seattle Times, 04.14.2007)

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Seattle Immune to Financing Woes?

By The Tim on March 19th, 2007 at 10:49 AM · 69 Comments

When the question is “how will the current home lending meltdown affect the housing market in Seattle,” the answer depends on who you ask. For instance, if you ask #1 Seattle real estate cheerleader Elizabeth Rhodes, the answer is something to the effect of: “Seattle is special. Don’t worry your pretty little head about it.”

Q: Local real-estate experts keep saying Seattle’s housing market will stay strong because the local economy is strong. But I think all the subprime loans going bad will mean a lot more houses on the market and prices here will sink. Why don’t you report that?

A: Let’s start with an interesting fact from Douglas Duncan, chief economist for the Mortgage Bankers Association: More than one-third of all homeowners have paid off their mortgages (or paid cash). This significantly decreases the potential for overall risk.

However, the growing crisis in the subprime mortgage industry, fueled by an increasing number of mortgage defaults, is real.

How much of an effect it may have is very location-sensitive, said Bob Visini, a spokesman for LoanPerformance, a California company that tracks nationwide mortgage activity.

The Seattle/Bellevue/Everett area “is exposed,” but way down the list, Visini said.

The Seattle area is in the bottom 20 percent for subprime mortgages among 331 major metropolitan areas — far below other parts of the country, particularly parts of Texas and California’s Central Valley where subprime accounts for nearly a fifth or more of all mortgages. At the top of the list was McAllen, Texas, where some 26 percent of loans are subprime.

By comparison, only 7.9 percent of all Seattle-area mortgages were subprime at the end of 2006 (ranking 278th out of 331), down from 8.7 percent the previous year.

And only a fraction of those loans were in trouble — some 7.6 percent at the end of 2006 were 60 days late or more, a sign foreclosure is looming. This put Seattle in the bottom 10 percent.

Those are certainly some convincing statistics Ms. Rhodes has pulled out. Unfortunately, she still employs her mad misdirection skillz in composing the answer. The reader didn’t ask “how does Seattle’s rate of subprime mortgages compare to other cities?” Nor did they say “the subprime lending implosion is already affecting Seattle.” Rather, they pointed out the high likelihood that the subprime mess will adversely affect Seattle’s housing market. Granted, it may not affect Seattle as much as other areas with higher percentages of subprime loans, but there is no reason to believe that it will not have any affect.

On the other side of the media spectrum, ask Mike Benbow of the Everett Herald the same question, and he might say: “Foreclosures are already on the rise, and will likely increase. If the country heads into a recession, the housing market will almost certainly suffer even more.”

Others are using risky loans, such as those where they’re paying only interest for a while, to get into homes they can’t afford. That can only lead to trouble.

In fact, it already has.

A recent article in the Puget Sound Business Journal quoted RealtyTrac Inc. as saying there were 2,377 foreclosures on homes in Snohomish County last year, a 35 percent increase over 2005.

That was lower than King County, where foreclosures rose 41 percent, and Pierce County, which showed a 58 percent hike. But it was higher that the 25 percent increase for the state as a whole.

Such a sharp increase in foreclosures tells us there are problems in the industry.

A local or national recession could trigger even more.

What am I trying to say here?

I guess that a rising local economy has kept the housing market relatively strong locally, but that things could change rapidly if economic circumstances change. Now, more than ever, home buyers should be careful about the types of loans they’re using and not expect home appreciation to bail them out of a purchase they never should have made.

Wow, it’s refreshing to read something that honest in the media once in a while. Foreclosures up 41 percent in King County? Funny, I must have missed the article in the Times where Ms. Rhodes covered that. I thought our housing market was the picture of perfect health. How could foreclosures be rising so quickly? Hmm.

(Elizabeth Rhodes, Seattle Times, 03.17.2007)
(Mike Benbow, Everett Herald, 03.19.2007)

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Elizabeth Rhodes: Master Of Misdirection

By The Tim on September 30th, 2006 at 10:58 AM · 14 Comments

Wow, Elizabeth Rhodes is on a real anti-bubble roll this weekend. Did one of you submit this letter to her “Home Forum” Q & A?

Q: I keep reading that home prices aren’t expected to decline in the Seattle area. Aren’t you overlooking the possible effect of “suicide loans” — those adjustable-rate mortgages that are common and dangerous? I think the interest rates on those loans will go so high that many will be forced into foreclosure. Won’t that produce a glut of for-sale homes that will force prices down?

A: Let’s start with the basics on those adjustable-rate loans.

The riskiest are teaser-rate loans. These start at an exceptionally low interest rate (like 2 to 4 percent), then reset upward later to a higher rate that can double the borrower’s monthly payment. Obviously borrowers who can’t refinance out of these loans are at great peril — particularly if their loan has allowed them to make interest-only payments, their home hasn’t appreciated much and they have little equity to work with.

However, it’s not a given that foreclosure is in their future. If the local economy is robust, jobs are plentiful and housing demand is strong about the time their loan resets, holders of teaser-rate loans have options. They may be able to increase their income and keep the house or find a buyer and escape foreclosure.

Okay I have to stop right there. “They may be able to increase their income”?!? Did she really just say that? Yeah, it’s that easy Ms. Rhodes… When Mr. & Mrs. Too Much Homebuyer find that they can’t afford to make their payments, why they’ll just get new jobs that pay more!

Maybe I’m confused, but aren’t there cities right now (San Diego, Sacramento) that have “robust economies” with “plentiful jobs” and yet are still experiencing a decline in prices? It seems to me that the one and only component that matters is that “housing demand is strong.” Oh, and incidentally, housing demand is weakening across the nation, and even here in Seattle.

Moving on.

These loans can reset more than once, from one to 10 years after origination — meaning there’s no one point at which distressed sellers will flood the market. Obviously, it’s impossible to forecast whether the economy will be good years from now, allowing them to ride it out. Maybe it will. Maybe it won’t.

Okay, so we admit that basically “who knows” if it’ll be a problem or not…

Loan Performance, a San Francisco-based mortgage-information provider, calculates that teaser-rate loans comprise 13 percent of mortgages in the Seattle-Bellevue-Everett area. Since January 2005, teaser-rate foreclosures have consistently been lower than 1 percent a month.

Did you catch what she did there? The question was about adjustable-rate and “suicide” loans in general. However, Ms. Rhodes decided to shift the focus to solely “teaser-rate” loans, and then provided a statistic that shows “only” 13 percent of local mortgages fall under that specific category. What about non-teaser-rate loans such as plain old ARMs, negative amortizing, payment-option, etc.? Excellent use of misdirection, Elizabeth.

Furthermore, of course foreclosures are still going to be low for our area. As long as we’re still experiencing double-digit year-over-year appreciation, it’s easy to sell or refinance your way out of a risky loan. It’s as though Elizabeth forgot the question (or more likely, just didn’t feel like answering it), which was about where we’re going, not where we’ve been or are.

I’m not going to bother quoting and responding to the rest of her answer here, because she’s obviously chosen to answer a completely different question than what was asked. Go read it for yourself, and if you’re convinced that her answer is sufficient, I guess you should go out and buy a house for 10 times your yearly income on a negative-amortizing, payment-option, no-money-down, adjustable-rate loan.

(Elizabeth Rhodes, Seattle Times, 09.30.2006)

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