PIN MEET HOUSING BUBBLE 2.0

Housing bubble 2.0 just met Pin 2.0

The 30 Year U.S. Treasury bond yield hit 2.35% yesterday. That is the lowest rate in U.S. history for the 30 Year Treasury. During the deepest darkest depths of the recession in March 2009, after the stock market had fallen over 50%, the yield was 3.5%. One year ago it was yielding 4.0%. Long term interest rates are not controlled by Yellen. They reflect the economic prospects of the country. When they are rising it means the economy is doing well. When they are plummeting to all time lows, the economy is either in recession or headed into recession. Take your pick. No amount of government data manipulation, feel good propaganda spewed by the captured mainstream media, or Ivy League educated Wall Street economist doublespeak, can change the fact this economy is in the dumper and headed much lower. The Greater Depression is resuming its downward march toward inevitable war.

ust30low

  • KBH SEES 1Q BOTTOM LINE ABOUT BREAK-EVEN (against expectations of a 17c rise!)
  • KB HOME CFO SAYS FIRST-QUARTER MARGINS EXPECTED TO BE DOWN
  • KB HOME PULLED OUT OF `COUPLE’ HOUSTON LAND DEALS, CEO SAYS
  • LENNAR CFO SAYS MARGINS ARE POISED TO NARROW ON LESS PRICING POWER
  • LENNAR GROSS MARGIN DECLINED & SALES INCENTIVES GREW
  • LENNAR CEO SAYS “ACROSS THE BOARD, WE’RE SEEING INTENSIFIED COMPETITION AS BUILDERS GO OUT AND CHASE VOLUME”

KB Home had revenues of $2.4 billion in 2014. They are one of the largest home builders in the country. It’s stock has dropped 30% in the last few days. It’s down 40% from its February 2014 high. It’s down 85% from its 2005 high. It had $9 billion of revenues and delivered 60,000 homes in 2005. Then Pin 1.0 popped the first bubble. Revenues collapsed to $1.3 billion and they lost hundreds of millions from 2007 through 2012.

Lennar had revenues of $7.0 billion in 2014. They are the largest home builder in the country. It’s stock has dropped 9% this week. It had been trading at a seven year high, but is still trading 33% below its 2005 bubble high. It had $14 billion of revenues and delivered 42,000 homes in 2005. Then Pin 1.0 popped their bubble. Revenues imploded to $3 billion and they also lost hundreds of millions from 2007 through 2012.

Their admissions earlier this week are proof Bubble 2.0 has met Pin 2.0. KB Home’s 85% increase in revenue and Lennar’s 130% increase in revenue since 2011 have been nothing but a Federal Reserve/Wall Street/U.S. Treasury engineered scheme to repair the balance sheets of the insolvent Too Big To Trust Wall Street banks. The financial industry oligarchs and their servile lackey puppet politicians decided an easy money, Wall Street created scheme to boost home prices would benefit the .1% and restore some of their fraudulently acquired wealth. It isn’t a coincidence home prices rose in parallel with the Fed’s QE programs. And it isn’t a coincidence the bubble is rapidly deflating now that QE3 is over.

The fraudulent nature of the supposed housing recovery can be deciphered by analyzing a few pertinent data points. 30 year mortgage rates were in the 5% to 6% range during the first bubble. Mortgage rates have been consistently below 4% for the last three years. In a healthy market driven economy, these low rates should have brought in first time home buyers and led to a sustainable long-term recovery.

Instead, the number of homes bought by first time buyers has languished at record low levels. The majority of homes sold in 2011 and 2012 were distressed foreclosures and short sales, and the vast majority of sales in the last two years have been to Federal Reserve financed Wall Street investors, Chinese billionaires and fast buck flippers. New home sales of just above 400,000 five years into an economic recovery are at previous recession lows, despite record low mortgage rates. They languish 65% below 2005 levels, when KB Home and Lennar were minting money. Existing home sales of 5 million are back at 1999 levels and 30% below the 2005 highs. This pitiful result is after $3.5 trillion of QE, extremely low mortgage rates, and tremendous hype from the NAR and the corporate MSM (It’s always the best time to buy).

The falsity of the housing recovery storyline can be seen in the fact that mortgage applications linger at 1995 levels, even though mortgage rates are 400 basis points lower than they were in 1995. A critical thinking individual might ask how home prices could rise by 20% since 2012 even though mortgage purchase applications are 20% lower than they were in 2012 and 65% below 2005 levels. The answer is they couldn’t have risen by 20% without massive monetary manipulation and insider deals between Wall Street banks, Wall Street hedge funds, FNMA, Freddie Mac, The Fed, and the U.S. Treasury.

gt10mbap

You see, average Americans buy houses not as an investment, but as a place to live. They save enough for a down payment by spending less than they earn, and then make monthly payments for 30 years from their rising household income. Of course, that was the old days. Real median household income is exactly where it was in 1995. It is currently below the level of 1989. Average Americans have made no headway in 20 years. The median price of a home in 1995, according to the Census Bureau, was $128,000. The median price of a home today is $281,000. When prices go up 120% and your real income remains stagnant, even record low mortgage rates is just pushing on a string. With real wages continuing to fall, young people saddled with a trillion dollars of student loan debt, the full impact of the Obamacare neutron bomb (kills small business, doctors and jobs, but not insurance conglomerates or government bureaucracy) just detonating, and an economy clearly going into the tank, there is absolutely no possibility of a real housing recovery in the foreseeable future.

nnnnffffff

The Too Big To Trust banks have consistently accounted for 35% to 55% of all mortgage originations in the U.S. over the last four years. Wells Fargo is the undisputed leader. All of these banks have reported dreadful financial results this week, with plunging revenues and profits, even with accounting shenanigans like relieving loan loss reserves and marking their balance sheets to fantasy rather than true market values. In the midst of a supposed housing recovery, with mortgage rates at historic lows, the largest mortgage originator in the world, saw their mortgage originations FALL by 12% over last year. They are down 65% from two years ago. JP Morgan and Citigroup also saw their mortgage businesses contracting. These banks have been firing thousands of people in their mortgage divisions. This is surely a sign of a healthy growing housing market. Right?

Essentially, the entire housing recovery storyline has revolved around the Federal Reserve providing free money to Wall Street banks, who then withheld foreclosures from the market, sold them in bulk at inflated prices to Wall Street hedge funds like Blackstone, who then created a nationwide rental business, driving prices higher. FNMA and Freddie Mac did their part by selling their bulk foreclosures to the same connected hedge funds. The average person had no opportunity to bid on foreclosed homes and reap the benefits of lower prices. Blackstone has since created a new derivative, by packaging their rental income streams into an “investment” to sell to muppets. Their rental properties are concentrated in the previous bubble markets of Arizona, California, Florida, and Nevada. What a beautiful business concept. Free money from their Federal Reserve sugar daddy, kicking people out of their homes and then renting their houses back to them, driving prices higher by restricting supply and stopping new household formations, double dipping by creating a new exotic subprime investment opportunity, and then exiting stage left before it all blows sky high again.

https://confoundedinterest.files.wordpress.com/2015/01/20131220_landlord_0.jpg

The areas of the country with the highest percentage of Wall Street owned rental properties have had the largest price  increases over the last three years. Some people never learn. Blackstone and the rest of the Wall Street crowd stopped buying properties in 2014. They’ve achieved their objective – easy profits. They have no intention of being long-term landlords. They are seeking the greater fools to take these properties off their hands at inflated prices. The result will be rapidly falling prices, as there is no real demand for these properties.

wayoutweat

The only thing propping up the housing market has been QE, connected Wall Street insiders, Chinese billionaires trying to get their money out of China before their collapse, and the usual flip that house morons you’ve seen on cable TV. QE has ceased. The Wall Street shysters are selling. The Chinese billionaires are only impacting the high end. The low IQ flippers are stuck holding the bag again. It’s no coincidence the Case-Shiller Index has been in a steady DECLINE since the beginning of 2014. Prices have round tripped back to 2012 levels and are headed back to 2009 levels. What a shame. Maybe they can hand out t-shirts that say:

THE FED PRINTED $3.5 TRILLION AND ALL I GOT WAS THIS STUPID T-SHIRT

Two of the biggest home builders in the country have already warned that 2015 is going to be bad. And they are surely painting a rosier picture than they will ever admit. Corporate executives aren’t known for honesty or forthrightness. A perfect storm is brewing and the second Fed induced housing bubble of this century is deflating rapidly. The plunge in oil prices is not due to over-supply. It’s due to under-demand. A global deflationary contraction is underway. What higher paying employment growth and capital investment that has occurred since 2009 was spurred by high oil prices. Texas has led the charge. Energy related companies are announcing thousands of layoffs, and the fun has just begun. Lance Roberts explains the ripple effects:

The majority of the jobs “created” since the financial crisis have been lower wage paying jobs in retail, healthcare and other service sectors of the economy. Conversely, the jobs created within the energy space are some of the highest wage paying opportunities available in engineering, technology, accounting, legal, etc. In fact, each job created in energy related areas has had a “ripple effect” of creating 2.8 jobs elsewhere in the economy from piping to coatings, trucking and transportation, restaurants and retail.

Energy companies have accounted for 25% of all S&P 500 capital expenditures. They are slashing cap-ex budgets by billions. Revenues and profits of energy companies are collapsing. Unemployment claims have already begun to rise. Retail sales growth below 3% always portends or confirms recession. People without jobs, burdened with student loan debt, and living on the same income they had in 1989, do not buy houses. Without QE and Wall Street hedge funds to prop up the market, the bubble is popped. Maybe someone should ask Ben Bernanke at one of his $300,000 lunch time speeches for Bank of America what he thinks about the housing market. He does have an Ivy league education and did save the world.

“We’ve never had a decline in house prices on a nationwide basis. So, what I think what is more likely is that house prices will slow, maybe stabilize, might slow consumption spending a bit. I don’t think it’s gonna drive the economy too far from its full employment path, though.”Ben Bernanke – July 2005

 

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26 Comments
Stucky
Stucky
January 16, 2015 10:14 am

Another data point, and this is strictly anecdotal, is that we get calls from a mortgage company just about EVERY SINGLE DAY …. in the past three months they’ve missed maybe 3 or 4 days. I am not kidding.

The WORST offender is Quicken Loan ….. “engineered to annoy you to fuckin’ death”. They call several times per week. At this point I “answer” and IMMEDIATLY hang up without saying a word. They call right back. I answer and hand up. They call back. If you think I’m bullshitting, you would be wrong. This happened a few weeks ago. They called at least ten times like that. Like it was a fucking game of attrition …… and, I won.

Anyway, I know from experience … do you know what it means when a loan officer makes endless cold calls? It means they are ……… DESPERATE.

Stucky
Stucky
January 16, 2015 10:16 am

goddammit … maybe I should check my spelling and grammar before I hit “submit”???? dumb ass

TE
TE
January 16, 2015 10:22 am

@Stuck, aw, you’re not a “dumb ass” my friend.

WordPress continues to eat shit.

The end.

BUCKHED
BUCKHED
January 16, 2015 10:24 am

Stuck..you are going about it all wrong…have fun with these folks. I love it when the rep for Time Warner calls…even though I have their cable service. I ask them questions like…do you have channels with Nekkid People on it ? Some of the folks bust out laughing….so do I .

card802
card802
January 16, 2015 10:28 am

More good news, on top of 30 ways the apocalypse will start, I’m so giddy I may just take the rest of the day off……

The shit is starting to happen faster……….

card802
card802
January 16, 2015 10:30 am

Goddammit, should always be capitalized. Please make a note of it.

TE
TE
January 16, 2015 10:45 am

@Stuck, I enjoy the fun game of answering, saying “hello!,” then I set the phone down and walk away.

Later on when the buzzing starts, I throw it back on its cradle.

The only company this didn’t work with was Omaha Steaks. They called me non-stop from mid December until I finally asked them to take me off the list.

If you ask them to take you off the call list, and they don’t, there is already a preset law stating what you are paid. Most legitimate companies will cease nearly immediately, just keep a log if they don’t.

The problems are the companies that use 3rd party/outside contractors that happen to be outside our borders. Those bastards are the worst because our regulators don’t touch them. These are the ones I love to walk away from. When my daughter was too little to say many words, I would hand the phone to her. It amused me to imagine the person on the other end trying to figure out if they had someone or not. And it makes them pay AT&T, and that makes me happy.

BUCKHED
BUCKHED
January 16, 2015 10:57 am

Why isnt there a big pool of 1st time buyers? 1st all of the youngsters who have been in the workforce the last few years are still living with their parents trying to pay off 50k or better in student loans…they have zero income to put down on a house. Next,another group has crappy credit because of their house getting repo’d in the crash.

Dont worry Fannie and Freddie are cooking up those zero down,100% loans again…good for everyone right…LMAO

TE
TE
January 16, 2015 11:16 am

Funny how rent and college costs have skyrocketed, not to mention digital entertainment, for our millennials and young families, yet our planning geniuses keep behaving like these are the targets to suck even more. Even as the companies quit hiring them.

How can rents increase when wages have decreased, mandated costs increased, minimum wage increased (still not enough to afford the increase, but surely made things more expensive for the rest of us), food increased, etc? How does making less cash equate to higher spending on necessities with unlimited growth potential?

The ONLY way it can is through Section 8 spending. The freaking Treasury lent them the money to buy the houses and fix them up (at $24k per house), now I’d bet a huge percentage of these are being “rented” by HUD.

How much money could you make if you were bonused the funds to buy houses at any price, the funds to fix them up to bullshit Fed regulatory standards, then Fed money pays the rent that enables the long term payback of the initial loans?

Now that the purchases and flood of remodel money is drying up, what could go wrong? Why can’t we all get in on that shit? No wonder young families are living in grandpa and grandma’s basement.

We grow ever closer to the drain. Reality gets even more distasteful as we near the center. What a crap deal we are all getting. Thanks for your continued efforts to bring this to the light of day.

Stucky
Stucky
January 16, 2015 11:22 am

I despise telemarketers in GENERAL … and, on occasion, I do fuck with them … ESPECIALLY if the voice on the other end is a fuckin’ dothead.

But … but …. in those rare moments where Compassion overtakes my darkened soul, I fully realize the poor schmuck on the other end of the line is just that …. a poor schmuck trying to forage for his next paycheck.

No doubt it is very likely he or she HATES what they are doing. In many cases they are educated people, maybe had a skilled job before they were down-sized. They do what they gotta do to get by. At least they aren’t grazing at the Free Shit Buffet … gotta give them credit or that.

I just can’t hate on them personally. In fact, it often saddens me. There but for the grace of God go I …..

BUCKHED
BUCKHED
January 16, 2015 12:53 pm

TE…I have a friend that is in the rental business…one of the biggest in the country. The laws that have been written to aide those in that business are pretty un-real. It’s made him very wealthy .

Stuck…I used to feel bad about messing with the tele-marketers . All of my teasing is good natured and not mean in any aspect. I’ve had friends listen on the speaker phone and they were rolling on the floor . One friend said that when the marketer hung up he probably laughed for a few minutes as opposed to the folks who cuss them out and hang up .

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
January 16, 2015 1:27 pm

https://www.donotcall.gov/

You may have to enter your various phone #’s every 5 years (I think ones being registered on the Do Not Call list expires after 5 years.) Once your phone # is officially on the Do No Call list, every single violation is subject to an $11,000 fine. I haven’t gotten a telemarketing call for 12 years.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
January 16, 2015 1:30 pm

I honestly didn’t even know telemarketing still existed.

Westcoaster
Westcoaster
January 16, 2015 3:04 pm

Great article Admin! @Stucky..good work messing with Quicken Loans. I had the misfortune to finance my last home purchase through these fine folks. First thing they did was bump the interest rate I was “guaranteed” by 1/4 point right before closing. When I screamed, their attitude was “fuck you-take it or leave it” so I ate it. Then, about 9 months into the loan when servicing was flipped to Chase, I discovered Quicken had totally fucked up the escrow account, so my payment would increase by almost $1,000 a month for a year, then would be $300 a month higher (than stated at closing) for the balance of the 30 year loan. What they did was to ignore the “Mello Roos” taxes of $2,500 a year in their payment calculation. “Mello Roos” is when the developer sticks it to the homeowner for costs of the infrastructure of the development (roads, streetlights, sewers, etc) I think it’s a 15-20 year bond that you pay through the county taxes.
Quicken wouldn’t admit they made a mistake and Chase wouldn’t negotiate the escrow, so I let them take it back. Fuckers!

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
January 16, 2015 3:10 pm

Quicken is supposedly the best of the internet mortgage companies. They may be.

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
January 16, 2015 3:24 pm

I gotta hand it to the govt and the DoNotCall list. My wife and I have not had a single telemarketing or robocall in over five years and probably MUCH longer than that.

@TE said:
“If you ask them to take you off the call list, and they don’t, there is already a preset law stating what you are paid.”

I’ve read that quite often but never met anyone who tried to or actually got paid.

@T4C, following that advice will probably earn you an unwelcome visit from the gestapo. Check out a comedian named Tom Mabe. He knows how to fuck with telemarketers.

Stucky
Stucky
January 16, 2015 3:54 pm

“Quicken is supposedly the best of the internet mortgage companies. They may be.”
———- Iska Waran

Depends on what you mean by “best”.

They certainly aren’t the cheapest. Think about their marketing costs ……. they run commercials (seemingly) on every fucking cable channel in existence …. morning, afternoon, and evening. Someone is paying for that. YOU.

Rise Up
Rise Up
January 16, 2015 4:02 pm

Housing market bubble? What me worry, the stock market is up 200 pts. today!

/sarc off

Stucky
Stucky
January 16, 2015 8:36 pm

There is something SERIOUSLY wrong wif Amurika when this revealing article gets 20 comments, and a man-fucks-horsey article gets 25. Really.

starfcker
starfcker
January 16, 2015 9:30 pm

Obamacare nuetron bomb. People still don’t realize just how bad they are about to get fucked, and how little appetite to attack the law there is in congress or the supreme court. Lotta sound and fury, but virtually nothing. The fix truly is in.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
January 16, 2015 11:55 pm

Stucky, just to be clear. Getting a loan from Quicken may be a horrific and expensive experience…which could still mean it’s the best internet mortgage company.

Stucky
Stucky
January 17, 2015 8:01 am

” …. which could still mean it’s the best internet mortgage company.” —– Iska Waran

You may very well be right.

I have never gotten a mortgage over the Internet …. and I NEVER will … and I would recommend the same for everyone.

Now, I know it’s been done hundreds of thousands of times. Probably most of the time successfully. The more “perfect” the borrower is — meaning, great credit score, great job history, more than enough income, a large down payment, etc — the easier it is to get the mortgage from anywhere, including the internet.

Here’s a sentence every mortgage borrower should tell their loan officer right up front — “I want you to go over the GFE (Good Faith Estimate) with me line item by line item.” Sure, that can also be done over the phone.

But, you know what? I want to see them sweat … I want them to look me in the eye … cuz it’s much harder to bullshit face-to-face. And, then, if there are bullshit or excessive charges where they won’t budge then I want; 1) to be there to have immediate access to a supervisor and/or 2) I want them to know I’m serious about shopping around for another broker … as they watch my fat ass walk out the door.

And when that’s all done I want to tell them face to face the second sentence every borrower should say …. that at closing I will compare the GFE to the final HUD1 closing document, line item by line item…….. and they better be DAMN close. (About a 10% difference is allowed these days … that’s still too much.)

All this is much better done in person.

Stucky
Stucky
January 17, 2015 8:54 am

For Admin

Sticking this here with hopes you will see it.

Yesterday …. the NCAA announced that it will restore the 111 wins that it forced the Penn State football program to vacate in the wake of the Jerry Sandusky scandal … thus restoring Poppa Joe as the Division I college football’s all-time wins leader.

I know this will make you happy. I just know it.

http://www.ncaa.org/about/resources/media-center/news/ncaa-reaches-proposed-settlement-corman-lawsuit