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Some Saw the Crash Coming

By
Managing Real Estate Broker with Howard Hanna Rand Realty License # 49FA1074963

While going through some old archives to rebut some gnu who feels agents are overpaid, I found the following passage, which I authored on May 1, 2006, on another blog. This was over a year prior to the sub prime collapse of 2007 and the Fannie/Freddie crisis of 2008. 

The sales statistics for homes sold in my area for the first quarter of 2006 are out, and sales are down from the first quarter of 2005 by 14%. This, coupled with higher interest rates means that the pool of buyers is shrinking, which suppresses appreciation. Add to this the growing inventory from the lower sales rate, and, all together now, the boom is over. Oh, one more thing: in the next 18 months, millions of variable rate mortgages which started out as fixed for 2, 3 or 5 years will hit their adjustment period. This will flood the market with even more inventory as people try to jettison mortgages which they can no longer afford. Foreclosures will spike, putting more properties up for sale, and the bank-owned REOs will elbow out a significant number of regular folks who wish to sell and who may find themselves unable to get the price they need.  Guess when this really hits the fan? 2008, which, by the way, is a presidential election year.

If you don't want Hillary to be president, you better pray hard that they catch bin Laden, because that's the only thing that will turn things around for this administration.  

Of course, Barack Obama was on no one's presidential radar in May of 2006. Moreover, nobody could have predicted the house of cards that Freddie and Fannie were. As significant and unpredictable as those things were, the writing was on the wall anyway. There would be no soft landing. 

I'll finish my answer to the person who feels that licensees are overpaid and post it soon.

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Linda Mae Croom
Topock, AZ
(928) 768-3040

Great find.... I did however want Hillary for president....

Good Luck with the 'gnu' that thinks agents are overpaid.....

Dec 20, 2009 09:22 PM
Bill Gassett
RE/MAX Executive Realty - Hopkinton, MA
Metrowest Massachusetts Real Estate

Well there were a few that predicted big changes and this guy was right on the money!

Dec 20, 2009 11:17 PM
Bill Gassett
RE/MAX Executive Realty - Hopkinton, MA
Metrowest Massachusetts Real Estate

There more I think about it you must have had a lot of time on your hands back then because the Yankess were going no where fast:)

Dec 20, 2009 11:58 PM
J. Philip Faranda
Howard Hanna Rand Realty - Yorktown Heights, NY
Associate Broker / Office Manager

Bill: True. The $%^&^%$ Red Sox and Angels were kicking our asses and it was a coping mechanism.
2004 and 2007 were rough years, births of the kids aside.

I was at game 7 of the ALCS in 2004 behind the plate. It was awful.

Dec 21, 2009 12:07 AM
Paul Warkow
Paul Warkow-D.G. Weber Law Associates - Hauppauge, NY

If you really want to look up some one who all this coming go on you tube and search for Peter Schiff.  It was over 2 years ago that he was predicting the stock market collapse, unemployment and the housing collapse.  On any of these clips which are about his appearances on CNBC all the other so called experts were making fun of his doom and gloom predictions.

Dec 21, 2009 01:52 AM
Peter Mastroianni
RealPartner.com - Pelham, NY

Phil, you were spot on!  On May 1, 2006 my head was so far in the clouds I thought it would never rain.  It took real perspective to observe the coming changes in the middle of shangri la.

I bet it was difficult to find people to listen to reason.  Who wants to listen to bad news?  But considering your sales record you must have gotten through to some of them...

Dec 21, 2009 02:39 AM
Mitchell J Hall
Manhattan, NY
Lic Associate RE Broker - Manhattan & Brooklyn

Philip, Good for you! You were correct! My first blog post was in June 2006. I didn't predict a crash but I said Manhattan was in a buyer's market for the first time since the early 90's and we had a glut of inventory. My title was "Short-term glut - Long term opportunity"

A  broker actually said to me at the time "you can't call it a buyer's market - it's not official it wasn't reported in The NY Times". LOL

Dec 21, 2009 03:12 AM
J. Philip Faranda
Howard Hanna Rand Realty - Yorktown Heights, NY
Associate Broker / Office Manager

Mitchell, Good for me, bad for the economy. 

Dec 21, 2009 05:51 AM
Jason Sardi
Auto & Home & Life Insurance throughout North Carolina - Charlotte, NC
Your Agent for Life

Philip - Silly me, I thought the "bad times" would get better in about a year with one blog I wrote back in the day, specifically for the Lending Industry.  Boy was I wrong.  It seems your financial wisdom did shine through, Philip.  Now let's hope that the turn around for the better happens sooner rather than later.  Both for the short and long term.  As usual, time (or Philip) is the only teller:)

Dec 22, 2009 03:27 AM