Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

GDP, M&A, EBITDA, P/E, NASDAQ, Econo-thread Part 13

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • I am paying $80,000 after tax in rent

    Holy freeholies.
    I came upon a barroom full of bad Salon pictures in which men with hats on the backs of their heads were wolfing food from a counter. It was the institution of the "free lunch" I had struck. You paid for a drink and got as much as you wanted to eat. For something less than a rupee a day a man can feed himself sumptuously in San Francisco, even though he be a bankrupt. Remember this if ever you are stranded in these parts. ~ Rudyard Kipling, 1891

    Comment


    • edit: thanks for posting three times while I was writing this crap!!


      Originally posted by HershOstropoler
      I doubt it is such a tiny portion. Also, were LTCM's troubles based on such exotic bets?
      The derivatives market is huge but most of the nominal value of the contracts are pretty vanilla, and fairly short term. They are a direct result of the internationalization of trade and investment.

      Interest rate swaps and currency swaps are two of the largest catagories, and these are pretty simple. With Interest rate swaps an entity can borrow in the fixed rate market, but pay a floating rate of interest or vice versa. Given the typically positively sloped yield curve, periodic caps and floors, and the time decay of a maturity, it would take cataclysmic instantaneous change in the rate of inflation to impact most contracts.

      Currency swaps are similar, I borrow from you for a year in Euros, but get the check from the bank in Dollars. The following year the bank's swap in the opposite direction matures and I pay them Dollars, which they use to settle their maturing EUR/USD swap and pay you back your Euros. The bank keeps the bid/offer spread of 0.001 or what ever.

      LTCM used a lot of illiquid esoterics/exotics AND leveraged themselves up to 20:1. They simply didn't have the capital to wait out 3sigma events. When forced to liquidate illiquid positions - that everybody knew they were being forced to liquidate - they couldn't find a bid because no one wanted to step in front of their trainwreck until prices were really really compensatory. So the entire firm became illiquid, and everything they were able to sell just shocked the market more and wiped out more of their capital. They were too big. Finding a buyer for a million USD worth of rubles is difficult, finding an emergency buyer of a couple of Billion USD worth of rubles can cause a crisis.


      I'd also consider that a bubble in such a conservative asset category, esp when you have inflationary expectations and a highly artificial financing of that rise.
      It does just become a question of the semantic difference between a bubble and an overvaluation.

      Your 'highly artificial' financing is, I think overstated, but as long as there is popular encouragement for subsidizing home ownership, I don't envision the asset class becoming undervalued - hence my guess that the coming price decline will not overshoot to the downside.

      Also, what would even just a 10 % decline, concentrated in the most bubbled areas, do to the mortgage market?
      We have had two events in recent memory that give me some guidence on the impact of local bubble pops on the mortgage market.

      In the 80s, when the securitized mortgage market was just starting, Texas and Oklahoma were smacked around by the oil market. At that time, Texas and Oklahoma exposed paper traded at a small discount to the broad market - about a point (one percent). Individually traded mortgage pools at that time were significantly smaller then than they are now. Some of those deals were a couple of million original face versus todays deals that can be a couple of billion, so the geographic diversification was weaker then.

      The other regional event was the very weak California economy in the early 90s. Pools with a high percentage of California paper traded a quarter to a half percentage point behind other pools. Those pools were larger than the early Texas pools, but still in the 10 - 100 million range.

      If we are heading for a depression, then the 20% equity minimum for conventionals may prove to be a problem, but that would require a ~40% move in hot urban prices and a 20% move across the board - and you would still be looking at ~90% payout on existing pools.

      If that type of scenario developed, then there would certainly be a Resolution Trust type of structure put together to provide liquidity to homeowners so they wouldn't have to liquidate tertiary assets like 401ks and personal property, etc. into an illiquid market and screw up the general markets even more.


      "...3x US, versus 4x UK, and 6x in Japan..."

      Not sure what the point there is?
      My point here is that on a purchasing power basis, the US market is still not as overvalued as some others, and could defy the odds and continue to appreciate, very much to my chagrin. If that $1,000,000 piece of crap house next door goes up to $1,500,000 (and that would have been tax free to me) I will be certifiably one pissed hombre.

      Cheers!
      Be the bid!

      Comment


      • el freako - I concur on your statement about the impact, and trust your opinion about the English housing market.

        DuncanK - I agree. Not a great reason to be optimistic about the pace of our economic recovery is it.


        DanS - tell me about it. If we had a palace I could maybe make an exception, but it is just a single floor apartment 1200 sq ft, 3/2. I don't know where the people come from that can swing this. (we are here temporarily)
        Be the bid!

        Comment


        • Originally posted by DanS
          I am paying $80,000 after tax in rent

          Holy freeholies.
          hehe, never took Spanish did you? It's frijoles
          "When you ride alone, you ride with Bin Ladin"-Bill Maher
          "All capital is dripping with blood."-Karl Marx
          "Of course, my response to your Marx quote is 'So?'"-Imran Siddiqui

          Comment


          • Originally posted by Sten Sture
            My point here is that on a purchasing power basis, the US market is still not as overvalued as some others, and could defy the odds and continue to appreciate, very much to my chagrin. If that $1,000,000 piece of crap house next door goes up to $1,500,000 (and that would have been tax free to me) I will be certifiably one pissed hombre.

            Cheers!

            As housing is not traded internationally then I think that comparing housing costs in differing countries with differing legal systems, lending requirements and even something as basic as popualtion density - therefore any comparison would be pretty meaningless (at least in terms of how high or low house prices can go).

            What you should do is compare over time - could you point me to an index of the median house price in the US ? (preferably one going back at least 20 years).

            I will then make a forecast about how much the fall is likely to be.
            Last edited by el freako; March 6, 2003, 17:32.
            19th Century Liberal, 21st Century European

            Comment


            • Originally posted by Sten Sture
              My point here is that on a purchasing power basis, the US market is still not as overvalued as some others, and could defy the odds and continue to appreciate, very much to my chagrin. If that $1,000,000 piece of crap house next door goes up to $1,500,000 (and that would have been tax free to me) I will be certifiably one pissed hombre.

              Cheers!
              Population density has to come into play when comparing housing prices in the US to that of UK and Japan. There may still be a bubble in Japan, but we should expect real estate to be more expensive there because they have a greater population density.
              "When you ride alone, you ride with Bin Ladin"-Bill Maher
              "All capital is dripping with blood."-Karl Marx
              "Of course, my response to your Marx quote is 'So?'"-Imran Siddiqui

              Comment


              • I don't think there is a bubble in Japan.

                At it's peak in 1990 that ratio was over 10 for japan so 6 is a very large fall.
                19th Century Liberal, 21st Century European

                Comment


                • Originally posted by el freako
                  I don't think there is a bubble in Japan.

                  At it's peak in 1990 that ratio was over 10 for japan so 6 is a very large fall.
                  No, probably not.
                  "When you ride alone, you ride with Bin Ladin"-Bill Maher
                  "All capital is dripping with blood."-Karl Marx
                  "Of course, my response to your Marx quote is 'So?'"-Imran Siddiqui

                  Comment


                  • Directly comparable? probably not, to be sure.

                    Nevertheless, housing is a very real expense/asset.


                    Here is the National Association of Home Builders annual data for existing and new homes.

                    Be the bid!

                    Comment


                    • Well, using that data and relating it to Disposable income per head (which is what I used to make the forecasts for the UK)....

                      ... I'm forced to conclude that there is no bubble in US housing.

                      Here is s synopsis of the movements in House prices/disposable income relative to the level in 1970.

                      There was a generalized rise in the 1970's with the peak in 1979 at 20.2% above the 1970 level.
                      During the early 1980's recession this fell back to exactly the level it was in 1970 in 1985, but by 1989 a small boom had raised it to 13.4% above the 1970 level.
                      Again as recession struck the level fell back (to 0.9% above in 1995) since then it has been steadily rising (with a small setback in 2000-01) and was 5.0% above the 1970 level in 2002.

                      As such I can forsee no nominal price falls for the US as a whole for the foreseeable future.


                      There is still a bit of a bubble in 'equity withdrawal' (which is running at 4% of disposable income) but that is nowhere near as worrying as that plus overvalued house prices.
                      19th Century Liberal, 21st Century European

                      Comment


                      • though I guess that if household disposable income is in a bubble, then a collapse in that measure could result in significant declines in the valuation of the housing stock....


                        In digging around I saw that the median price per square foot was $63.60 for the States in 1999, the most recent # I found. I wonder what the equivalent is in the UK, Japan and elsewhere? How is it quoted in Europe? Square meter??
                        Be the bid!

                        Comment


                        • Well the tax cuts have massively boosted disposable income over the last 2 years.

                          Real growth in household's: Total Income, Disposable Income

                          2001 1.3%, 1.8%
                          2002 1.6%, 4.5%

                          Of course the upshot of that is the rapidly deteriorating financial situation of the US government:

                          Net Lending as % of : total government receipts. GDP

                          2000: +4.7%, 1.4%
                          2001: -1.6%, -0.5%
                          2002: -12.6%, -3.5%
                          19th Century Liberal, 21st Century European

                          Comment


                          • I agree that disposible income is the primary determinant, but there are other factors that could be important. Probably new home construction, the distribution of that income, and iterest rates are important. There may not be much of a bubble, but if the economy goes bad home prices could fall more than 10%.
                            "When you ride alone, you ride with Bin Ladin"-Bill Maher
                            "All capital is dripping with blood."-Karl Marx
                            "Of course, my response to your Marx quote is 'So?'"-Imran Siddiqui

                            Comment


                            • Sten:

                              First about your rent - for an appartment??? Insane...

                              As for derivatives, sure they have their use. The big question is if they have created a situation where risk did not just get redistributed, but disregarded. Just as in the old flood insurance game, we won't know for sure until the next flood hits. I'm particularly curious how the GSEs use derivatives.

                              "LTCM used a lot of illiquid esoterics/exotics AND leveraged themselves up to 20:1."

                              Good ol' leverage... how much are the GSEs leveraged? How much are those holding the other end of derivatives leveraged/capitalised?

                              "Your 'highly artificial' financing is, I think overstated, but as long as there is popular encouragement for subsidizing home ownership, I don't envision the asset class becoming undervalued"

                              I'm not talking so much about the tax breaks, but about the artificially low interest rates.

                              As for regional busts, those earlier examples are almost from a different world, are they not?

                              "My point here is that on a purchasing power basis, the US market is still not as overvalued as some others"

                              Others have pointed it out already, it's just a matter of domestic cost structures. Scarcity of land is one factor, also resulting in a larger share of "urban prices". Building traditions are another - few people here like the cardboard type house, fewer than in the US, I assume.

                              "In digging around I saw that the median price per square foot was $63.60 for the States in 1999, the most recent # I found. I wonder what the equivalent is in the UK, Japan and elsewhere? How is it quoted in Europe? Square meter??"

                              m2, yes. That would be 700 $/m2, right? Just - for land, for construction cost, or the total per m2 of living space?

                              ElF:

                              "Well, using that data and relating it to Disposable income per head"

                              I don't think this is a good indicator, but what does the relation look like?
                              “Now we declare… that the law-making power or the first and real effective source of law is the people or the body of citizens or the prevailing part of the people according to its election or its will expressed in general convention by vote, commanding or deciding that something be done or omitted in regard to human civil acts under penalty or temporal punishment….” (Marsilius of Padua, „Defensor Pacis“, AD 1324)

                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by HershOstropoler
                                I don't think this is a good indicator, but what does the relation look like?
                                I wonder what indicator you would use?
                                wages - but surely if the tax take goes up that effects the affordability of housing.
                                after tax wages - good luck getting the statistics for any meaningful period of time/coverage of the population.


                                The relation is pretty good IMO, with a fairly obvious trend level (at least in the UK as US).
                                Prices tend to stay at around this level for a few years after a slump and then boom - they then fall back to a bit below this level and recover, then the cycle repeats itself.
                                19th Century Liberal, 21st Century European

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X