Home Prices During Stagflation

REAL ESTATE NEWS (Los Angeles, CA) — Stagflation indicates both upward and downward pressure on residential real estate property prices, but with inflationary pressures getting the upper hand. While increasing interest rates may cause some home prices to fall due to reduced demand, runaway inflation has already gained a foothold, creating its own reinforcing psychology among the home buyers, sellers, builders, landlords, renters and investors. In addition, governments are adversely affected by economic crashes caused by rising interest rates in several ways: Not only does a falling economy cause the government to lose revenue, and thus to become unable to pay its own debts and obligations, but financially suffering voters tend to expel administrations, causing political losses, high turnover and government volatility. The politicians will continue to lean towards inflation, continuing to call it “temporary,” someone else’s fault, or some may even continue to falsely call inflation “good.” Because inflation involves larger amounts of money, some will continue to try to refer to it as some kind of “wealth”. It’s not. The true nature of price inflation is a destruction of the value of the currency. Inflation makes us about as wealthy as the holders of monopoly money.

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The median home price in Orange County, California just topped $1 million for the first time. The area now has 45 out of its 83 zip codes averaging seven figures for the average home value. This milestone represents the 15th record high in a two-year, pandemic-era home-buying binge. Statewide, the median price of a home hit another record high of more than $849,000 in March, driven primarily by a surge in the sale of higher-priced homes, according to Realtors Association’s data.

The highest of high home prices are found in the San Francisco Bay Area, where median price in March was $2.28 million in San Mateo County, $2.06 million in San Francisco County, $1.95 million in Santa Clara County and $1.737 million in Marin County. Orange County prices rose 3.5% from February to March, and 22% in a year. Some see a bit of good news for buyers: the high prices have cooled the spending spree. March sales are down 19% from a year ago, according to ABC News.

Mortgage rates are now rising. Will this slow an out-of-control housing market? For the last ten years, extremely low mortgage rates encouraged home buyers to bid up the cost of housing. This has been especially true during the last several years, during the virus hysteria, when rates fell to unheard-of levels, and home prices exploded across Southern California and much of the United States.

Things are changing. Mortgage interest rates are rising at the fastest pace in many years, hitting 5% last week for the first time since 2011, according to Freddie Mac. Just six weeks ago, the average rate for a 30-year fixed mortgage was under 4%. In November, it was below 3%. The rapid rise, on top of soaring prices, has made homeownership suddenly more expensive. The question then becomes: If the average home buyer can afford less, are home prices going to drop?

Several top real estate experts, when asked this question, said that they don’t foresee a substantial price decline unless we encounter a recession. Real estate experts, however, are usually not economists. They are salespeople, often biased towards data that increases the number of transactions. The number of transactions in Downtown Los Angeles has been on the low side for several years. While safer suburban neighborhoods boomed during the virus hysteria, inner city suburban real estate stagnated or fell. The lowest priced lofts at Little Tokyo Lofts in Downtown L.A., for example, declined in price as the average home buyer grew more averse to perceived sketchy adjacent neighborhoods like Skid Row. For Downtown LA, prices began to rebound in September of 2021. Today, home prices in DTLA are surging due to extreme inflationary pressure from a dollar that is losing its value internationally, at home and abroad.

In response to rising interest rates, real estate prices are likely going to continue to climb, but in smaller increments than Southern California’s recent 17% annual home price growth rate.

Economists and other experts pointed to several factors that should largely uphold home values: a shortage of everything, including a low supply of homes for sale; rising incomes due to inflation; falling unemployment as virus hysteria wanes; and a tendency for what some nonsensical opinions have called “homeowner greed,” while what we are really seeing is more appropriately termed “FOMO” Fear Of Missing Out, along with a very real threat and rational fear of runaway inflation. Because home prices and rents react strongly to a falling dollar, real estate provides very strong protection from severe inflation.

In the past, steep increases in mortgage rates have slowed home price spurts. Rising rates will have this effect this time, but the severity of overspending, historic radical Fed policy, delay in initiating rate increases, overall accommodating Fed, bureaucratic deep state that is petrified of stock market crashes; and the atom bomb of dollar destroyers: blockchain cryptocurrencies. Bitcoin, ethereum and other cryptos shall prove to be the unexpected nails in the coffin for the U.S. dollar. Good money chases out bad. Newer, better money destroys old, abused money. The U.S. Dollar is toast, meaning that we’re most likely to eventually experience Weimar Republic / Zimbabwe style of absolute monetary devastation. In other words, a loaf of bread could end up costing not just $10 or $20, but $1,000 or $1 million or more! That is the end result of bureaucratic abuse and overprinting, along with total crushing by newer, better emerging monetary technologies that are independent and immune to government abuse.

Buyers can afford less. This shows up as industry professionals reporting fewer visitors at open houses, fewer multiple offers per home and fewer mortgage applications. Real estate professionals have been reporting cooling.

Most home buyers now agree that interest rates have an effect, a very significant effect. They decrease the number of home buyers, and decrease the amount of home that the average person can buy. While this can certainly slow down inflation, it cannot necessarily stop runaway inflation that has already had too much of a head start, particularly inflation that has other major causes in addition to interest rates that were too low for too long. Turmoil is in the cards. Rising prices, along with crashy sideways spurting markets. The Fed and government fits and stops, panics and printing, waves of back and forth economic uncertainty lie ahead. Welcome to the reality, the impending full bore brunt of stagflation. The good news is that, along with gold, quality stocks, commodities, collectibles and cryptocurrencies, real estate is among the best protections from inflation and economic stagnation.

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Real Estate Warning by Billionaire Charlie Munger

REAL ESTATE NEWS (Los Angeles, CA) — Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway partner Charle Munger recently mentioned that we’re in a big bubble. How is this likely to play out when they’re printing money on the scale that modern nations are printing today? Japan the United States, Europe etc. We’re getting into new territory in terms of size. There’s never been anything quite like what the federal government and Federal Reserve are doing now. We do know from what has historically happened in other nations: If you try to print too much money, it eventually causes terrible trouble. We’re closer to terrible trouble than we’ve been in the past, but it may still be a long way off. Charlie certainly hopes so. When fed chair Volcker, after the inflation of the 1970s, took the primary rate to 20%, and the government was paying 15% on its government bonds, a horrible recession followed, lasted a long time. A lot of agony followed, and we all certainly hope that we’re not going there again. | INTERVIEW

Munger believes the conditions that allowed Volcker to do that, without interference from the politicians, were very unusual. In 2020 hindsight, he believes that it was a good thing, but he would not predict that our modern politicians will be as willing to permit a new fed chair to get that tough with the economy, and to bring on that kind of a recession. Thus, our new troubles are likely to be different from the old troubles. We may wish we had a Volker-style recession instead of what we’re going to get. The troubles that come to us could be worse than what Volker was dealing with, and harder to fix. Think of all of the latin american countries that print too much money. They end up with strongmen dictatorships. That’s what Plato said happened in the early greek city-state democracies: one person, one vote, a lot of legality, and you end up with demagogues who lather up the population with free money. Pretty soon, you don’t have your democracy any more. Munger thinks that Plato may have been right. That accurately described what happened in Greece way back then, and it’s happened again and again in latin America. We don’t want to go there. Charlie Munger does not want to go there.

The United States has done something pretty extreme, and we don’t know how bad the troubles will be whether we’re going to be like Japan or something a lot worse. What makes life interesting is that we don’t know how it’s going to work out. We do know that we’re flirting with serious trouble. Munger reminds us that some of our earlier fears were overblown. Japan is still existing as a civilized nation, in spite of unbelievable access by all former standards in terms of money printing. Think of how seductive it is: you have a bunch of interest-bearing debts, and you pay them off with checking accounts on which you’re no longer paying interest. Think of how seductive that is for a bunch of legislators. They merely get rid of the interest payments, and the money supply goes up. It seems like heaven. Of course, when things get that seductive, they’re likely to be overused.

Munger credits some of his career success with placing money into quality investments that can get through good times and bad. Investors should be equally ready for boom and bust, be ready for day and night by buying at the right price. Nothing is worth an infinite price. When investing for the long-term, it is ok to pay a fairly large price for a particularly strong investment.

What’s coming? A new bunch of emperors.

We have overall a hugely strong economy and a hugely strong technical civilization that’s not going away. Munger reminds us that our weakness today is that the U.S. now tries to solve economic inefficiencies by getting rid of the debt through an artificial non-interest bearing checking account where interest would historically need to be paid. Not only do we have a serious problem, but the solution that is the easiest for the politicians, and for the federal reserve, is just to print more money and solve the temporary problems.

That, of course, is going to have some long-term dangers. We know what happened in early 1920’s Germany when the Weimar Republic just kept printing money. The whole thing blew up, and that was a contributor to the rise of Hitler. This stuff is dangerous and serious. If you keep doubling down on that risky behavior, you’re flirting with danger. Unless there’s some discipline in the process. Japan has gotten away with some of this, according to Munger.

(Charlie is forgetting that Japan, with or without discipline, has paid a hefty price for its low interest rates: squandering its 1980s economic and technical dominance, replacing it with 30-years of relative stagnation.)

In his whole adult life, Munger has never hoarded cash waiting for better conditions. He has just invested in the best thing he could find. Today, Berkshire has quite a bit of excess cash, looking for the right deal to responsibly invest it in.

Today, people are worried about inflation and the future of the republic. Inflation is a very serious subject. Munger says, “It’s the way democracies die.” It’s a huge danger, he warns, “Once you’ve got a populous that learns it can vote itself money, if you overdo it too much, you ruin your civilization.” It’s a big long-range danger. Look at the Roman empire with an absolute ruler. They inflated the currency steadily for hundreds of years and eventually the whole roman empire collapsed. It’s the biggest long-run danger we have — next to nuclear war.

Munger thinks the safe assumption for an investor is that, over the next hundred years, the currency’s going to zero. That’s his working hypothesis. This kind of very dangerous environment brought in Hitler. It was the combination of the Weimar inflation, where they utterly destroyed the savings of the middle class in Germany, followed by the great depression. It was a one-two punch, then Hitler came in — a dictator hell-bent for world war. The lesson: Germany was a very advanced and civilized nation, yet Germany voted Hitler in after they somehow let their nation deteriorate too much. Money printing and reckless expenditures leads to depression, world war and tens of millions dead.

In today’s age of Keynes (socialism) we’re going to get big government reaction to economic crises, health crises, political crises, any crisis. The reaction this time was bigger than it’s ever been before in the history of the united states. they just threw money at the problem. Munger goes on to say that people are getting more spoiled. They demand more and more for less and less. He says that the world is driven by envy. Everybody is five times better off than they used to be, but they take it for granted. All they think about is somebody else has having more now. He reminds us that the bible warns us not to covet our neighbors ass.

An example of the damage of today’s culture of envy: During the great depression of 1929, it was safe to walk in the poorest neighborhoods. Today is shockingly different. Walk in Los Angeles while wearing a Rolex, and get mugged. Pretentious expenditures lead to dissatisfaction. Investing in quality stocks and apartment houses provide enough diversification. Four good assets is plenty, according to Charlie.

Good investments? it’s going to be way harder for the group graduating from college now for them to get rich and stay rich. It’s going to be way harder for them than it was for Munger’s generation. Think about what it costs to own a house in a desirable neighborhood in a city like Los Angeles. Munger believes that we’ll probably end up with higher income taxes too. He says that the investment world is plenty hard.

Inflation’s effects on the future is going to give more happiness to those with more modest ambitions in terms of what they choose to deal with. Skills will come into play. To everyone who finds the current investment climate hard, difficult and somewhat confusing, Charlie says, “Welcome to adult life.”

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Copyright © This free information provided courtesy L.A. Loft Blog with information provided by Corey Chambers, Realty Source Inc, DRE 01889449. We are not associated with the seller, homeowner’s association or developer. For more information, contact 213-880-9910 or visit LALoftBlog.com Licensed in California. All information provided is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed and should be independently verified. Properties subject to prior sale or rental. This is not a solicitation if buyer or seller is already under contract with another broker.