Color Me Constitutionalistic

Say Goodbye to Big Bell. We did - hallelujah!

20 January 2008

In The News Today 20 Jan 2008

Living through a bubble from start up to cresting the wave is quite the education. Looking back, there are definite signs along the way. This Times of India article pointing up what we would now call, in technical terms, "a biggie":

Property rates double in 2 yrs
Times of India - India
"Normally, real estate rates appreciate at around 20 per cent a year or even lesser. So, doubling of prices in two years is big indeed," said a realtor. ...

Many spending less, just in case
Houston Chronicle - United States
By many measures the Houston economic picture is far rosier than the nation's, thanks to a sturdier real estate market and thriving energy industry. ... (video below)

It's Time to say GOOD BYE !
By Susanne in Key West
It's time to say Good Bye to Key West! After living for more than 7 years on this wonderful island we are ready to move on. Ready also to move on in life to other horizons, to another destination. Where exactly that will be and what we ...

Conchscooter_2 No Name Bonneville
By Conchscooter
... on No Name Key so you'll need to learn to maintain the generator, replace the batteries from time to time, and drive 20 minutes just to get to the Overseas Highway, which still leaves you an hour from the fleshpots of Key West. ...

Gps_tours_key_west_2 HIGH-TECH GPS TOURS DEBUT TO SHOWCASE LOW-KEY KEY WEST
KEY WEST, Florida Keys — Visitors are using high-tech handheld global positioning system units to tour the low-key island of Key West following the January 2008 debut of Go GPS Tours’ interactive audiovisual sightseeing experiences. ...

Search for Foreclosures Nationwide.

15 January 2008

Financial Times on Property

The economic news in London's Financial Times is not cheery, but it is also not emotional. As opposed to the hype and drama we read in U.S. economic news. We 'mericans like our drama. Well, ok, I do. But even I must say it's refreshing to read opinion and observations based on reality.

It is also noteworthy that the FT speaks in terms of a global economy, something the U.S. press avoids like the plague. Are we too good for the globe? Actually, we used to be. We used to be the pinnacle. If we don't control our spending and get our financial house in order, other countries of the world will be shaking their heads, too embarrassed for us to even look our way.

Here's our national debt:

The Gross National Debt

National_debt_graph_2 The National Debt has increased over $3,000,000,000,000 (Three Trillion Dollars) - that's 30% - since W has been in office. In your house, when you are deeply in debt, can't pay your current bills... do you keep spending?

We all joke about how, with a mortgage, "the bank owns my house." So, who owns the U.S.?

(Answer: The Federal Reserve. Which is not a government agency. It's a group of private bankers. So private we don't know who they are! And they own our country. But that's another post. Perhaps another blog...)

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08 January 2008

U.S. Credit Crisis Adds to Gloom in Norway

Narvik_norway_2 By MARK LANDLER, The New York Times

NARVIK, Norway, Nov. 30 — At this time of year, the sun does not rise at all this far north of the Arctic Circle. But Karen Margrethe Kuvaas says she has not been able to sleep well for days.

What is keeping her awake are the far-reaching ripple effects of the troubled housing market in sunny Florida, California and other parts of the United States.

Ms. Kuvaas is the mayor of Narvik, a remote seaport where the season’s perpetual gloom deepened even further in recent days after news that the town — along with three other Norwegian municipalities — had lost about $64 million, and potentially much more, in complex securities investments that went sour.

“I think about it every minute,” Ms. Kuvaas, 60, said in an interview, her manner polite but harried. “Because of this, we can’t focus on things that matter, like schools or care for the elderly.”

Norway’s unlucky towns are the latest victims — and perhaps the least likely ones so far — of the credit crisis that began last summer in the American subprime mortgage market and has spread to the farthest reaches of the world, causing untold losses and sowing fears about the global economy. Continue reading here...

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26 December 2007

An Odd Twist

Miami_condos_de_comprar_2 This ad was in yesterday's La Nación here in Costa Rica. Translation:

"This is the moment to buy. Stable price and low interest! Resale opportunity. Pre-construction priced at $250,000. Only 10% down and you can pay that in four payments! [So get into this game for only $6,000 now.] To be completed in 2010, then finance 70-80% for 30 years. I sell these properties in Miami." The rest is contact information...

There are so many things that struck Hal and I. Like:

  • Advertising a Miami condo in a Spanish language third world country's newspaper?
  • Advertising for speculators at this point in the market?
  • Could this be a sign that Costa Rica real estate is now MORE expensive than Miami's? (Yes.)

From everything we know about Miami's real estate market, it's crashing badly. Condos that sold pre-construction for $600,000 are selling now for $300,000.

Hal told me that in the first five years of the decade (2000-2005), only 5,000 condos sold in Miami. Total. That's 5,000 TOTAL. For all five years. I'm hammering this point because I had to keep asking him to be completely specific. I kept thinking I wasn't understanding the numbers. Because...

In subsequent years, as of about 2005, there were 50,000 condos in the pipeline at some stage of construction. Fifty thousand new condos being built... when only 5,000 new condos sold during the preceding five years.

Do developers do any research? Can they add? They can sure extrapolate their presumed profits. But none of them, it seems, looked back or around. They were building for the 77 million baby boomers coming along any minute, 50,000 of whom would surely want a new condo in Miami. Who wouldn't????

On the road to the Multiplaza here in Escazú, we pass, in a one-mile stretch, at least 10 new office buildings in various stages of construction. TEN. Multi-story, multi-office, big, fancy, brand spanking new and, so, most likely in the $250K range...

Question: where are the businesses located now that are supposed to fill these offices? What will entice them to move to these far fancier, more expensive new digs? They are making Costa Rica-style incomes... how can they pay Miami-style prices? And... do enough businesses even exist?

Here's the scenario I've constructed for this office park boom. But it will work for any real estate boom anywhere:

  1. Costa Rica's real estate starts booming, driven by easy money people acquired in their home country - either borrowing on their primary residence or selling at the exact right time. Which was an incredibly short window of opportunity.
  2. People start to believe the hype, "Real estate never goes down."
  3. Everyone hears that commercial real estate is the next boom.
  4. A guy builds an office building near the Multiplaza and it sells out.
  5. Nine other guys quietly buy land on the road to the Multiplaza, to build "the next" office park. They tell no one.
  6. One by one, they start to build... noticing the new office park going up right next to theirs.
  7. They start cutting corners and hurrying along to finish before the next guy...
  8. We aren't finished building yet, haven't reach the finish line... how do you think this will end?
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30 November 2007

Sound Familiar?

One of today's threads on the Costa Rica Living Group board was "Lots of for sale signs." The conversation went like this:

Posted by: Marvin
Fri Nov 30, 2007 5:59 am (PST)

I was driving around the other day with a friend and noticed about 50 "for sale/for rent" signs in a period of about 30 minutes.

Some realtor friends of mine say real estate has REALLY slowed down and there is too much inventory and no buyers.

My complex in Escazú is really nice and quite inexpensive, and 3 of the 7 condos are for sale...yet nobody has even come to look at them. A couple blocks away is a brand new complex and not a single condo has sold...not 1.

Does anybody else get the distinct feeling that we are about to have a real estate crash?

--

Posted by: Gary
Fri Nov 30, 2007 7:31 am (PST)

Same feeling about Jacó Beach. My condo is also up for sale and nary a nibble. Its probably because there is SOOO much inventory, and a lot of it is not finished yet, that serious buyers aren't ready to make a decision yet. I hope there is no short term crash, but it really wouldn't surprise me. In Jacó not much thought has been put into upgrading infrastructure, and so thats a big question for folks used to regular Hydro and toilets that really flush.

--

Posted by: David
Fri Nov 30, 2007 6:12 am (PST)

you can only sell a finite number of 80,000 dollar homes for 350,000 dollars, and then the well runs dry ----- and the dollar loses value, and the stock market loses 1000 points, and the sub-prime funds go under ----- HELLO ------- welcome to the real world ----- just my personal opinion

--

Posted by: Jack
Fri Nov 30, 2007 6:54 am (PST)

David, Everything is cyclic, if you have a boom eventually the smoke blows away. With all the over building going on something has to give sooner or later. All these builders were counting on the baby boomer's buying without brains. Well it turns out that getting to retirement age you do become very cautious with your money especially with the fears of SS going broke and all that stuff. I know that I currently changed my way of thinking. I bought in Costa Rica for big reasons, 1 - that I could buy a Tico home for cash, 2 - lower cost of living, 3 - awesome people and 4 - awesome country. That said, I think your personal opinion is right on.

29 October 2007

Escape Artist on the Global Market

Since we are now living in Costa Rica, I'm on a few international email lists: International Living.com, Sam's Prima Panama blog and Escape Artist. This morning, I got a link to a very interesting article on Panama real estate. Panama used to be the #1 recommended outside-the-U.S. retirement destination, but recently slipped to #4 due to its skyrocketing real estate prices (sound familiar) and rise in crime.

There is much talk here in Costa Rica - mostly among the local real estate agents - on whether or not the housing decline in the U.S. will affect Costa Rica's market. The agents say, "No." (What a surprise.) Everyone else says, "Of course it will."

Of course it will. When the U.S. sneezes, the world gets a cold. Or vice versa. I found this morning's Escape Artist article (read the whole article at the link) particularly interesting from a global point of view. Since a lot of the article deals with moving to Panama, I've copied the pertinent real estate parts of the article here:

"Mark Twain once said, “History does not repeat itself, but it does rhyme.” So as time goes by, Panama’s housing boom is increasingly looking like its late American par, the bursting mother of all housing bubbles.

Boomers looking for well-balanced information about Panama will find out rather promptly that it is one very scarce commodity these days.  The wizards of R.E.A. (a.k.a. real estate advertising) and their well-off Maecenas have managed to create, out of a country that could be beautiful indeed, a three-headed Dragon (developers, brokers and profiteers) that can devour almost anything crossing in its path.

Panama, long time renowned by its famous navigable canal and the good-nature of its people, has more recently been sold as the newest Gold Rush of the 21st century.

Unfortunately, current American history shows tangible proofs that the speculation beast, once freed by greed and deception, will sink its fangs into both men and nature, swallowing the whole landscape.  As a result, our world could be awfully transformed in a gloomy realm of negative equity and amortization.

But reckoning days are coming!

An impartial observer neither should have any stakes in the game nor should he/she kneel to serve those with a vested interest.  Regrettably, the great majority of “self-proclaimed” experts in Panama are somehow connected to the local real estate and tourism industries.

Sadly, Saint George is not out there slaying the Dragon.  Like it or not, Big Money rules."

And further down...

"High-end real estate property at bargain prices? They should be kidding!

Three years ago, the average ocean front-side condo at Balboa Avenue was priced at $450 per square meter.  Nowadays, prices have skyrocketed up to $3,500 and even higher in certain building complexes, up to $5000M2!

In a recent report analyzing Panama’s housing boom, The Financial Times warned about the fact that the median sales price of Panama City new condos is actually getting higher than the median sales price of existing single-family homes in America!  According to the London’s newspaper, the “baby boomers” could start to lose interest in buying a second home or a two-bedroom apartment in Panama City for $224,500 or more, which not long ago could be bought for $60,000 or $80,000.

The National Association of Realtors reported that US median national home price was $224,500 in August and prices are going down still further.

Link to WSJ article 9/26/07 (need to be a subscriber to read it all).

“One Prima Panama study looked at immigration trends from the US and residency visas issued to foreigners by Panama’s government as a proxy for end-user demand. Its findings suggest that the level of immigration might be insufficient to justify the building of so many luxury apartment complexes targeting foreign purchasers, and that the perception of foreign demand could be overly optimistic.  There are growing concerns that the building activity is too much for Panama’s market to absorb, particularly as property values are rapidly rising.  The activity is even larger than recent property development in Miami metro area, which is a wealthier and internationally oriented city and business centre for Latin America.” (Miami is actually a deflating bubble just waiting to burst!)

The easy dollar’s pump engine fueling Panama and Central America’s construction boom is badly sputtering.  America’s subprime mortgage melt is just beginning and the landslide has yet a long way to go.  US sales of existing homes slowed to their most sluggish pace in five years.  Home prices fell for a record 12th straight month.  The index that tracks signing of contracts for sales of existing homes tumbled 12.2 percent for July, to its lowest level in more than six years, the National Association of Realtors reported.  New-homes sales tumbled in August to the lowest level in seven years, a stark sign that the credit crunch is aggravating an already painful housing slump.  Sales of new homes dropped by 8.3 percent in August from July.

US house prices are likely to fall significantly from their present levels, the former Chairman of the Federal Reserve Alan Greenspan has told the Financial Times, admitting that there was a bubble in the US housing market. “We should be seeing, in some real estate markets, 30 and 40 percent declines in prices," said Joel Naroff, President of Naroff Economic Advisors.

Link to MSNBC article on U.S. Housing 8/27/07

Rodrigo Rato, the Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), considers that the real effects of the housing and mortgage crisis upon the broader US economy will manifest more obviously by 2008.  Europe won’t be spared either.

Link to article on Rodrigo Rato 9/24/07 in Spanish

Panama’s housing boom is neither healthier nor more viable in the long haul than its doomed American par.  Condos’ flippers believing that there is enough charm here to trap ten legions of baby boomers are truly delusional.  The odds that 40,000 American families would decide to dwell here are as good as the chances for the US government to retake the Panama Canal at anytime soon.  Besides, with so much inventory becoming available, price levels, currently being driven up by speculation, are very vulnerable to plunge hard.  Profiteers are well set for one major disappointment.

Last August, Ivan Carlucci, President of the Panamanian Association of Real Estate Brokers (ACOBIR), denounced that around 30 unlicensed real estate’s brokerages were selling new projects not yet approved by the authorities.  Mr. Carlucci referred critically to the lack of control by the local authorities, asking for stiffer fines.  Like a plague of locust, illegitimate intermediaries, as well as local and foreign hustlers, have spread nationwide, trying to make an easy buck from unsuspected buyers.

Many local short-sighted economists and investors are bragging that the Panamanian economy is shatter-proofed against any major financial storm.  But if a severe slowdown or a full-blown economic recession finally strikes America, unchaining a rippling reaction throughout the world’s markets, the Panamanian economy will hit the wall too.  No country is totally shielded in a globalized economy.

The New Herald’s journalist Andres Oppenheimer, a respected specialist in Latin American affairs, recently wrote that in the event that the American economy could experience a prolonged slowdown, Latin American exports will tumble. Mexico and Central America, both closely tied to the US market, would be the most affected.

Link to Nuevo Herald (Miami Herald Spanish edition) article 8/23/07

Actual economic grow rate in Latin America is too dependent on external factors… The region’s economy has mostly benefited from rising imports of raw materials by US and China, pushing prices up… but it’s poorly related to the region’s competiveness in Global terms.  When the US economy slows down further, causing China’s to decelerate too, both world’s economic giants will reduce imports from Latin America and the region won’t be able to sustain the actual growing rates.

Link to Nuevo Herald article (in Spanish) 9/23/07

Jose Luis Machinea, Secretary-Executive of the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), recently stated that “if the United States crisis drags down the world’s economy for more than six months, Latin America will be definitively shocked.”

The Wall Street Journal’s columnist E.S. Browning recently wrote, “The Federal Reserve cut interest rates… in order to address a pressing concern: the risk of recession and of a breakdown in credit markets.  By lowering rates… however, the central bank has revived another fear that had been dying down: inflation… Which way is scarier?”

Link to WSJ article

"The global economy appears to be at a turning point," said Paul Sheard, an economist at Lehman Brothers, adding it had been hit by two related shocks. “First, the US housing recession has turned out to be considerably worse than we envisaged...Secondly; the subprime mortgage meltdown has triggered a broad sell-off across capital markets, with incipient elements of financial contagion and panic."  He added that the key uncertainty revolves around how long and how severe the US housing recession turns out to be and whether it tips the US economy into, or close to, recession."

Link to Financial Times article 9/15/07

Fears that the troubled housing market and credit problems could short-circuit the six-year-old economic expansion have shaken Wall Street.  The biggest worry is that people and businesses will cut back on their spending and investment, throwing the economy into a tailspin.  Former Federal Reserve chief Alan Greenspan, in an interview with The Associated Press recently, said the odds of a recession are now higher than one-in-three but are still under 50 percent.

Link to MSNBC article 9/27/07

Kerry Killinger, C.E.O. of Washington Mutual (WAMU), the largest U.S. thrift bank, declared that America’s housing market faces rising delinquencies and foreclosures, higher borrowing costs, tighter underwriting standards and tough capital markets, "creating what we call a near-perfect storm for housing.”

Panamanian banks are not blind to the new realities.  Capital Financiero, one local magazine, recently reported that the banking sector has established new conservative policies regarding construction financing.  Before, they usually require 30% of a project’s pre sale at the time of providing financing.  Now, they are requiring an average of 40% to 50%. Additionally, down payments for foreigners were raised up to 15%. Banks are carefully reviewing sales contracts and verifying foreigners’ incomes and nationality.

Furthermore, they are frequently limiting the sales price risk to $1,500 per square meter (10.7639 ft²).  This is very bad news for flippers, because for more than a year now, due to the rampant speculation, prices have been pushed upwards, sometimes reaching up to $5000 M2 at certain locations with the highest appreciation rating.  Logically, banks are not supposed to finance more than the real worth of any building project.

How many boomers will be prone to overpay for properties that could be losing value instead of adding it?

How many of them will be willing to overpay for condos in which they could not live for more than 30 days, unless obtaining a 60-day extension to their tourist visas or a pensioner’s residency?  The 30-day limited tourist visa does not affect profiteers (Most flippers do not live in Panama), but it surely affects their favored prey: American baby boomers."

Panama's market seems destined for a big correction. I think Costa Rica's is not far behind and I believe these two countries will see an even bigger correction than the U.S. The amount of building here is unbelievable. Costa Rica is the size of North Caroline and there are condos being built for every single one of the 77 million baby boomers. We shall see.

02 August 2007

Chicken Littles SO Unappreciated!

Once again, my Panama blog friend has interesting news... this time on Spain. Read it all here.


16 July 2007

Pre-Construction Prices Likely Still Available

I stumbled across this on the web today. Is this how rich people want to live? I'm assuming you have to be rich. There are no prices and, well, if you have to ask...

The link is to the Palm Jumeirah in Dubai. There are two more of these palm-tree-shaped waterfront developments going up. Jumeirah is the first one. It's almost complete and apparently "residents are moving in."

The main website is here: www.palm.ae. The website is difficult to travel, but there are videos and it doesn't take long to get the big picture. I am both fascinated and repelled.

And I have to ask: how much for entry level?