Showing posts with label David Lereah. Show all posts
Showing posts with label David Lereah. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Citizen Lereah?

Those who have been following along since the early days of the housing debacle will recall the role played by housing bubble blogesphere arch-nemesis and former National Association of Realtors chief economist David Lereah.

Until May of 2007 Lereah vigorously worked to spin the story of housing in such a way as to produce the best and most optimistic outlook possible.

When the housing bubble was inflating, Lereah wrote of the benefits of home ownership, its potential for dramatic wealth creation, and his outlook for a long-trending bull run.

When the markets started to crack, he saw stabilization around every corner, a “boom” that “would not bust”… he routinely massaged metaphors for town hall meetings… “bubbles” bursting became “fat balloons” deflating… and called out non-believers as Chicken Little’s.

Then, as the sub-prime crisis cleared the point of no return, Lereah left the National Association of Realtors for the relative safety of (more or less) obscurity.

For his efforts Lereah garnered the respect (and pay) of his association and a massive cadre of “believer” Realtors but also earned the recent title of one of the “25 People to Blame for the Financial Crisis” by Time magazine and likely the scorn of a generation.

But Lereah has since admitted his mistakes… and although his “positive spin” promotion of the narrow financial interests of an industry group over the overwhelming and truly important interests of the common good was quite a misstep, don’t we all deserve a chance at redemption?

Maybe not… but it appears that Lereah has launched a new venture… let’s call it a blog… with both an ironic title and a decidedly more realistic un-spun outlook.

Real Estate Economy Watch” is effectively a blog that hosts daily commentary on the housing market, tracks market data, and even specifically follows the course the “housing crisis”.

The title is ironic because it is reminiscent of “David Lereah Watch” a popular blog that relentlessly pounded Lereah during the heyday of the bubble crescendo.

The content, on the other hand, bears an unrecognizable skeptical edge.

Has Lereah turned it all around? Is he “owned up” and now on the road to salvation?

Who knows… but, in any event, his site is worth a read if not simply as a basic contrast against which his past performance and the current NAR line look remarkably stark.

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Question(s) of The Day - Buffet the New Lereah?

Is Warren Buffet the new David Lereah?

Is his call for going long the U.S. stock markets correct, shortsighted or simply shill-like propaganda?

Will Buffet go the way of Greenspan… godlike hero to reviled scoundrel almost overnight?

Wednesday, May 07, 2008

NARcasting The Future: May 2008

Today, the National Association of Realtors (NAR) provided their latest estimate of annual existing home sales for 2008 increasing their prior “beginning of year” estimate slightly to a 4.95 million unit annual sales pace and decreasing their estimate for the “end of year” annual sales pace to 5.82 million units resulting in total year sales of 5.39 million units.

As I had noted last month, this type of “beginning year”-“end of year” reporting which in prior months estimated first and second half of the year sales pace and now estimates first and last quarter sales pace will probably be discontinued shortly as NAR goes back to stating only their total year sales estimate but for now I will chart all predictions.

Note that in this month’s chart I simply broke out each prediction and connected them to the 2007 year end result so as to best capture the flow of predictions.

As usual, the latest forecast comes with another dose of truly ridiculous spin.

In an effort to put their absurd bias into perspective I compiled all their existing home sales forecasts for 2007 and now 2008 into a chart along with a list of prominent quotes supplied with each forecast.

12/11/2006 Prediction: 6.40 million units.
Lereah "Most of the correction in home prices is behind us."

1/10/2007 Prediction: 6.42 million units.
Lereah "The good news is that the steady improvement in sales will support price appreciation moving forward."

2/7/2007 Prediction: 6.44 million units.
Lereah "After reaching what appears to be the bottom in the fourth quarter of 2006, we expect existing-home sales to gradually rise all this year and well into 2008."

3/13/2007 Prediction: 6.42 million units.
Lereah "Although existing-home sales will be marginally reduced due to subprime lending restrictions, they should be gradually rising this year and next."

4/11/2007 Prediction: 6.34 million units.
Lereah "Tighter lending standards will dampen home sales a bit, but by less than a couple of percentage points from initial projections."

4/30/2007
Lereah Leaves NAR for Move.com

5/9/2007 Prediction: 6.29 million units.
Yun "Housing activity this year will be somewhat lower than in earlier forecasts."

6/6/2007 Prediction: 6.18 million units.
Yun "Home sales will probably fluctuate in a narrow range in the short run, but gradually trend upward with improving activity by the end of the year."

7/11/2007 Prediction: 6.11 million units.
Yun "Home prices are expected to recover in 2008 with existing-home sales picking up late this year."

8/8/2007 Prediction: 6.04 million units.
Yun “With the population growing, the demand for homes isn’t going away – it’s just being delayed.”

9/11/2007 Prediction: 5.92 million units.
Yun “Patient buyers in most areas who do their homework will recognize that housing remains a good long-term investment.”

10/10/2007 Prediction: 5.78 million units.
Yun "The speculative excesses have been removed from the market and home sales are returning to fundamentally healthy levels, while prices remain near record highs, reflecting favorable mortgage rates and positive job gains."

11/13/2007 Prediction: 5.5 million units.
Yun "In some ways, the extended real estate boom from 2001 to 2005 created unrealistic expectations that housing is a short-term high-yield investment… 2007 will be the fifth best year for housing on record"

12/10/2007 Prediction: 5.67 million units in 2007, 5.7 million units in 2008.
Yun "The broad trend over the coming year will be a gradual rise in existing-home sales, but because sales are exceptionally low in the final months of 2007, total sales for 2008 will be only modestly higher than 2007."

01/08/2008 Prediction: 5.66 million units in 2007, 5.7 million units in 2008.
Yun "A meaningful recovery in existing-home sales could occur as early as this spring, or it may be further delayed toward late 2008."

02/07/2008 Prediction: 4.9 million units in H1, 5.8 million units in H2, 5.38 million units full year.
Yun "Where builders have cut construction sharply, and in most areas with improving affordability conditions, we’ll generally see moderately higher home prices."

03/06/2008 Prediction: 4.9 million units in H1, 5.8 million units in H2, 5.38 million units full year.
Yun "Significant price declines in some local markets have sharply and quickly improved local affordability conditions, and are inducing buyers to return to the marketplace"

04/08/2008 Prediction: 4.9 million units in Q1, 5.9 million units in Q4, 5.39 million units full year.
Yun "Exceptionally weak home sales related to jumbo loans problems will depress home prices in the first half of the year, but steady liquidity improvements in the conforming jumbo-loan market will help prices recover in the second half of the year"

05/08/2008 Prediction: 4.95 million units in Q1, 5.82 million units in Q4, 5.39 million units full year.
Yun "Although more than half of local markets are expected to see price growth this year, the aggregate existing-home price will decline 2.4 percent in 2008, driven by a relatively few markets that are very oversupplied"

Monday, April 30, 2007

Crash and Burn!


Oh for Kripes sake!

My server has bit the dust!

No BNN… No Bubble Times… No S&P/Case-Shiller/Futures Charting Tool… No Inventory Tracking Tool… Not even a stinking OFHEO Chart… Nothin’…

But, not to worry.

I’m working diligently to get all the issues resolved and should have the system restored in a couple of days.

For now though, let me spotlight some of my favorite blogs that offer similar services to the ones now absent from my blog.

First, for BNN-style video-blogging there is both the Real Estate Video Blog and the New York City Housing Blog with daily video posts of all things bubbly.

For S&P/Case-Shiller and OFHEO charts as well as a host of other really impressive charts check out Housing Bubble Bust.

For Bubble Times-esc and Digg-styled Housing Bubble news you can turn to Housing Bubble News Central and Speculative Bubble.

Of course, Ill still be blogging throughout these trying times and Ill certainly be sure to yell from the highest rooftop when everything is all back up and running.

Wish me luck!



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Thursday, April 12, 2007

Lereah’s Fat Balloons

I’m really starting to worry about this guy.

Imagine what it must feel like to have risen to such heights of success, both professionally and on a more personal metaphorical level, having achieved almost unparalleled success, save possibly for that of Greenspan, in the apparent pursuit of grotesquely inflating the nations housing markets only to stand by helplessly and watch the whole thing go shebang!

It’s obviously having an effect on the poor mans psyche.

Witness this video clip of him sitting in a Lakeland Florida hotel lobby, obviously trying to keep a stiff upper lip while rambling on about his new DNA theory of housing, the great “buyers” markets of Boston and Providence and the “hot” markets in the Smoky Mountains.

The piece sadly ends with Lereah attempting to educate CNBC’s Carl Quintanilla on the ins and outs of the nations “Fat Balloons”.

Oh! how the mighty have fallen!

I half expected him to sign-off that segment by making one of those old-time cartoon cuckoo gestures while singing “Hello my baby, hello my honey, hello my ragtime gal!”

Then yesterday came possibly the hardest blow to date.

In a press release entitled “Tighter Lending Standards Good for Housing, But Will Dampen Sales” Lereah had to admit that things are getting considerably worse for the nations housing market.

“Tighter lending standards will dampen home sales a bit, but by less than a couple of percentage points from initial projections.”

More importantly, Lereah now expects the national median existing-home price to decline by 0.7% this year while existing-home sales will total only 6.34 million as compared to the 6.48 million home sales in 2006.

If this prediction were to come true, it would be the FIRST ANNUAL DECLINE to the national median existing-home price ever recorded by the National Association of Realtors.

To put this in better perspective, the smallest annual increase to the national median existing-home price ever recorded to date was in 2006 at 2.0%.

Additionally, Lereah is expecting new home sales to plummet to 904,000 from the 1.05 million sales in 2006.

So what’s next for Lereah?

Possibly a new edition of his book entitled “Why All Real Estate Keeps Following ME!: - And How I Just Can’t Get Away From It… Dammit! Stay Back! You Filthy Fat Balloons!”

For an always up-to-date take on the life and times of this truly unusual character read the ever popular David Lereah Watch Blog!



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Saturday, April 07, 2007

The Trouble with Lereah

Well, David Lereah’s new book is officially out… slightly modified subtitle from what fellow BubbleMeter blogger reported last fall but likely the same overall concept, namely how to profit from residential real estate.

In fact, that theme seems so essential to Lereah that it has, in one form or another, worked its way onto the front cover of every real estate book he has ever written.

First, there was his 2005 release titled “Are You Missing the Real Estate BOOM? Why Home Values and Other Real Estate Investments Will Climb Through the End of the Decade-And How You Can Profit From Them.”

Then quickly came the 2006 revision, “Why The Real Estate BOOM Will Not BUST – and How You Can Profit From It.”

Finally, now his newest installment “All Real Estate Is Local: What You Need to Know to Profit in Real Estate - in a Buyer's and a Seller's Market.”

Having not read any of his books, I’m certainly not qualified to make any real criticism of them, but what I do know is that Lereah has worked vigorously to promote the idea of profiting from residential real estate.

What’s wrong with that you say? This is America isn’t it?

Even if Lereah were to use every available means at his disposal to promote half-truths in an effort to create viral hype in the nations home buying population, isn’t that his right?

Buyer beware ... There’s a sucker born every minute and the like.

Well, I’d argue that Lereah and the National Association of Realtors have actually crossed significant ethical boundaries in an endeavor that I see as essentially analogous to the less-than-principled process of home sales itself, but on a grand scale.

We are all keenly aware of the extent to which many real estate agents will go to “make the deal happen” regardless of the fallout to the parties involved.

But in this case, what’s at stake is not a quick commission on the part of the agent or a reasonable deal for the buyer or seller; it’s the stability of the American economy and the future for many millions of its residents.

By narrating the events of the nations housing market in an “always and excessively favorable” light, the NAR and Lereah, through a lazy and willing traditional media, have played an important role in driving the “flipper nation” to the stratospheric heights that peaked in 2005.

Remember, the NAR is not a new organization.

It’s nearly 100 years old and as such has been collecting and analyzing housing data for many decades.

All the NAR leadership, including Lereah, are well aware of the fact that, in general, residential real estate appreciates roughly in line with inflation and incomes providing a reasonably stable, long term, “investment” but far from the “profit-laden” thrill ride they have made it out to be in recent years.

As Lereah himself stated last year, “Keep in mind that over time, home prices rise at the rate of inflation plus one-to-two percentage points -- buyers in most of the country who plan to stay in their home for a normal period of homeownership can pretty well bank on those historic averages, but people who purchased last year with the intent of flipping are likely to get burned.”



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