Overcorrecting?
Posted in For Sellers, Market Trends and Projections | By Blair Newman and Dave Emerson | Tags: Business, Lakewood real estate, Long Beach Real Estate, Market Trends and Projections, Orange County real estate, real estate investing, real estate market, real estate projections
Sunday’s New York Times had an interesting article on“How a Bubble Stayed Under the Radar,” dealing with economic theory and herd mentality.
Basically, it said what any long term observer of either the real estate or stock markets must have already concluded: Market prices get too high near the end of most up cycles, and too low at the end of most down cycles.
I figured that out at least three cycles ago, when another Realtor mentioned the insane bidding up of home values in 1989 was typical of the last, overpricing gasps of a market about to collapse. I thought our market had peaked in 2004, which was obviously too early. Still, in 2005 I made my ill-fated effort to beat the market by exchanging for out of state property (see my recent post on out of state investing). It’s the same herd mentality that created bubbles from internet stocks to silver.
Ironically, as our southern California prices drop, people tend to forget the flip side of the same herd mentality: The lows become irrational as well. Which either will at some point create or is currently creating opportunites to “buy low.”
I don’t think anybody can know with certainty if that time of opportunity is now or yet future. Once we know for certain, it will have past, and the best bargains will be gone.
But I do know that thousands of homes are on the market for prices 20% to 40% below the highs of a few years back. And I do know that many sellers are willing to take far less than they’re asking. And interest rates are also quite low.
I also know that prices tend to go up in the first half of the year and down in the second. So it appears that this year’s great opportunity may be passing. December of 2009 may present even greater opportunities. Or not.
But at some point, this market will overcorrect. Maybe it already has.
Tags: Business, Lakewood real estate, Long Beach Real Estate, Market Trends and Projections, Orange County real estate, real estate investing, real estate market, real estate projections