Posts Tagged ‘American optmism’

One veteran broker’s perspective: It’s not that bad!

Tuesday, June 10th, 2008

Blair and I have both worked for the same owners our entire careers: Bruce Mulhearn owns the firm, while Clint Roe owns & manages our office. Both were experienced brokers back when I first got my license in 1980.

Bruce and I have climbed Mt. Whitney & skied Mammoth together, usually competing against each other all the way. He’s an enthusiastic optimist, as are most successful entrepreneurs.

Bruce mails out an upbeat letter to all 800+ of his agents about twice a month. This week’s letter is entitled “A Proper Perspective–Past, Present, and Future.” Please understand–we’re not changing our basic market predictions (see “How low will prices go?“). However, we do think Bruce helps put the current downturn in perspective. Here are some excerpts:

The current financial morass is painful; however, it would be wrong to rank it with many of the past 100 years. The problem is we have a cultural rut of pessimism, according to Zachary Karabell of The Wall Street Journal. It drains our collective energy, blinds us to possibilities, and erodes our world leadership.

Consider our current situation:

  1. Unemployment: 5%
  2. Inflation: 4%
  3. Economic Growth: 0.6%
  4. Housing has delcined primarily in four states–by approximately 20% We conveniently forget that in these states property values increased over 100% in the previous five years.

Hardly statistics to celebrate, but a far cry from the real crises of the 20th Century.

Consider the Great Depression:

  1. From 1929 to 1932 the Dow went from 380.33 to 41.22–a decline of 89%.
  2. By 1933 unemployment was 24.9%; after seven years of the New Deal it was still 14.6%
  3. 4,000 banks failed in 1933.
  4. Not only did millions lose their homes, most of them became homeless and lined up at soup kitchens.

Or compare our current situation to the ’70s and ’80s:

  1. 1977 unemployment 8.5%. 1982: almost 10%.
  2. From 1973 to 1974 stocks dropped 46%, from 1067 to 560.
  3. 14% inflation under Jimmy Carter, with odd & even days to line up for blocks to buy gas–at a higher percentage of consumer spending than today.
  4. In 1979 I had over 20 offices and 500 agents; by 1982 I was down to 6 offices with 125 agents–but we survived.

Dave here, interrupting Bruce for a few paragraphs with an “Amen!” This market really isn’t all that bad, at least in terms of sales volume. The slowest market I ever say was in 1990 - 91 during the build-up to George H. W. Bush’s first Iraq war. For months there were virtually no buyers. I took listings off the market.

The Southern California defense bust housing crash of 1991-1995 was also much worse than today’s market, in terms of a slowdown in sales, but not in price declines. I remember a story told back then by Century 21’s CE0: When he flew in to Honolulu for a statewide C-21 rally back then, he was greeted by hundreds of cheering, shouting, horn-tooting, confetti-throwing, gold-coated C-21 agents. In the midst of all the hoopla, he heard a passing businessman remark, “Guess they finally found a buyer.” True story!

Today’s just not that bad! The last listing we took, which went on the M.L.S. just 3 business days ago, had two competing offers within 24 hours, although Blair was still negotiating both of them last time I checked (5803Hayter.com). Likewise, although it took a couple weeks, the listing we took prior to that one also had competing offers, despite being one of those troublesome short sales (AdwenStreet.com). While the strategies we discuss in “How to sell your So Cal home for top dollar in 30 days” will work in almost any market, they work better when more buyers are out there, and that’s the case right now. Now back to Bruce Mulhearn’s thoughts:

There were also tough times during the tech blowout at the end of the century.

Tech stocks dropped from 5,000 to below 2,000. Teal estate has never had that kind of downside. But there was also an upside due to technology, which led to invaluable innovation and welath creation in the USA and around the world. Hundreds of thousands became wealthy.

America has always been marveled at and envied. I believe that 95% of the world still wants to live here. At the start of the 20th Century Britain’s ambassador to the U.S., Lord Bryce, remarked about “the hopefulness of American’s people.”

While there may be strength in America’s self-criticism 100 years later, there is a fine line between self-criticism and defeatism. We need to snap out of our deep pessimism. Our fears put us at a disadvantage in today’s world.

I’ve been to both China and Dubai, where you can feel electricity in the air–the hum of activity, ambition, and sheer optimism about the future. It’s both a strength and a source of energy, even though the Chinese stock market was down almost 50% in the past months, and there have been severe real estate crashes in both Shanghai and the Persian Gulf.

We have a choice in life. We can view our circumstances through grime-encrusted lenses, or with more flexibility about our so-called weaknesses. I’m not suggesting rose-colored glasses, but a need to break this downward spiral. Let’s not have the world declare, “What happened to the American Spirit?”

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