Examining the home price boom and its effect on owners, lenders, regulators, realtors and the economy as a whole.
Saturday, February 04, 2006
Any 'Freebees' In Your Housing Bubble?
How about the housing market in your neck of the woods? Post any observations or media sources that you want to share; open houses, anecdotal items, etc.
Some readers posted these in the topics thread. "The radio spots that are STILL played by mortgage brokers. Hayes Barnard of Paramont Equity is the worst. His newest is 'the average SD home appreciated nearly 40k last year! You have the power for financial freedom to pay off debt with this new found equity' Like 40k is just like your car keys or that $10 bill in your pants back pocket."
"Are sellers including 'freebees' in your area? (Cars, vacations, plasma TV's, ganite counter tops)? Here in Irvine, (Orange County) California, the Irvine Public Schools Foundation is including a BMW 750Li in an 'early bird' drawing as part of its annual house raffle. That's a first."
Another said, "I'd like comments from owners/rentors who actually live in these hi-rise condos so we could have first hand knowledge of the pros and cons."
This reader noticed a change. "Is the tightening up of credit/liquidity being felt by consumers in areas other than mortgages?"
"I pondered this last night when I took my junk mail and fed it to my shredder. Looking at the unsolicited credit card offers, I noticed that the quality of the offers (Balance transfer terms and CCard terms) seems to be way down in the last few months."
"I've got the kind of credit profile that gets great offers by the ton (only 3 cards, plenty of activity (use Amex for everything I can), almost no debt, fico mid-800's, flawless histories) so I'm wondering why the change. As a single sample, this could be because something has changed in my credit reports. (Though it shouldn't have - I'm going to get updated reports to make sure nothing funny has happened)."
"On the other hand, If I am not alone in seeing this trend, does that mean that lenders are anticipating tougher times and reduced consumer spending ahead? That would likely mean more people using their offers just to transfer balances back-and-forth to keep rates and payments down, and less new purchase spending."
To which another responded, "But that's a good thing, right? I get tired of receiving all that mail. I'm just messin' with ya. I understand your observation and it's worthy of note. I agree it would be interesting if the lack of is related."
This blogs been down for hours. Thanks for checking back!
ReplyDeleteHi Ben,
ReplyDeletemy place was down too - so were a bunch of other blogspot ones I checked. Oh well - we can go 6 hours without a bubble fix. Well, just barely.
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteIn the Bay Area, we still have Barney Aldredge from Benchmark Lending, Mark Tice from HMS Capital, and Wesley Hoglin from Lennox Financial (I think I got that right) pimping "unconventional" loans on the radio. The most annoying for me is Hoglin, "We're making plenty of money on the loan, we don't need to stick it to you for closing costs".
ReplyDeleteEnjoy ever narrowing credit spread, snake oil salesmen. I wonder who is funding these on the secondary market. I fear it's my retirement fund.
I came across a quality credit card offer recently. 0% balance transfer for 12 months with no transfer fee. It is the new Simplicity Card with no late fees*. It's nice to say that I don't need it.
ReplyDeleteThese offers dried up mostly during the last 18 months. However, I did get one in Q3 2005 (US Bank) which I actually used. During 2002-2004, these offers were almost standard.
I like the voice over Ditech ad, where the guy says it's easier to refinance than order a pizza.
ReplyDeleteDo you want anchovies with that loan?