Real Estate Bubble - Explained - YouTube

Channel: Real Estate Decoded

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When the Great Real Estate Bubble burst in 2008 it triggered the worst recession
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since the Great Depression.
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You would think that ten years after the bubble's peak that we would have come to
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some consensus on what caused it and how to prevent another one. But nope,
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there's still no consensus. People are still arguing after all these years. So I
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spent a couple of months trying to figure it out for myself and found an
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easy way to explain the basic economics behind the Great
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Real Estate Bubble.
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Economists like to say about inflation that prices are determined by
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how much money is chasing how many goods. The "how much money" part measures demand and
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the "how many goods" part measures supply. It turns out this simple frameword also works
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great for explaining the boom and bust in home prices in the Great Real Estate
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Bubble.
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So let's get back to basics and look at how much money was chasing how many
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homes in the Great Real Estate Bubble. First let's look at the second part,
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"how many homes." Homes are the textbook example of what economists called
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inelastic supply.
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Most products are kind of like iPhones, if the new iPhone is a hit, great, Apple
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makes a zillion more iPhones but they don't increase the price of iPhones. Homes are
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different.
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If your town suddenly became super cool and cool people all over the world
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want to move there, home prices in your town would skyrocket. The supply of homes
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is fixed in the short term.
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So even small increases in the amount of money chasing homes can cause big
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increases in home prices. In the long term in cities where it's easy to build
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new homes,
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prices will come back down but in cities where it isn't, they won't.
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Now let's go back and look at the first part of that equation,
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"how much money." Two factors determine how much money is chasing homes,
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how much money people have and how much money people can borrow. And two huge
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factors that determine how much money people can borrow our
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interest rates and how loose mortgage companies are with their money, or with
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money. From the early 1990s to the peak of the Great Real Estate
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Bubble mortgage companies became a hell of a lot looser with their money. They
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loosen up slowly at first but then faster and faster and crazier.
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FHA became loser. Fannie and Freddie became looser.
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Subprime companies became looser and in addition the number of subprime
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mortgages skyrocketed.
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Back in the early 1990s, if you couldn't get a prime mortgage
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you might not be able to get a mortgage at all. Then some small enterprising
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mortgage companies started to sell high cost, subprime mortgages to people with
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iffy credit histories who couldn't get low-cost, prime mortgages.
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by the late 1990s, easier mortgages and a strong economy we're
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making a lot more money available to chase homes.
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Home prices started to rise fast in some cities. For example, the home price index
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for Los Angeles increased 14% in one year alone, 1998. Then the
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Dot-Com bubble burst in 2000, the stock market crashed and a recession
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began. To pump up the economy, the Federal Reserve lowered interest rates
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drastically. Interest rates on 30-year fixed-rate mortgages felt 3
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percentage points from 2000 to 2003. The lower rates meant people could borrow a
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lot more money
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to chase homes, if they wanted to anyway. With the same monthly payment you could
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borrow nearly 40% more money in 2003 compared 2000. If
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you switch to an adjustable rate mortgage, you could borrow 60%
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more. If you switch to a subprime mortgage, you could borrow even more.
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Los Angeles, for example, already had a really tight real estate market and its
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economy wasn't as hard hit as others by the Dot-Com bubble burst,
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so the new, low interest rates sort of freed prices in LA to rise. Higher prices
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made people want to buy homes right away before prices increased even more. So
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prices
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increase even more. With the rapidly rising home prices, subprime mortgages
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became more popular because people wanted to borrow more money and more
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people want to borrow.
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Everyone was talking about home prices. It was as if the Dot-Com mania is simply
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shifted over to real estate. California real estate speculators were making big
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bucks.
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Some took their winnings and moved on to Las Vegas and Phoenix which triggered
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bubbles there.
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I should mention the most US cities did NOT have real estate bubbles. Home buyers
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in non-bubble cities could have borrowed a lot more money to chase after
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homes, if they wanted to, but they didn't want to.
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So, why not? Most likely they didn't need to.
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Their real estate markets weren't that type. Home buyers could find homes they
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wanted to buy without borrowing more money and bidding up prices. And part of
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it MIGHT be that the people in the non-bubble cities were just less
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comfortable taking risks than the people in California and Florida. They avoided
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taking bigger and riskier mortgages
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even though they could have. Upward price spirals never really got started there.
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Mortgage interest rates fell throughout 2001 and 2002 so a huge number of people
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decided to refinance their homes. When they switched into lower interest rate
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mortgages, many people also got larger mortgages. That way they can get cash out
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when they refinanced.
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They ended up with less equity in their homes but more cash in their pockets. In
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2003, an incredible 20% of us homeowners with mortgages refinance
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their homes. About half of all mortgages made in 2004, 2005 and 2006 were
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for refinancing. Home prices had skyrocketed
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which meant people can get huge cash outs, if they wanted to. They could get even
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bigger cash-outs if they refinanced into low down payment, subprime mortgages.
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Unfortunately, they ended up with less equity which would come back and bite
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some people when home prices tanked
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after the bubble burst.
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As the refinancing boom was ending in 2003, the subprime mortgage boom really
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started to take off. And at the same time subprime mortgages were getting riskier -
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credit scores fell, down payments fell, maximum loan amounts rose, fraud rose.
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Subprime lending standards fell so far that from 2005
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to 2007
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the median subprime mortgage had zero down payment. And by 2006 half of all
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mortgages were some prime. Some people chose subprime because they couldn't get
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prime mortgages. Others chose subprime so they could borrow more money.
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Either way the increase of subprime mortgages meant people could borrow a
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lot more money to chase homes, if they wanted to anyway.
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Combined with the low interest rates,
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home prices absolutely skyrocketed in the bubble cities during 2004 and 2005. On
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top of this, the Fed began slowly increasing interest rates in 2004
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but instead of slowing things down people became even more manic about
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buying homes right away before the low interest rates were gone forever.
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Eventually, home prices got so high in the bubble cities that the market
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psychology changed from, "These home prices seem crazy high but they're increasing
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crazy fast
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so let's buy a home ASAP" to simply, "These home prices seem crazy high and they're
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not increasing crazy fast anymore, so let's just wait and see.
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The spell was broken. And anyway,
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pretty much anyone with any inkling to buy a home already had bought one. In
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2005, the number of home sales peaked. In 2006, home prices peaked. The spell, however,
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wasn't broken for the mortgage industry. They continued to lower their lending
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standards in a desperate attempt to keep the music playing. Many subprime
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mortgages made in 2005, 2006 and 2007,
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especially the no money down mortgages, made it rational for investors to stop
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paying their mortgages as soon
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as they realized that home prices weren't increasing anymore.
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If they put no money down, the only money they had lost was the first few monthly
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payments they made. The sooner those investors stopped making payments,
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the smaller their losses. In 2006, after home prices stopped increasing,
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foreclosures started increasing. By 2007, home prices started to fall and
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foreclosures of subprime mortgages started to take off. By 2008, foreclosures
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of prime mortgages started to take off and home prices in bubble cities began
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to freefall. Then the stock market began to freefall. And then the government
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stepped in with the first in a series of huge financial interventions. By the time
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home prices finally bottomed out in 2012,
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home prices fallen 30% nationally, 40% in Los Angeles
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50% in Miami and 60% in Las Vegas. The Great Real Estate
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Bubble triggered the Great Recession which turned out to be the deepest and
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longest recession since the Great Depression.
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Here's why. When the stock market falls, it doesn't have a huge impact on the
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wealth of lower-income Americans, they don't own stock.
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Remember how quickly the economy bounced back from the 50% crash in the
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stock market in the 2000 Dot-Com bubble. When home prices fall
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30%, however, it hurts a lot more people and wipes out most of what
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little wealth lower-income Americans have. So consumer spending crashes hard.
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That's why the worst recessions, like the Great Recession, are usually tied to real
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estate bubbles.
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I think the money chasing homes framework does a great job of decoding
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the chaos of the Great Real Estate Bubble and even partially explains why
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during the bust
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we saw home prices fall in cities that didn't even have booms. After the bubble
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burst,
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mortgage companies freaked out and tighten lending standards everywhere.
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The money chasing homes was reduced
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everywhere, even in cities that didn't have real estate bombs. And currently, the
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money chasing homes framework helps explain why home prices are skyrocketing
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in Vancouver, the U.S. West Coast, Miami and some techie cities,
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it's an influx of foreign and/or tech money chasing homes in those cities.
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The first step to preventing another Great Recession is to understand what
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caused the Great Real Estate Bubble.
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I hope this video helped you get a better feel for what happened
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If you want more real estate decoded, please subscribe my website
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RealEstateDecoded.com.
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And if you're watching on YouTube, please click the Subscribe or Like button. Your
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questions and comments are always welcome.
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Thanks so much for watching! Take care. ticker