<em>"This property went through a series of purchased at inflated price, 0% financing, early default, rent skimming, and foreclosure. And I did not see you highlighting these key points."</em>
I have no knowledge of these events, and even if I did, it would not have changed anything. The house was purchased for a price from a homebuilder, and now it is being advertised with an offering price way, way below the purchase price. Those are facts. The circumstances which created this situation are irrelevant. If we were in a strong real estate market, situations like this would have been invisible because it wouldn't take such a drastic price reduction to get the seller out of trouble.
That is like saying the huge spike in foreclosures which are about to crush the market was an unusual outside event which could not have been anticipated. I think we have documented the reasons for the coming foreclosure tsunami in great detail. Claiming special circumstances is not valid.
People want information. We provide that information. We also provide our interpretation of that information, and we allow others to share their interpretations as well. I think many realtors are so used to living in a world of positive spin that they have come to believe that is a neutral market interpretation. It is not.
Do we spin the information the other way to counterbalance realtor spin? That is up to our readers to decide. For the last year, realtor spin has been far more detached from reality than what we have been saying here, but then again, that is my opinion and interpretation. People are free to disagree.
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"I believe the same group of people trade both securities and real estate; however, alternatively."</em>
I have seen this as well. It is classic bubble behavior of the general public chasing after big returns. It is why they will both end up the same way: a painful disaster. If you didn't see this post, you should check it out: <a title="Permanent Link to The Nature of Market Reversals" rel="bookmark" href="http://www.irvinehousingblog.com/2007/07/21/the-nature-of-market-reversals/" linkindex="7" set="yes">The Nature of Market Reversals.</a>