Home Prices During Stagflation

REAL ESTATE NEWS (Los Angeles, CA) — Stagflation indicates both upward and downward pressure on residential real estate property prices, but with inflationary pressures getting the upper hand. While increasing interest rates may cause some home prices to fall due to reduced demand, runaway inflation has already gained a foothold, creating its own reinforcing psychology among the home buyers, sellers, builders, landlords, renters and investors. In addition, governments are adversely affected by economic crashes caused by rising interest rates in several ways: Not only does a falling economy cause the government to lose revenue, and thus to become unable to pay its own debts and obligations, but financially suffering voters tend to expel administrations, causing political losses, high turnover and government volatility. The politicians will continue to lean towards inflation, continuing to call it “temporary,” someone else’s fault, or some may even continue to falsely call inflation “good.” Because inflation involves larger amounts of money, some will continue to try to refer to it as some kind of “wealth”. It’s not. The true nature of price inflation is a destruction of the value of the currency. Inflation makes us about as wealthy as the holders of monopoly money.

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The median home price in Orange County, California just topped $1 million for the first time. The area now has 45 out of its 83 zip codes averaging seven figures for the average home value. This milestone represents the 15th record high in a two-year, pandemic-era home-buying binge. Statewide, the median price of a home hit another record high of more than $849,000 in March, driven primarily by a surge in the sale of higher-priced homes, according to Realtors Association’s data.

The highest of high home prices are found in the San Francisco Bay Area, where median price in March was $2.28 million in San Mateo County, $2.06 million in San Francisco County, $1.95 million in Santa Clara County and $1.737 million in Marin County. Orange County prices rose 3.5% from February to March, and 22% in a year. Some see a bit of good news for buyers: the high prices have cooled the spending spree. March sales are down 19% from a year ago, according to ABC News.

Mortgage rates are now rising. Will this slow an out-of-control housing market? For the last ten years, extremely low mortgage rates encouraged home buyers to bid up the cost of housing. This has been especially true during the last several years, during the virus hysteria, when rates fell to unheard-of levels, and home prices exploded across Southern California and much of the United States.

Things are changing. Mortgage interest rates are rising at the fastest pace in many years, hitting 5% last week for the first time since 2011, according to Freddie Mac. Just six weeks ago, the average rate for a 30-year fixed mortgage was under 4%. In November, it was below 3%. The rapid rise, on top of soaring prices, has made homeownership suddenly more expensive. The question then becomes: If the average home buyer can afford less, are home prices going to drop?

Several top real estate experts, when asked this question, said that they don’t foresee a substantial price decline unless we encounter a recession. Real estate experts, however, are usually not economists. They are salespeople, often biased towards data that increases the number of transactions. The number of transactions in Downtown Los Angeles has been on the low side for several years. While safer suburban neighborhoods boomed during the virus hysteria, inner city suburban real estate stagnated or fell. The lowest priced lofts at Little Tokyo Lofts in Downtown L.A., for example, declined in price as the average home buyer grew more averse to perceived sketchy adjacent neighborhoods like Skid Row. For Downtown LA, prices began to rebound in September of 2021. Today, home prices in DTLA are surging due to extreme inflationary pressure from a dollar that is losing its value internationally, at home and abroad.

In response to rising interest rates, real estate prices are likely going to continue to climb, but in smaller increments than Southern California’s recent 17% annual home price growth rate.

Economists and other experts pointed to several factors that should largely uphold home values: a shortage of everything, including a low supply of homes for sale; rising incomes due to inflation; falling unemployment as virus hysteria wanes; and a tendency for what some nonsensical opinions have called “homeowner greed,” while what we are really seeing is more appropriately termed “FOMO” Fear Of Missing Out, along with a very real threat and rational fear of runaway inflation. Because home prices and rents react strongly to a falling dollar, real estate provides very strong protection from severe inflation.

In the past, steep increases in mortgage rates have slowed home price spurts. Rising rates will have this effect this time, but the severity of overspending, historic radical Fed policy, delay in initiating rate increases, overall accommodating Fed, bureaucratic deep state that is petrified of stock market crashes; and the atom bomb of dollar destroyers: blockchain cryptocurrencies. Bitcoin, ethereum and other cryptos shall prove to be the unexpected nails in the coffin for the U.S. dollar. Good money chases out bad. Newer, better money destroys old, abused money. The U.S. Dollar is toast, meaning that we’re most likely to eventually experience Weimar Republic / Zimbabwe style of absolute monetary devastation. In other words, a loaf of bread could end up costing not just $10 or $20, but $1,000 or $1 million or more! That is the end result of bureaucratic abuse and overprinting, along with total crushing by newer, better emerging monetary technologies that are independent and immune to government abuse.

Buyers can afford less. This shows up as industry professionals reporting fewer visitors at open houses, fewer multiple offers per home and fewer mortgage applications. Real estate professionals have been reporting cooling.

Most home buyers now agree that interest rates have an effect, a very significant effect. They decrease the number of home buyers, and decrease the amount of home that the average person can buy. While this can certainly slow down inflation, it cannot necessarily stop runaway inflation that has already had too much of a head start, particularly inflation that has other major causes in addition to interest rates that were too low for too long. Turmoil is in the cards. Rising prices, along with crashy sideways spurting markets. The Fed and government fits and stops, panics and printing, waves of back and forth economic uncertainty lie ahead. Welcome to the reality, the impending full bore brunt of stagflation. The good news is that, along with gold, quality stocks, commodities, collectibles and cryptocurrencies, real estate is among the best protections from inflation and economic stagnation.

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Copyright © This free information provided courtesy L.A. Loft Blog with information provided by Corey Chambers, Realty Source Inc, DRE 01889449. We are not associated with the seller, homeowner’s association or developer. For more information, contact 213-880-9910 or visit LALoftBlog.com Licensed in California. All information provided is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed and should be independently verified. Properties subject to prior sale or rental. This is not a solicitation if buyer or seller is already under contract with another broker.

How Runaway Inflation Kills Rent Control

Does inflation spell the beginning of the end for rent control?

REAL ESTATE NEWS (Los Angeles, CA) — Many renters have no idea of what happens to rent control during inflation. Severe inflation obstructs or ends rent stabilization one way or another, because landlords must raise rents enough to account for inflation. In general, 7% inflation means that rents can go up about 7% per year. When inflation rises to 10%, 20% or more, that’s how much rents must eventually go up. If the city does not allow landlords to promptly raise the rent to cover inflation, then maintenance and enjoyment of the property suffers, as landlords must find other ways to make up for the shortfall. Whenever cities attempt to prevent landlords from recouping rising costs, property values drop, then neighborhoods suffer from increasing crime, budget deficits, deterioration and blight.

Rents can be increased up all the way to the market rate when a tenant: voluntarily moves out; does not pay rent and is evicted; violated the lease agreement and is evicted; is evicted for failure to comply with a Tenant Habitability Plan; is evicted per a City Attorney order or if the tenant accepts a Tenant Buyout Agreement.

Landlords may also raise rents when they hear that an additional tenant is moving in. Tenants may be charged by the landlord an expanding number of surcharges and fees to help pay for the growing rent control bureaucracy. Landlords may also charge the tenant for some improvements made to the unit, renovations to the building, hazardous material removal and seismic retrofit. Landlords may charge for unexpected increases in expenses that results from many costs, including inflation.

Landlords may also raise the rent to full market price by evicting the tenant if one of the following occur: Failure to pay rent; Failure to fix or address a violation of the rental agreement; Creating a nuisance or causing damage to the rental unit; Using the rental unit for an illegal purpose; Failure to renew a similar rental agreement; Failure to provide the landlord reasonable access to the rental unit; or if the person at the end of the lease term is a subtenant not approved by the landlord.

Additional reasons to evict the tenant and fully raise the rent include: The owner, or immediate family member will move into the rental unit; A resident manager will move into the rental unit; Demolition and permanent removal from the rental market; Government order; or Conversion to affordable housing. If the eviction is of no fault by the tenant, then the property owners may be required to provide some relocation assistance compensation.

Many property owners benefits from a plethora of exemptions from rent control, especially in Downtown Los Angeles. These include: luxury properties; properties that are privately owned by individuals; properties that are very old, very new etc. Most DTLA lofts have plenty of exemptions.

Big cities in California, such as Los Angeles, have a sprawling, growing bureaucracy that tries to help renters to keep rents somewhat stable. 64% of Los Angeles residents are renters, and many don’t understand that rent control and rent stabilization can only do so much to help temporarily. Eventually, the economic laws of supply and demand overrule any temporary government measures. Additionally, bureaucratic laws create additional costs, more administration fees and more legal costs, which eventually get passed on to renters. In the mean time, the supply of housing gets more constricted and limited if property owners are not allowed to charge market rates. That bureaucracy increases rents in the long run, as it causes artificial housing shortages. When the economy stagnates, homes are eventually vacated, run down and torn down, like we’ve seen in many neighborhoods of the rust belt over the last 30 years.

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Los Angeles, CA rent stabilization meets inflation: Which buildings have the most exemptions?

Copyright © This free information provided courtesy L.A. Loft Blog with information provided by Corey Chambers, Realty Source Inc, DRE 01889449. This is not to be taken as legal advice. Consult with an attorney regarding legal questions, and consult with the City of Los Angeles regarding local ordinances. We are not associated with the seller, homeowner’s association or developer. For more information, contact 213-880-9910 or visit LALoftBlog.com Licensed in California. All information provided is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed and should be independently verified. Properties subject to prior sale or rental. This is not a solicitation if buyer or seller is already under contract with another broker.