Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Love This From Kiplinger's - How we React to Uncertain Times

http://us.lrd.yahoo.com/_ylt=AvLF7HoeVV3ljkNEaIYvkqVG2vAI;_ylu=X3oDMTFjZ3JuczY3BGlpZAMyNTIzNjIwOTY0MzcxODExMDU5BG5vaAM1BHBvcwMyBHJpZAM1NTQ3/SIG=12abtde5p/**http%3A//www.kiplinger.com/magazine/archives/2008/11/bad_decisions.html
YOUR MONEY
Bad Decisions in Bad Economic Times
Curb your emotions and avoid costly financial mistakes.
By Bob Frick, Senior Editor
From Kiplinger's Personal Finance magazine, November 2008

Maybe your investments have taken a beating or the bank has cut your home-equity line of credit in half. Or you just spent $100 to fill your gas guzzler's tank. A lot of financial stress is going around these days, which puts us in particular danger of making stupid mistakes.

You'd think the opposite would be true -- that we'd get more conservative with our money when we're feeling pinched. But smart people who study such things know how fragile we are when it comes to holding on to what we have. "Investors will endure all kinds of risks, crazy risks," to maintain the status quo, says Don Moore, a professor of organization behavior at Carnegie Mellon.

A recent study by Moore's colleagues shows just how easily we can be induced to take risks. In the study, a series of questions made participants feel either relatively poor or relatively wealthy. Those made to feel poor were asked to peg their income on a scale that started at "less than $100,000" and went up in $100,000 increments. Most landed in the bottom tier. The scale for those made to feel wealthy started at "less than $10,000" and went up in $10,000 increments. Most participants ended up in the middle to upper tiers.

Once they were primed to feel rich or poor, they were either paid $5 for participating or given the option of receiving up to five lottery tickets. The "downtrodden" chose twice as many tickets as those who'd just had their financial egos massaged. "People are often willing to go double or nothing to avoid feeling that they're losing," says Moore.

In addition to psychology working against us, we are also biologically programmed to make poor decisions under stress. Psychiatrist Richard Peterson points out that stress hormones affect our brains to make us short-term, impulsive thinkers when financial problems often call for long-term, creative solutions. Peterson runs a hedge fund based on "emotional arbitrage" -- he buys stocks laden with dire predictions, and sells ones with too much upbeat buzz.

He also counsels financial advisers on how to deal with clients' emotions. One thing he preaches: Don't fight biology. "People need to take action because they are chemically primed to take action," he says. The fight-or-flight response should be channeled in a positive way, though, such as moving money from a growth fund to a value fund after the market has tanked.

And if tinkering with your portfolio doesn't calm your nerves, maybe understanding a psychological quirk called recency will. It seems we pay too much attention to the recent past when making decisions. For instance, in 1999, the average investor thought the market would rise 30% in 2000, says Brian Bruce, editor of the Journal of Behavioral Finance. (Instead, the tech bubble burst and Standard & Poor's 500-stock index started a three-year plunge.)

Bruce says that recency can also make investors more pessimistic. Events such as the Korean War and the Cuban missile crisis, and bear markets, such as the ones that followed the 1987 market crash and the demise of the dot-coms, destroyed investor optimism. But in the year following the bottom of those setbacks, the S&P 500 rose 36.6%, on average.


In the short term we forget and react, at least I know I do! It's a nice reminder that the stock market JUMPS after these bottoms.
Just like in Real Estate - It's time to buy!

Working on Bank Owned Properties [REOs] helps me to see that there really is a lot of cash in the market. We are seeing multiple offers on properties under $250K - often all cash!

Thursday, October 16, 2008

Rental Fraud Alert in San Jose and surrounding areas


These are all rumors - I have no first hand knowledge - however, my friends are running into these issues:

1) The property manager puts a rental on craigslist. The same day "evil person" puts the same property on craigslist for less money and with easy qualifying guidelines, ie; no credit report. Evil then shows up at the house, collects money and disappears with the renters money.

2) Owner receives a Notice of Default. Owner rents the property to a renter - collecting rents and deposits all the way up to the trustee sale - and sometimes even after. The bank then shows up to evict the tenant.

If you or someone you know is renting something - check to make sure you are actually working with the owner and check NOD records. Your great local Realtor is a great resource for this information.

Values continue to decline as unit volume rises

In San Jose, we are seeing multiple offers on properties under $300K - perhaps suggesting a bottom or slowing of the decline in home prices. Additionally, the number of monthly sales has been increasing since January 08.

This information just came in from CAR:

Home prices throughout most areas of California will post declines next year while sales of existing homes will continue to rise in 2009, according to a forecast released by the California Association of Realtors.

“The current uncertainty about the financial system and economy is likely to persist over the next several weeks, and could extend into next year,” said CAR President William E. Brown. “Our forecast assumes that the financial system will begin to show signs of stabilization late in 2008 and into early 2009.


No one can tell the future - what do you think is happening in this current market?

Thursday, October 9, 2008

Are we as a nation overleveraged?

A week or so ago, I posted a link to Bill Clinton talking about the economic crisis and how we as a nation are overleveraged.

This week I heard myself admitting that I voted for Perot because he is a business man and would get us out of debt.

Then I see this:

NEW YORK (AP) -- The National Debt Clock in New York City has run out of digits to record the growing figure.

As a short-term fix, the digital dollar sign on the billboard-style clock near Times Square has been switched to a figure -- the "1" in $10 trillion. It's marking the federal government's current debt at about $10.2 trillion.
Don't Miss

* 8 of 10 Americans stressed because of economy
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The Durst Organization says it plans to update the sign next year by adding two digits. That will make it capable of tracking debt up to a quadrillion dollars.

The late Manhattan real estate developer Seymour Durst put the sign up in 1989 to call attention to what was then a $2.7 trillion debt.

We can't keep this up for long - we are drowning