Friday, July 4, 2008

Slack Tide, Fundy Markets, & Investor Surge (Gravity In Marin Real Estate)


The Gravity of Money

The Earth rotates around the sun, the moon waxes and wanes, tides rise and fall—an intricate, yet simple relationship based on gravity. Real estate, if a less predictable system of variation, is much the same.

While I don’t know why the Bay of Fundy in Canada exhibits such a dramatic tidal range (click here for more on that), or why other places have very slight tidal changes, I do know that the tidal phenomenon is rooted in gravity. Similarly, money and its availability acts as gravity in real estate.

For example, in some markets (let’s call them “Fundy Markets”), as banks clamped down on money, prices went into a freefall. 35%-50% price reductions exist in many markets across California, Nevada, Florida, and elsewhere. These Fundy Markets were also the beneficiaries of dramatic gains when the market was on its sustained rocket ride (fueled by low cost money) into the stratosphere during the early 2000s—a time of laissez faire lending practices.

On the other hand, some local markets (I refer to these as “Kevlar Markets” because they are largely bulletproof) around the country have felt a minimal effect from the clamp-down on money. Areas such as San Francisco (and surrounding counties like Marin, San Mateo, and Santa Clara) have experienced limited price declines. Banker money just doesn’t impact Kevlar Markets as they do Fundy Markets.

Real Estate Prices Rise and Fall Like the Tide.

Low tide is interesting (and in real estate, often heartbreaking). Things become visible that were hidden before. For most people, the inter-tidal zone is a source of curiosity—many folks are now out looking to buy distressed homes and 30–minute television commercials show how (for a small fee) you can learn the secret to buying homes at auction or via some other semi-exotic method for pennies on the dollar. For these people, it is interesting to watch the drama unfold. Indeed, sometimes after a big storm and at low tide an old sunken ship may pop up out of the sand, something that people haven’t seen for decades. And this is the kind of stuff that happens when money is not available. And of course, unusual things are being observed today in real estate.

But, “slack tide” is also appropriately called the “turning tide.” It is the point at which a low tide stops and begins to turn around....


Click HERE for rest of article.