BrinkTank! - Austin Texas Homes & Real Estate Blog
James Brinkman, Austin Real Estate Broker, Realtor, CRS, ABR, ePro
What Boom?

Six years ago, in the summer of 2000, I sat in my car outside a home in Jester Estates waiting to meet a client.  It was a Friday morning, about 8:50AM.  The instructions posted in the MLS said the home would not be shown until Friday at 9AM.  When I pulled up to the home I thought I might as well be going to a party because of the amount of cars sitting outside the home.  Outside my windshield I saw no less than 6 other Realtors and their clients waiting in a scattershot, makeshift line in front of the house.  The listing agent might as well have put a number dispenser at the front of the house and a little “Now Serving Number” digital board over the front door.  As I got out of my car I thought to myself, “Well, this is no good”.


Demand.  I saw a lot of the ‘Demand’ side of supply and demand that summer.  I’ve mentioned it before, but I had 7 different buyers that lost out on a home in best and final situations in July of 2000 alone.  Being in a market with multiple offers, many significantly over asking and actual market value, is not the boon to real estate (and for that matter, Realtors) that many people believe it to be.  Buyers are frequently are disappointed or frustrated and many end up overpaying for the home in that market scenario.  (I, personally, tried to be diligent and make sure the prices my clients paid were supported by comparable sales.) 


While many were caught in the euphoria of the thought of never ending price escalation, I was stuck with the feeling that the Austin boom was about to come to an end.  The words of Dr. Stephen Pyhrr’s article “ Austin ’s Persistent Real Estate Cycle” were resonating.  He wrote that Austin has historically experienced ‘up’ cycles of 8-10 years and ‘down’ periods of 3-5 years.  In 2000, the last ‘bottom’ of the cycle, the beginning of that cycle’s ‘up', had begun in 1991.  We were well into our 9th year of the ‘up’ and it was becoming evident that cycle had run its course.  The real question was starting to look like, how bad would be the down cycle?


At that same time, in California the market was just beginning to really heat up.


 

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Six years later it’s hard not to see all the stories and articles about how the boom is over.  It has become one of the bigger business stories of the year and I would wager that most of the major media outlets have at least run one ‘Boom is Over’ in the past month or so.  Yesterday I ran across this article prominently featured on the MSN home page.  It is an article from Forbes magazine titled ‘How Low Will Real Estate Go?’ (Lacey Rose).  The first sentences in the article read, “Get used to it – the seller’s market is closing up shop.  The days of fat, fast home value increases are gone.  Pack away those flipping fantasies.  “The boom is definitely over, there’s no debate about that,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist of West Chester, PA – based research firm Moody’s Economy.com.  “Now the question is more how hard is it going to land, if it lands at all.” ”


 

So the boom is over, huh?  What boom?  Where have I been?  Last I check Austin went through its down cycle from the Fall 2000 to the Fall of 2004.  Here in Austin , we experienced zero growth, for the most part, between 2000 and 2004.  Since the Fall of 2004 we have seen steady growth, commensurate with that of a market in the beginning cycle of growth.  Growth, based on past history, that should continue through to 2012, maybe even 2014.


 

Even within the article there is a link title “How Low Real Estate Will Go In 15 Metro Areas” there are examples of markets that look like they will fair just fine during this ‘bust’.  The link graphs out the projected growth for the next 10 years in 15 different markets.  Seattle, Dallas and Houston all are projected to fair just fine during this terrible, terrible time (tongue firmly planted in cheek).  Boston, Los Angeles, Miami, New York, Phoenix and Washington are the only cities they show that appear to actually have a retreat in pricing at some point over the next 10 years.  For those keeping score, that’s 6 out of the 15 cities cited, and yet the article/link is “How Low Will Real Estate Go…”. 


I don’t think it is a big jump in logic to say that the stories we read and see, written for national consumption, are heavily influenced by the east and west coast in this country.  Is it too much to ask that broad brushes not be used when writing the stories though?  Of the 6 cities that actually appear to have price decreases on the way, only Phoenix does not fit the mold as a major east or west coast market.  It definitely appears that this is coloring the news and, in spite of evidence to the contrary in plenty of markets, is causing the writers and reporters of these stories to make such grand sweeping statements as “the seller’s market is closing up shop”. 

 

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: all real estate markets are local.  When a market is down in your town, I’ll find you a market that is up in another.  Point me to a seller’s market in one city and I’ll point you to a buyer’s market in another.  There is no ‘national’ real estate story when it comes to a national real estate market.  Yes, certain factors influence all markets.  A spike in interest rates will have some influence over all real estate markets, but the impact will be different depending on the local factors. 


In Austin we are influenced by technology and the state government, among many other factors.  When the tech options vaporized and the stock market fell in late 2000 and 2001, the Austin real estate market followed.  The record highs of the real estate market in Los Angeles and Miami over the next few years had absolutely no influence as to what was happening in Austin .  Of course it didn’t, why would it?  Yet we heard story after story about how the national real estate market was booming, just as now we are treated to the doom and gloom.  During the last few years, Austinites would ask, ‘What Boom?’ and now, just as easily, they can ask, ‘What Bust?’ 


So as you read and see these stories just remember some simple rules:

 

Real estate is local.  There are always some points of wisdom to be gleaned from the stories and they are a good way to know what’s going on in different parts of the country but, in the end, what happens with the real estate in New York City has little influence as to what is going on in Austin. 


Real estate cycles are just that – cycles.  They go up and they go down but over the long-term the growth trend line is up.  Nationally, the 50 year growth trend line is up 4.8% per year on average.  Over the past 30 years in Austin the growth trend line is up about 6.7% per year.  Real estate remains one of the best ways to leverage your money over the long term, regardless of the cycle at that moment.


 

Don’t buy into the hype and hyperbole that the reporters use in their stories and articles.  In the end, much of their job is to sell papers, magazines or whatever their medium might be.  The headline, ‘How Low Will Real Estate Go’ will certainly grab one’s attention a lot more than something more pedestrian.

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Six years ago, as I got out of my car outside a home in Jester Estates and got ‘in line’ with my clients I thought to myself what a wild scene it was and how it certainly could not be a good sign for where the market was headed.  My clients actually got the house that day.  There were multiple offers but we stayed within the comparables sales and, after an afternoon of ‘sweating it out’, we got the phone call that their offer had been accepted.  Just a few months later the word came out that Dell would be laying off employees and so began the past downturn in the Austin market. 


Six years later we are still here.  Jester actually did fairly well over the past few years and is a high demand area.  Austin made it through the down cycle and came back out and now we are at the beginning of our growth period.   And, at least for the next few years, the boom starts here.


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Here is an interesting report on the subject of market performance from First American if you would like to read more on real estate cycles of different market.

 

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