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In the summer of 1990, with my freshly minted Bachelor's degree from the University
of Washington, I went off to Japan to make my fortune. In the late 1980's if
you recall, Japan was the place to be - Japanese management was all
the rage, the Nikkei was soaring, and Japanese businessmen were buying up impressionist
paintings and prime properties around the world at record prices. Americans
were fretting and wringing their hands at the prospect of being displaced as
the world's supreme economic power.
In spite of all these good economic reasons to stake a claim in Japan, the
reason I was there had little to do with all of that. While I had heard of
the "bubble economy" in college, I frankly had no idea what it meant. (Having
just graduated from college, I barely knew my ass from a hole in the ground,
and it was only after leaving school that my true education began.)

The real reason I was in Japan was because I'm half Japanese and I'd just
graduated from college without a clue of what to do with my life. So I set
off to meet my relatives and discover my roots in the land of the Rising Sun.
While I had a job and a place of my own in Tokyo, I spent a good deal of time
at my uncle's house in Yokohama. My uncle is a salary man (sarariman),
on the young side of middle age at the time, married and with two kids. In
many ways he was an average Japanese enjoying the fruits of a booming economy.
Japan was on the rise. Between 1955 and 1990, land prices in Japan appreciated
by 70 times while stocks increased 100 fold! You might remember when it was
claimed that the land under the Imperial Palace in Tokyo was worth all of Manhattan,
and that the land in Tokyo alone was worth more than all the US.
Oh, so that's what they meant by a bubble!
In spite of the booming economy, my uncle, like many Americans today, was
shut out of the housing market. Prices always seemed too high, but a pullback
never materialized, so he waited until the right time to buy. While he waited,
prices spiraled up and away until at last they were hopelessly out of reach.
By the time I arrived in 1990, his family was living in a government-owned,
rent controlled flat that was, by any standards, small: Two rooms that were
each about 12 square feet, a small kitchen and a tiny bath to serve three adults
(including his mother) and his two kids. (Japanese rooms are multi-use rooms,
so at night when you're done eating and watching TV, the furniture is put away
and the futons come out and everyone sleeps together on the floor). His was
a unit on the first floor of a huge concrete building that sat in the middle
of a sea of identical buildings. The picture below is not his actual building,
but you get the idea.

And now to the meat of the story that I've found myself telling with increasing
frequency of late: My uncle thought that he would never ever be able
to afford a house in Japan, and that he would live out his dying days in that
little rented flat. In his experience, housing prices went only in one direction:
up. But by 1992, two years after the Nikkei peaked, something strange began
to happen - housing prices started drifting down. Of course my uncle didn't
know that the Nikkei had just put in its all time high, and would ultimately
fall by 80% over the next 13 years. Anyone paying attention to the stock market
most certainly thought that it was just taking a necessary and well-deserved
breather, and that new highs were just around the corner.
By 1994, housing prices continued to drift lower until some units started
to become, with considerable stretching and creative financing, affordable.
So that year, by taking out a two generation, 60-year mortgage -- with his
16-year old son on the hook for the remaining years that he might not be able
to pay -- my uncle bought his first home. The family had to scrimp, and both
he and my aunt had to work more hours, but they were finally, proud homeowners.
And it was a nice house - larger than their old house (but not much), in a
nicer neighborhood, and on a higher floor with a view of the treetops. I even
helped them move in. It was a happy day. I don't recall the exact price he
paid, but I remember thinking that it sure was a lot! Somewhere north of half
a million dollars. Those were the kinds of details were lost on me at that
age.
I left Japan in 1994, and didn't return again for a visit until late 1998.
In the intervening 4 years, housing prices had continued to fall, and fall,
and fall to the point where my uncle's house was worth only half of
what he had paid for it four years earlier: A couple hundred thousand, up in
smoke, just as Japan's economy was mired in a 13-year slump. But he
stuck with his loan, hoping the value will come back. And one day, it just
might. So he makes his payments each month faithfully, and when he can no longer
make them, his son will take over and pay off the remaining balance. And sometime,
in the remaining 48 years on the mortgage, the house may once again be worth
more than what is owed on it.
The reason I've been telling this story so frequently is that, as
housing prices in Boston start to come down , my home-less friends and
acquaintances are perking up, excited that they may actually be able to own
a home of their own - something previously thought to be an impossibility.
But when I go out to the Sunday open houses with them, what I see is still,
in my opinion, overpriced. I certainly wouldn't mortgage my life for
30 years for any of it. And so I tell the story of my uncle, but
for the most part it falls on deaf ears. I have no problem in believing that
housing prices actually can come down, because I've seen it with my own eyes.
Since I learned that lesson from the Original Bubble Economy, I've since
seen many bubbles, and this chart, from the EWI special report on (Real
Estate: Boom or Doom) clearly depicts a bubble:

Since its peak in January of this year, the homebuilders index has fallen
by almost 50%, is hovering near its low and threatening to break down further: See
Bloomberg Chart Here. Stocks always move before the news. As late as this
June, Time was still way behind the curve, featuring its "Home $weet Home" cover:

But now the tidal wave of bad news is hitting the media. The Dallas Morning
News reports:
Never
in the history of the United States have so many home owners hocked so
much of their biggest asset, hoping that rising prices would let them outrun
their debt forever. The resulting picture isn't pretty. Last week, Moody's
Investors Service reported that the delinquency rate in the home equity
loan market rose 11 percent for the quarter ended in April from the same
period a year earlier.
According
to Moody's, delinquent loans now represent nearly 7 percent of the total
existing pool of home equity loans. "This is the 11th consecutive month
that the home equity delinquency growth rate has risen," Moody's Ben Garber
said.
The Moral of the Story
Most of the people I know today either glibly, or grimly, believe that housing
prices in the US will never come down - or if they do, it won't be that much
- just like my Japanese uncle once did. The glib ones are those who already
own a home and are just waiting for the higher prices that they know are coming.
The grim ones have been shut out and believe that they'll never own a home,
and so are ready to pounce on the first opportunity they can afford to buy,
even if the house is not suitable either physically or financially. But I know
that just as prices spiraled up for years, they can also spiral down for years.
The advantage my uncle had of renting a government-subsidized unit was that
he was able to save a lot of money for his house. But had he waited only a
few more years, instead of jumping on the first thing he could afford, he could
have bought twice as big a house, or had half as large a mortgage. And his
life would have been quite different. My Uncle already learned this lesson
once, and I pass this story along so that you also might benefit from his experience.
When I finish this article and post it, I'm going to get on the horn to my
friend T, who is a real estate agent in Seattle. The last time I spoke with
him, he told me that things were holding up well in Seattle - business was
brisk, and prices were still rising - a big contrast to Boston. I'm going to
get his perspective, and see what kind of advice he's giving current buyers
and sellers. And tomorrow I'm going to call the agent for the house next door
to mine, which has been for sale now for about 3 months. I've never seen anyone
visit it, and I've never seen an open house, so I think I'll call the agent
and see what I can find out.
That's for next week's report. If
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