What to do? What to do?
Chuck Ponzi June 30th, 2008
I recently had a reader pose a question to me via email and I’d like to take some time from our normal programming to see what is on his mind
Our friend, let’s call him Boomer for short, had this to ask of me:
Moved my family to La Costa area (renting) and own a house in AZ which I owe $159k at 6.5% (it adjusted and will again in 8 months) The home was at peak worth $750k now $550k I had it rented last yr for $2200 and just signed a 3 yr lease w/ new tennant for $2,400 . I have $600k in cash..Should I pay this house off?? or should I just refi it and hold on to my cash to buy here in S cal in a yr or two?
First off, I have a couple of thoughts:
1. Whoever Boomer is, he’s in a pretty good position, relatively speaking
2. Without knowing his age, I’d say Boomer is likely Early Xer or Late Boomer.
3. The most important point of all (where he wants or needs to live) is missing from the question. Don’t feel bad, many people forget this little factoid. We’ll assume that he wants to stay in SoCal.
I’ll deal with some important points:
1. What is that house in Arizona really worth long-term?
2. What should Boomer do with the cash?
3. What kind of financing makes the most sense?
What is that house in AZ really worth?
This is the question that wasn’t really asked, but needs to be answered, what is the house in Arizona worth, so we can understand what to do with the money.
Well, Arizona is a big place. It has a varied geography with beautiful vistas, scorching deserts, and some bone chilling mountains. You may not like what I have to say, but I’ll say it anyway. Your perception of the world and finances is the boiled frog syndrome. Not that I blame you. You’ve been raised in a world of ever decreasing interest rates and increasing asset values. The world has been kind to you.
You see, the success of many of the past 30 years (primarily the boomer cohort) is a demographic abnormality. Asset values have increased simply because of the organic demand of the Baby Boomer generation and ever increasing ability to finance that demand. In addition to this, an extremely relaxed monetary policy has increased the value of assets consistently since inflation was trounced back in the late 70s.
Unfortunately for many, that time is over.
In the short run, houses are worth what someone else is willing to pay for it, but in the long run, they are subject to the value of the next best alternative, or substitute pricing. The best substitute for owning a house is renting one. In some cases (such as short-term living), renting is almost always the clear alternative.
There are many formulas for determining the value, but one of the simplest mechanisms is the GRM (Gross Rental Multiplier). Basically, this number is used to multiply the monthly rent to arrive at a fair estimate of rental value. However, this is only a rule of thumb and is not to be taken as gospel; lower interest rates (like I expect we will see for the forseeable future) will increase the GRM, while substitutes (buildable land, locus to employment centers) will decrease it. In certain premium places like Orange County, the upper stretch might be 220 or so, while in places like Las Vegas or Arizona, a more reasonable 120 to 160 is more in line with reality. If we err on the side of optimism (150 GRM), this places the current value based on long-term fundamentals at about $360,000, leaving Boomer with a $190,000 premium over its fair value. If I were evaluating a stock, I’d say SELL! SELL! SELL! Doubly more so if Boomer had lived in the house for more than 2 of the last 5 years since he can walk away with pretty much all of the money tax free. It doesn’t matter what the market is selling at, if there is really that much of a disparity, sell that house and get your money! (of course, it doesn’t help that it was just rented, but there are always ways to let a renter go, if the price is right). At a 229 GRM, his house is badly overpriced. When it was $750K, I haven’t a clue how someone could justify that, since it would have been a GRM of 340. Holy smokes!
The future good in some ways, but bleak in other. The Southwest is largely overbuilt in nearly every city with a real dearth of extensive employment opportunities (unless WalMart is your target), and if energy prices remain elevated (not a given in my mind), the ability to pay will deteriorate along with the economy. Boomer may end up with late (or no) payments from his rental. Rentals are generally difficult to manage from a long distance and I would only advise it if you were planning on returning back to the home at some date. However, that would be hard after living in LaCosta for a few years.
In addition, a house can be valued at the cost of money to purchase it. This is a bit more detailed, but an easy rule of thumb is to take the rental equivalent, figure in future increases in rent, and discount the cash flows based on current borrowing rates. It accomplishes about the same thing as GRM, but removes the variability of borrowing rates (especially if it is held as a long-term investment). Using the inverse calculation, you could figure what the “money rent” on the current place would be given a few variables such as the “current value” and current interest rates. Given a current value of $550,000, the money rent valuation using 7% says that Boomer should be collecting about $3,700 in rent on that money. This leaves out taxes, repairs, rental expenses, vacancy, and many other options, so it is by far the most optimistic. By this reckoning, the house would have an imputed value of $357K, pretty darn close to our above $360K value. Sounds like time to sell this puppy no matter how you look at it.
As another way of thinking of it, as interest rates go down, this increases the ability to pay, but that can only increase so much since the risk of buying on low interest rates and being unable to sell into a similar situation will weigh heavily on others’ minds and prices will need to adjust to handle this uncertainty. Since demand for housing is waning as the boomer generation ages in place or downsizes (or simply dies), it is unlikely that houses will be able to continue their rich valuation long into the future without a substantial demographic to replace them with the ability to purchase.
Any way you look at it, the house is currently valued at more than it is “worth”. I can show houses in Orange County that currently have better GRMs than what this house is showing, and Orange County is one of the most overpriced locales in the US.
Tomorrow, I’ll deal with the question of what Boomer should do with his cash. Any thoughts before then?

I think you missed a sentence ending: “I can show houses in Orange County that currently”
Great analysis though, thanks!
I agree that people underestimate the economic effect of the baby boom moving through the system. Things will not be the same.
Thanks,
Missed that edit.
Chuck
I’m very curious to see what you would suggest he do with his cash if he sold. I have a somewhat similar situation (although I’m living in the single property I own), and debated selling about a year ago but decided to hold the property, primarily due to my favorable long-term mortgage and fear of high inflation. Although I stood to make a sizable profit, I would have needed to find and move into a rental, and somehow preserve the value of the cash. Since moving is a pain and I couldn’t think of good ways to preserve value in the face of inflation, I decided to hold.
If you want to indulge my “pessimistic” (but not worst case) case, use 10% annual inflation and a 50% high-end tax rate in your investment projections. I’m very curious to see what investment(s) you would recommend for 200k cash given that scenario (including taxes), and a comparison to the house value after, say, 20 years (assuming the house is valued at your “value” number, but increases by the inflation percentage every year; eg: 360k is 2,421k after 20 years, assuming 10% annual inflation). I calculate that you’d need a >25% annual rate of return, before taxes, over 20 years on the cash to equal the gain on the house under those circumstances, but I admit I’m not thinking creatively. I’m looking forward to your analysis.