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The return of the travelling circus



On one sunny weekend in March some time ago, 61,500 people packed into a massive convention centre paying $49-$499 to listen to America’s self-proclaimed best business minds including Tony Robbins, Robert Kiyosaki (rich dad, poor dad author), and Donald Trump.  The mood was energetic and the attendees were, at many times, screaming in joy when the speakers took the stage.  People were pumped up as if they were going to watch the Stanley Cup ceremony where the Leafs won it all – the atmosphere was ballistic to say the least. Welcome to the Learning Annex's Real Estate Wealth Expo.

This travelling circus went from city to city telling crowds the following: “in one weekend you can be a millionaire”, “do whatever it takes to get onto the real-estate ladder”, “the best way to build wealth is through real-estate”, and my absolute favourite, “real estate can only go up from here”. The clowns cleverly reached people’s inner FOMO (fear of missing out) and exploited it to the max while collecting fat speaker fees.

Carol Lloyd attended this event and was rather mystified by the whole spectacle. It was pandemonium and the crowds were eating up this “education” like candy. She later wrote, “why now that interest rates are rising and homeownership rates are at an all-time high and savings at an all-time low? Why would over 61,000 people in one of the most overpriced housing markets in the world spend good money to learn about real estate investing?”

Ms. Lloyd inferred something big was on the horizon as the warning signs were all flashing red.  Rising cost of money, all-time high ownership rate, savings rate at an all time low, and personal debt up the wazoo. This was March 2006 in California just months before the real-estate tsunami was about to make landfall and crush the American dream for so many.

“Guess who’s back” – Eminem

Anyone who has taken public transportation in this city has likely seen the following ad:
This all-star event featured Tony Robbins, an HGTV actor, some guy from Dragon’s Den, the “king of real-estate” a realtor by the name of Daryl King and Canada’s #1 real-estate investor, Pit Bull (he likely does not own any real-estate in this country).

Tickets for this world class educational program ranged from $49-$2499 which is good considering the one’s that took place in the states before their real-estate implosion were priced in US dollars.  I would imagine the $2499 package included some favours of an R-rated nature.

As much as I wanted to attend this event (no sarcasm this time), I had a big run that day and skipped out. I regret few things in my life such as the time I missed a Metallica concert back while I was in undergrad, refusing to drink ice caps from Tim Horton’s for two years because an ex-girlfriend really liked them and once ordering sushi a la carte when there was an all-you-can-eat option.  I would like to add missing this affair to the list.

About 15,000 people attended this event back on March 18, 2017, and, as expected, it was one giant circus. People were yelling and screaming in joy when speakers took to the stage. Euphoria was in the air and everyone was high on the allure of easy money.

The message conveyed to the attendees was crystal clear: “do whatever it takes to buy”, “be creative if you don’t have the money to buy”, “just do it and buy now” and, my favourite, again, “real-estate can only go up”.  

The “king of real-estate” Daryl King was quoted saying “so buy today before it’s too late”. 

I wonder what comments Pit Bull had in relation to our mortgage finance system.

Outside of the “lecture hall” where the “students” were busy drinking the kool-aid, I mean learning the intricacies of Toronto real-estate investing, there were many booths from sketchy lenders offering high interest loans, syndicated mortgage companies, “creative financing companies”, pooling money to buy negative cash flow properties and other sexy opportunities one can only dream of. Suffice to say, the place was preying on unsophisticated common folk. “Predatory” would be a good way to describe the scene.

The shadow banking system that we discussed in the last blog post was alive and well. Unregulated lenders loaning obscene amounts of money to people so they can get the “creative financing” and buy properties to flip a short time later. Apparently, many of the loans were only for 1 year in duration meaning that they were solely designed for short term speculators.

In case you forgot, let me just cut and paste the words of Ms. Llyod who attended the same event back in 2006 with Tony Robbins as the headliner: “Why would over [15,000] people in one of the most overpriced housing markets in the world spend good money to learn about real estate investing? ... perhaps the very success of the Expo is an ominous sign of the bubble popping, rather than a sign that the real estate boom is continuing.” 

Revisiting the time-honoured stages of a speculative mania 

In any speculative mania, a point is reached when the masses are so fixated on one object they collectively lose their minds. Re-read the post “Fixating on delusions” if would like a refresher. The real-estate wealth expo that took place here is prime evidence of lunacy. Many people lined up and paid good money to hear so called “experts” who recycle the same debunked dogma that has hurt so many people across the world. But, rest assured, they were paid handsomely for their sermon.

When the summit of a speculative mania is reached, greed and delusion pervades everyone’s thinking and irrationality becomes the norm – until it doesn’t. The switch from greed and delusion to “what the hell did I just do?” and denial is never easy to pinpoint with any precision.  Eventually the keg of kool-aid will run dry, it always does. Once the masses figure out that it may not have been a prudent decision for someone to spend $1.5 million for a wobbly semi-detached home at 18x the median family income, there will be a collective “what was I smoking when I agreed to this?!” moment that will be felt like an earthquake. Greed will always turn to fear just like jumping into a lake will always result in getting wet.

Echoing history

The real-estate expos just prior to the US meltdown and the one that just took place here in Toronto share such strong resemblances it would be folly to ignore. Same headliners. Same narrative to buy now or be priced out forever. Same encouragement to get involved with “creative financing”. And the same madness and euphoria expressed by those in attendance. History does not always repeat itself, but it does often rhyme.  

The Toronto expo encouraged the same reckless behaviours that sunk many hard-working middle and upper class families down south - borrowing down payments, utilizing shady lenders, leveraging the family home to speculate on a futures market, and making foolish decisions in the attempts of making a quick buck. The speakers shrewdly reached people’s inner FOMO and exploited it to the max.

In any real-estate mania, those who were caught holding onto one or more properties when the market froze over quickly found themselves underwater. No life jackets were provided.  As much as we want to think we can time the market, we simply cannot. Not even the world’s best mathematician, Sir Issac Newton, could time the market when he got caught up in one of the earliest stock market speculative manias. 

Ask yourself: did Tony Robbins refund all those attendees at the 2006 expo? You know, since anyone who bought real-estate in the USA in 2006 lost 30-70% of their money if they were forced into foreclosure, and then some?

Did Daryl King and the other realtors who presented inform the attendees how Torontonians in the late 1980’s lost upwards to 40% of their money betting on Toronto real-estate and others had to wait 21 years to get their money back? Did they explain how the same dangerous credit conditions back in 1989 have reappeared as of late?

You and I both know the answers to the aforementioned questions.

But most importantly, would you follow the advice of the travelling circus?