Posts tagged as:

house prices

Housing Vs. Gold

by Adrian Ash on April 30, 2009

“Top to bottom in the 1970s, house prices measured in gold lost four-fifths of their value all told…”

BEWARE THE CLAMOR to call the bottom in house prices.

Because with a tired predictability, the UK experience of seeing “green shoots” in every new survey says the global bust starting barely two years ago has a long way to run yet.

People who bought UK residential real estate in 1973, for instance, took until 1986 to break-even, on average, after accounting for inflation. Prices then doubled in the last half of the Eighties, before falling again for the next six years running, dropping nearly 40% (inflation-adjusted) and only regaining their peak in 2002.

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How the Property Market is Preparing You for Inflation

by Kris Sayce on April 24, 2009

We’ve been banging on the property bubble drum for some time. As the old movies will tell you, you’re safe until the drums stop beating. Well, we’re going to beat them for a bit longer because the bubble is still expanding, but I’ll get back to that in a moment.

First I want to explain the secondary reason why we’ve focused so much attention on the property bubble. Sure, when house prices fall and the unemployment rate rises even further, things are going to get pretty bad, but…

It will be nothing compared to what the property market is showing us about the effects of inflation.

In recent months many commentators, economists and analysts have scoffed at the idea of government stimulus programmes being inflationary. They’ve trotted out some fairly typical reasons why it couldn’t possibly lead to inflation.

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Real Estate Brokers: The Latest Victims of the Housing Crunch

by Kris Sayce on December 20, 2008

Who would have thought it possible? Asset values falling. That’s exactly what has happened and the remarkable thing is that even the so-called financial experts can’t believe it has happened.

Let’s take a look at two of the most popular Australian investments. Property and shares. I’ll be blunt, things are bad for property investors. But they may be even worse for what I like to call “real estate brokers”, or real estate agents. Why do I call them real estate brokers? Simple, for the last few years these real estate brokers have been advising buyers and sellers of property to churn houses just like shares.

Why? Because they thought that prices would always rise – and because they could earn a stack of commission. Buy one, wait for the value to go up, get it revalued then buy another and do the same. All of a sudden an average property investor has bought a dozen houses just from putting down $20k cash. The rest of the money they used was just ‘funny money.’ Although chances are that they borrowed the $20k ‘cash’ against their own home as well.

But to see just how bad things are in the property market you need look no further than the real estate brokers themselves. Not so long ago the car de jour for every broker or agent was a BMW. Shiny, 2-door or 4-door, it didn’t matter.

What are real estate brokers driving these days? Well, based on a very small sample of two brokers seen at an ‘open for inspection’ last weekend, they are driving a six-year old Holden Commodore and three-year old Holden Astra.

If that isn’t an indication that times are bad, then nothing is.

But maybe you can excuse the average punter for being made to believe that house prices and share prices can only ever rise in value. Or that if you ‘buy and hold’ then eventually everything will be fine. Remember the expression touted – “It’s time in the market, not timing the market.”

You know what, for shares the “time in the market” argument is starting to look pretty thin at the moment. Take a look at the chart below:

Even for investors that bought index weighted stocks in the early 1990’s their return until today is probably not that much better than those that had been in cash. For those that started investing around 2000 then the returns are most probably even worse. That’s if the investors bought and hold, which is what a typical fund manager will advise – obviously because it is in their interest to do so.

My guess is that more active investment management will be the key for anyone wanting to make a better-than-inflation return from shares over the next five years.

Whereas for property investors it will be a case of ‘buy and hold.’

The Most Important Money Morning Story This Week:

The ‘free market’ has been getting some bad press lately. It is a shame because the market we have had could not by any definition of the word be described as a free market. You only have to look at the number of rules, regulations and codes for nearly every aspect of life and business to see that this is not and never has been a free market. Not only is the free market having to take the blame for what has actually been socialism, but it is also being made the scapegoat for criminality and fraud – neither of which has any connection whatsoever with free markets. This week’s story on Wall Street veteran Bernard Madoff explained it all. Click here for more…

Monday: They may see it as politically unpalatable, but the fact is, if you are prepared to except an economy that goes ‘boom’ you must be prepared to except one that goes ‘kaboom.’ That is what we have at the moment. Left to run its course the economy will be purged of the ills that caused the boom and will emerge stronger. Click here for more…

Tuesday: Alas, this is how a public bureaucracy works. The same bureaucracy that will be responsible for spending billions of dollars on infrastructure projects as part of the stimulus package. Good luck! Click here for more…

Wednesday: The big surprise was what else they have done with the rate. Having seen that the market was pricing interest rates well below the target rate, the Fed has thrown up its hands. Click here for more…

Thursday: If, as CBA claim, Merrill’s were told about the revised write-offs then CBA is obliged to notify the market immediately. Failure to do so would result in Merrill’s and its clients acting on information that was not widely known to the market. In other words, insider trading. Click here for more…

Friday: With six and a half billion people in the world, the demand for energy has never been greater. This demand – especially from China and India – is the hidden engine behind Australia’s economy. One Perth based company is perfectly poised to capitalize on the voracious demand for energy. The “energy metal” they mine is critical for sustained renewable energy. Click here for more

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