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Strategies & Market Trends : The Residential Real Estate Crash Index -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: gcrispin who wrote (35913)7/21/2005 2:10:59 PM
From: Wyätt GwyönRead Replies (2) | Respond to of 306849
 
I thought real estate was overpriced when they were a tenth of the price

it could be, depending on the longterm cost of money and credit availability. if you knew what this is, you would know the real present value of everything. e.g., even somebody as debt-averse as myself would be happy to take on hundreds of millions of debt to buy RE, if, for example, i could lock in 100-yr I/O mortgages at 0.1%. the only criterion would be to have cash-flow sufficient to cover all taxes/expenses/depreciation, plus, say 1% positive cash flow.

OTOH, if real interest rates were known to be in double digits for the next 100 yrs, very few RE investments would make sense except at steep discounts.

RE could have seemed overpriced in the 1980s if one assumed continued high real interest rates, just as today it could seem underpriced if one assumes continuation of the opposite. what foiled the bears was a return to trend from expensive money in the 1980s, just as in the 2000s the bulls will be foiled by an end of cheap and easy credit.

what we see in real market prices today is that the market is assuming very low cost of money combined with high credit availability (quite ludicrous based on historical standards) for a long, long time. thus, it seems to me if the cost of money and credit availability can be expected to return to trend, a housing crash is inevitable.



To: gcrispin who wrote (35913)7/22/2005 12:02:27 AM
From: mishedloRespond to of 306849
 
Do I think prices are too high? Yes. My point is that no one can predict what will happen with prices in all areas, but it is best to treat your home as just that, and not an "investment".

The problem is 36% of all houses sold in 2004 were for investment or as second homes. That is staggering is it not?

I do not have figures for 2005.

Mish