southoctracker_IHB
New member
Excellent, <a href="http://money.cnn.com/2007/11/06/real_estate/home_prices.fortune/index.htm">grounded story in Fortune</a> that came out today about the future of real estate, and why prices will revert to historical levels that take into account the price of renting (where have I heard this type of analysis before?). <a href="http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/price_rent_ratios/">It also includes a chart</a> that projects OC will see price drops of <strong>22.2% over the next 5 years</strong>. Some quotes:
"We can't tell you what your house would fetch tomorrow. But we can help you through the fog of whipsawing prices and vacillating views to develop a clear picture of what your house will most likely be worth in five years or so. <strong>Over long periods housing, like stocks and bonds, follows a set of economic fundamentals. </strong>No matter how far prices get unhinged in a speculative craze - and we've just witnessed a blowout - those basic forces eventually regain their grip.
"...once the fervor fades, <strong>prices must fall to restore their normal, long-term relationship with rents</strong>. Rents exercise a kind of inevitable gravitational pull on prices. The ratio of prices to rents "behaves much like price/earnings ratios for stocks," says Yale economist Robert Shiller. "Like P/Es, price-to-rent ratios are mean-reverting." In other words, while prices soar from time to time, sending the ratio to exceptional heights, <strong>sooner or later the relationship is bound to return to its historical average</strong>."
"<strong>The cheap and easy money is gone, but</strong> <strong>the inflated prices it created are still here</strong>. No other factor was as important in driving the price-to-rent ratio to its current, unsustainable heights."
"We can't tell you what your house would fetch tomorrow. But we can help you through the fog of whipsawing prices and vacillating views to develop a clear picture of what your house will most likely be worth in five years or so. <strong>Over long periods housing, like stocks and bonds, follows a set of economic fundamentals. </strong>No matter how far prices get unhinged in a speculative craze - and we've just witnessed a blowout - those basic forces eventually regain their grip.
"...once the fervor fades, <strong>prices must fall to restore their normal, long-term relationship with rents</strong>. Rents exercise a kind of inevitable gravitational pull on prices. The ratio of prices to rents "behaves much like price/earnings ratios for stocks," says Yale economist Robert Shiller. "Like P/Es, price-to-rent ratios are mean-reverting." In other words, while prices soar from time to time, sending the ratio to exceptional heights, <strong>sooner or later the relationship is bound to return to its historical average</strong>."
"<strong>The cheap and easy money is gone, but</strong> <strong>the inflated prices it created are still here</strong>. No other factor was as important in driving the price-to-rent ratio to its current, unsustainable heights."