Housing Bubble Housing Bubble: Fun in the Sun by Eric J. Fry The Rude Awakening Wall Street, New York Tuesday, July 12, 2005 Eric Fry discusses evidence of the Housing Bubble found in New Jersey. ------------------------- The Rude Awakening PRESENTS: Anyone need more evidence that the housing bubble is approaching the terminal stage? Property prices along the New Jersey shore are soaring. --- Advertisement ---
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------------------------- FUN IN THE SUN By Eric J. Fry Anyone need more evidence that the housing bubble is approaching the terminal stage?... Property prices along the New Jersey shore are soaring. "Home prices along the coast from Sandy Hook to Cape May have more than doubled since 2000," Bloomberg News reports. "That compares with a 62 percent increase in the rest of the state, according to data from the National Association of Realtors. The rise in prices along the 127-mile (204 kilometer) stretch of Atlantic Ocean is three times as fast as in the rest of the U.S." Maybe the Jersey Shore deserves every bit of its resurgent popularity, but we doubt it. Your editor just returned from a weekend in Belmar, New Jersey – home of sand and sun and not much else. He did not visit this oceanfront town to luxuriate in a 5-star spa. There are none. Nor did he trek two hours south of Manhattan to dine at one of Belmar's renowned seafood restaurants. There are none. Housing Bubble: Volleyball Rather, he ventured to the seaside town to watch the nation's finest volleyball players strut their stuff. Every year about this time, a cadre of young, tan and very fit athletes descends upon Belmar Beach to compete in a tournament sponsored by the AVP (Association of Volleyball Professionals). The pros in attendance this year included guys like Karch Kiraly, the volleyball legend who led three different U.S. men's indoor team to Olympic gold medals. Karch played brilliantly all weekend, despite relying upon 44-year old legs. [Karch Kiraly] The "Golden Girls" of women's volleyball, Kerri Walsh and Misty May, also made an appearance, and defeated all opposing teams to add one more tournament victory to their lengthening list of career wins. [Kerri Walsh with Rachel Wacholder looking on] Your editor divided his time between watching matches and trailing his daughter around the complex while she gathered autographs from the players. He stood a few feet away while his daughter procured an autograph from Karch...And he clicked off a few snapshots while she awaited a signature from Kerri Walsh. Unfortunately for the residents of Belmar, however, the tournament lasts only three days. The other 362 days of the year, they must content themselves with whatever delights the town produces on its own. We would imagine that tranquility – bordering on ennui – tops the list of principal off-season attractions. Belmar is a non-descript strip of sand along the Jersey Shore, not far from several non-descript strip-malls. Even on a 90-degree Sunday in early July, the town feels a bit forlorn. To be sure, one finds blocks and blocks of cute little cottages clustered along the coastline which, collectively, create a somewhat charming effect. Not charming enough, however, to attract hoteliers or restaurateurs or even the Starbucks Company. But Belmar's greatest deficiency is not aesthetic; it is atmospheric. Belmar is a delightful little strip of sand...for three months of the year. The rest of the time it inhabits the same artic climate that the rest of us in the Northeast endure. "Why," we griped to a local, "are hotels non-existent in Belmar?" "Who'd want to make the investment?" the local replied, "You'd only have demand for rooms from Memorial Day to Labor Day?" At first, the explanation seemed reasonable, as we hopped into a car and headed inland to a Days Inn in nearby Neptune, New Jersey. But we immediately recalled that luxury hotels dot the coastlines of Brittany and Normandy - - two places where the sun rarely shines, even in summer. Likewise, hotels operate in the Hamptons and in Cape Cod and in many, many other seasonal locales. But not in Belmar. In other words, seasonality, alone, does not explain the dearth of accommodations. However, a lack of off-season allure might. Housing Bubble: Hotel Operators Stay Away; Speculators Don't But even if hotel operators shy away from the Jersey Shore, real estate speculators do not. "Baby boomers returning to the New Jersey beaches this summer in search of childhood memories," Bloomberg News relates, "are discovering something else: surging real estate prices...The median sales price of an existing single-family home in the Atlantic City region rose 23 percent to $217,400 in the first quarter of 2005 from a year earlier, and 20 percent to $358,500 in Monmouth and Ocean counties, according to data compiled by the National Association of Realtors. John Swanick, a partner at a Philadelphia-area accounting firm, is one of the real estate min-tycoons who is contributing to the boom. "After vacationing in Sea Isle City as a child," Bloomberg notes, "he bought a place in 1992. Swanick, 44, currently owns three properties in town and said he may buy one more in the next few weeks. He estimates the four-bedroom townhouse he bought in January 2001 for $485,000 is now worth $1.3 million." "People are realizing that real estate is a smart investment to make, a safe investment," beams Bonnie Fitzgerald, president-elect of the New Jersey Association of Realtors. "It's one of the only investments where you're pretty much guaranteed to get a return on your money." Really? Real estate provides a "guaranteed return?" Even from highly seasonal vacation properties? The effusive Fitzgerald might not have ALL the facts at her disposal. Home prices along the Jersey Shore tumbled about 40% shortly after the stock market crash of 1987. But why worry about such disquieting "one-off" events when prices are still soaring year-after-year? Sign Up for The Rude Awakening Start your mornings off with a dose of Rude news. The Rude Awakening is dedicated to highlighting phenomena in the financial markets that others may not see. 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Real estate – it is no secret – has been a terrific investment for several years, especially since 2000. It has been so terrific, in fact, that many investors consider it a "can't-lose" proposition, which is often the state of mind that prevails immediately before a given asset class is about to become a "can't-win" proposition. Like gold in 1979, Japanese stocks in 1989 and U.S. tech stocks in 1999, real estate seems like the greatest, most reliable, and safest of all investments on earth. But we suspect it is somewhat less than that. While basking in the summertime warmth of continuous capital appreciation, it is easy to forget that the wintry chill of softening prices is sure to arrive. The pleasant days of summer rarely last long, especially in Belmar, New Jersey. [Ed. Note: While most reliable indicators and opinions are pointing towards a blistering, Belmar-style Winter for the housing market, there is certainly no crystal ball with a time and date of demise. Wouldn't it still be wise to have a plan-b for when things do go belly up? Contingency planners click here: Rainy Day Planners Information --- Advertisement ---
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------------------------- Did You Notice...? By Eric J. Fry Still not convinced that real estate is topping out? Check this out: Public pensions are rushing into real estate the way they rushed into tech stocks in the late 1990s. "When the tech boom went bust A few years ago, New Jersey's public pension fund was among the hardest hit in the country, suffering a loss in its tech-laden portfolio of nearly one-third of its value, or $30 billion. Now the State Investment Council has another great idea: In January it decided to jump into - this can't be a surprise - real estate." Within the ranks of "dumb money" public pension plans often top the list. In 1982, for example, on the eve of an 18- year bull market in stocks, CalPERS (the massive public pension plan of California) allocated less than one quarter of its portfolio to equities. But by 1999, immediately before the Nasdaq bubble burst, CalPERs' allocation to stocks had swelled to nearly 70%. The giant pension plan may have learned its lesson. "We think the timing is right [to sell real estate]", says Brad W. Pacheco, a Calpers spokesman. "We have a property on the block right now and plan to continue selling." Calpers has lately sold about $7 billion in expensive real estate and taken profits. But few public pension funds are following CalPERs' lead. "After getting out of real estate altogether in the late 1990s," Forbes Magazine relates, "the Teacher Retirement System of Texas has decided to invest up to $2.7 billion, or 3% of its $90 billion in assets. For the first time the Arizona and New York City funds are buying up property. All told, the top 50 public funds increased their commitments to real estate last year by $9.8 billion, equal to 11% of their property holdings, according to the newsletter Real Estate Alert. Now they have set a target of loading another $34 billion into land and buildings as quickly as is practical, representing a 37% hike to $128 billion, or 7.2% of their assets. "The rush of public money into real estate," Forbes concludes, "has many signs of the rearview-mirror investing that cost New Jersey so dearly during the tech bust." Well said...All else being equal, we'd rather sell to the nation's public pension funds than rub shoulders with them. [Ed. Note: If the infamous tech bubble has taught wise investors anything, surely it must be that diversity is an indispensable characteristic in securing a profitable portfolio. Technology aimed at curing crippling diseases has been turning a profit at astonishing rates. Find out more here: Massive Pharma Tech Breakthrough ------------------------- And the Markets... | Monday | Friday | This week | Year-to-Date | DOW | 10,520 | 10,302 | 229 | -2.4% | S&P | 1,219 | 1,198 | 29 | 0.6% | NASDAQ | 2,135 | 2,076 | 90 | -1.8% | 10-year Treasury | 4.10% | 4.07% | 0.19 | -0.12 | 30-year Treasury | 4.34% | 4.33% | 0.14 | -0.48 | Russell 2000 | 672 | 649 | 43 | 3.1% | Gold | $426.05 | $425.00 | -$13.95 | -2.6% | Silver | $7.10 | $6.94 | -$0.11 | 4.2% | CRB | 308.90 | 313.32 | -2.47 | 8.8% | WTI NYMEX CRUDE | $58.92 | $60.63 | -$1.62 | 35.6% | Yen (YEN/USD) | JPY 111.82 | JPY 112.35 | -2.51 | -9.0% | Dollar (USD/EUR) | $1.2068 | $1.1935 | 92 | 11.0% | Dollar (USD/GBP) | $1.7567 | $1.7149 | 722 | 8.4% |
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