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One Reason U.S. Real Estate
Can't Crash
By Dr. Steve Sjuggerud
June 22, 2007

Greetings from Sligo, Ireland...

County Sligo is as close to the middle-of-nowhere as you can get.

We've been here in Sligo (pronounced "sly-go") for days now, and we can't much figure out what people do here.

It's your basic, regular town. Yet the average asking price for a home here in Sligo is 354,767 euros according to the May 2007 issue of Business Sligo magazine. At current exchange rates, that's an astounding US$475,368.

I couldn't believe it.

This trip was yet another reminder to me that U.S. real estate isn't that expensive when you compare it to real estate around the world.

In the United States, the median price of an existing home is US$220,900, less than half the average asking price in middle-of-nowhere Ireland.

This U.S. median price, of course, includes the expensive places – New York and California. If you look at just the Southeast, even including Florida, the median home price drops to only $181,100.

If you like rain, cold, and not a whole lot going on, Sligo is a fine place. I actually like visiting here. We've been lucky. It hasn't been as cold or rainy as it should be this time of year. But I'd much rather live in Florida. Amazingly, you can live in Florida for half the money you need in Sligo.

It's not just Sligo...

Irish house prices are up 251% since 1997, according to the latest issue of The Economist. Home prices from Britain to South Africa are up by hundreds of percent. Yet the same magazine says U.S. home prices are up by only 103% in the same amount of time.

Said another way: Sure, U.S. home prices have risen in the last 10 years, but not nearly as much as many other countries. Also, I believe that U.S. home prices were starting from a low base... they had room to rise.

Foreigners now think that U.S. real estate is dirt-cheap.

Tom Dyson is from London. He moved to Florida to co-write DailyWealth with me. He can't believe you can buy a three-bedroom, two-bath house a half-mile from the beach for less than $250,000. But dozens of them are available right now. "You can hardly buy a closet in London for that price," Tom says.

U.S. real estate is always in demand by foreigners. For many, it's a nice way to get some assets out of their own country and own something "real." If you doubt me, visit Miami...

This trip to Ireland has been a good reminder to me... there's an underpinning to Florida real estate that won't let it crash dramatically. And that's buying by foreigners. Europeans buy in Florida because the weather is nice and real estate is cheap. Latinos buy to get money out of their own countries. I doubt either of these buyers will go away anytime soon.

It may take years to "burn off" the supply of homes available for sale on the market now. So we may not see much price appreciation for a while. But I don't think we'll see a dramatic fall in prices either.

Yes, U.S. home prices have run up in recent years. But when you get out and see the world, you find that U.S. real estate is simply not that expensive for what you get.

The fears of a housing crash nationwide are overblown.

Good investing,

Steve

Editor's note: Steve Sjuggerud is a regular contributor to DailyWealth, a free investment newsletter focused on the world's best contrarian opportunities. We write with a simple belief in mind: You don't have to take big risks to make big money with your investments.

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WE HAD A HOUSING CRASH AND DIDN'T EVEN KNOW IT

Europeans aren't the only ones to see U.S. home prices a little differently than us locals. Old man gold has a different view as well.

On June 2nd, we published an updated chart of the S&P 500 in terms of gold... to show that the profits you're making in stocks are struggling to keep up with the rising costs of healthcare, gasoline, food, and electricity.

We thought we'd use gold to measure the supposedly "ridiculous" price of homes in America. Aren't home prices ready to crash, as some say? Let's take a look.

As today's chart of "homes vs. gold" shows, that crash has already happened. After peaking in 2001, U.S. home prices have fallen nearly 50% against "real money," gold. That $200,000 profit you made on the old house doesn't buy near what it used too...

Median Price of a Single Family Home in the
U.S. - Gold Price Adjusted

-Brian Hunt

Nobody likes the rising price of oil better than U.S. railroads.

As the cost of crude soars, rail is gaining a competitive edge after losing ground to trucks for half a century. Even as automotive plant closings and reduced U.S. housing construction have contributed to a 4.4 percent drop in train shipments this year, investors including Warren Buffett and Carl Icahn are flocking to railroad shares, betting that higher oil prices and surging Asian imports along with congested highways will boost long-term demand.

"Earnings and stocks could quadruple within five years, which makes the stocks a bargain today," said Snehal Amin, a partner in London-based TCI Fund Management LLP.

"Railroads typically are about three times more fuel-efficient than trucks,'' said Jason Seidl, a New York-based analyst at Credit Suisse. Higher fuel prices "will drive up the differential."

-Bloomberg

The world has become one big construction zone. Whether it's an oil refinery in Angola, a zinc mine in Tibet or a strip mall in Idaho, there seems no end to the amount of earth that needs to be moved to make way for something new.

The momentum is being driven on a couple of fronts, said Charlie Rentschler, analyst at Wall Street Access. One is the world's "craving" for infrastructure.

"Whether you're an advanced country in the west or a developing country, everybody wants roads, transmission lines, communications networks," Rentschler said. "There's lots of construction projects that need to get done."

Another lift is coming from demand for natural resources such as oil and gas, coal, copper, lead and zinc.

"Just look at what's happened to the prices of oil, gas and coal," Rentschler said. "Obviously demand for these products spurs the price, which in turn spurs the miners and drillers to redouble their efforts to pull these resources out of the ground."

-Investors Business Daily

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