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A Surprising Look at 100+ Years of Home Prices
By Dr. Steve Sjuggerud
March 19, 2007

We really have experienced the greatest real estate boom in U.S. history, if the figures are to be believed. Take a look...

130 Years of Home Prices

The only other housing boom of any real magnitude was the World War II boom. But it doesn't come close to what we've just gone through...

The figures should be believable... They are from Yale professor Robert Shiller, who is both a well-known financial historian and the creator of the Case-Shiller Weiss real estate price indexes. Shiller's real estate indexes are thought to be the best available (speculators note: You can even trade futures and options on these indexes on the CME).

Looking back over the history of real estate, a few things strike me. First off...

1) Contrary to popular belief, real estate prices don't always go up.

Everyone knows that "you can't lose money in real estate," right? But this chart doesn't show that... so what's going on?

This chart is adjusted for inflation. So for example, even though homes prices went somewhat higher in the 1990s, the reality was, home prices didn't keep up with inflation in the 1990s.

2) The price gains on this chart don't account for the increase in the size of houses.

The chart makes it look like home prices were flat from roughly 1950 until 2000. But I don't believe this is accurate. The home of 1950 doesn't compare with the home of today...

In 1950, the average home in America was 983 square feet. It had two bedrooms and one bath. It was short on modern amenities – nobody had a dishwasher or air conditioning.

By 1970, the average home size jumped to 1,500 square feet. It had three bedrooms and one-and-a-half baths. One in three homes had a dishwasher and air conditioning.

Nowadays, the average home is two stories. It's around 2,500 square feet, with at least two-and-a-half baths, and a two-car garage. We've come a long way since 1950.

When you think about the dramatic increases in the size of homes and the innovations (like air-conditioning and dishwashers) that are now standard features, it is hard to believe that home prices didn't rise on average for the second half of the 20th century.

It's possible that the great boom that we've seen in home prices since 2000 – the greatest in the history of our nation – is really home prices simply making up for lost gains of the second half of the 20th century.

One possible explanation is that house prices were really cheap in 2000 – as they hadn't done much in a very long time. That would suggest the boom we're in was apparently kicked off for sound reasons.

More on Chris Weber

Housing Prices: The Real Truth

Real Estate: The Bull Market Is Officially Over

Looking ahead, is the housing boom over completely? Or will there be another leg higher? We'll continue to comment on the housing market when we find something interesting to share going forward.

But looking back, consider this...

We're in the greatest boom in history, after going through an extended period when housing prices didn't do much. During that period, essentially the second half of the last century, homes nearly tripled in size. 

That could mean that homes were ridiculously cheap by the end of the 1990s. And that could be the real foundation for the great boom we've seen...

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.

Sign up today to read more investment ideas from Steve Sjuggerud.

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Even though dozens of new exchange-traded funds are already on the market this year, the pipeline for new offerings is bulging with international ETFs, sector funds, and securities to track commodities such as natural gas.

At least 288 more ETFs are pending before the Securities and Exchange Commission, according to data compiled by IndexUniverse.com, an indexing-industry Web site. This number is more than half as large as the number of ETFs now on the market.

Barclays Global Investors is working on expanding its line of commodity-linked products. It recently filed to launch iShares ETFs that follow livestock, natural gas, industrial metals and other types of assets.

Four of the five largest ETFs to hit the market in 2006 are based on commodities, according to Morningstar data. The biggest, the iShares Silver Trust, has accumulated about $1.8 billion in assets.

-Wall Street Journal

Options traders are starting to say the Federal Reserve may cut interest rates three times this year as the housing slump threatens the economy's growth.

Options on Federal Fund futures at the Chicago Board of Trade show a 24 percent likelihood the central bank will lower its target rate for overnight loans to 4.5 percent from the current 5.25 percent. Just seven weeks ago, options prices suggested no chance of that large a reduction this year.

-Bloomberg

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