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The Cheapest Beachfront Around
By Tom Dyson
August 6, 2008

I met Jack in the back of a taxi here in Malaysia. Jack is American. We shared a ride from the airport yesterday...

Jack asked me where I lived. When I told him I lived in Florida, he quickly turned the subject to real estate. It turns out, Jack got involved in the Miami condo bubble.

Jack knows nothing about real estate or investing. But in 2004, he and his wife bought two condos on Collins Avenue. Miami had two major construction booms: One boom ran along the beach on Collins Avenue. The other was downtown... in the financial district... around Biscayne Boulevard.

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Jack's condos rose 15% through 2005. Let's say Jack put 10% money down. He had a 150% profit. Jack had intended to flip his condos, but when he saw how easy it was to make money in Miami's construction boom, he decided to let his profits run. Then the market collapsed...

Collins Avenue condos are now down around 15% from their peak, and the condos around Biscayne Boulevard have lost around 35%.

Jack's investment is back where it started. Except now Jack owns two condos no one wants to buy and he has to rent them out. It reminds me of the old joke: What do you call a short-term trade that goes bad? Answer: An investment. He says the rent covers about half his monthly mortgage, tax, and condo fee.

Here's the thing: Developers can always construct a new condo building in downtown Miami. But as Jack says, "They aren't building anymore beach." Jack made a bad investment. He's stuck with two condos he never wanted and he's losing money every month. But at least his initial investment is still intact. If he'd bought downtown, he'd be sitting on a 250% loss right now... on top of the monthly bleeding. Besides, the beachfront market will recover before the downtown market, and it'll rise faster when the next boom comes along.

"Thank God we bought on the beach," he says.

The time to buy Miami condos is not here yet. The worst of the decline may be behind us, but I expect it'll take three or four years for this market to find a bottom. We can still take a lesson from Jack: Always buy beachfront. There's less downside and more upside.

In Detroit, "beachfront" is a mansion in Grosse Pointe next to the country club, with views of Lake Saint Clair. In Argentina, beachfront is an apartment in Buenos Aires' Recoleta neighborhood. In Las Vegas, it's a penthouse on the Strip.

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The stock market has its beachfront, too. When the time comes to invest in homebuilders again, I'll buy NVR. It's by far the best-managed homebuilder. When financials find a bottom, I'll buy Wells Fargo, the elite bank that counts Warren Buffett as a huge shareholder.

What's the best deal in "beachfront" right now? I like mint condition pre-1933 gold coins. They're almost as cheap as the "downtown" common bullion coins, and they're in an uptrend after a 10-year bear market...

Good investing,

Tom

P.S. Malaysia? Yes... I'll be in Asia for the next month and a half, researching investment opportunities. If you're close by or if you'd like to hear about a specific subject, write us a note at editorialfeedback@dailywealth.com.

Editor's note: Tom Dyson 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 Tom Dyson.

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THE MARKET LIKES HEALTH CARE AND BIOTECH

Our job at DailyWealth is to show you the biggest-upside, lowest-downside investments in the world. That's why we've been writing about biotech lately.

We believe you could see biotech stocks gain hundreds of percent in the next few years. More so than any other sector, biotech tends to move in giant boom and bust trends. The signs of a new "boom" are popping up daily...

Loads of individual biotech companies are hitting new highs right now. The S&P Biotech ETF is regularly hitting new highs. The world's largest biotech firm, Genentech, is the subject of a huge buyout story. And here's this week's sign: new highs for the "big boy" of health care, Johnson & Johnson.

J&J is like a huge health care hedge fund. It frequently inhales small medical and drug companies. It receives revenue from drugs, medical devices, and consumer products. Said in English, J&J makes money by selling everything from Sudafed to scalpels to schizophrenia drugs. It's a terrific gauge of sentiment toward health care and drug investments.

As you can see from J&J's uptrend, sentiment toward the sector is good... which means it's "buy time" for the drug and biotech sectors.

Johnsno & Johnson

U.S. farmland values are at a record high even as the rest of the country suffers the worst housing crisis since the Great Depression, with the highest crop prices ever pushing up agricultural real estate.

The value of all land and buildings on farms averaged $2,350 an acre at the start of this year, up 8.8 percent from a year earlier, the U.S. Department of Agriculture said today in an annual report.

Surging corn, wheat and soybean prices boosted values in the Northern Plains, which includes Kansas, Nebraska, North Dakota and South Dakota, by 15.5 percent, the biggest increase in the country, according to the report.

The report also tracks rates for land that's rented for farming. Rents for farmland rose 13 percent last year to $96 an acre while pasture fees rose 8.3 percent to $13 an acre. Because of high demand for additional farmland and the high cost of buying, farm-rental prices may rise 20 percent to 30 percent in 2009, said Murray Wise, chief executive officer of Westchester Group Inc., a farm-asset management company based in Champaign, Illinois.

Bloomberg

By 2017, consumers and taxpayers will spend more than $4 trillion on health care, accounting for one of every $5 spent, the federal government projects.

The 6.7 percent annual increase in spending – nearly three times the rate of inflation – will be largely driven by higher prices and an increased demand for care, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services said Monday. But other factors in the mix include a growing and aging population. The first wave of baby boomers become eligible for Medicare beginning in 2011.
– Associated Press
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