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An Unbelievable Opportunity Is Arriving Quicker Than I Imagined
By Dr. Steve Sjuggerud
December 23, 2008

You're not going to believe this... But U.S. residential real estate is now more affordable than it's been since 1973.


It's true. Thanks to 1) record low mortgage rates (Wells Fargo is offering 30-year fixed mortgages under 4.9%) and 2) a speedy fall in home prices (the median home price is down $50,000 on average nationwide)... we've arrived at "affordable" quicker than I ever imagined possible.

The Housing Affordability Index measures these two things and adds in median household income. It essentially compares the median family income to the median house payment.

Houses Are More Affordable Than They've Been Since 1973...
Copper Futures - COMEX

With house prices and mortgage rates way down... poof! We're here. Houses are ridiculously affordable once again. But that alone doesn't mean it's time to buy.

"Cheap, hated, and uptrend" – that's what we look for. It's hard to find all three at any time. We have the first in U.S. residential real estate right now. Houses are cheap. We also have the second... Real estate is hated:

The latest survey of homebuilders suggests they don't expect to sell a darn thing today or in the future... The survey just hit record lows in sentiment. But you probably don't need statistics to tell you sentiment is terrible toward real estate right now. You already know it.

So real estate is cheap and hated. But what about the trend? That's the last piece of the puzzle before we'll consider buying again.

Right now, of course, the trend is still down. It's still terrible. And many facts suggest what you probably expect: We might have another year of "terrible" before we enter what could be five great years in U.S. residential real estate.

U.S. residential real estate typically bottoms right after recessions. We've seen two terrible recessions – one ended in March '75 and another ended in November '82. In those two, new home prices bottomed within two months on either side of the end of the recessions.

We also had a recession that hit real estate hard, ending in March '91. New home prices didn't bottom until a year later in that case.

After coming out of recession, new home prices typically do well for about five years. (The last official recession ended in November '01... Home prices went straight up for nearly four years after that.)

Right now, we're in recession. We could be in recession for another year. Based on history, there's no hurry to buy anything yet. Unless you're desperate, you shouldn't hurry to sell either.

If there's any good news, it's that the speed of the carnage was extraordinary. (We've seen a $50,000 fall in home prices already, and they're down roughly 25% from their highs nationwide.) Now, the factors are lining up for a legitimate bull market in real estate:
* Mortgage rates nationwide will hit record lows in 2009.
* The supply of housing is at a level not seen since 1981, so prices will likely fall in 2009. But that will probably make U.S. residential real estate the most affordable it has ever been.
* Meanwhile, real estate sentiment is extremely negative.
* The government has promised to "employ all available tools" to fix it.
* Prices will bottom about when the recession ends. (A year from now? We don't know.)

The key factor is, when will the recession end? The group that officially dates recessions won't tell us until a year after it's already over. So we need something else...

Dennis Gartman – one of my favorite newsletter writers – alerted me to the indicator with the best track record of timing the end of recessions I've ever seen. For 40 years, it has called the end of recessions with remarkable accuracy.

It sounds a bit strange... but it works. It's a ratio of the "coincident economic indicators" to the "lagging economic indicators" put out by the Conference Board. Basically, it takes common economic measures (like unemployment) and compares where we are today to where we were in the recent past. Right now, this ratio says we're in a serious recession... the worst period since 1974.
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This indicator usually bottoms just about when the recession ends. We'll say that when this ratio turns up for three months in a row, we're out of recession. We're not there yet... but we'll let you know when we are.

At that point, the risks in the housing market will have turned. Based on what I've showed you today, that uptrend could be a year away... or even less.

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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THIS INDICATOR SAYS LOAD UP ON CRUDE OIL BETS

Right now, a special indictor is signaling the brutal decline in crude oil is close to an end. It's called the "gold/oil ratio."

This gold/oil ratio is the amount of crude oil one ounce of gold will buy. If gold is $800 an ounce and oil is $80 per barrel, the ratio is 10. If gold is at $800 and oil is at $40, the ratio is 20. When the ratio dips below 10, gold is considered cheap relative to crude oil, and it's a safe bet gold will outperform oil over the following year. When the ratio climbs above 20, the opposite is true... crude oil is cheap.

With a rock-bottom reading of 6.5, the ratio was screaming "cheap gold, expensive oil" in July. Oil traded for over $140 while gold traded for $925. Oil "corrected" the situation by plummeting over 70% in the following six months. As you can see from today's chart, it pumped up the ratio to 20... and we now have extremely cheap oil.

There's no guarantee oil prices will rebound in 2009... but this ratio reached a similar extreme in 1994, 1999, 2002, and 2007. Oil staged a big rally each time. The "long crude oil" bet is starting to look attractive.

Copper Futures - COMEX

U.S. casinos, whose fortunes have tumbled amid a slowdown in consumer spending, may be at a turning point, said KeyBanc Capital Markets.

The investment firm said improving balance sheets, stabilizing fundamentals and low valuations make for attractive entry points.

Ameristar, (ASCA) which KeyBanc rates a buy, should see a boost next year, when it predicts several Colo. towns will approve 24-hour gaming and raise betting limits. Ameristar rose 3.1% to 9.64. It also favors Penn National Gaming, (PENN) which rose 2.6% to 22.60.

– Investor's Business Daily

The average price of regular gasoline at U.S. filling stations fell to $1.66 a gallon as the nation's recession sapped demand.

Gasoline slipped 9 cents, or 5.1 percent, in the two weeks ended Dec. 19, according to oil analyst Trilby Lundberg's survey of 7,000 filling stations nationwide.

Crude oil, which accounts for about 59 percent of gasoline's pump price, has tumbled 77 percent from a record $147.27 a barrel reached July 11 on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

AAA, the nation's biggest motoring club, said today that regular gasoline at the pump averaged $1.668 a gallon, down 59 percent from the record $4.114 in July.

– Bloomberg

A loss of nearly 42,000 jobs last month pushed California's unemployment rate to 8.4%, a 14-year high and the third-highest jobless rate in the country.

California's November unemployment figure lagged behind only Michigan with its crippled automobile industry at 9.6% and Rhode Island at 9.3% after job cuts this year in retail, manufacturing and services.
– L.A. Times

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