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For those who believe investing in the S and P is better than buying Manhattan RE

Started by spunky
over 17 years ago
Posts: 1627
Member since: Jan 2007
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Response by spunky
over 17 years ago
Posts: 1627
Member since: Jan 2007

Oh I forgot to say you get to live in it as well. Well time to have the brewski on the terrace tonight.

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Response by spunky
over 17 years ago
Posts: 1627
Member since: Jan 2007

oh I forgot about the tax deductions as well

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Response by houser
over 17 years ago
Posts: 331
Member since: Apr 2008

I was wondering how accurate this chart really is.

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Response by stevejhx
over 17 years ago
Posts: 12656
Member since: Feb 2008

Note the little box in the lower right-hand corner: There does not appear to be a correlation with the Dow Jones Industrial average, but we provide the chart because it is requested so often.

This is why spunky is dumb: "I beleive this chart says it all" when the chart itself says it's meaningless.

LOL.

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Response by stevejhx
over 17 years ago
Posts: 12656
Member since: Feb 2008

Moreover, it's the "average" sales price - skewed by a few very expensive apartments - versus the more accurate still median sales price, versus the more accurate still price of the same apartment over a period of time.

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Response by joepa
over 17 years ago
Posts: 278
Member since: Mar 2008

The chart doesn't say it's meaningless. It says there is no correlation (ie. when the Dow goes up it doesn't necessarily imply housing will go up). The chart has plenty of meaning if you read it.

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Response by houser
over 17 years ago
Posts: 331
Member since: Apr 2008

Actually stevejhx if you read the link below investing in Manhattan Real Estate proves to be a much better investment than investing in stocks. Just curious about your comments on this one.

http://www.themortgagegeek.com/Downloads/Presentations/Condo_vs_Dow.pdf

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Response by spunky
over 17 years ago
Posts: 1627
Member since: Jan 2007

excellent article houser very enjoyable reading.

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Response by stevejhx
over 17 years ago
Posts: 12656
Member since: Feb 2008

houser, I am absolutely certain that if you start from 1997, that will be the result. And that is also the problem.

joepa, if you plot two variables on the same chart overlaying them using the same scale, you are attempting to show the correlation between the two. It has no other purpose. When the chart itself says there is no correlation, just because the lines appear to move in one direction or another in tandem, do not mean that they are correlated.

Basic statistics.

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Response by joepa
over 17 years ago
Posts: 278
Member since: Mar 2008

You can certainly make a chart to show more than just correlation. This chart is a perfect example. The Dow and housing are not correlated, yet the chart still shows that housing outpaced the Dow. So the chart demonstrates how one asset outpaced another - even though there is no correlation between the two assets.

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Response by houser
over 17 years ago
Posts: 331
Member since: Apr 2008

stevejhx well you pick a time and I'll plug the numbers in and see what we come up with. What year would you like me to start stevejhx.

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Response by joepa
over 17 years ago
Posts: 278
Member since: Mar 2008

Another example would be if we chart your iq since birth with my height. Although they are not correlated, the chart would show how my height outpaced your iq.

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Response by stevejhx
over 17 years ago
Posts: 12656
Member since: Feb 2008

joepa, you make my point: they're not correlated, so just because they behaved in one way in the past does not mean they will behave that way in the future.

I assume your weight is far in excess of my IQ.

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Response by spunky
over 17 years ago
Posts: 1627
Member since: Jan 2007

"Actually stevejhx if you read the link below investing in Manhattan Real Estate proves to be a much better investment than investing in stocks. Just curious about your comments on this one." houser

http://www.themortgagegeek.com/Downloads/Presentations/Condo_vs_Dow.pdf

"houser, I am absolutely certain that if you start from 1997, that will be the result. And that is also the problem." stevejhx

"stevejhx well you pick a time and I'll plug the numbers in and see what we come up with. What year would you like me to start stevejhx."--houser

notice how stevjhx purposely evaded this request now I know why stevejhx is referred to as a weasel

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Response by JuiceMan
over 17 years ago
Posts: 3578
Member since: Aug 2007

"2) The S&P 500 increases at a real rate of 8.0% per annum.

These being true, it is ALWAYS better to rent property than to buy, if you invest the down payment in the S&P 500."

steve, I was wondering if you were thinking about the correlation of the S&P and real estate when you made these comments?

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Response by stevejhx
over 17 years ago
Posts: 12656
Member since: Feb 2008

houser, it is well known that property prices fell by around 25% from 1987-1998. The S&P 500 rose at an annual rate of 16.50% from January 1, 1987 through December 31, 1998.

http://www.moneychimp.com/features/market_cagr.htm

For a total price increase - just capital gains, not dividends - of 393%.

You lose.

Spunky: "I beleive this chart says it all.
http://millersamuel.com/charts/gallery-view.php?ViewNode=1168395557MyEfJ&Record=5"

Steve: "Note the little box in the lower right-hand corner: There does not appear to be a correlation with the Dow Jones Industrial average, but we provide the chart because it is requested so often."

This is why spunky is dumb: "I beleive this chart says it all" when the chart itself says it's meaningless.

LOL.

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Response by stevejhx
over 17 years ago
Posts: 12656
Member since: Feb 2008

juiceman, I wasn't, because they are completely uncorrelated. See Spunky's chart for the DJIA:

http://millersamuel.com/charts/gallery-view.php?ViewNode=1168395557MyEfJ&Record=5

The S&P 500 is much more closely correlated to the DJIA than to housing prices. It's a silly comparison to make - the S&P 500 is tied to expectations of future earnings of the composite companies; housing prices are tied to household incomes and leverage.

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Response by JuiceMan
over 17 years ago
Posts: 3578
Member since: Aug 2007

So your saying you should compare the returns of the S&P to real estate?

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Response by stevejhx
over 17 years ago
Posts: 12656
Member since: Feb 2008

No, you did.

I am saying they are uncorrelated. Real estate prices are correlated to household income and leverage. The S&P is correlated to expectations of future earnings.

Spunky is the one who says the DJIA is related to real estate prices. You should address your question to him since you'd rather be called him than me. I said there is more correlation between the DJIA and S&P 500 than there is between either of them and real estate prices. Are you saying that that is false?

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Response by joepa
over 17 years ago
Posts: 278
Member since: Mar 2008

Steve - can you ever admit you are wrong or would you explode if you did?

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Response by stevejhx
over 17 years ago
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Member since: Feb 2008

joepa, I always admit I'm wrong when I am. Read my other threads. ALWAYS.

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Response by JuiceMan
over 17 years ago
Posts: 3578
Member since: Aug 2007

I don't understand steve. If you say the S&P is not correlated (which you never have said until you saw that chart) why do you keep using the S&P in comparisons with real estate?

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Response by stevejhx
over 17 years ago
Posts: 12656
Member since: Feb 2008

Ah, juiceman, again with the obfuscations, trying to make a sensible messenger like moi sound stupid to the unfamiliar by asking a stupid question.

The opportunity cost of investing in real estate is the cost of not investing somewhere else. The S&P 500 is a broad sample of the stock market. Don't invest in real estate and rent instead, do invest in the S&P 500, and over time you will become far wealthier.

I "never said it until I saw the last chart" because it would have never occurred to me to say it. Only the Spunkster would say something so stupid, without realizing how stupid it was.

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Response by houser
over 17 years ago
Posts: 331
Member since: Apr 2008

Gee stevejhx all I asked was for a start date because I wanted to demonstrate to you that over the past 40 years to present one would of been way better off investing in Manhattan RE as opposed to the S and P. Certainly if you can pick the top or bottom of any market price you are much smarter than me. I do want to commend you on your talented ability to manipulate questions and remarks from others. This manipulative approach will always generate antagonistic responses.

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Response by stevejhx
over 17 years ago
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Member since: Feb 2008

houser, I said the data don't exist.

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Response by JuiceMan
over 17 years ago
Posts: 3578
Member since: Aug 2007

oh, I see stevejhx but that is a silly silly statement. There are many investments that "could" outperform housing, but none that you live in. So the only comparison you should be making is between renting and buying. So maybe you shouldn't discuss the S&P anymore?

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Response by inquirer
over 17 years ago
Posts: 335
Member since: Aug 2007

JuiceMan: Now stevejhs will scream that he can discuss anything he wants, that you can't tell him what to discuss... This board is dead.

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Response by stevejhx
over 17 years ago
Posts: 12656
Member since: Feb 2008

JuiceMan, what? What you said makes no sense. I think you're trying to twist and obfuscate again, because the truth is painful.

The fact is, residential property is not a good investment, though it could be a great place to live, provided that it costs no more than a rental, because a rental has the same output value: shelter. If you look at housing versus the S&P 500, and consider housing to be a good investment, you merely need compare not that it "could" outperform housing, but that over long periods of time it always does.

So, do the math. Invest your down payment, maintenance and taxes in the S&P 500, which yields a real 8.0% per year over long periods of time. Invest them in housing, which like rents rise at the rate of incomes, or a real 0.7% per year over long periods of time. You will always get the same answer, over long periods of time: it is far better, as an investment, to invest in the S&P 500.

By all historical measures, the recent run-up in real estate prices is an aberration. Current housing prices are 24x annual rent in Manhattan. Because of the 40x/28% income constraints, those constraints can not long be over 12x. So either incomes rise 50%, or prices fall 50%, or some combination of both.

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Response by JuiceMan
over 17 years ago
Posts: 3578
Member since: Aug 2007

Your argument is silly. You could make the same argument you are making about renting. If you are saying you shouldn’t own because it is a bad investment when compared to the S&P you can also say you shouldn't rent because it is a bad investment when compared with the S&P. How has renting performed against the S&P?

So people, steve says don't rent or buy, live with your parents and invest the money in the S&P.

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Response by stevejhx
over 17 years ago
Posts: 12656
Member since: Feb 2008

JuiceMan, you make no investment when you rent. It is an expense, pure and simple. It doesn't show up on your balance sheet. It shows up on the P&L.

What you say is stupid. You can't compare income accounts to asset accounts.

I repeat: by all historical measures, the recent run-up in real estate prices is an aberration. Current housing prices are 24x annual rent in Manhattan. Because of the 40x/28% income constraints, those constraints can not long be over 12x. So either incomes rise 50%, or prices fall 50%, or some combination of both.

Sorry if you don't like it, but those are the market-imposed constraints. The value of owning a home is its output value, which is market rent. Market rentals are a near perfect substitute for market purchases. If one is too expensive, people gravitate toward the other.

Basic economic theory: elasticity of demand.

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Response by JuiceMan
over 17 years ago
Posts: 3578
Member since: Aug 2007

"JuiceMan, you make no investment when you rent. It is an expense, pure and simple. It doesn't show up on your balance sheet. It shows up on the P&L."

So you saying that the return on renting is 0, because it is expense right? How does that compare to the S&P?

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Response by stevejhx
over 17 years ago
Posts: 12656
Member since: Feb 2008

JuiceMan, now you're being ridiculous. I guess you want me to stop posting because you don't want people to hear my message because your properties are still for sale.

You cannot by definition have a return on an expense. And the S&P is not an expense.

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Response by Popomobile
over 17 years ago
Posts: 15
Member since: Apr 2008

Where do we get 40x/28% income constraints as a pricing model for real estate? Maybe a general guideline on lower income levels. But among higher income levels and among those with stores of wealth, those ratios are rather modest.

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Response by JuiceMan
over 17 years ago
Posts: 3578
Member since: Aug 2007

So if what your saying is true, you can only compare expenses. Home ownership is both expense (interest) and an asset. So you should only compare rent expense with the expenses related to home ownership and can compare the S&P to an appreciable asset, such as home ownership. Is that correct steve?

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Response by stevejhx
over 17 years ago
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Member since: Feb 2008

Popomobile, yes, in the extreme.

JuiceMan, what? If what you mean is that you compare the expenses of home ownership to the expenses of renting, and compare the performance of your actual investment in the property - the down payment - to investing that down payment elsewhere, that's what I've been saying.

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Response by JuiceMan
over 17 years ago
Posts: 3578
Member since: Aug 2007

Yes, we are in agreement. So why do a monthly rent vs. buy analysis by comparing rent vs. fully loaded mortage cost? You have to exclude the principal payment for your expense to expense equation to be true.

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Response by stevejhx
over 17 years ago
Posts: 12656
Member since: Feb 2008

No, JuiceMan, read my example on another thread. I include the principal & what you get at the end: the full value of the apartment less interest costs. Take the down payment and increase it @ the historical rate of the S&P 500, & you will exceed the numbers for owning property @ historical real values for residential real estate prices. Residential real estate is a crappy investment. Nice for security & ego, but as an "investment" it sucks.

For the first time I have to say that malraux makes more sense than you do. Investment real estate is NOT a crappy investment, provided that one look at it on a cash flow basis, as malraux does. It's not one that I'd ever get involved in b/c I understand emerging markets much better - & I think they're more lucrative albeit more volatile - but investment real estate is a different animal.

All "investments" make the same return in the long-term. Residential real estate should not be viewed as an "investment." Investment real estate should.

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Response by spunky
over 17 years ago
Posts: 1627
Member since: Jan 2007

stevejhx take if you purchase an apt in Manhattan 10 or more years ago you would be far better off today than investing in the S and P. Take a look see at the link below.

http://www.themortgagegeek.com/Downloads/Presentations/Condo_vs_Dow.pdf

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Response by stevejhx
over 17 years ago
Posts: 12656
Member since: Feb 2008

Yes, spunky, take a mortgage broker's pov. That will get you far.

Property prices are correlated to incomes, & until recently, in Manhattan, those incomes have risen. If they fall, as they are falling....

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Response by wrmoss84
over 17 years ago
Posts: 2
Member since: Nov 2007

doesn't this chart show that investing is better than buying?

Dow goes from ~2,000 to ~12,000 (500% return)

Sales price goes from $400k to $1.8mm (350% return)

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Response by stevejhx
over 17 years ago
Posts: 12656
Member since: Feb 2008

wrmoss84, if you're willing to believe a single chart w/ chosen start & stop dates & w/o explanations, g-d bless.

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Response by wrmoss84
over 17 years ago
Posts: 2
Member since: Nov 2007

ummm stevejhx, if you think i believe that chart g-d bless

i was just saying spunky's chart was disproving his/her point duH!!!!!

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Response by spunky
over 17 years ago
Posts: 1627
Member since: Jan 2007

wrmoss84 that's if you paid 100% cash for the property. Most people don't. So at 20% down what do you come up with.

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Response by stevejhx
over 17 years ago
Posts: 12656
Member since: Feb 2008

spunky, you like to compare apples to jackasses: you can only compare a leveraged return to a leveraged return. Now, if you can get 4x leverage for a house by only 2x in the stock market, fair enough, compare those figures: they're market figures. But not a naked investment to a leveraged investment.

And any case, even if you do what you do, renting is still more advantageous at historical rates of return.

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Response by spunky
over 17 years ago
Posts: 1627
Member since: Jan 2007

well stevejhx if evn even combine the rate of return with that of renting the apt( as long as there is positive cash flow) that's even better. I agree there are some very overpriced apts for sale right now but then again some of my best investments have been buying overpriced apts.

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Response by eric_cartman
over 17 years ago
Posts: 300
Member since: Jun 2007

Spunky:

Sorry - just saw your chart - haven't read the other comments, but I think the chart is VERY misleading (bordering on plain out lying) because it tries to IMPLY that house is a slightly better investment than Dow Jones at most points in time, by showing the Sales price of the two over time. However, it conveniently leaves out the dividends you could make by holding the Dow Jones stock (say, 5% per year). It also leaves out the expenses incurred if you own the apartments (tax, maintenance, insurance - say, another 5% per year). Right there, the chart is off by ~10% per year.

However, Spunky, I must commend you - you are headed in the right direction. This is exactly the kind of debate I hope to see more from the bulls. Happy to engage more if you have additional data / perspectives.

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Response by stevejhx
over 17 years ago
Posts: 12656
Member since: Feb 2008

Spunkster, I don't know how you have made good investments by buying overpriced things - perhaps you can elaborate. It will work in the short-term if prices are rising and you flip a unit, but I don't know of another way to do it.

You're starting to talk sense "on a cash-flow basis." As on my other thread, malraux invests in properties if he's break-even on a cash-flow basis; he then has someone else pay off his mortgage and taxes and interest, so he makes a profit concomitant with his risk. Makes pure economic sense.

But if you then switch it to owner-occupied properties, and it cost you more to buy the property from malraux than it would to rent it from him, and you try to justify that by your "tax savings," as I've so often said, you're counting the "tax savings" twice: once when malraux - who owns your apartment - includes it in his calculation of the market rent, and then again when you try to justify why you made a "good purchase" because it "reduces the tax."

You can't count the benefit twice. Go to my orange example. I grow an orange and eat it. No profit, merely saving the cost of buying an orange at the store. I grow an orange and sell it to malraux, who sells it at his grocery shop. I make a profit on the difference between the sale price of the orange to malraux and my marginal cost of production. Malraux makes a profit on his cost of buying the orange from me and selling it on the open market.

If I sell an orange that I grow to malraux, then go to malraux's store to buy it back, that's dumb. The only benefit I get from growing the orange for self-consumption is the right not to have to buy an orange from malraux. I get no cash, I get no profit. Nothing. Merely the right not to have an expense.

And just like the benefit I get from growing an orange and eating it is the right not to purchase an orange on the open market - its output value - the benefit I get from buying an apartment on the open market is the right not to rent the same property. Those are the output values of those two commodities. So why in god's name would I buy an apartment on the open market when - on a cash-flow basis - it costs me twice what I could rent it for? You can't say the "tax benefit," because malraux has already calculated that tax benefit into his market rent, and it was one of the factors when he decided to make his investment. You know, discounted cash flow.

Residential owner-occupied real estate is a capitalized expense, not an investment. I'm a bank, I decide to write a computer program in-house. The value of that development is precisely what it would cost me to buy an identical program from another company, say BMC. The computer program has a useful life - I capitalize the expense and depreciate it over the course of its useful life. At the end of that useful life I can still use it - I own it outright. The decision as to whether to develop the program in-house - akin to owner-occupied real estate - is what its cost is versus what the cost of buying that outside program is - the license fee, or "rent." If it's cheaper for me to develop the program myself and amortize it than it would be to pay the license fee, then I will develop the program myself and amortize it. Otherwise, I'll pay the license fee.

The economics, accounting, and finance of this is inexorable. Residential real estate is not an "investment"; it is a capitalized expense. Its value is its output value, market rents, which take into account taxes, opportunity costs, and everything else that people are trying to count twice.

And the market constraint on prices is 40x/28% income.

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Response by Cpalms
over 17 years ago
Posts: 122
Member since: Sep 2007

I am very suprised that no one has said that they are BOTH good investments. Clearly the RE maket has been fantastic but you also made 6x on your original stock investment in a little over 18 years. Thats pretty damn good.

Good investment portfolios have a variety of asset classes with a low correlation to each other (stocks, bonds, RE, commodities, hedge funds, all have low correlations). What the chart does indicates is that NY RE has gone parabolic. When asset classes go parabolic (see stocks 3rd qtr '99) it usually close to the end of the road and a good idea to look elsewhere for outperformance....

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Response by stevejhx
over 17 years ago
Posts: 12656
Member since: Feb 2008

Because, Cpalms, owner-occupied real estate is not an investment. It is a capitalized expense. What has happened in recent years is anomalous. Owners' carrying costs on a cash-flow basis cannot long exceed market rents, never mind being where they are now, at twice.

Investment real estate, on the other hand, can be a good investment. Just not one that I personally like.

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Response by steveF
over 17 years ago
Posts: 2319
Member since: Mar 2008

http://www.millersamuel.com/research/gallery-view.php?ViewNode=1096034424rIMRe
thanks houser great link...I posted a link(above) earlier from Business 360 from 2004 to help explain some of Manhattan real estate movement from Miller Samuel. I'm sure alot of you posters are aware of it. But as I read the title and it said "Real Estate Bubble?"....and I thought wow they are addressing the "bubble" talk back from 2004. It's 2008 and "bubble talk" is still here and I concluded that "bubble talk" will always be around. It's so easy to say "Bubble" as it trys to unnerve you and yet it offers nothing.

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Response by joepa
over 17 years ago
Posts: 278
Member since: Mar 2008

People who are discontent, feel alientated or are distrustful, or have problems with ambiguity will often create apocalytic or fundamentalist theories to provide easy answers and resolve contradictions. Whether it be the fate of the world, Y2K, or the value of housing, there will always be fundamentalists predicting its imminent demise. One day they will be right.

Perhaps real estate in Manhattan will decline, those who are predicting a catastrophic collapse I think fall into this group.

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Response by stevejhx
over 17 years ago
Posts: 12656
Member since: Feb 2008

Yup, steveF, you're right: in 2004 - the date of that article - real estate was NOT overpriced. Unfortunately, it's doubled since then, but incomes haven't.

What I've been saying all along.

joepa, that's a very useful comment. But in investing, fundamentalists always come out ahead.

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Response by urbandigs
over 17 years ago
Posts: 3629
Member since: Jan 2006

poker anyone?

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Response by stevejhx
over 17 years ago
Posts: 12656
Member since: Feb 2008

dude, i'll lose, but anything is better than repeatedly explaining the obvious.

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Response by Cpalms
over 17 years ago
Posts: 122
Member since: Sep 2007

stevejhx, I believe you are being a bit to rigid in you view of owner occupied real estate as an asset class; If it is viewed as an investment so be it, regardless of what the textbooks say. What investments doen't have carrying costs/ capitalized expenses?, most of the good ones have huge carrying costs...Jim Simons at Renaissance charges 5% yearly fee plus 50% of profits...Steve Cohen at SAC charges 3% and 35%. Private equity guys the same thing....mutual funds 1-2%....stocks, bonds have commission....buy any futures lately? the commissions are huge: not to mention ongoing capital gains. I agree with your accessment of NYC RE but your missing he the boat here....

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Response by TwoFacedLiar
over 17 years ago
Posts: 44
Member since: Jul 2008

How's that S&P?

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Response by EddieWilson
over 17 years ago
Posts: 1112
Member since: Feb 2008

Is it me, or can spunky not read a chart?

From this, S&P starts at 2200 and ends at 11500.
RE starts at 3800 and ends at 16500.

S&P grows 423%, RE grows 334%.

And the S&P already took its lumps, will be interesting to look at this in 12-18 months...

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Response by MMAfia
over 17 years ago
Posts: 1071
Member since: Feb 2007

"How's that S&P?"

Very sickly. It couldn't penetrate key resistance levels even with the substantial correction in oil.

Elliot Wave analysis intimates that we recently saw the iii wave peak, which means we could see a bottom for oil (~110s) before the next run up.

If the S&P couldn't penetrate key resistance at this most opportune time during current oil correction cycle we're in that has a very good chance of completing when it reaches the $110s, watch out when oil goes back up again.

Remember this post, and let's refer back in about 4-6 weeks from now (today is 7/29). We'll see just how sickly the S&P is at that point in time.

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Response by october
over 17 years ago
Posts: 145
Member since: Mar 2008

Just to go out on a ledge - based on the Miller chart - it seems that Manhattan RE outperformed the S&P only on the last 5 years with the S&P out performing RE for the 10 years before that. At the beginning of the chart it seems that Manhattan RE is worth more - but both the S&P and the RE values remain stagnant. Am I missing something?

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Response by reaper
over 17 years ago
Posts: 118
Member since: Oct 2007

That chart doesn't come close to showing the gains I made in NY Real Estate compared to the crap I've done in the Stock Market since 1997. NOT EVEN CLOSE!!!!!

Best move if my life was selling a bunch of stock and buying Real Estate... (well, other than getting married ; ))

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Response by stevejhx
over 17 years ago
Posts: 12656
Member since: Feb 2008

Owner-occupied residential real estate does not "perform." It is in a bubble. Face it.

Negative real interest rates + lax underwriting standards + excessive Wall Street bonuses based on selling worthless assets = bubble

Now reverse those trends:

High interest rates + tight underwriting standards + diminished Wall Street bonuses = crash

Who's left to buy at these prices?

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Response by JuiceMan
over 17 years ago
Posts: 3578
Member since: Aug 2007

"Who's left to buy at these prices?"

Sounds like all of Urbandigs' clients.

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Response by stevejhx
over 17 years ago
Posts: 12656
Member since: Feb 2008

"Sounds like all of Urbandigs' clients."

Seems to me that new listings continue to exceed contracts signed:

1-day 7-day 30-day
New Listings 72 314 1,163
Price Cuts 67 288 1,072
Contracts Signed 38 170 641
Total Inventory 7,527 7,504 7,494

So much for that theory.

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Response by bennyboy
over 17 years ago
Posts: 1
Member since: Jul 2008

It seems like it would be more practical to compare the performance of real estate vs renting while investing in the S&P -- in other words a typical rent vs buy calculation. This would take into account the money that could be made in the market, but also the cost of rising rents and the tax benefits and equity building of home ownership.

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Response by stevejhx
over 17 years ago
Posts: 12656
Member since: Feb 2008

Bennyboy, been done lots. Right now, renting is cheaper. Again - lots.

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Response by JuiceMan
over 17 years ago
Posts: 3578
Member since: Aug 2007

I don't get your point steve. Urbandigs said yesterday that he is working with a number of non Wall St. buyers. I know that pains you to hear, but digs seems like a pretty credible guy. So the answer to your question of "Who's left to buy at these prices?" is pretty simple, buyers such as Urbandigs' clients.

Not sure why you went to the inventory picture and commented "So much for that theory", besides the fact that you had nothing else to say.

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Response by EddieWilson
over 17 years ago
Posts: 1112
Member since: Feb 2008

BTW, notice its the *entire* S&P against just one cities RE. How about if you picked only the best sector for instance? Or couple of companies. Not to mention you get to pick the best period every for NYC real estate... and it still seems to lose out to the S&P.

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Response by somewhereelse
almost 15 years ago
Posts: 7435
Member since: Oct 2009

Classic post from the archive. I love that both Spunky and SteveF make (brilliant) appearances.

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Response by jason10006
almost 15 years ago
Posts: 5257
Member since: Jan 2009

"BTW, notice its the *entire* S&P against just one cities RE. "

Right, when the...I don't know...CS-S&P housing INDEX for the whole US might be a better comparison...

Lets pick RE versus gold stocks. Or Oracle or Home Depot since the late 80s or early 90s.

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Response by somewhereelse
almost 15 years ago
Posts: 7435
Member since: Oct 2009

What's funny is the chart changed since he pointed to it. If I read it correctly....

Manhattan prices go from 750k to 1.5 mil
Dow goes from 2100 to 11800... not inflation adjusted, but you get dividends along the way (which I believe have exceeded inflation).

And you get 462% return.

What was inflation in that time?

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Response by huntersburg
almost 15 years ago
Posts: 11329
Member since: Nov 2010

It isn't fair to tell anyone that the S&P is an alternative (better or worse) for buying real estate that is to be used for your primary residence.

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Response by bjw2103
almost 15 years ago
Posts: 6236
Member since: Jul 2007

swe, is this you finally coming clean about being EddieWilson? I'm shocked.

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Response by Riversider
almost 15 years ago
Posts: 13572
Member since: Apr 2009

Stocks appear to be topping out. One could easily make the case that Stock will under perform real estate by a wide margin over the next twelve months. And to not recognize that stocks carry more risk is being an ostrich.

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Response by inonada
almost 15 years ago
Posts: 7952
Member since: Oct 2008

RS, no offense, but your track record with predicting stocks has sucked. Here's what you were saying when S&P was around 1075 (we're now up 20%):

http://streeteasy.com/nyc/talk/discussion/21581
"Riversider
about 6 months ago
... Equity is not dead money, it will generate the returns of the asset class. Stocks are 40% over-value, Bonds are also grossly over valued...."

And in the middle of 2009:
http://streeteasy.com/nyc/talk/discussion/13477-stock-market-is-over-valued-based-on-real-pe
"... It is amazing that anyone would go long an equity market with a reported P/E multiple of 700x but that is indeed what we have on our hands. The end of the recession and the onset of a sustainable recovery, as we saw in 2002, are not the same thing. So this could still end badly but we will await confirmation signs that this is more than a very flashy bear market rally before shifting gears...."

I'm not saying stocks are gung-ho right now, just that the predictions you made with such authority have sucked. At 40% below 1075, that means you think proper value is at 645, or half of where it is now. Shouldn't you be putting on a big short?

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Response by somewhereelse
almost 15 years ago
Posts: 7435
Member since: Oct 2009

"It isn't fair to tell anyone that the S&P is an alternative (better or worse) for buying real estate that is to be used for your primary residence."

If folks are buying to live in... as consumption, sure, its not fair.

But once anyone uses the "investment" word to justify overconsumption in RE, then it is more than fair.

And, in reality, the comparison was made by a RE pusher... so, its a little late to say the comparison is unfair.

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Response by somewhereelse
almost 15 years ago
Posts: 7435
Member since: Oct 2009

> RS, no offense, but your track record with predicting stocks has sucked.

or RE...

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Response by bjw2103
almost 15 years ago
Posts: 6236
Member since: Jul 2007

"swe, is this you finally coming clean about being EddieWilson? I'm shocked."

swe, cat got your tongue?

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Response by Riversider
almost 15 years ago
Posts: 13572
Member since: Apr 2009

swe, inonada
ladies, no offenses taken. You are certainly not obligated to sign up for my market-timer fund.

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Response by alanhart
almost 15 years ago
Posts: 12397
Member since: Feb 2007

I KNEW it! Riversider is the Rice Twins!!!

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Response by Riversider
almost 15 years ago
Posts: 13572
Member since: Apr 2009

If only my returns were that good!

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Response by somewhereelse
almost 15 years ago
Posts: 7435
Member since: Oct 2009

I had to look up who the Rice Twins were...

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Response by huntersburg
almost 15 years ago
Posts: 11329
Member since: Nov 2010

Diversification - great idea
Market timing - bad idea

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Response by columbiacounty
almost 15 years ago
Posts: 12708
Member since: Jan 2009

huntersburg is hfscomm1.

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Response by Riversider
almost 15 years ago
Posts: 13572
Member since: Apr 2009

LOL!
I still think the S&P is over-valued.

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Response by huntersburg
almost 15 years ago
Posts: 11329
Member since: Nov 2010

Relative to cash or what?

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Response by columbiacounty
almost 15 years ago
Posts: 12708
Member since: Jan 2009

and, of course, so is riversider.

watch it talk to itself.

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Response by alanhart
almost 15 years ago
Posts: 12397
Member since: Feb 2007

Wait ... I thought Riversider is the Rice Twins.

Where's spunky?

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Response by somewhereelse
over 14 years ago
Posts: 7435
Member since: Oct 2009

wow, that must have been painflu for spunky

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Response by somewhereelse
over 12 years ago
Posts: 7435
Member since: Oct 2009

hee, hee

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Response by greensdale
over 12 years ago
Posts: 3804
Member since: Sep 2012

>hee, hee

We have you on record saying you sold 2 years ago.

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Response by somewhereelse
over 12 years ago
Posts: 7435
Member since: Oct 2009

and still being more heavily invested than pretty much anyone on this board. you have a point?

or are you still just jealous?

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Response by greensdale
over 12 years ago
Posts: 3804
Member since: Sep 2012

> than pretty much anyone on this board.

You are the smartest on Streeteasy, right?

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Response by somewhereelse
over 12 years ago
Posts: 7435
Member since: Oct 2009

That's your assertion.

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Response by jason10006
over 12 years ago
Posts: 5257
Member since: Jan 2009

Riversider
"LOL!
I still think the S&P is over-valued."

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Response by w67thstreet
over 12 years ago
Posts: 9003
Member since: Dec 2008

HahahaaaaA. Riversider. You tard. 2 yr of no equities. 2yrs of praying for your coop to pump up. Like the rest of you. Just flaccid. Flaccid flaccid flaccid.

You may want to move/shift that penis once in awhile. It'll get bed sores.

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Response by stevejhx
over 12 years ago
Posts: 12656
Member since: Feb 2008

Spunky!

Where's Spunky?

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Response by somewhereelse
over 12 years ago
Posts: 7435
Member since: Oct 2009

Steve!

Where's Steve?

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Response by yikes
over 12 years ago
Posts: 1016
Member since: Mar 2012

six seven!
shift penis, lest bedsores. ha!
you got me.

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Response by greensdale
over 12 years ago
Posts: 3804
Member since: Sep 2012

Of all of w67's posts, odd that you focus on the penis bedsores one.

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Response by rb345
over 12 years ago
Posts: 1273
Member since: Jun 2009

W67thStreet:

1. based on the way you boast herecurr
2. it seems to me that you might be able to upgrade your current housing accommodations
3. if after the next time a buy a refrigerator for a tenant
4. I let you pick up the carton

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