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Extra9/10/2009 12:01 AM ET

Why it's time to invest in real estate

It's scary to jump into the housing market when prices have been plunging. But waiting could end up costing you.

By James B. Stewart, SmartMoney

Passing through the Fort Myers, Fla., airport a few weeks ago, I noticed people eagerly signing up for a free bus tour of foreclosed real estate -- with all properties offering water views. During the ride to my hotel, the young driver volunteered that he'd just bought his first house, paying $65,000 for a foreclosed property in nearby Cape Coral that had last sold for more than $250,000. He said he'd never expected to be able to buy anything on a driver's salary, let alone something that nice.

Late last month, Standard & Poor's reported that its S&P/Case-Shiller U.S. National Home Price index of real-estate values increased this past quarter over the first quarter of 2009, the first quarter-on-quarter increase in three years. Its index of 20 major cities also rose for the three months ended June 30 over the three months ended May 31, with only hard-hit Detroit and Las Vegas experiencing declines. The week before that, the National Association of Realtors reported that sales volume of existing homes was up 7.2% in July from June.

In short, the data suggest that real-estate prices hit a bottom some time during the second quarter and have now begun to rise. There's no way to be certain that this marks the end of the long, painful correction that followed the real-estate bubble, but clearly prices are no longer in free fall.

That means if you've been sitting on the fence, it's time to act.

Trying to buy at a bottom

Ordinarily I'd never try to time the real-estate market, but I can understand why buyers have been cautious. Few want to buy in down markets, just as stock buyers avoid bear markets. And for most people, of course, buying a house is a much bigger decision than buying a stock. But with real-estate prices nationally now down about 30% from their 2006 peak and showing signs of turning up, the prices aren't likely to go much lower. Every real-estate market is local, and so there may be a few exceptions. Overall, though, I can't imagine a better time to buy than right now.

Video: Housing's magic number

In addition to bargain prices, buyers should find plenty of homes to choose from. The inventory of unsold homes was 4.09 million units in July, up 7.3% from June, according to the National Association of Realtors. And mortgage rates this week were at a two-month low of close to 5%.

Even the stricter appraisal process is working to the advantage of buyers. Appraisals are coming in far lower than most sellers have been expecting, forcing them to face the new reality of sharply lower prices. And with stricter standards, lenders aren't going to let buyers borrow more than they can afford, which protects buyers and helps to keep prices down.

The flipping days are over

Unless you're really prepared to accept the demands (and headaches) of being a landlord, I don't recommend direct ownership of real estate as an investment. The days of buyers lining up to buy and flip Miami Beach and Las Vegas condos are mercifully gone. There are much easier ways to make money in real estate, such as buying into real-estate investment trusts or buying shares in homebuilders and other housing-related businesses, such as Home Depot (HD, news, msgs).

Historically, the mean rate of return on real estate has been around 3%, according to research from Yale economist Robert Shiller, who co-developed the Case-Shiller index. Shares in REITs and other stocks have often done much better.

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But there's a good reason homeownership has been such a central part of the American dream. It delivers security, pride of ownership, a sense of community and decent investment returns as a bonus.

I felt glad for my driver in Florida. He represents the other side of the foreclosure crisis. For every hardship story, and no doubt there are many, others are realizing their dreams of homeownership and getting what may well turn out to be the deals of their lives.

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StockScouter data provided by Gradient Analytics, Inc.
Quotes supplied by Interactive Data.
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Wednesday, September 09, 2009 8:51:53 PM
Your home's market value is an important factor in a long list of financial decisions, including selling the home, refinancing your mortgage, borrowing against your equity, estimating your annual property tax bill, buying homeowner's insurance, calculating the expected return on remodeling costs, managing your other investments, estate planning and so on.
Wednesday, September 09, 2009 9:39:18 PM

I generally agree with the basic premise of this article, but, you still have to get the right price. Just because something sold for $250k three years ago doesn't mean that $65k is a good deal now.

 

One rule I follow - look for property selling below construction cost, after adjusting for real physical depreciation. There is plenty of it out there. When you find it, and you are willing to own it for at least 5 years, then it's probably a reasonable bet to buy in.

 

 

 

Thursday, September 10, 2009 12:50:55 AM

I wouldn't buy in any market until the prices drop to match that areas median wage with the old adage of 3X your annual salary towards the purchase of a home.

 

If the local median wage is $16 an hour, X 2080 hours in a standard 52 week year X 3 = 99,840.

 

When the national average running around 170,000 I'll sit and wait until the rest of the air is out of the bubble.

Thursday, September 10, 2009 2:53:52 AM

what testing?

Thursday, September 10, 2009 3:37:48 AM
No Job. No Money. No Health Insurance. No Retirement. No 401k.
#6
Thursday, September 10, 2009 6:47:58 AM

$65K for a house, well if it's habitable then I would say that since it would cost 2-3X that to replace it and buy the land then I think that the contributor that said it may not be worth the price may be missing the boat - literally.

 

True the $250K selling price was probably a 2005-2006 sale and inflated as was the entire market in that timeframe, but look around, new construction for similar dwellings would run a lot closer to the $250K than the reported $65K price.

 

The availability of financing is the key.

 

Bravo for the few remaining lenders that are being careful in granting new mortgage money but until a sufficient amount of capital is released into the market the recovery cannot begin in earnest.

 

Our economy is still too driven by housing and auto production.  Believe what you want, but until unemployment recedes and more people become employed in good paying jobs we aren't going to grow the economy in real terms.

 

The trick is how do we accomplish that after the administration has shot their load via the stimuli programs enacted to date and committed in the near term. Taking on a Trillion dollars in additional health care cost debt at the same time seems like lunacy to me .....any thoughts as to how we pull this off?

 

 

 

Thursday, September 10, 2009 7:09:35 AM

Lots of "Deals" to be had in the Rust belt on Foreclosed houses.  Not for the faint of Heart however, most of these offer no interior inspection prior to bidding.  The numbers are still rising.

 

http://foreclosure.pterrywave.com/

Thursday, September 10, 2009 7:17:43 AM
For a young person looking for a home to live in and raise a family, its a good time to buy if he finds the right size house in the right neighborhood.  As an investment, real estate has some more big falls coming- 2010 and 2011 will see a huge spike in those fake- 0 down interest only mortgages re-setting to higher payments.  This will put another glut of foreclosures on the market.  Adding to that is the trend for prime borrowers to walk away from their homes because the value has fallen below the mortgage balance.  As this increases, the stigma decreases and it snowballs.  On top of this, the banks are holding a huge inventory of repos off the market and using TARP money to cover the costs, hoping for a market re-bound.  This could spell doom for some big names like B.O.A.
Thursday, September 10, 2009 7:30:47 AM
too late.  Should have bought months ago.
#10
Thursday, September 10, 2009 7:35:30 AM
I have had REITs for a long time and I agree: REITs are a much easier way to invest in RE and the dividends are much better with less trouble. Re-investing those dividends as they come in can pay off HUGE given time to work the magic of compounding dividends.
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