Sunday March 21, 2010 12:09 PM ET
SmartMoney
Published September 1, 2009  |  A A A
Common Sense by James B. Stewart (Author Archive)

It's Time to Invest in Real Estate

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 over $250,000. He said he’d never expected to be able to buy anything on a driver’s salary, let alone something that nice.

Last week, 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.

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.

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%, according to Zillow. 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.

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 real-estate investment trusts or buying shares in home builders and other housing-related businesses (such as Home Depot (HD)). 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.

But there’s a good reason home ownership 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 home ownership and getting what may well turn out to be the deals of their lives.


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User Comments
Posted by: DKP50
You'll be Eating Crow or Kicking yourself if oyu don't add to your Reits now..

The Index ( VGSIX) lost over -53% btwn 07' & 08'
CGMRX made 34% in 07' , then lost -47% = -29% for the same period..

You're buying at 2003 prices on commercial Properties

DCAing into them would be a wise move
Or buy when others Don't and when it's not on the radar screen..

Very Volatile> If you wait until Clear Sailing and they look Improving? It wil be too late.. they can ( and have) gain +30% in a week..

And all it takes this time? Is just some "New and Improved" announcement by Congress and the FED in changing their Game plan.. or The Big banks start paying back their TARP $..

The Only reason not many Mortgages are being approved vs in previous yrs? They are Finally Returning to requirements to get them they used before 2003...adn no more of the nonsense that Caused them to collaspe...

I'm just waiting to read more Brokers and RE ag...(Read more of this comment)
Posted by: DKP50
FWIW In regards to REITS?

1. It's either a Index Reit of VGSIX or Go for the Gold with CGMRX
2. I don't regard Reits as Bonds, they are more Commodities..or Equities if you will and thus Invest into them as such..
3. I Add to them On the Dips/Corrections/Bears
4. and Rebalance them After 2-3 yrs of Bulls..Regardless of How good they are doing..and anytime they way outperform their Norm Ave. for Bull and Bear Mkts..
5. I've owned CGMRX since 98' and rebalanced it 3 times since, last time was in 07' after it's Big Run up and Reduced it by 50% going into 08'.
6. Adding to it in Oct/Nov of 08' and again in March of 09'...
7. Will Add to it if we have another Correction of -10% or more in thie future..

I think Reits need their own Classification and not Under FINANCIALS in Portfolio's..Financials covers way to many things...

and since they did loose as much as Equities in 08? Maybe best to be classified as such..? At least on a stand alone...(Read more of this comment)
rudgleym

2 Comments
absolutely disagree with phylrock. Support your claims? If you have some knowledge or trick the rest of us dont know then share it with me and dbop92 and 100's of others. How do you get banks to make decisions on offers? How does a potential home owner counter the cash offers? Not sure you are on the same planet as the rest of us.
phylrock

1 Comments
Not so!!!
It's a great time to invest in real estate. It's time for real investors, not speculators. Even here in L.A. it's fine. Folks are buying houses at the low end and ACTUALLY CASH FLOWING THEM. Who cares about flipping.

Posted by: dbop92
Must be nice to sit around writing fiction all day Mr. Stewart. This is a terrible time to buy, and your a fool for thinking otherwise. It's not a buyers market, its not a sellers market. It's the Bank's market. My wife and I have been looking for a house for 8 months now in. The San Fernando Valley area of Los Angeles. All the homes that the banks foreclosed on are released in to the market one at a time. So any house that becomes available in our price range has 10-20 offers on it with in the first 24 hours its listed. Not to mention the offers put on it before its listed due to insider information. So now the bank can pick and choose which offer to take. And they will take months to make there discision, keeping everyone waiting. The opposite is homes the bank owns, that are a dump, and or in a bad area that is over priced. The banks wont come down in price so it sits on the market for a year. All the while the bank is losing money on it every day. What do they care they got stimulu...(Read more of this comment)
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