Buy
a House!
by
Addison Wiggin
Daily Reckoning
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by Addison Wiggin: Uncle
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A little more
than a year ago, a very successful professional investor declared,
“If you don’t own a home, buy one. If you own one home, buy another
one, and if you own two homes, buy a third and lend your relatives
the money to buy a home.”
Since that
declaration, house prices have continued drifting lower in most
parts of the country. The Case-Shiller index of national home prices
is down about 4% year over year. Even so, we’re betting this professional
investor was merely early...not wrong. US housing isn’t just cheap;
it is the cheapest it has been in more than 40 years. And when one
considers the possibility that inflation may rear its head soon,
housing looks even cheaper still.
If you think
we’re crazy, you’re not alone. The housing market is a complete
bust right now. The following chart shows the median home price
in terms of per capita disposable income. Based on this calculation,
home prices are lower than they have been in 40 years!

And it isn’t
just that home prices have fallen a long way. For most home buyers,
the price of the home is only one part of the true cost
of a home. Mortgage rates matter as much, or more, than the purchase
price itself. In other words, buying a house is not just a bet on
real estate; it is also a bet against interest rates. For
the typical buyer of a home who takes out a 30-year mortgage, an
increase in interest rates is just like an increase in the price
of a home.
Today, because
home prices and interest rates are both at extremely low levels,
the cost of buying a home with a 30-year mortgage is at an all-time
low. To illustrate this stunning fact, the chart below shows the
average monthly mortgage payment on the median-priced home, expressed
as a percentage of per capita disposable income.

If you can
get a mortgage, you are basically taking a reverse bet on the bond
market. You could be a long-term borrower at fixed rates, instead
of a long-term lender. Right now, you can borrow for 30 years at
around 3.3%. After the mortgage tax deduction, for some people the
net effective interest rate is nearer to 2%! That’s going to prove
an awesome deal if we see inflation again.
But here’s
the factor that clinches the case for investing in residential real
estate: the long-term supply and demand for housing. Let’s start
with supply.
Consider how
long it will take to bring new supply to the market. As investors,
we want new supply to come slowly.
The number
of housing starts is currently lower than at any time in at least
the past 50 years. Moreover, new construction is only about half
the long-term average. Again, good news for investors in housing,
since this means that new supply is growing very slowly.
Meanwhile,
housing demand based simply on demographic trends
should rise inexorably for years to come. Take the growth in households
driven by population growth and apply a home ownership
rate. Demographically, the US is still a growing country. By 2030,
there will be 370 million Americans. Even using the long-term average
home ownership rate means we’ll need 1.1-1.2 million new single-family
homes per year.
In other words,
busted markets don’t last forever. The cure for low prices, as the
old saw goes, is low prices. Furthermore, a bet on the housing market
is not merely a bet on real estate; it is also a bet that inflation
will rise.
The US economy
may be idling in neutral for the moment, but inflation is revving
its engines. How should you prepare?
“Buy gold”
is the time-honored answer, and we don’t quarrel with it. But an
alternative answer, especially this time around, might be: “Buy
a house.”
That’s the
advice offered by a growing but still small number
of very successful investors. John Paulson is one of them. He is
the guy who said about a year ago, “If you don’t own a home, buy
one. If you own one home, buy another one, and if you own two homes,
buy a third and lend your relatives the money to buy a home.”
He was early...and
his hedge fund performed very poorly last year, mostly because he
was too early betting big on a rebound in the US economy. Double
wrong! But we still think Paulson’s call on housing may be close
to the mark.
Despite his
dismal performance in 2011, Paulson is the guy who turned one of
the greatest trades of all time. Betting against the housing
market, he netted a cool billion dollars for himself in 2007. One
fund he managed rose 590% that year. Today, he is one of the richest
men in America...still.
His advice
today is very different than it was in 2007. “Buy a house,” he says.
And he has
put money where his mouth is...He already owns posh digs in
Manhattan on 86th Street, plus a Southampton house he nabbed in
2008. In 2010, he snapped up an 8-acre ranch in Aspen for a cool
$24.5 million, before buying a Fifth Avenue condo at a 23% discount
to the asking price. (This 26th-floor pied-à-terre will be his “guest
house.”)
Let’s flash
back in time for a second...
Another successful
investor gave similar advice in 1971 the dawn of one of America’s
biggest housing bull markets. The investor was Adam Smith (George
Goodman) on The Dick Cavett Show. Here is a snippet from
that conversation:
Smith:
The best investment you can make is a house. That one is easy.
Cavett:
A house? We were talking about the stock market. Investments...
Smith:
You asked me the best investment. There are always individual stocks
that will go up more, but you don’t want to give tips on a television
show. For most people, the best investment is a house.
Cavett:
I already own a house. Now what?
Smith:
Buy another one.
How good was
that advice?
Houses, as
an investment, trounced stocks during the inflationary 1970s. The
chart below tells the tale.

In the 1970s,
US stocks returned about 5% annually failing to keep pace
with inflation. Still, it was an up-and-down ride. In 1974, the
stock market fell 49%. But here are the average selling prices for
existing homes in the 1970s, as inflation heated up:
1972
$30,000
1973 $32,900
1974 $35,800
1975 $39,000
1976 $42,200
1977 $47,900
1978 $55,500
1979 $64,200
That was a
pretty impressive run-up in home prices. Today, I think we could
be on the threshold of another once-in-a-generation buying opportunity
in the housing market.
The homebuilding
stocks seem to agree. Many of them have doubled during the last
five months from their very depressed levels. Although the ISE Homebuilders
Index is still down about 80% from its 2006 peak, it has been gaining
steady ground relative to the rest of the stock market.
The chart below
shows the rolling three-year price performance of the S&P 500
index, minus the rolling three-year price performance of the ISE
Index. As you can see, the ISE has been lagging far behind the S&P
500 for most of the last five years. But during the last few months,
this index has been closing the gap...and looks like it is about
to begin a period of outperformance relative to the rest of the
stock market.

So we like
select homebuilding stocks, but we don’t love them. Unlike the housing
market itself, homebuilding stocks have priced in quite a bit of
good news already. Not surprisingly, therefore, the insiders at
these companies have been doing a lot more selling of their own
shares than buying. (Pulte is one conspicuous exception.)
We also like
housing-related stocks. As Chris
Mayer, our colleague over at Capital & Crisis,
observes, “Companies such as Lowe’s (LOW) and Home Depot (HD) would
benefit from a recovering housing market...as would the makers
of flooring, Mohawk Industries (MHK), the makers of kitchen cabinets,
Fortune Brands Home & Security (FBHS) and a whole bunch of stuff
in between...In a robust housing market, good fortune would also
smile on A.O. Smith (AOS), which makes water heaters for homes.”
But again,
we don’t love these stocks. Not at their relatively rich valuations.
Even so, we’ll be combing through this sector very carefully for
promising investment ideas. In the meantime, for those with the
means and the inclination, the best buy in the housing sector is
an actual house!
This picture
is unequivocal. US home prices are very, very cheap today. “Cheap”
does not preclude “even cheaper,” of course. Home prices could certainly
continue sliding. But even if that were to occur, mortgage rates
might begin rising, which would cause the effective price
of a home to increase.
Obviously,
buying residential real estate at both a housing market low and
an inflationary low would be the optimal entry point in fact,
it would be a screaming buy. And that’s exactly what today’s circumstances
seem to be offering.
Perhaps that’s
why a large number of very successful professional investors are
licking their chops over opportunities in the US residential real
estate market.
This out-of-favor
asset class has attracted the attention of David Ackman, a hedge
fund manager with a fondness for contrarian investments. He calls
them SFHRPs, an acronym for “Single Family Home Rental Property.”
“The best investments
we have made are the ones no one else would touch,” Ackman explains.
As housing
prices have continued drifting even lower, Paulson and Ackman have
picked up a little bit of company. The US housing market is becoming
a central focus of several “deep value” investors. Over the past
weeks, I’ve bumped into three very successful professional investors
who were much more eager to talk about their real estate investments
than about their stock market investments.
One gentleman
in particular, who has made billions of dollars for his investors
by buying deep value stocks, was much more eager to talk about his
recent real estate investments than his recent stock market investments.
He was talking glowingly if not giddily about the
opportunities in real estate he was coming across.
“I’m not finding
much to buy in the stock market at the moment,” he explained. “But
real estate is a different story. I wish I had the capital to act
on more of the ideas that are coming across my desk.”
We asked this
investor if he was concerned about the risk of real estate prices
falling even further.
“Nah,” he said
as he waved the question aside, “I assume the housing market will
remain soft for a while. But the kinds of deals we’re finding should
work out well, even if the housing market keeps sliding for a bit.
Besides, there’s one lesson I’ve learned repeatedly as a value investor
in the stock market: You can have good news or cheap prices. You
can’t have both.”
The US housing
market has absolutely no good news...but plenty of cheap prices.
Reprinted
with permission from The Daily
Reckoning.
April
10, 2012
Addison
Wiggin [send him mail]
is the editorial director and publisher of The Daily Reckoning.
He is the author, with Bill Bonner, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving The Soft Depression of The 21st
Century and the upcoming Empire
of Debt. His
latest book is The
Demise of the Dollar...and Why It's Great for Your Investments.
Copyright
© 2012 Daily Reckoning
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