Presents an analysis of the current real-estate boom and offers advice on how to take advantage of it, including making the most profitable improvements in one's own home and what to look for in buying a home.
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<p><b>DAVID LEREAH</b>, senior vice president and chief economist of the National Association of Realtors, serves as the association’s spokesman on economic forecasts, interest and mortgage rates, and home sales. He has written numerous articles on finance, investments, and real estate, and is frequently quoted in <i>The Wall Street Journal</i>, <i>The New York Times</i>, and <i>Business Week </i>and on CNN Business, CNBC, CBS Evening News, and C-Span. He lives in Fairfax Station, Virginia.</p>
Preface
Today’s residential real estate markets are booming, and I and many other prominent housing economists believe they will most likely climb into the next decade. Some in the media and elsewhere claim there is a housing bubble, and that it will eventually burst, similar to the stock market bubble debacle in 2000. As I demonstrate throughout this book, their reasoning is flawed, a point I have driven home time and again on major business television net-works like CNBC and CNN in recent years. Nonetheless, each year the naysayers come back sounding further alarms. Fortunately, given the reaction from the marketplace, few are paying attention.
I am not suggesting that real estate prices will post double-digit growth as they have in so many of our nation’s local housing markets the past several years. That is not a healthy market situation in the long run. Demand for homes needs to come more into balance with the supply of homes. The frenzied local real estate markets with 20 to30 percent price appreciation over a couple of years’ time, and with multiple bids on a house that result in a sale price significantly higher than the price for which the house is listed, is neither sustainable nor desirable. One should not equate the word “boom” with this kind of frenzied market environment. Simply stated, a real estate boom is a healthy real estate expansion. And for a variety of compelling reasons I outline in this book, this healthy expansion has endured for about thirteen years and promises to continue into the next decade. Do not think that a slowing in price appreciation (from double digits) signals the demise of the real estate boom. The fact is that residential home sales could even have a down year without indicating an end to the boom. You can’t post a record-setting performance year in and year out. From10,000 feet in the air, a one-year dip is just a blip in the long-term expansion path. Stick with real estate investing for the remainder of this decade and into the next, and you will experience substantial and satisfying wealth gains.
The contents of this book are based on my twenty-plus years as a real estate/banking economist. You’ll find simple and easy-to-use information on how to successfully purchase, invest in, and maintain real estate, learn more, I urge you to visit the following Web sites for information and insight: www.Fanniemae.com; www.Freddiemac.com; www.REALTOR.org; www.REALTOR.com’ www.mbaa.org; and www.nahb.org.
Perhaps the most important message of this book is that real estate doesn’t even need a boom to roar. Even when property sales and price appreciation settle back to more normal levels of activity, property returns still offer benefits that more traditional investment vehicles such as stocks and bonds cannot. I’m talking about the leveraging power of your real estate investments as well as the tax and other government benefits bestowed upon property. Such benefits give real estate a “competitive edge” over stocks and bonds and other investment rivals as long-term investments, even in a slower real estate market. In a boom, such benefits are even more powerful.
In my view, there has never been a better time to make real estate a bigger part of your long-term financial future.
Chapter One
The Opportunity of a Generation
The recent U.S. real estate boom has made money for an incredible number of households in America. In fact,in 2001 and2002, many economists (including me) claimed that real estate was the only sector propping up the economy and keeping it from a full blown free fall. Even as stock prices tumbled and businesses faltered, the real estate market continued to soar, with home prices rising steadily in most areas of the country. For most home owners, their house is far and away their biggest investment. This great rise in real estate values meant that home owners saw their household wealth increase substantially. Moreover, the savviest real estate investors have discovered how to profit from the boom in ways other than just owning their own home–through home improvements or renovations, buying rental properties, vacation houses, Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs), and more. The performance of real estate as a financial asset has been astounding.
What you may not know is that opportunities still abound in U.S. real estate markets. And those opportunities will continue to exist throughout this decade and into the next. What we are seeing today is a phenomenon that takes place only once every other generation: a long-term expansion of the real estate market. And that is why you need to take advantage of this once-every-other-generation opportunity now.
Those of you who are home owners are already participating in the real estate boom to an extent. During the first four years of this decade (2000—2004), home owners and investors in residential real estate collectively enjoyed a $4.6 trillion increase in the value of their properties! That means, on average, each home owner experienced a $42,700 gain on their home in just a four-year period. And, of course, some home owners saw an even greater increase–as much as 70 to150 percent of the value of their house. In some high-priced areas such as Anaheim, California, households earned more than $200,000 over this period. That is a lot of wealth.
But not everyone benefited from this rise in value. Too many households do not own any real estate property. And of those who do, most do not realize the many ways they can leverage their investment and increase their stake in the real estate boom. Most home owners view their home as a place to live and have an emotional attachment (justifiably) to their homes. It is often difficult for these individuals and families to make sound, objective financial decisions about their homes.To them, home is a security blanket, a safe haven from an outside world plagued with crime and terrorism. From a financial perspective, they view their home as a large, tangible, appreciating asset, one that most expect to eventually sell and use the proceeds to purchase another home or to add to their retirement nest egg.
But there is so much more you can do to profit from real estate during a boom period. It does, however, require changing old habits. Home owners need to learn to separate their emotions from economics. What do I mean by that? Most home owners make home improvements that satisfy them emotionally but do not increase the value of their house (i.e., the pink carpet in a daughter’s bedroom, or the wet bar in the basement). Modernizing a kitchen or installing central and energy-efficient air-conditioning, on the other hand, can be effective investments that yield a substantial increase in the long-term value of your home.
In most cases, real estate is the largest financial purchase a household ever makes. It needs to be treated as an investment similar to stocks and bonds. Property ownership should be integrated into the goals and property ownership need to be thought of as a primary component of a household’s investment and retirement portfolios. Real estate can improve your ability to take care of your financial health. Think of real estate as a dynamic asset, generating monthly and/or annual returns. Home owners need to factor in these returns as they review the performance of their investment and retirement portfolios.
I will argue that over the next decade, some funds currently earmarked for stock and bond investments should instead be earmarked for real estate: home renovations/additions, second homes, rental properties, real estate investment trusts (or REITs), and real estate mutual funds. In the current boom, the benefits of real estate investing vis-à-vis stocks,...
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