Why Your Best Investment Right Now is a Home

I’ve heard it over and over again for the past couple of years from friends, family, business colleagues, and even my local bartenders and baristas. The refrain is eerily similar each time, and it sounds something like this: “What are you waiting for?  Now is the time to buy that house.” I let these comments roll off my back for a long time, as I knew the metrics of large supply overhang, increasing foreclosures, slow GDP growth and anemic employment figures were liable to keep home prices down for some time.

But now, however, I’m thinking those bartenders and baristas just might be right – especially after Wednesday’s news that new home sales have hit an eight-month high.

If we look at the recent news in housing segment, we see some very interesting trends developing. According to a report from the National Association of Realtors, or NAR, sales of existing U.S. homes jumped 12.3% in December. However, the upbeat month for home sales comes after the worst one-year performance in the metric since 1997. Based on the NAR’s preliminary data, which will be finalized next month, annual sales of existing U.S. homes were 4.91 million in 2010. That figure represents a drop of 4.8% over sales in 2009.

What this means is that the turnaround in sales in December could be a harbinger of more good news for home sales in the months ahead. According to NAR chief economist Lawrence Yun, “December was a good finish to 2010, when sales fluctuate more than normal. The pattern over the past six months is clearly showing a recovery. The December pace is near the volume we’re expecting for 2011, so the market is getting much closer to an adequate, sustainable level.”  January’s numbers released this week seem to bear this out.

The NAR report shows that although there is still a lot of inventory out there in the property market, those inventories have been gradually going down. Inventories in December of 3.56 million homes represented 8.1 months of supply, compared with 9.5 months in November. On the pricing front, we see that the median price of existing homes in December decreased 1% to $168,800. Yet for the full year, prices managed to climb 0.3% to $173,000.  While this median price figure remains well below both 2007 and 2008 levels of $219,000, and $198,100, respectively, what we are once again seeing could be a bottom forming, this time in the price metric.

If we liken this to investing in stocks, it would be as if a company’s share price had recently bounced off of its 52-week low on heavy trading volume (i.e. those December sales numbers). Investing in securities when it is believed the market has reached bottom following a major decline is known in investing terminology as bottom fishing, and it’s a strategy that is all-too familiar with stock hounds. It’s also a strategy that’s made many an investors wealthy—and for real estate buyers, what we could be looking at is a bottom in the making.

Are Homes A Better Deal Than Stocks?

One reason why your best investment right now could be a home has to do with the relative upside of getting in on an asset class while it’s at the bottom vs. buying into other asset classes that could be near a top. Consider for a moment the tremendous upside we’ve seen in stocks, precious metals and agricultural commodities over the past 12 months.

Stock prices over the past 12 months, as measured by the S&P 500 Index, are up nearly 17%. Precious metals prices also are up big, with gold prices jumping 20% over the last year while silver prices have surged of over 50%. Agricultural commodity prices, as represented by the Deutsche Bank Liquid Commodity Index, have spiked nearly 28% over the past 12 months.

If you’re a long-term investor looking to put money to work, now is not really the best time to get into any of these three asset classes. However, with home sales starting to improve, and with prices now possibly forming a bottom, real estate could well be the asset class that represents the best low-risk buying opportunity out there today.

Besides, if that investment is your primary residence for over two years, you won’t pay a dime of capital gains on your profits. That’s a significant savings adding to the appeal.

Why Rent When a House Is Cheaper?

The value argument in favor of buying real estate isn’t the only favorable factor when it comes to the pro-home purchasing argument. In fact, there’s one very telling argument in favor of buying now vs. the alternative of renting, and that argument is one of pure costs.

According to real estate data firm

Trulia in its Rent vs. Buy Index, buying a property—including mortgage principal, interest, taxes and insurance—was actually cheaper than renting in 72% of cities around the country. The firm compared a year’s rent for a two bedroom apartment, condo or townhouse with the cost of buying a similar property in 50 big cities around the country. Some of the most affordable areas to buy right now, according to Trulia, are Las Vegas, Miami and Phoenix. Of course, if you’re looking to buy in Los Angeles, San Francisco or New York City, your buying cost will be considerably greater than renting.

Another cost-related argument in favor of investing in a home right now is interest rates. The bottoming out of the housing market, combined with an improving economy, could send more homebuyers like me rushing into the market to lock in current mortgage rates before they get any higher. We saw mortgage interest rates rise steadily during the last few weeks of 2010, with the average rate for a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage finishing at 4.71% in December. That number represents a 4.3% gain from November.

Yes, mortgage rates still are near historical lows, but if we see these rates rise the cost of a new home could climb significantly. So, now could really be the best time to pull the trigger on that home purchase—and it could also be your best investment right now.

Jim Woods has spent nearly two decades as a financial journalist specializing in the economy and stocks. He is a former stockbroker and money manager.


Article printed from InvestorPlace Media, https://investorplace.com/2011/01/housing-market-buy-home-house-investment/.

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