 The Rude Awakening Wall Street, New York Thursday, June 16, 2005
------------------------- The Rude Awakening PRESENTS: Most of us are sick and tired or reading about the housing bubble, which is why your New York editor has decided to devote ONLY two of this week's columns to the topic. --- Advertisement ---
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------------------------- BIRD WATCHING By Eric J. FryMost of us are sick and tired or reading about the housing bubble, which is why your New York editor has decided to devote ONLY two of this week's columns to the topic. We would prefer to avert our editorial gaze from the proliferating signs of excess in the national real estate market, but these signs seem to appear everywhere we turn - they have become even more numerous than the voices in our head. Today, we'll take a peak at a few of the latest signs of home-buying exuberance. Tomorrow, we'll gaze into the future and try to imagine the after-life of the housing bubble. Perhaps, by contemplating this inevitable Day of Reckoning, we may achieve a partial salvation. But first, let's consider the here-and-now
When we queried Google yesterday for the term, "housing bubble," we received 476,000 responses. The phrase "stock market bubble" produced only 144,000 responses. "Oil bubble," returned 9,910 responses, while "soybean bubble" yielded a mere 6 results. Clearly, therefore, the notion of a housing bubble is no secret to the masses. (But wouldn't we all be blindsided by a soybean bubble!) The topic attracts debate and discussion nearly every day in nearly every media outlet. Therefore, could anything as widely anticipated as the end of the housing boom ever come to pass? Our contrarian instincts rebel at the thought. Perhaps, therefore, we have not yet reached the terminal stage of the bubble, but are merely drawing closer to it. On the other hand, for every 10 individuals who scorn the housing bull market as a "bubble," 100 seem to embrace it as a "sure thing." "Of course it's a risk," one high-stakes property speculator recently admitted to a Wall Street Journal writer, "but where else can you make this sort of money so fast?" Such is the sentiment that seems to be powering much of the break-neck appreciation in the real estate market. Property speculators and second-home buyers represent a growing percentage of the overall demand for real estate, thereby inflating demand above what "ordinary" home-buying might produce. Self-proclaimed "investors" represented 25% of the nation's homebuyers last year, up from only 14% the year before, according to the National Association of Realtors. Inflated demand, all else being equal, produces inflated prices. A recent "monthly update" from a real estate agent operating in a Westchester County town, north of New York City, beams, "The median sales price for a house [in her town] jumped to $1,496,250 in the first quarter of 2005, 38.3% higher than just three months ago." "In-town trading-up continues and there now appears to be significantly more buyers seeking weekend homes," the giddy broker explains. "Increasingly affluent buyers, many of them Baby Boomers, are placing their capital in real estate, considered not only stable and secure, but an excellent investment vehicle. All of these factors have combined to create a red-hot real estate market." We have no idea when the red-hot housing market might turn stone-cold. But we do know that asset markets are stubbornly symmetrical. Any investment that can produce large, rapid profits can also produce large, rapid losses
at some point. And that point often arrives at the very moment when prices are rising most rapidly. Despite this historic tendency however, few property investors admit to any fear. Meanwhile, the real estate investors on Wall Street exude just as much optimism as those on Main Street - most homebuilding stocks have quintupled over the last four years. These stocks are rising so sharply that their trajectory bears an eerie resemblance to the trajectory of Nasdaq stocks between 1996 and 2000. 
Admittedly, housing stocks do not appear to be very expensive. Most still sell for less than eight times earnings. But those earnings would shrink dramatically, or disappear, if the gait of home sales were to slow from a gallop to a trot. Elsewhere on Wall Street, real estate investment trusts (REITs) are becoming a bit pricey. These securities, which hold a portfolio of investment properties, typically pay plump dividends. Occasionally, REIT shares will also produce plump capital gains. For the last few years, they have been delivering both. Since the end of 2002, the S&P REIT Index has produced a total return of almost 75% - or about double the return of the S&P 500. Perhaps, therefore, REITs have "over-delivered." They have climbed so high that their dividend yields (dividend yield = total annual dividend divided by the share price) have fallen to multi-year lows relative to the S&P 500's dividend yield. At present, for example, Equity Office Properties' (EOP) dividend yield of 5.97% is only 3.93 percentage points higher than the S&P 500's yield of 2.04%. For perspective, as recently as 2003, EOP paid a dividend yield more than 6 percentage points higher than the S&P's. 
This trend does not inspire terror, but neither does it instill confidence that REIT shares will continue their strong relative performance. We would not dare to plant a flag on June 16, 2005, declaring the end of the real estate bull market. But neither would we join the hordes who are rushing in to buy ever-pricier "investment" homes and homebuilding stocks and REITs. We would prefer to "sell into strength," rather than chase after it. "You can't stop the birds from flying over your head," a married friend once remarked as an attractive female strolled though our line of sight, "but you CAN stop them from building a nest in your hair." We suspect investors would do well to adopt a similar philosophy toward real estate. We cannot stop the housing bubble from expanding throughout our neighborhood - and besides, it's rather nice to look at - but we can prevent the bubble from expanding throughout our entire investment portfolio. [Ed. Note: Where some see bubbles, market collapses and a plague of Willy Loman's, others see opportunity for some serious profits. Strategic Investment's Dan Denning shares his thoughts on the matter here: Strategic Investment --- Advertisement ---
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------------------------- Did You Notice
? By Justice Litle Nuclear energy never really left the scene; it just avoided the spotlight for a long while. Today, nuclear power accounts for approximately 16% of total electricity generation worldwide. 
The United States has more than 100 nuclear reactors in 31 states. India has 14; South Korea, 19; and China, just nine - for now. As you might imagine, uranium prices have seen a wild ride. In the late 1970s, before the disasters of Three Mile Island and Chernobyl, "yellowcake" ran to $50 a pound. After Chernobyl, a supply glut relentlessly hammered prices to an all-time low near $7 per pound in December 2000. Today, yellowcake changes hands around $25. But the tide has turned for nuclear energy. China and India alone have plans to build more than 40 new nuclear power plants in the next 15 years. South Korea and Mexico could take the tally of new plants over 50! So we doubt the new nuclear power boom will end any time soon. [Ed. Note: Outstanding Investments has booked major gains in the past from uranium stocks. With the recent weakness in the uranium stock sector, we think it's time to take another look
Outstanding Investments ------------------------- And the Markets
| Wednesday | Tuesday | This week | Year-to-Date | DOW | 10,566 | 10,548 | 54 | -2.0% | S&P | 1,207 | 1,204 | 8 | -0.4% | NASDAQ | 2,075 | 2,069 | 12 | -4.6% | 10-year Treasury | 4.11% | 4.11% | 0.07 | -0.10 | 30-year Treasury | 4.41% | 4.42% | 0.09 | -0.41 | Russell 2000 | 637 | 634 | 11 | -2.2% | Gold | $428.35 | $426.85 | $1.30 | -2.1% | Silver | $7.31 | $7.26 | $0.04 | 7.3% | CRB | 306.98 | 304.96 | 4.50 | 8.1% | WTI NYMEX CRUDE | $55.57 | $55.00 | $2.03 | 27.9% | Yen (YEN/USD) | JPY 109.26 | JPY 109.49 | -0.63 | -6.5% | Dollar (USD/EUR) | $1.2109 | $1.2029 | 11 | 10.7% | Dollar (USD/GBP) | $1.8215 | $1.8058 | -93 | 5.0% |
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