Elliott Wave International | World's Largest Market Forecasting Firm Since 1979
Please Login
   
| What's My Password?
 

Home > Real Estate
Will "Stagflation" Stop My Home Price From Falling?

By Robert Folsom
Thu, 21 Feb 2008 17:30:00 ET
Add to Facebook Add to Twitter Add to Facebook Printer Friendly Get the RSS feed Add to more social media services
Get Elliott wave insights like this article when you sign up for EWI's free email newsletter, The Independent. It will change the way you view the markets forever. Privacy

Day long selling left the major stock indexes lower on Thursday (Feb. 21).

*****

They were mistaken about whether is would happen. Now they appear just as predictably wrong about how it will unfold.

I'm talking about the economy's southward turn, and the "consensus view" amongst the purveyors of conventional wisdom.

The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times each ran page one stories today about "stagflation" (the Times actually had two stagflation stories). I hardly think that the editors of these two papers planned to match topics on their front pages, which is all the more to conclude that "stagnation fears" is the establishment consensus.

Most of what you need to know is summed up in this quote:

"Lately, many people are hearing an echo — faintly perhaps but distinctly audible — of the stagflation of the 1970s."

Of course, I wasn't among the "many" who picked up on that "faintly audible echo." Then again, I realized that my hearing really is okay once I looked at the chart that that was in the same article as the quote.

Take a good look at those insanely inflationary spikes from 1974 and 1979, and then at the comparatively minor increase of recent months. Does anything about the chart data itself recall the 12% to 15% inflation of the 1970s?? Apart from the WSJ and NYT planting the thought, would the word "stagflation" even come to mind?

And naturally, none of the articles addressed the most conspicuous difference between today's economic trends and those of the 1970s -- namely, home prices. If you owned a home back then, you probably remember very well that the one silver lining to rampant inflation was that home prices mostly kept pace with that trend.

But surprise, surprise: That's not true today. Every indication is that home prices are falling. Can you have "stagflation" -- or even a strong overall inflationary trend -- if home prices are headed in the other direction?

We know the answer to these questions. We also know that the conventional wisdom is dangerously wrong for anyone who follows it.

Come see exactly what we see, right now. The Financial Forecast Service can be on your screen within minutes.

Tags: Bear market, credit crisis
Rating: - based on [4 rating(s)]
Rate this content:
  


Buy Now!

Near-Term Turns + Long-Term Trends = Big-Time Opportunities

The Financial Forecast Service is the most valuable investment forecasting service you can buy – period. You get three publications that deliver time and price analysis, in the time frames that matter to your investment decisions.

Here’s what you get:

The Financial Forecast Short Term UpdateYou’ll get forecasts for the market’s turns each Monday, Wednesday and Friday, after the markets close. It also includes occasional special opportunities, and Steve Hochberg’s latest on the extraordinarily accurate Fibonacci Turn Dates. – $39/month

The Elliott Wave Financial ForecastWe’ll match this publication’s stock market analysis over the past two years with anyone’s. Each month you’ll get the major trends in stocks, bonds, metals and pop culture. – $19/month

The Elliott Wave TheoristHe may forecast the reversal of a 14-month trend (like on March 26), or Bob Prechter may present "Elliott" from physics to social theory. But no matter what, Bob stands you on the cutting edge of Elliott and the markets themselves. – $20/month

You also get a FREE copy of Prechter and Frost's classic Elliott Wave Principle -- Key to Market Behavior when you subscribe ($29 value; shipping and handling charges apply). This book revolutionized market timing when it hit the street in 1979, and is considered a masterpiece to this day. No investor should be without it.

Your subscription is risk-free. Try it for 30 days: if you don't like it, ship the book back to us in good condition and get a full refund of your subscription money (minus S&H). You can also get a pro-rata refund anytime during your subscription. If we don't hear from you, we'll continue to bill your credit card every quarter until you tell us to stop.

It’s been a tough environment for investors lately. Go with publications that have proven their worth. Individual subscriptions to these three publications would total $78, yet together they’re just $59 per month. You save $228 a year.

Buy Now!More InformationDon’t delay. Opportunity waits for no one.

If you want to order by phone, call our customer service representatives at 800-336-1618 (from within the U.S.) or 770 536-0309 (from outside the U.S.). When you call, please refer to code FFS3-FRRE.