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

Home > Real Estate
U.S. House Prices Down 14%, But 12 Nations Face Worse
IMF reports on global housing

By Susan C. Walker
Thu, 22 May 2008 14:00:00 ET
Email |  Print  |  RSS Feeds Generated by Elliott Wave International RSS |  My Updates
Bookmark and share It!

Updated May 27, 2008, 2 p.m.

The latest house price news came out today -- the S&P/Case-Shiller index shows house prices down 14% since last year this time. That's the largest drop since this particular index appeared 20 years ago.

When it comes to housing prices, it's human nature to look around your own neighborhood, town or state to decide how you're doing. So, as this recent housing debacle plays out, folks who own homes in states where houses are appreciating in value – like Wyoming, Utah and Montana – feel a lot better than those who own homes in Nevada, California and Florida.

This despite the fact that home prices overall in the United States are going down. A government report out last week from the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight (OFHEO) says that U.S. homes prices were down 3.1% in the first quarter of 2008 compared with last year's first quarter. That is the largest decline in the OFHEO's purchase-only index in the 17 years it's been tracking house prices. California and Nevada were down more than 8%.


Housing, General Electric, Volatility -- Each one shows signs of the emerging bear market. Learn why in the latest Elliott Wave Financial Forecast avalable now. 


Although we've become accustomed to negative news about U.S. home prices and foreclosures, perhaps it's worth looking outside of the U.S. of A. to see how other countries are doing. Surprise – home prices in 12 nations from 1990-2007gapped up much more than in the United States. Ireland, the Netherlands and Great Britain lead the list. A recent story in Bloomberg reports that asking prices for homes in the United Kingdom rose about 2.2% in April 2008 from the previous April, even though home prices based on agreed transactions fell by 0.9%, according to Britain's largest mortgage lenders. It's a classic case of homeowners not being realistic about a falling housing market.

Our analysts at Elliott Wave International draw an even larger conclusion about global housing prices. They say that the tremendous increase in global housing prices speaks of a big-time deflation ahead for a large part of the world. Here's an excerpt and chart from the latest Elliott Wave Financial Forecast to explain their rationale.

 
* * * * *
 
Excerpted from The Elliott Wave Financial Forecast, May 2008
 

"The worldwide scope of this bear market is confirmed by another sector that Elliott Wave International pegged as the front edge of the decline back in 2005: housing. Here’s the latest update on global home prices from The New York Times: 'The collapse of the housing bubble in the United States is mutating into a global phenomenon, with real estate prices down from the Irish countryside and the Spanish coast to Baltic seaports and even in parts of India.'

In England, confidence in the U.K. housing market slipped to its lowest point in at least 30 years, which a closely watched survey of English appraisers described as 'the gloomiest reading since the survey began in 1978.' Every bursting bubble announces itself with a flash of public recognition, and here it takes the form of a rash of expert predictions that 'some countries, like Ireland, will face an even more wrenching adjustment than the United States, with the possibility that the downturn could turn into wholesale collapse.'

"There’s still evidence of fundamental economic strength outside the U.S. An April 18 story about corporate earnings notes that big U.S. businesses that sell to customers abroad are proving resilient, but Kelvin Davidson, an economist at Capital Economics in London, notes that the boom in house prices was actually much bigger outside the U.S. and, 'If anything, people should be more worried than in the U.S.'

   

"This chart from the International Monetary Fund shows how much more out-of-whack with the fundamentals home prices are in most countries than they are in the United States. Global business may be holding up, but don’t forget that it took more than a year for the Dow Jones Industrial Average to acknowledge the U.S. housing bust with a peak of its own. Global home prices are reversing amidst a slowing global economy and well-developed credit crunch, so the transition to The Elliott Wave Financial Forecast’s 'across-the-board decline in financial assets' should happen much faster."


Housing, General Electric, Volatility -- Each one shows signs of the emerging bear market. Learn why in the latest Elliott Wave Financial Forecast avalable now. 


Tags: housing prices, home values, OFHEO

Rating: - based on [71 rating(s)]
Rate this content:
  

 Hurry, Last Day To Save 20%

People who read this also read:
Buy This Bailout or We'll Shoot This Bank
Commodity Special: Sweet Opportunity In Sugar
The Brilliance Of The U.S. Government Bailout
I Wish The Answers Were Here
Prepare to Be Robbed -- It's For Your Own Good
Categories
Most Recent Articles
- 9/30/2008 6:00:00 PM
"What We Do" -- Longest Page on the Fed's Web Site?
- 9/30/2008 4:15:00 PM
Oil Prices Say “Watch Out”
- 9/29/2008 5:30:00 PM
The Bailouts Can’t Buy Happiness
- 9/29/2008 5:15:00 PM
A Reckoning On An Epic Scale
- 9/26/2008 5:30:00 PM
Buy This Bailout or We'll Shoot This Bank
 


To access EWI's valuable message board, all you need is a free Club EWI profile. Create Yours Now >>
> Won't the bailouts save the stock market and stop deflation?
> Will demand for luxury goods increase in deflation?
> Does the SEC's ban on short selling affect the Elliott wave picture?
> Are bank safe deposit boxes a safe place in a deflation?
> Any suggestions for a general safe home for 401k money?
> Can the Federal Reserve do THIS to save the U.S. economy?
> Why didn't the U.S. dollar crash after the Fed bailed out Freddie and Fannie?
> Would a U.S. deflation affect the world's economies and real estate prices?
> Does electronic "black box" trading affect markets' Elliott wave patterns?
> Will China's economy continue to grow, or decline due to the U.S. slowing down?

Club EWI Members: Click Here

|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Elliott Wave Principle is a detailed description of how financial markets behave. The description reveals that mass psychology swings from pessimism to optimism and back in a natural sequence, creating specific Elliott wave patterns in price movements. Each pattern has implications regarding the position of the market within its overall progression, past, present and future. The purpose of Elliott Wave International’s market-oriented publications is to outline the progress of markets in terms of the Wave Principle and to educate interested parties in the successful application of the Wave Principle. While a course of conduct regarding investments can be formulated from such application of the Wave Principle, at no time will Elliott Wave International make specific recommendations for any specific person, and at no time may a reader, caller or viewer be justified in inferring that any such advice is intended. Investing carries risk of losses, and trading futures or options is especially risky because these instruments are highly leveraged, and traders can lose more than their initial margin funds. Information provided by Elliott Wave International is expressed in good faith, but it is not guaranteed. The market service that never makes mistakes does not exist. Long-term success trading or investing in the markets demands recognition of the fact that error and uncertainty are part of any effort to assess future probabilities. Please ask your broker or your advisor to explain all risks to you before making any trading and investing decisions.