Monday, 6 October 2008

The Worst Chart a Real Estate Investor Can See Right Now
By Brian Hunt, Editor in Chief, Stanberry Research

For the past few months, the behavior of one asset has reassured me that – despite the worst news in decades – "things aren't so bad" in the real estate market...

The bearer of good news was the surprising strength in the iShares Real Estate Fund (IYR). This ETF is full of America's largest apartment landlords, mall operators, and office-building owners. It's also one of the world's largest and most liquid ways to own a basket of commercial real estate stocks.

From early 2007 to mid 2008, this liquid asset flowed straight down the toilet. This was around the time folks started realizing real estate prices couldn't rise 15% every single year into perpetuity. During the decline, IYR fell 40% from its highs to around $57 in July 2008.

While this sort of fall is commonplace in banking and commodity stocks these days, for a diversified basket of blue-chip real estate assets, it counts as obliteration. But after falling, real estate stocks held steady in July and August, despite the horrid news coming from Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and Lehman Brothers.

A trader could only look at this positive action in the face of negative news as a sign commercial real estate could be putting in a bottom... that the market was saying, "The worst may be over."

Last week, however, the market changed its mind. It's screaming, "The worst isn't over at all." As you can see from this chart, IYR just plunged past its July bottom to reach its lowest point in years:



This new low has erased any hope an investor had for a bottom in commercial real estate. The market is saying credit- market weakness, a declining economy, and falling asset prices are crushing America's largest owners of commercial property... so it's no wonder commercial real estate insiders are selling stock in huge amounts.


Commercial Real Estate Is Starting to Crack

An Alarming Twist on the Ag Boom




What's an investor to do? Well, you can't know the future... but you can know the trend is still down for stocks, employment, and real estate prices. And you can know market trends tend to last longer than anyone thinks is possible.

My advice? Avoid real estate stocks for the time being.

An economic crisis always creates tremendous values in both stocks and land. And these securities are offering substantial yields in the 4%-6% range. But the trend in real estate stocks just got started on another leg down. The economic headwinds we're facing will make that trend last much longer.
Good investing,

Brian Hunt

P.S. For a great explanation of the fundamentals behind the chart pattern I've just described, I encourage you to read my colleague Porter Stansberry's recent column in DailyWealth. Knowing the facts as Porter presents them could make a huge difference in your retirement savings over the coming years. Click here to read it.




Hedge Funds "Worst in Nineteen Years"
Maverick Capital Ltd., Greenlight Capital LLC and The Children's Investment Fund Management LLP fell more than 12 percent in September as stock hedge funds posted record monthly losses and braced for client defections.

Lee Ainslie's Maverick Capital declined 19.5 percent and Greenlight Capital, run by David Einhorn, was down 12.8 percent, according to investors in the New York-based funds. Children's Investment, overseen by Chris Hohn in London, fell 15 percent, based on a preliminary estimate. Read on...

Credit Markets Freeze
Interest rates on three-month dollar loans rose to a nine-month high, short-term corporate borrowing fell by the most ever and leveraged loans tumbled, exacerbating the credit freeze that's paralyzing businesses around the world.

The London interbank offered rate that banks charge each other for loans rose for a fourth day, driving a gauge of cash scarcity among banks to a record. The biggest drop in financial short-term debt outstanding since at least 2000 caused the U.S. commercial paper market to tumble 5.6 percent to a three-year low, according to the Federal Reserve. Read on...
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