June Conway / Kelowna Okanagan Real Estate

When you are entertaining the important decision of buying or selling a home, turn to a real estate consultant who will be with you every step of the way.  
Go

  ... or read June's Kelowna Blog

Kelowna MLS Map
KELOWNA MLS® LISTINGS
June's custom maps bring all of Kelowna's listings to your fingertips.




BROWSE JUNE'S MARKET UPDATES:
 Jun 2010 to Jul 2010
 Jun 2010 to Jun 2010
 May 2010 to May 2010
 Apr 2010 to May 2010
 Apr 2010 to Apr 2010
 Mar 2010 to Apr 2010
 Feb 2010 to Mar 2010
 Feb 2010 to Feb 2010
 Jan 2010 to Feb 2010
 Jan 2010 to Jan 2010
 Dec 2009 to Jan 2010
 Nov 2009 to Dec 2009
 Sep 2009 to Nov 2009
 Jul 2009 to Sep 2009
 Jun 2009 to Jul 2009
 Apr 2009 to Jun 2009
 Mar 2009 to Apr 2009
 Feb 2009 to Mar 2009
 Jan 2009 to Feb 2009
 Nov 2008 to Jan 2009
 Sep 2008 to Nov 2008
 Aug 2008 to Sep 2008
 Jun 2008 to Aug 2008
 May 2008 to Jun 2008
 Apr 2008 to May 2008
 Mar 2008 to Apr 2008
 Feb 2008 to Mar 2008
 Dec 2007 to Feb 2008
 Oct 2007 to Dec 2007
 Jul 2007 to Oct 2007
 Apr 2007 to Jul 2007
 Jan 2007 to Apr 2007
 Nov 2006 to Jan 2007
 May 2006 to Nov 2006
 Feb 2006 to May 2006
 Jan 2005 to Feb 2006




Jun 6, 2009

Real estate is not a religion

Right now the topic of real estate is right up there with religion and politics: just don't go there with extended family and co-workers.

-- A comment on the Greater Fool website

The elevation of real estate to another faith-based topic best not discussed in good company was probably inevitable, if an American scholar of investor behaviour is right.

The scholar's name is Robert Shiller. A couple of years ago he circulated a paper that says property buyers and sellers in the first years of this decade shared a certainty about the inevitability of price-appreciation supported by neither evidence nor experience and, further, they shared that certainty in unprecedented numbers.

"While home-price booms have been known for centuries, the recent boom is unique in its pervasiveness," the Yale University professor of economics and finance wrote.

"Dramatic home-price booms have been in evidence since the late 1990s in Australia, Canada, China, France, India, Ireland, Italy, Korea, Russia, Spain, the United Kingdom and the United States, among other countries.

"There appears to be no prior example of such dramatic booms occurring in so many places at the same time."

Shiller is the developer, with Karl Case, of a widely circulated index of American real estate values. (See page G6)

The "Case Shiller" index's inaugural value was 100, established for January 2000. Its highest value was 206.5, reached in July, 2006. Its lowest value, 140, is also its current value.

The index, among many, many matters, records 78 months of increasing American prices followed by 32 months of decreasing prices. On the way up the average monthly change in the index was almost 1.4 per cent; on the way down, almost 1.9 per cent.

No "fundamentals" -- monetary policy, for example -- drove international real estate prices up, Shiller says.

Instead, "extravagant expectations for future price increases" lifted them, an extravagance he attributes to an apprehension that "a new era of capitalism . . . is producing phenomenal economic growth, and . . . both extreme winners and unfortunate losers."

Further, "fundamentals" will not reverse, by themselves, "large real-price declines extending over many years in major cities that have seen large increases."

Robert Shiller doesn't say a change in certainties is required, but it clearly is, from faith-based to experience-informed.

A germane Canadian experience might be our immigrant experience: we are a nation of immigrants, arriving and settling in the millions over the 400 years since the founding of Canada's first permanent settlement, Quebec City.

A document on the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation website, Pro-Home: A Progressive, Planned Approach to Affordable Home Ownership, is the inspiration for the possibility that in our immigrant past is a home-ownership experience of valuable currency.

"In the first half of the 1900s lower-income, immigrant families developed large portions of older Canadian cities using their own, and in some cases their neighbours', labour and capital.

"Subdivided park and farm lots were developed unevenly, without any overall plan, but this approach provided affordable homes for many working-class families.

"According to some estimates, as much as 25 per cent of housing built in Toronto between 1900 and 1913 was self-built."

Not the particulars, the owner-built house, attract in this immigrant achievement.

The ethic attracts, the identification by ordinary people of a need and of a means of acquiring it. These homes were "incremental . . . affordable . . . and flexible," to appropriate the language the study uses in championing "incremental housing" as a possible solution to the affordability challenges endured today by low-income families.

The homes were incremental because their owners expanded or altered them as household circumstances changed. They were flexible because they could be built by property owner or contractor and could be built to include "an accessory unit . . . as a source of income." And they were affordable, to start and expand and alter.

The last quality is their most important today. They were affordable because their owners considered them "as a process rather than a product" or as a means rather than end, a means of mastering household circumstances over the years and the decades, good and bad, additions and subtractions.

This mastery was, and is, an achievement of profound value, with dividends that will speak to us today if we would only listen, and learn.

(prepared by Michael Sasges/Vancouver Sun)


Go Back To The Market Updates Page

Questions? No problem! For more information, please feel free to contact June Conway toll free at +1.888.657.7123. Of course, you could always just .
 


If you're looking for Kelowna MLS Listings...


about june | opinions | properties | kelowna maps
buying? | selling? | market update | links
home page



Remax Kelowna

250.317.3136

100-1553 Harvey Ave, Kelowna, BC V1Y 6G1
Office: 250.717.5000 Fax: 250.861.8462
June's Toll Free: 1.888.657.7123

Each Office independently owned and operated. Privacy Policy.


Website by JonathanDay.com



June Conway