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Encouraged by Plummeting Housing Starts

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ContrarianProfits/~3/V4wN78jrb6E/16871
Posted on Tuesday, May 19th, 2009 | In Market Commentary
Contributed by: Contrarian Profits (http://contrarianprofits.com) -

We’re confused this morning… help us understand this mess.

Initial construction of new homes in the U.S. fell to the lowest level on record last month, the Commerce Department announced early today. Housing starts in April fell 12.8%, to an annual rate of 458,000, the worst since at least 1959, when the government started keeping track. Applications for building permits fell to a record low as well.

Here’s what we don’t get: The market hates this. Futures were aiming for another day in the black early this morning, and then reversed seconds after the numbers were announced.

But we see the housing starts number as an encouraging development. In the worst housing crisis of our lifetimes – with a 9.8-month supply of existing homes on the market and a record 342,000 homes in foreclosure in April alone – who in their right mind is starting construction on a new house?

If the biggest hurdles in ending the housing crisis are price discovery and clearing supply, and if true recovery is a curtailment of home price expectations and a return to living within our means… why are record low housing starts a bad thing?

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At this stage, isn’t the best possible housing start number… 0?

Source: Encouraged by Plummeting Housing Starts

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About Contrarian Profits (http://contrarianprofits.com)

ContrarianProfits.com is a financial news and opinion website with a twist. As investment guru Rick Rule puts it, “You are either a contrarian or a victim.” In the financial world, most people are losers because they just don’t know what game they’re playing. They think they can just get “into the market” along with everyone else, do what everyone else does, and they will make money. Not likely. By the time you’ve paid commissions, spreads, fees, taxes – and suffered the consequences of inflation – you’ll be very lucky just to have as much money as you started with.

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Why is this so? Well, it’s obvious that if you do the same thing everyone else does you’ll get the same results everyone else gets. On average, and over the long run, real investment returns for the typical investor cannot exceed the rate of growth of the economy itself. Everybody can’t get richer faster than everybody else. Real economic growth in the US today averages about 3% per year; if you don’t make any mistakes, that’s about what you can expect. Few people may be satisfied with 3% per year, but most feel comfortable in the middle of the financial herd and are happy to take whatever that gets them. If you’re one of those people, you will probably not like our site. It will make you uncomfortable.

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