@tomaspueyo: You think housing prices will ...
@tomaspueyo
15 views
Jul 17, 2024
2
Our perception of real estate prices is extremely biased.
Most ppl alive today have only experienced them since WW2, but that's a completely anomalous period!
Prices before did not grow as much. Here are real prices for 14 countries
What happened?
Supply and demand
Most ppl alive today have only experienced them since WW2, but that's a completely anomalous period!
Prices before did not grow as much. Here are real prices for 14 countries
What happened?
Supply and demand
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The last 80 years have seen a growth of housing demand never seen before. At the same time, supply has been shrinking consistently. These trends are all reverting now. Let's look at them in detail:
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So the 4 biggest sources of housing demand used to be huge, and are now slowing down or reverting:
1. Population shrinks
2. Urbanization stops
3. Household sizes stabilize
4. The growth in house sizes slows down
And supply is going in the opposite direction!
1. Population shrinks
2. Urbanization stops
3. Household sizes stabilize
4. The growth in house sizes slows down
And supply is going in the opposite direction!
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B. SUPPLY
You can only grow your cities horizontally (more land) or vertically (more floors)
1. Horizontally
The size of cities is determined by transportation, because ppl don't want to commute much more than 30m each way. That's called the Marchetti Constant
You can only grow your cities horizontally (more land) or vertically (more floors)
1. Horizontally
The size of cities is determined by transportation, because ppl don't want to commute much more than 30m each way. That's called the Marchetti Constant
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SUMMARIZING:
A. Demand used to grow a lot:
šppl
šurbanization
šhouses/person
šhouse size
B. Supply was limited
šAdditional horizontal supply (after cars)
šVertical growth (NIMBYs)
ALL THESE TRENDS ARE SLOWING DOWN, STOPPING, OR REVERTING!
A. Demand used to grow a lot:
šppl
šurbanization
šhouses/person
šhouse size
B. Supply was limited
šAdditional horizontal supply (after cars)
šVertical growth (NIMBYs)
ALL THESE TRENDS ARE SLOWING DOWN, STOPPING, OR REVERTING!
20
Nearly all of us have lived through 75y of real estate prices going up. We have accepted it as a fact of life. It isn't. It was due to extraordinary circumstances that are now disappearing.
I go into details about this in this new article:
unchartedterritories.tomaspueyo.com/p/why-i-dont-iā¦
I go into details about this in this new article:
unchartedterritories.tomaspueyo.com/p/why-i-dont-iā¦
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Of course, there's much more to consider: interest rates, wealth vs population, big vs small cities, housing vs real estate, timing, immigration... I'll talk about it in my premium article tomorrow
bit.ly/4aV7Lj2
bit.ly/4aV7Lj2
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Sources in articles
Of course, none of this is investment advice! Don't invest because someone on the Internet told you to. I'm sharing how I think. Take it as info and entertainment, and talk with investment advisors
Sources in articles
Of course, none of this is investment advice! Don't invest because someone on the Internet told you to. I'm sharing how I think. Take it as info and entertainment, and talk with investment advisors
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the prices above are in *real terms*. They account for inflation.
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The most common reply is: "This is due to money printing"
Yes and no
You can see prices shooting up after 1971, the end of Bretton Woods. But:
⢠Housing prices also grew before that, since 1945
⢠Housing prices grew in real terms after Bretton Woods
⢠Housing prices grew faster than incomes after Bretton Woods
So it's not just Bretton Woods
Why did housing prices outpace inflation, even income?
Because demand was higher than supply and coveted land demand is inelastic
I explore this in this week's premium article
unchartedterritories.tomaspueyo.com/subscribe
Yes and no
You can see prices shooting up after 1971, the end of Bretton Woods. But:
⢠Housing prices also grew before that, since 1945
⢠Housing prices grew in real terms after Bretton Woods
⢠Housing prices grew faster than incomes after Bretton Woods
So it's not just Bretton Woods
Why did housing prices outpace inflation, even income?
Because demand was higher than supply and coveted land demand is inelastic
I explore this in this week's premium article
unchartedterritories.tomaspueyo.com/subscribe














