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Friday, June 03, 2005

Shiller on NPR

by Calculated Risk on 6/03/2005 09:47:00 PM

Yale University economics professor Robert Shiller appeared on NPR today to discuss - what else? - the real estate bubble. Here are a few quotes:

"But I think the nature of the talk may be subtly changing. I mean people are seem to be much more aware of the possibility that we are in a bubble now. Whether they call it a bubble or something else, lots of people are expressing awareness that something is funny here."
On the fundamentals of Real Estate:
"Right now price relative to rent, price relative to construction cost, price relative to income, those are at high or record levels. And, uh, people are starting to become aware of that. And that's the change that will eventually end this bubble."
On the myth that housing prices do not decline:
"Although home prices have gone up a lot in the recent years, they are just the same houses, right? There is no change in the services they provide, its just the value we put on them. And so houses' value can just evaporate overnight too. If people suddenly get vary wary of investing houses, because they don't think the prices are going to go up, or if they think they are going to fall that will cause home prices to fall."
On the breadth of the bubble:
"Alan Greenspan said we have a lot of local bubbles - that we don't have a national bubble. Well, Ok, maybe he is technically right, but the enthusiasm is infectious and it is starting to spread all over the place."
On speculating today:
"I think that one conceivably could buy a house to try to flip it in a year. There is a good chance that prices will be a lot higher in a year, but I wouldn't be too sure. I think it is getting risky."
Bubbles last longer than most people expect and end quicker. In June 2006, I expect to be writing about the impact of the housing bust, not when it will bust. But you never know.