Thursday, January 17, 2013

Consider a House To Hedge Against Inflation

The housing market, having walloped the bejesus out of tens of millions of Americans, may seem an unlikely hedge against inflation.  But history shows that home prices tend to move up briskly during inflationary times.  During the 1940s, inflation burst out, driven first by World War II rationing and then by pent up consumer demand after the war.  Consumer prices moved up about 72%.  Census Bureau data indicates that housing prices moved from a national average of $2,938 in 1940 to $7,354 in 1950 (unadjusted for inflation).  That's an increase of 150%.

During the stagflation of the 1970s, consumer prices rose 112%.  Housing prices rose from a national average of $17,000 in 1970 to $47,200 in 1980, an increase of 178% (unadjusted for inflation).  You can find Census Bureau data on housing at https://www.census.gov/hhes/www/housing/census/historic/values.html.

The data show that housing prices rose faster than inflation during two of the most inflationary decades in the past 75 years.  Of course, the sales prices of houses don't tell the entire story.  You can't directly compare prices of housing against prices of stocks or inflation-adjusted bonds like U.S. Treasury TIPS, because housing requires periodic lawn mowings, plumbing repairs, new roofs, maintenance of HVAC systems, and replacement of dishwashers.  It's also taxed locally every year, and sometimes hit up for special assessments if the water or sewer systems need to be gussied up.  But you'd directly or indirectly bear those expenses anyway if you rented.  So owning a house and capturing the upticks in value might work out well for you during inflationary flareups. 

Why would housing be such a good inflation hedge?  Professional economists might be tempted to wheel out a wagon load of regression analyses to demonstrate their erudition.  But the simple and obvious explanation is that a hard asset with substantial utility will have significant value no matter what the paper currency is doing.  A house provides shelter, warmth, indoor plumbing, and a private place to pig out on high fat, high sugar, low nutritional value junk foods while long-term parked in front of a 124-inch TV, parboiling your brain without the neighbors seeing what a couch burrito you really are.  Market forces will adjust the paper value of that hard asset upward when the fiat currency is going haywire.

At the moment, inflation seems to be spotted about as often as the ivory-billed woodpecker.  But that doesn't mean it's extinct.  History shows that inflation can be quiescent for long periods of time, and then burst forth like an oil well blowout.  Inflationary pressures right now are doing a fan dance, often out of sight but still faintly visible in profile.  Ultimately, unless the Fed and other central banks can repeal market forces, their massive money prints and asset purchases of recent years will eventually inflate paper currencies.

 Housing, like politics, is first and foremost local.  Some markets would make mediocre investments no matter what (like areas with high unemployment).  Some types of housing, like condos, may not be ideal for inflation hedging.  Their values tend to be less stable than that of the 4-bedroom, 2 1/2 bath Colonial with the white picket fence and English sheep dog.  A house isn't a substitute for sensible investment diversification.  Stocks, TIPS and perhaps other assets might also play a role as reasonable inflation hedges in a well-diversified portfolio. 

It's hard to have confidence in housing after the free fall in prices of recent years.  But investment success can often come from buying disfavored assets.  Buying bubbly assets like bonds (especially junk bonds) isn't likely to be the epitome of financial perspicacity.  Home sweet home, be it ever so humble, may work out better if inflation rears its ugly head.

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