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9.26.2007

What Happens On The National Real Estate Scene Doesn't Matter To You

The National Association of Realtors® released its monthly Existing Home Sales report for August 2006 and, as usual, you should be ignoring it.

The report discusses real estate on a national level and we all know that real estate is a local phenomenon.

It's not that the report isn't helpful -- it is. The Existing Home Sales report paints a broad picture of our nation's housing market which has implications for the economy as a whole.

The reason why the EHS report is not helpful to individual homeowners is because the process of buying and selling real estate is not a national occurrence -- it's a very, very local one.

When you buy your next home, you won't be buying a home that exists in all 50 states. You'll be buying a very specific home on a very specific street in a very specific neighborhood.

So, when the NAR -- a national group! -- reports that home supply is up and home sales are down, it is lumping every street in every town together into one giant chunk of irrelevant data.

Again: real estate is a local business, not a national one.

On the "street" level, the story can be much different from what the general reports tells us. Locally, there are plenty of areas in which there is a shortage of homes and in which property values are increasing.

This is why "national" real estate stories in the papers are often wasted ink -- accurate real estate stories are the local ones.

(Image courtesy: Wall Street Journal Online)