king county historical housing price chart
hi
i saw a chart somewhere on the site recently, that showed housing prices over time (a long time, 50 years or more).
i found the housing price run up in the lates 80s that flattend in 1990, right after i bought my first house.
i need to show that to my wife, to prove that houses dont always go up 10% or more a year. she has only been watching RE since 2001, and she has no context to show the last 6 years have been unusual from a historical perspective.
thanks! mike
i saw a chart somewhere on the site recently, that showed housing prices over time (a long time, 50 years or more).
i found the housing price run up in the lates 80s that flattend in 1990, right after i bought my first house.
i need to show that to my wife, to prove that houses dont always go up 10% or more a year. she has only been watching RE since 2001, and she has no context to show the last 6 years have been unusual from a historical perspective.
thanks! mike
Comments
Thus, since the foundation for today's real-estate market is FAR weaker than ever, it's unravelling is bound to be far more severe than past experiences would indicate.
I assume you're referring to this post. Note that the chart shows King County SFH prices adjusted for inflation using the officially-reported CPI.
Also note that the factors used to calculate the officially-reported CPI has been significantly monkeyed-with through the years. For an alternate take on CPI, check out Shadow Government Statistics. If I were using their CPI data, the data from 1990 to the present would be less extreme.
This Very, Very Old House
And have her read this article for the downside:
A Cautionary Housing Tale from Japan
that peak in 1990 followed by the drop and flat spot through 1996-
that was me!
i bought at the peak and sold in the flat. no pink ponies for me!
Technically they only claimed that prices haven't dropped since 1984. You have to go back to 1970 before you see the median decrease without inflation factored in.