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Starting next year, investors will be able to bet on whether housing prices in San Diego and nine other cities will continue to rise or plunge off a cliff.
| The Chicago Mercantile Exchange, a leading futures market, plans to begin home-price trading in April. Investors will be able to buy contracts on the future direction of housing prices in the 10 cities, similar to what investors do now with oil or corn.
While some economists question whether a home-price derivative market will gain traction, the fact that the Chicago Mercantile Exchange would launch such products could signal a growing concern about the nation's housing boom. San Diego ranked second nationally among cities most likely to see housing price declines in the next two years, according to a survey from PMI, a mortgage insurance provider based in the Bay Area. But the company only puts the odds of price declines in San Diego at roughly 50-50. And it doesn't specify whether prices will dive or dip slightly. Hence, the potential demand for a home-price derivative market. The derivatives aren't being tailored to individual homeowners. Instead, they target home builders, banks and large mortgage institutions that own bundles of home loans. "It's a good idea ? not for you and me ? but it will be a risk-sharing tool for home builders and potentially some large real estate investors," said Stefan Meierhofer, a partner in A&M Investment Management in San Diego. Still, homeowners could tap into the high-risk investment vehicles if they chose to. The concept of real estate derivatives has been discussed since the early 1990s, but it took a boom in housing prices to propel it to reality. This will be the first time such a market is available. Home values appreciated 65 percent nationwide from 2000 to 2004 and more than doubled in some areas, according to the National Association of Realtors. In San Diego, they've increased more than 140 percent in the past decade. U.S. residential real estate was valued at $18.6 trillion at the end of last year. "There really is no way (now) for anyone to hedge home prices," said CEO Sam Masucci of Macro Securities Research, a Morristown, N.J.-based financial research firm that's developing the contracts with the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. "Or for institutional investors to gain exposure to the market without going out and buying homes. "Housing is one of the largest asset classes in the world, (and) we thought it made a lot of sense to give people access to it," he said. "One never knows when you launch something like this, whether it's going to be successful or bomb. But all the elements are there for it to be successful." Housing derivatives would work in a similar way to futures contracts. Say an investor thought prices would rise in San Diego. He or she would buy a futures contract based on the median price index for the city. If prices rise within the contract time frame, the value of the contract increases. But say an investor believed prices would fall. He or she would buy versions of contracts called put options. These options typically cost several thousand dollars. They allow holders to sell their contracts at a gain if the price drops, ensuring that they recoup some of their lost house profits in a declining market.
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