A New Measurement for House Price Declines

Given the severity of house price declines it only seems like it merits its own measurement as neither the English system (inches, feet, pounds, etc…) nor the Metric system (meters, kilometers, grams, etc…) can properly convey the magnitude of the fall.  For this I propose a new measurement called the Greenspan which measures the distance between the value of your house at the peak of the market and what it will measure at the bottom of the market (whenever that occurs).

Why call it the Greenspan?  Here are three very sound reasons:

  • “Green” is, of course, the symbol (in the US) of money and wealth.  For example “after the latest economic collapse I have a lot LESS green.”
  • “Span” measures distances and often LARGE ones (like bridges and the distance from one side of the Grand Canyon to the other).
  • “Greenspan” as in Alan Greenspan the person who is significantly responsible for this mess.  It it is time he is honored for his role in this.

As a baseline, a single Greenspan is a 25% fall in value from peak.  Given that the average US market will probably fall by as much as 2 Greenspans in total.  Certain markets (like Vallejo, California) could see a drop of 3 Greenspans.

Remember real estate is local so your Greenspans may vary. 

See how Palo Alto, California is due for AT LEAST a 1.2 Greenspan drop.

One Response to “A New Measurement for House Price Declines”

  1. The Greenspan measurement is classic. You are very clever!

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