Dreary Housing Market In Europe Reflects In ETFs
By Tom Lydon on August 4, 2008 | More Posts By Tom Lydon | Author's Website
In Ireland, the investors have packed up and are nowhere to be seen, as the credit crunch has halted the housing market, leaving real estate exchange traded funds (ETFs) at a standstill.
The Belfast region of Ireland is especially hurting from the recent credit crunch, and the economic growth rate has slowed to an estimated 1%. Last year, the province was expecting an economic revival of sorts, as the Catholics and Protestants declared peace, reports Colm Heatley for Bloomberg.
United Kingdom home prices fell as July consumer confidence fell to an all-time low as the country borders on a recession, says Brian Swint for Bloomberg. Average home values dropped 8.1% from the previous year. Falling retail sales, dropping home values, high food prices and credit tightening are weighing on the economy and real estate ETFs.
ETFs that are feeling the pain:
- iShares S&P World ex-US Property Index Fund (WPS): down 20.6% year-to-date; 10.2% in the United Kingdom
- SPDR Dow Jones Wilshire International Real Estate (RWX): down 16.4% year-to-date; 13.4% in the United Kingdom
- iShares FTSE EPRA/NAREIT Global Real Estate ex-US Index Fund (IFGL): down 20.5% year-to-date; 11.2% in the United Kingdom
- iShares FTSE EPRA/NAREIT Europe Index Fund (IFEU): down 13.5% year-to-date; 36.6% in the United Kingdom

Forex Wrap-up: A Massive Short-Covering Rally In The US Dollar May Just Be Starting
The Message Of The 2-Year US Treasury Note, Deflation And Japan
Video: The Week Ahead
3 Steps To Becoming A More Successful Trader
The Transportation Sector: Here Are Three Investments In A Sector That Are Ready To Soar
Bay Street Stocks Slip Slightly Again - Canadian Commentary - 20 hrs ago
Stocks Close Mostly Lower Amid Disappointing Quarterly Results - U.S. Commentary - 21 hrs ago
Bay Street Stocks Linger Slightly Below Unchanged Level - Canadian Commentary - 22 hrs ago
Stocks Remain Stuck In The Red In Mid-Afternoon Trading - U.S Commentary - 23 hrs ago
European Markets Fall, Led By Banks, Oils - European Commentary - 1 day ago


