MacroMarkets today announced that they'll be issuing New York Stock Exchange-traded securities for investors to play the US Housing Market. From the press release:
MacroShares Housing Depositor, a subsidiary of MacroMarkets LLC, filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission for exchange-traded securities
that will allow investors to invest in the upward and the inverse movement of U.S. home prices. MacroShares Major Metro Housing Up and Down securities will be based on the S&P/Case-Shiller Composite-10 Home Price Index and will allow investors to access this important, but illiquid, asset class. When launched, these revolutionary paired securities will have a ten-year term and will feature a 2x (200%) leverage factor. MacroMarkets LLC plans to launch the new securities on the NYSE Arca under the ticker symbols:
- UMM- MacroShares Major Metro Housing Up
- DMM- MacroShares Major Metro Housing Down
Looks to me like an ETF, which would be ideal for lowering the transaction costs and the capital requirements that have been dogging the commodities-exchange traded securities. ETFs, remember are exchange traded funds so you can invest pretty directly in an underlying asset class. In oil, for example, you can trade with the ticker symbol USO traded on the Amex.
In the couple years since launching the Chicago Merc-traded housing futures based on the S&P/Case Shiller Index, MacroMarkets is widely acknowledged to have dropped the ball. The traded volume on these markets is tiny and was restricted by steep license fees that MacroMarkets tried to extract from the Street. This winter, MacroMarkets sold to S&P the master license of the Index and droped the license fees. That was Step One. Step Two is to get products into the hands of the people who can use them. It looks like MacroMarkets is focusing on Step Two. Let's hope they learned their lesson and this product gets the volume it deserves.
While we have yet to see these securities trade on the NYSE, they're based on the Case Shiller 10-City Composite, which is good news for Altos (and our customers). We publish the Altos 10-City Composite which, whattya know, follows the same 10 cities.
Our Real Estate Derivatives weekly report is now available to subscribers who want to know where these indexes are heading with a 90-day lead. Beyond just pricing, the reports dive into all the detail real estate data: supply and demand levels, turnover, etc. If you're interested, contact us.
Meanwhile, I'm keeping my fingers crossed to see some trading volume.
Felix Salmon submits: Up until now, Robert Shiller has been spectacularly unsuccessful in (a) finding ways for investors to short the housing market, and (b) designing ETFs. So, naturally, he's now trying to do both at once! Read more »
Tracked: Jun 13, 08:18
The other day, I highlighted the announcement from Bob Shiller's MacroMarkets to list exchange traded funds on the housing market. I've now had a chance to investigate more deeply and I'm giddy like a schoolgirl. (Albeit an incredibly geeky schoolgirl,
Tracked: Jun 13, 08:22