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December 12, 2004 06:54 AM

A New Way to Hedge Your Home's Paper Profit


Excerpt: IF you have owned a home for several years, you may be sitting on a sizable increase in equity. And if you are worried that the run-up in housing prices can't last much longer, you may think the only choice is to call a broker, rent a moving van and head for the (less expensive) hills. But through an increasing number of new investments, you may be able to limit future erosion of your home's value.


IF you have owned a home for several years, you may be sitting on a sizable increase in equity. And if you are worried that the run-up in housing prices can't last much longer, you may think the only choice is to call a broker, rent a moving van and head for the (less expensive) hills.

But through an increasing number of new investments, you may be able to limit future erosion of your home's value.

Macro Securities Research, a company affiliated with Robert J. Shiller, the Yale economist, has reached an agreement with the Chicago Mercantile Exchange to list pairs of derivative instruments that are essentially index funds linked to home prices in certain markets. One instrument in each pair will rise as its market index rises; the other will rise as the same index falls. That will let investors bet on the direction of housing prices. Similar, but less sensitive, vehicles are being offered by HedgeStreet, a firm in San Mateo, Calif., that offers small-scale derivatives speculation online.

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