Once again, the boom-time intoxication set in. As long as
house prices kept rising, there was little need to ask questions.
In Los Angeles, the average price of a home rose from $161,000
1
in 1995 to $228,000 in 2000. It then soared to $585,000 in
2006. But everyone knows that Los Angeles has a great cli-
mate and a rapidly growing entertainment industry.
Tampa also has a great climate. With tens of millions of
baby boomers retiring over the next two decades, Tampa
would be inundated with snowbirds. Th e average price of a
home in Tampa rose from $84,000 in 1995 to $102,000 in
2000. It then spiked to $229,000 in 2006. Tampa enthusi-
asts noted that their prices were still low compared to those
of other metropolitan areas, including Miami’s, where house
prices rose by 218 percent from 1995 to 2006. Phoenix also
experienced a boom. Th e average price of a house there rose
from $92,000 in 1995 to $124,000 in 2000 before peaking
at $268,000 in 2006. Th is was an increase of 192 percent in
one decade.
But prices weren’t rising only in the Sun Belt. In Seattle,
the average house price rose from 145 percent between 1995
and 2006, increasing from $147,000 to $361,000. Th is was
explained by the fact that Seattle was a clean, vibrant city
surrounded by mountains and Puget Sound. Also, thanks to
Microsoft , Seattle was at the center of soft ware development
for the whole world.
San Francisco saw the average price of a home increase from
$234,000 in 1995 to $753,000 in 2006, a rise of 221 percent.
San Francisco is one of the most beautiful cities of the world,
dominated by streets lined with charming homes built in the
early years of the last century.
Aft er some tough years in the 1970s and 1980s, Chicago
was revitalized in the 1990s. Th e average price of a house in
Chicago rose from $136,000 in 1995 to $274,000 in 2006, an
increase of 101 percent.
Property values in New York and Boston had long ranked
near the top in the country, but that didn’t mean they couldn’t
go higher. Th e price of an average home in Boston rose from
$159,000 in 1995 to $402,000 in 2006, an increase of 153
percent. In New York, the average house price rose by 173 per-
cent, from $172,000 in 1995 to $469,000 in 2006. Boston has
enormous charm and history, plus a vibrant economy result-
ing from the spin-off s and start-ups emerging from research
and development in the area. As a major cultural and fi nancial
center, New York was creating many high-paying jobs.
And so the stories went. Wherever house prices went
through the roof, residents and realtors explained the trend in
terms of their city’s unique appeal. After all, there’s only one
Miami, Tampa, Phoenix, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Seattle,
Chicago, Washington DC, New York, and Boston. And,
whatever else happened in the economy, homeowners in these
cities were confi dent that their investments were safe.