Iâve seen a lot more news stories trying to do something that seems a bit weird these days: stoke anger between generations.
I bring this up because itâs an example of why, when it comes to picking stocks (and 8%+ paying closed-end funds), we simply canât trust the media anymore.
Why? Because many outlets are so focused on generating emotional responses (and the clicks that go with them) that theyâve gotten far away from what really matters: the real data behind what theyâre saying.
With that in mind, weâre going to look at a data-driven indicator that tells us whether or not itâs a good time to buy. No fear. No clickbait. Just pure data.
What Iâm going to show you is not something youâll read about on financial sites. Thatâs because it takes just a bit of digging to get to itâand most journalists canât be bothered!
Which brings me back to those intergenerational ârageâ stories. Theyâre out there because thereâs simply no better way to enrage a reader than to write about, say, how millennials are lazy or baby boomers are selfish. Or, in the case of Business Insider, how âBoomers are clinging to their jobs, homes and halls of power.â
If this narrative sounds outrageous, thatâs because it is. In fact, itâs just not true. Funny thing is, most times, these manipulations can be unmasked pretty quickly. Take the canard about boomers âhoardingâ homes.
The Theory: Boomers Are Blocking the Path to Housing for Everyone Else
A lot of articles on this have popped up lately, a number of which have been based on a National Association of Realtors study showing that the median age of a first-time homebuyer is now 40, up from the early 30s from the 1990s until the pandemic.
The implication here is that these folks are essentially aging out of their prime first-time-homebuying years as boomers refuse to sell.
But lucky for us (and not so much for the media), the NAR isnât the only group doing research on this stuff, and other sources tell a different story.
Both the Census Bureau and Federal Reserve have been asking the same question, and the answer they came up with is not 40. Itâs actually 36, and that number is lower than what it was throughout the 2000s and much of the 2010s, as you can see in the blue line below.
Thatâs a big difference, especially in how the Fed sees first-time homebuyers being younger in 2024 than they were in the 2000s, the exact opposite of the NAR survey.
So what gives here?
In short, itâs all about methodology. The NAR mailed questionnaires to households asking questions like âIs this your first home purchaseâ and âHow old are you?â
Since older people tend to be more open to mail surveys, this skewed the numbers upward. Itâs shown in the response rate: Just 3% of surveys got full responses in the NARâs 2022 effort, making them a poor snapshot of the real situation.
Yet this study was the one that drove the most headlines.
Meanwhile, both the Census Bureau and Fed used actual data to zero in on who these first-time homebuyers are, both by looking at government data and information from credit bureaus. Thatâs much more reliable than a survey mailed to random houses.
Now, things arenât perfect. You can see that even the Fed data shows the average age of the American repeat homebuyer is up from 44 in the early 2000s to 48 in 2024. But bear in mind that the average American is four years older now than in 2000.
The population is indeed aging, after all!
Now, if we keep in mind Americans are on average older than they were a generation ago and the average age of first-time homebuyers is lower than it was a generation ago, all of a sudden, our story is happier: Weâre becoming an older society, but younger people can still buy a home.
The âHappyâ Story Gets Buried
When I was a full-time journalist, I pitched stories like this, and they got shot down because theyâre too upbeat. This is why I didnât stay in journalism for long.
This is where we come back to the markets.
The boomer housing story is far from the only pessimistic tale being peddled these days. Another is fear of an AI-driven stock bubble. The results can be seen in one of my favorite indicators of stock-market sentiment: the CNN Fear and Greed Index.
The average investor is very worried these days, and Iâm not surprised! The news is trying to ramp up the fear, and every once in a while, it succeeds. But market performance belies something else: As of this writing, stocks are still up around 13.5% in the past year, far from a panic.
Similarly, the discount to net asset value on CEFsâthe real indicator I wanted to tell you aboutâis around 5.3% as I write this. This measure shows how far the fundâs market price (or its value on the open market) is below its net asset value (or NAVâthe value of its portfolio).
Since CEFs (which trade on the open market, like stocks) generally have the same share count for their entire lives, their prices can be much different than their portfolio values. This not only tells us when a CEF is cheap but, when you look at the average discount across all CEFs, it gives us a good snapshot of where investors really are.
Right now we see that this 5.3% discount is a bit narrower than the long-term average of around 7%. This shows that the âfearâ on the news isnât prompting people to sell.
There are a lot of conclusions one can draw from this, but the most important is that the media is not a reliable indicator of actual market sentiment.
Michael Foster is the Lead Research Analyst for Contrarian Outlook. For more great retirement income ideas, click here for our latest report âIndestructible Income: 5 Bargain Funds with Steady 8.9% Dividends.â

