From Salon:
Pumping real estate just isn’t any fun anymore
Did the housing bust just claim another victim? David Lereah, the chief economist for the National Association of Realtors, a man who has been mocked many times in How the World Works and elsewhere for his relentless optimism about the housing market, even as it was imploding all around him like a giant Florida sinkhole, is stepping down from his position. (Thanks to Calculated Risk for the tip.)
Naturally, I headed directly to DavidLereahWatch.com, hoping to score some juicy schadenfreude nuggets. I was not disappointed.
…
where is the ever-optimistic economist headed? According to Reuters, Lereah is taking a “senior executive position” at Move Inc., an online real estate service.Formerly known as Homestore.com, the company changed its name in early 2006, probably in an attempt to escape the lingering stench of having 11 former executives convicted of federal charges relating to a sheaf of offenses, including insider trading, fraud, filing false reports to the SEC and lying to auditors.
According to Fortune Magazine, the bulk of Move’s current revenue comes from advertising on Realtor.com, the Web site it runs for the National Association of Realtors. So Lereah isn’t going very far.
“Formerly known as Homestore.com, the company changed its name in early 2006, probably in an attempt to escape the lingering stench of having 11 former executives convicted of federal charges relating to a sheaf of offenses, including insider trading, fraud, filing false reports to the SEC and lying to auditors.”
Lireah is finally at home.
Can’t understand how a “journalist” from a web-based magazine (Salon) can get a link to a resource completely wrong.
The correct site is http://DavidLereahWatch.blogspot.com and not DavidLereahWatch.com, which is currently not a valid website…
OK, his link was correct, just not the link text. So that’s half a demerit.
Lereah’s pathetic legacy in a nutshell:
http://davidlereahwatch.blogspot.com/2007/03/lereah-housing-market-is-doing-lot-of.html