Land that could be bought for $800,000 could, within a year, be resold for 4 million before crashing back down to pre-boom levels. The prices were so inflated that to buy a condo-style property in XXXX, you would've had to pay the same as you would now have to pay for a luxury home in the guard-gated communities in Miami ($4,500,000)—without adjusting for inflation!
Via Florida Real Estate Bubble [1] from The Mess That Greenspan Made: Money Magazine on “Cashing Out” [2], “The Florida Real Estate Craze [3]”
This is not a speculative article “written” from the perspective of say, 2011, but is instead about a real estate bubble that actually happened in the state of Florida a while ago.
How long ago?
The $4,500,000 price, adjusted for inflation, would be $494,500,000—nearly half a billion dollars today.
Too bad for the gentleman that actually spent $4,500,000 dollars back in 1926 for the property.
[2] http://themessthatgreenspanmade.blogspot.com/2005/07/money-magazine-on-
[3] http://www.investopedia.com/features/crashes/crashes4.asp