>1. Clearing price assumes efficient markets. My house in my neighborhood is one of maybe three (probably much less judging by the rental units friends of similar means live in) like it that will be available throughout the year.
Yes, low liquidity in the rental market means that there's a spread in the estimates, but I don't see how it follows that "imputed rent is meaningless". The low liquidity can cause the estimate to be both above or below reality. Do you have evidence that the inflation numbers for the housing component of the CPI is totally detached from actual market prices?
>2. Even in the stock market the clearing price is dubious; the market cap of a company is a useful bit of fantasy. By multiplying the clearing price by the outstanding shares there is an implicit and incredible assumption that all the shareholders value the shares equally - which is obviously not true, some share-holders believe the stock has more promise, others are sentimental (the founder’s family members).
Again, this seems to be more of a complaint that the market cap figure isn't 100% accurate, rather than that the number is "meaningless" as claimed in your original comment. It seems like the entirety of your argument (for both imputed rent and market cap) is "well there are these factors that causes the number to be inaccurate, therefore the number is totally meaningless and should be ignored".
Yes, low liquidity in the rental market means that there's a spread in the estimates, but I don't see how it follows that "imputed rent is meaningless". The low liquidity can cause the estimate to be both above or below reality. Do you have evidence that the inflation numbers for the housing component of the CPI is totally detached from actual market prices?
>2. Even in the stock market the clearing price is dubious; the market cap of a company is a useful bit of fantasy. By multiplying the clearing price by the outstanding shares there is an implicit and incredible assumption that all the shareholders value the shares equally - which is obviously not true, some share-holders believe the stock has more promise, others are sentimental (the founder’s family members).
Again, this seems to be more of a complaint that the market cap figure isn't 100% accurate, rather than that the number is "meaningless" as claimed in your original comment. It seems like the entirety of your argument (for both imputed rent and market cap) is "well there are these factors that causes the number to be inaccurate, therefore the number is totally meaningless and should be ignored".