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It's inflation. Money goes into assets. Why hold a continuously debasing greenback? I thought the Euro was trash but the dollar is giving the Europe a serious run for its money, no pun intended. I don't see a crash at all on the horizon, not even a correction.
It's inflation. Money goes into assets. Why hold a continuously debasing greenback? I thought the Euro was trash but the dollar is giving the Europe a serious run for its money, no pun intended. I don't see a crash at all on the horizon, not even a correction.
Beating a dead horse here, but municipal debt and shortfalls are the biggest concern in my opinion.
Beating a dead horse here, but municipal debt and shortfalls are the biggest concern in my opinion.
I'm amazed at houses going pending after only a couple days on the market. Unless the property is a exceptional deal, no way would I be buying right now.
WookieMan saysBeating a dead horse here, but municipal debt and shortfalls are the biggest concern in my opinion.
Maybe mell is right that it's not that the market is up, it's that the dollar is down. And if they print more to bail out places like SF, the inflation would just be all the greater.
If a household loses 1 of the household jobs and this created a hole, how does getting another job (as long as it's at the same salary) created excess? It doesn't. So you've only just come back to where you were before.
Patrick saysWookieMan saysBeating a dead horse here, but municipal debt and shortfalls are the biggest concern in my opinion.
Maybe mell is right that it's not that the market is up, it's that the dollar is down. And if they print more to bail out places like SF, the inflation would just be all the greater.
I'm a bit confused...if all the money being created is only enough to keep debt afloat and people in the houses, how can inflation go crazy, you're simply filling the cup back up to where it was. As long as you're not overflowing the cup, how can there be inflation?
Now we are at bi-quarterly payments where my household is getting $2400.
WineHorror1 saysPatrick saysWookieMan saysBeating a dead horse here, but municipal debt and shortfalls are the biggest concern in my opinion.
Maybe mell is right that it's not that the market is up, it's that the dollar is down. And if they print more to bail out places like SF, the inflation would just be all the greater.
I'm a bit confused...if all the money being created is only enough to keep debt afloat and people in the houses, how can inflation go crazy, you're simply filling the cup back up to where it was. As long as you're not overflowing the cup, how can there be inflation?
If you don't see the pattern here. Bush was mailing out $300. Obama was what? $800? Now we are at bi-quarterly payments where my ho...
@mell
They may be fleeing the city, but their just moving out to the suburbs. My buddy who lives in Mill Valley has seen his house almost double in the last 3 years.
Inflation is the stimulus checks, each and every dollar. It's money created out of thin air for no work. The debt forgiveness = inflation, moratoriums = inflation. Covid personal and business loans = inflation. It's everywhere.
@mell
They may be fleeing the city, but their just moving out to the suburbs. My buddy who lives in Mill Valley has seen his house almost double in the last 3 years.
As I have learned the hard way, it is pretty easy to see what is going to happen, and incredibly hard to cipher out when.
I don’t know about you guys but my family income climbed significantly this year. Both I and my wife made quite a bit more. We felt a little guilty so dropped some large donations on a youth shelter.
I have been working with a realtor and while it's true that the nice houses which are also good deals in the burbs usually sell relatively fast I have not seen any bidding wars or multiple offers. Usually an offer comes in around the ask and gets accepted. Many sellers try to overprice and you can find plenty of properties sitting on the market for months. If you take zillow for reference I assume the real home value to roughly 10-15% below what they list.
theoakman saysWineHorror1 saysPatrick saysWookieMan saysBeating a dead horse here, but municipal debt and shortfalls are the biggest concern in my opinion.
Maybe mell is right that it's not that the market is up, it's that the dollar is down. And if they print more to bail out places like SF, the inflation would just be all the greater.
I'm a bit confused...if all the money being created is only enough to keep debt afloat and people in the houses, how can inflation go crazy, you're simply filling the cup back up to where it was. As long as you're not overflowing the cup, how can there be inflation?
If you don't see the pattern here. Bush was mail...
Yes, that's a definitely true. People are fleeing SF, NYC, and other places. Consider this, how does a SF apartment go from $250k to $2 million while you have drug addicts shitting outside your home when a nice property allows you to live much better? Why did the same exact thing happen to my sister's shitty apartment in NYC go from $200k to $600k while a communist mayor destroys the entire city bringing it back to the 70s? Now, people finally see the writing on the wall....or don't. People are fleeing NYC en masse. You know what they are doing? They are buying up properties in my neighborhood bidding them through the roof in New Jersey. We are no better off, with our idiot governor shutting down the entire state and waging war on every business destroying his tax base. Yet, our home prices grow by $200k in the midst of 15% unemployment?
All of that inflation always flies into the real estate market because when those dollars we send overseas come back, they buy up our prime real estate. The system is going to continue to bleed in all facets and inflation is inevitable.
TARP was the biggest bailout and when it happened, we couldn't conceive it. We've had what, the equivalent of 3 TARPs last year and Biden's talking about stimulus of 1.9 trillion, another 2 TARPs. That's literally teh equivalent of 5 TARPs in a one year span. Even if we keep it going another 10 years, they've only gotten worse and now state governments are finally realizing they literally are broke. The federal government is fast realizing they are broke as well. The amount of money that we spend to pay off interest on the national debt as a percentage of GDP is quickly getting out of control. They are too big and they've destroyed their tax bases. They are going to need bailouts as well. How long before we are up to bailouts equal to 10 TARPs?
mell saysI have been working with a realtor and while it's true that the nice houses which are also good deals in the burbs usually sell relatively fast I have not seen any bidding wars or multiple offers. Usually an offer comes in around the ask and gets accepted. Many sellers try to overprice and you can find plenty of properties sitting on the market for months. If you take zillow for reference I assume the real home value to roughly 10-15% below what they list.
Where?
I'm amazed at houses going pending after only a couple days on the market. Unless the property is a exceptional deal, no way would I be buying right now.
I've tried to convince my wife that we should sell and pocket the profits, and rent for a few years in the same location. Our little community has a history of price swings.
But she doesn't want to move again. /sigh
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