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Norris Group predicts 20% increase for 2013


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2012 Dec 13, 1:58am   43,778 views  103 comments

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http://www.thenorrisgroup.com/index.php?cID=714

If you never heard of these guys you are not a RE investor in CA. They are medium sized flippers/hard money lenders. They put $ where mouth is. You can even invest in notes through them so of course they are talking their book but all data indicates upward prices.

Im going with his prediction - which will vary wildly from inland ghetto to 'good schools' (racist codeword) areas.

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81   mell   2012 Dec 14, 11:12am  

tatupu70 says

Call it Crazy says

Exactly..... I'm not a big fan of "can kicking". I rather just take the pain up front, get it over with and then rebuild from there....

Unfortunately, that's not it works. You would have ended up with a recession that was much deeper and likely longer than what we actually had.

No, you would have ended up with a short and hard recessions and as soon as the bad debt is cleared you would actually have had a sustainable recovery. This is just an endless recession, call it stagflation or what you will. Nobody in their right mind can advocate a recovery while the percentage of Americans on food stamps grows by the month. You can still extract money however from where credit is injected if you are smart - may help you, but definitely not the economy.

82   Bellingham Bill   2012 Dec 14, 11:19am  

mell says

No, you would have ended up with a short and hard recessions and as soon as the bad debt is cleared you would actually have had a sustainable recovery

thing is, I think the dotcom recession was the beginning of the back-end trades we had made to get what growth we had in the 1990s.

Our trade deficit was just getting rolling in 2000:

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=dOF

mfg was beginning to crack:

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=dOG

the dreams of dotcom-generated stock wealth were crashing:

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=dOH

Gini was rising back then too::

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/GINIALLRH

so the housing bubble wasn't the "hair of the dog that bit us" -- rather, it was a new intervention to get something like the 1990s going again.

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=dOI

shows consumers arguably didn't have much debt to "clear" in 2001. That came with the 2002+ boom-bubble.

83   Philistine   2012 Dec 14, 11:42am  

tatupu70 says

It's not fear, it's knowledge and logic.

Sounds like fear to me. Your Q.E.D. is some kind of soup-kitchens-and-street-groveling scenario. So be it. As I stated, if we had done the hard landing, we would have been in a much better position to rebuild on solid ground by now and have actual long term, authentic productivity that benefits all of society. As we are now, the 2.5% own everything and the rest of us are winding down on our ability to cover the cost of living. That's what Extend N' Pretend got you.

I suppose most societies are faced with a fear-versus-liberty proposition at some point. Most choose fear and comfort, so I don't blame you. The French did have a Revolution before their embarrassing debacle in WWII.

84   Bellingham Bill   2012 Dec 14, 11:54am  

Philistine says

I suppose most societies are faced with a fear-versus-liberty proposition at some point.

That's bullshit framing.

The problem is the corporate press has controlled the debate in this country since the 1980s.

Tune into talk radio to see how that's going.

It's not fear that's keeping this country from doing the right thing -- raise taxes a lot, cut military spending, institute Canada-style or better health reforms, it's all the bullshit.

Philistine says

The French did have a Revolution before their embarrassing debacle in WWII.

No they didn't. The Third Republic lasted from 1870 to two weeks after the armistice was signed.

85   Philistine   2012 Dec 14, 12:13pm  

Bellingham Bill says

It's not fear that's keeping this country from doing the right thing

I agree, and the between-my-lines says as much. I guess it's all too nuanced for a post-by-post forum thread. I would submit that Greed and Ignorance are the culprit.

Bellingham Bill says

No they didn't. The Third Republic lasted from 1870 to two weeks after the armistice was signed.

Huh? The French Revolution was in 1789. What is this non-sequitur of the Third Republic?

87   RealEstateIsBetterThanStocks   2012 Dec 14, 1:41pm  

tannenbaum says

Barely two years ago, Brucey Boy also predicted double digit interest rates:

http://www.jasonhartman.com/bruce-norris-%E2%80%9Ci-believe-we-will-approach-the-day-when-we-reach-double-digit-interest-rates%E2%80%9D/

i think 20% is unrealistic, but to be fair, he didn't say when.

88   tatupu70   2012 Dec 15, 12:07am  

mell says

No, you would have ended up with a short and hard recessions and as soon as the bad debt is cleared you would actually have had a sustainable recovery

But how is the bad debt cleared? That's my point. As the recession got "harder" as you call it, the debt problem gets worse not better. When people have no jobs, they certainly don't pay down their debts. Or get current on their mortgages.

Unless you have a debt jubilee, I don't see how a hard recession helps clear bad debt.

89   mell   2012 Dec 15, 12:26am  

tatupu70 says

mell says

No, you would have ended up with a short and hard recessions and as soon as the bad debt is cleared you would actually have had a sustainable recovery

But how is the bad debt cleared? That's my point. As the recession got "harder" as you call it, the debt problem gets worse not better. When people have no jobs, they certainly don't pay down their debts. Or get current on their mortgages.

Unless you have a debt jubilee, I don't see how a hard recession helps clear bad debt.

It would have taken the debt away instantly through defaults, individual defaults followed by corporate defaults, instead of bailouts. For the individuals, it would have destroyed their credit bur relieved them form their debt (and possibly house) instantly. Defaulting banks would not have been an issue for small and medium investors as fdic insurance covers up to 250K per account (if you have more than that you need to have multiple accounts at different institutions and/or hoard some precious metals). The best part though is that everybody defaulting would have lost their LEVERAGE which would mean a return to sustainable budgeting and appropriate rates/risk management reflecting the current risk of default. LEVERAGE and injection of credit (it's not money, it's credit) is destroying the US.

90   taxee   2012 Dec 15, 1:03am  

mell says

The best part though is that everybody defaulting would have lost their LEVERAGE which would mean a return to sustainable budgeting and appropriate rates/risk management reflecting the current risk of default. LEVERAGE and injection of credit (it's not money, it's credit) is destroying the US.

But pensions would have been wiped out. And that was a great excuse to print and give trillions to people who have never produced a thing in their lives.
The same people who think they can succeed in business if only they can borrow enough to buy up the world and run a monopoly.

91   David Losh   2012 Dec 15, 3:20am  

mell says

LEVERAGE and injection of credit (it's not money, it's credit) is destroying the US.

I never thought there would be an exit strategy to what the Fed is doing, but I think I can see it now.

If the Fed can continue to convert the debt they buy from short term to long term, make a profit by selling off the holdings they have, then everything goes back to normal.

The one thing that no one looks at is the amount of cash in the system today. If that cash maintains value we could have a very strong global economy in the next ten years.

As for housing, I don't see that as an economic driver with all the building we have done, globally, in the past ten years. I think housing will be another expense for the consumer, but has lost it's wealth factor, other than the equity the borrower gets by paying off debt.

92   tatupu70   2012 Dec 15, 3:53am  

mell says

It would have taken the debt away instantly through defaults, individual defaults followed by corporate defaults, instead of bailouts. For the individuals, it would have destroyed their credit bur relieved them form their debt (and possibly house) instantly. Defaulting banks would not have been an issue for small and medium investors as fdic insurance covers up to 250K per account (if you have more than that you need to have multiple accounts at different institutions and/or hoard some precious metals)

I think you're forgetting that every debt has a lender as well. When you wipe out the debt, you wipe out the savings of someone else. Every bank has owner(s) and the large ones are all publicly owned. You're talking about wiping out the retirement funds of a lot of people. I fail to see how that solves anything. And how that would make the recession any shorter.

93   mell   2012 Dec 15, 5:58am  

tatupu70 says

mell says

It would have taken the debt away instantly through defaults, individual defaults followed by corporate defaults, instead of bailouts. For the individuals, it would have destroyed their credit bur relieved them form their debt (and possibly house) instantly. Defaulting banks would not have been an issue for small and medium investors as fdic insurance covers up to 250K per account (if you have more than that you need to have multiple accounts at different institutions and/or hoard some precious metals)

I think you're forgetting that every debt has a lender as well. When you wipe out the debt, you wipe out the savings of someone else. Every bank has owner(s) and the large ones are all publicly owned. You're talking about wiping out the retirement funds of a lot of people. I fail to see how that solves anything. And how that would make the recession any shorter.

Yes, wiping out some retirement funds will be part of the harsh reality. But it will force people to diversify. not to blindly trust banks/corporations/governments, and realize that "guaranteed" 8% pension returns don't exist and shouldn't exist and that hey have been stealing from their own children and continue to do so. The lesson learned here is, don't invest in criminal enterprises and don't trust any government on "guaranteed" returns, use solid hedges for inflation/deflation and diversify your assets, don't heloc your homes, save in regular savings accounts which are fdic insured (backed by money printing aka credit injection if need be) and don't just give your money to somebody who tells you they can manage it better than you could. Stop buying useless tech gadgets and designer clothes, stop buying christmas presents because society tells you so, focus on good nutrition and your and your families health, bring up your kids without materialism/consumerism, teach em the right values. Bailouts is teaching them the wrong values and putting all that debt on their shoulder without them having any say in it. Lastly, arrest the banksters and claw back bonuses and salaries as much as possible - apply the rule of law!

94   tatupu70   2012 Dec 15, 6:03am  

mell says

Yes, wiping out some retirement funds will be part of the harsh reality

Again--so your moralizing aside, how does wiping out people's savings make a recession shorter? Or signficantly reducing demand make a recession shorter?

I understand you don't like debt. Fine. But don't pretend that it would make a recession shorter.

95   mell   2012 Dec 15, 6:10am  

tatupu70 says

mell says

Yes, wiping out some retirement funds will be part of the harsh reality

Again--so your moralizing aside, how does wiping out people's savings make a recession shorter? Or signficantly reducing demand make a recession shorter?

I understand you don't like debt. Fine. But don't pretend that it would make a recession shorter.

It makes it harder but much shorter and it restores the values and principles needed to avoid future recessions/depressions by incentivising prudent risk-management and de-incentivising greed/fraud/financial crime. Also it puts the responsibility on the people who caused this instead of the ones who didn't or haven't been born yet.

96   David Losh   2012 Dec 15, 6:39am  

mell says

It makes it harder but much shorter

That was then, this is now.

Yes, Obama could have let the economy crash, and that may have been a good thing, except for how fragile Europe was.

I think Obama made all the right moves at the right time, including today.

97   Peter P   2012 Dec 15, 6:43am  

David Losh says

Yes, Obama could have let the economy crash, and that may have been a good thing, except for how fragile Europe was.

Was Europe fragile? Or was the European Union fragile?

98   FNWGMOBDVZXDNW   2012 Dec 15, 7:53am  

I think that letting things crash had a high risk of leading to a depression. There was a lot of talk of this. Bernanke wrote a thesis on how loose monetary policy could have prevented the depression. Bernanke did what he could.

Obama campaigned in 2008 on the idea that taxes should remain low (Bush levels) on everybody except those making > $250,000. http://money.cnn.com/2008/06/27/news/economy/obama_wealthy_taxes/index.htm
He campaigned in 2012 on basically the same line. He won two elections on the same campaign idea in 2008 and 2012. Let's get on with it.

In 2008, I never thought that Obama would be reelected. I was sure that the stock market and economy were going to go into the crapper way more than they did & way more than would allow O to get reelected.

99   tatupu70   2012 Dec 15, 10:46pm  

mell says

It makes it harder but much shorter

You've said this many times, but saying it doesn't make it so. I'm wondering how making a recession into a depression makes it shorter? How does making more people unemployed shorten the duration?

And there seems to be others who agree with you. So anyone--how does making a recession "harder" shorten the duration?

100   bg   2012 Dec 15, 11:33pm  

RentingForHalfTheCost says

Our economy shouldn't be so dependant on growth. Growth should be a blessing.

An economy built on growth makes me very nervous. I remember a video that was floating around about the destruction of resources on the planet. It was basically saying that we have allowed corporations and advertisers to fuel a growth based economy by glorifying self-ish, hyper-consumption. This has resulted in a criminal destruction of resources on the planet. We fuel the growth and the concentration of wealth by literally destroying the things that keep us alive.

Bellingham Bill says

That's bullshit framing.

The problem is the corporate press has controlled the debate in this country since the 1980s.

I think greed and entitlement fueled by a corporate press are like a virus.

When I say entitlement, I don't mean benefits to the poor. I mean entitlement to have and consume more. The "Baby, I deserve it!" culture is a toxin.

101   RealEstateIsBetterThanStocks   2012 Dec 18, 3:19am  

YesYNot says

He campaigned in 2012 on basically the same line. He won two elections on the same campaign idea in 2008 and 2012. Let's get on with it.

there are always a lot of "obstacles" in congress, all they do is hinder progress.

102   FNWGMOBDVZXDNW   2012 Dec 18, 4:02am  

Mark D says

there are always a lot of "obstacles" in congress, all they do is hinder progress.

True, but I am surprised the repubs are not getting the message. They lost two elections where the economy was one of the biggest issues. The other guy won both with the same message. You would think that the repubs would see the writing on the wall, and go with the flow.

103   RealEstateIsBetterThanStocks   2012 Dec 18, 4:32am  

YesYNot says

Mark D says

there are always a lot of "obstacles" in congress, all they do is hinder progress.

True, but I am surprised the repubs are not getting the message. They lost two elections where the economy was one of the biggest issues. The other guy won both with the same message. You would think that the repubs would see the writing on the wall, and go with the flow.

there are also a lot of lobbyists and dark forces working behind the scene.

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