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Then why are you living here?
NO country, at any point in history, has been a nice place to live during a financial collapse.
Please gtfo if you think its all going down.
You're going back on my ignore list. good bye =)
Do you understand the antecedent of that statement (i.e. printing trillions) is likely to continue so long as the fed exists? Are you willing to spend, potentially your full lifetime, "waiting out" the fed?
IMO, the Fed won't be able to print like this and keep rates down for very long. It will eventually destroy the currency. If rates go up to over 5%, then that itself will crush housing and the economy.
So that puts us back at square 1 (read my response upthread & the bond market's insatiable appetite for our debt & their inability to completely topple the first domino {greece}) yet.
Again, no offense here, but I am just trying to get you to sharpen your thinking. Your writing style is one of extreme hyperbole and hysterics - and it doesnt seem to have moderated at all in the past 2+ years as the economy has turned each of your calamaties into nothingburgers.
Further, your statements here "not very long", "eventually" are pretty much verbatim what you said 2+ years ago and my acquaintance said 20+ years ago who is still renting today. Is there any reall difference between you and him other than the date you became aware of TPTB perpetual game of kick the can?
Again, I dont mean to pick on you, but I just cant help but notice the similarities here. Even now, in his 24th 25th year of renting, he is waiting because he is SURE that the collapse is imminent. Thus, if I may, you might want to pick a "hard and fast" date (and again, a calendar date, not an approximation like "2 years" which people slide forward for years on end) where you say "if it hasnt happened by then, then maybe I am just wrong".
Maybe you dont want to do that today. It really should be an end all be all date that you should think long and hard about committing to. Still, if you do, it would be interesting to see how that changes your outlook. Cheers.
If you're friend has been waiting for 25 years then that is a little extreme. We just had the biggest housing bubble in history. I think it has a good amount of downside before we stabilize. When home prices falls to line 110 or 100 then that would be a good time for me to buy. I think we'll see prices at these levels within 3-4 yrs. I think the upcoming recession will bring home prices down much faster than anything expects.
This chart proves that housing is still in a bubble. I remember in 2006, I showed people this chart and they argued that prices will stay stagnate at worst. Prices are trying to get to line 110 but the Fed is trying to prop up prices. Fundamentally, home prices need to fall further.
Keeping rates down artificially comes at a price. We now have a bubble in the bond market and WHEN that implodes, we should see rates move up very quickly. ALL economic bubbles burst so it is probably safe to say that the bond bubble will burst.
This chart proves that housing is still in a bubble
No--that chart provides some evidence that housing might still have been in a bubble in 2010. Last I checked, it's now 2013.
And that chart has been discredited by several sources. It's not the true Case Shiller.
ALL economic bubbles burst so it is probably safe to say that the bond bubble
will burst.
If the bond bubble bursts the financial system will collapse, rates moving up will basically bankrupt EVERYONE.
Will the Fed let that happen? Does the bond bubble burst if the Fed can expand its balance sheet to infinity?
This chart proves that housing is still in a bubble.
As Tatupu notes, that chart has been discredited
http://blog.jparsons.net/2011/04/housing-bubble-graph-fail.html
Note in particular, the conversation this bubble blogger had with Mr. Ritholz:
Update #2: I contacted Barry Ritholtz about the issues with the graph. He then contacted Steve Barry. It has been confirmed straight from the horse's mouth, from 2006 onward the disputed graph uses the S&P/Case-Shiller 20-city index, rather than the national index that Robert Shiller used, and it does not adjust for inflation. This graph is really making its way around the web, which is unfortunate because it is worthless.
Hence, the reason Mr. Ritholz has distanced himself from that chart, and it has not been updated since 2010.
In any event, if you actually took the time to update that chart and correct it, you would not like what it said - it would completely undermine what you want to believe is going to happen.
Will the Fed let that happen? Does the bond bubble burst if the Fed can expand its balance sheet to infinity?
Would the Fed allow the housing bubble to burst in 2006? It would devastate the economy and cause millions of homeowners to default.
Mean Reversion Bitches.......
Thanks. That shows that prices only moved sideways and needs to fall further. lol
Would the Fed allow the housing bubble to burst in 2006? It would devastate
the economy and cause millions of homeowners to default.
If you look at Fed meeting notes from 2007 the had no clue. Now they think they have a clue. I do not believe they can let interest rates skyrocket. They can't, they will have massive losses and the economy will collapse. The rich get richer the poor poorer. Same old same old.
Update #2: I contacted Barry Ritholtz about the issues with the graph. He then contacted Steve Barry. It has been confirmed straight from the horse's mouth, from 2006 onward the disputed graph uses the S&P/Case-Shiller 20-city index, rather than the national index that Robert Shiller used, and it does not adjust for inflation. This graph is really making its way around the web, which is unfortunate because it is worthless.
Good work
Actually, Shiller keeps the data updated, so I just looked it up (see the 2nd excel chart here)
http://www.irrationalexuberance.com/
It looks like in early 2012, the real (i.e. adjusted for inflation - not the nominal like the one yup posted above) rate dropped all the way down to 113 (i.e. 1998 prices).
Thanks. That shows that prices only moved sideways and needs to fall further.
lol
Yeah that is why I posted it. Prices need to drop 50% MORE to revert to Mean.
If you look at Fed meeting notes from 2007 the had no clue. Now they think they have a clue. I do not believe they can let interest rates skyrocket. They can't, they will have massive losses and the economy will collapse. The rich get richer the poor poorer. Same old same old.
I agree with that statement. But what IF we have a currency crisis (runaway inflation)? They will need interest rates well above the rate of inflation to slow it down. Rates in 1981 went above 18%!
Yeah that is why I posted it. Prices need to drop 50% MORE to revert to Mean.
Exactly! Thanks for posting.
Yeah that is why I posted it. Prices need to drop 50% MORE to revert to Mean.
Exactly! Thanks for posting.
Again, if you notice, that chart Yup put up is nominal (i.e. it does not adjust for inflation). Here is the real (i.e. inflation adjusted) one:
http://www.irrationalexuberance.com/
If you believe in inflation as Mr. Shiller does, it looks like we are at 1998 prices.
Actually, Shiller keeps the data updated, so I just looked it up (see the 2nd excel chart here)
http://www.irrationalexuberance.com/
It looks like in early 2012, the real (i.e. adjusted for inflation - not the nominal like the one yup posted above) rate dropped all the way down to 113 (i.e. 1998 prices).
Wages and home prices are still way out of wack where I live. household income to home price ratio is 7 and the national average is currently 3.5
Actually, Shiller keeps the data updated, so I just looked it up (see the 2nd excel chart here)
http://www.irrationalexuberance.com/
It looks like in early 2012, the real (i.e. adjusted for inflation - not the nominal like the one yup posted above) rate dropped all the way down to 113 (i.e. 1998 prices).
Wages and home prices are still way out of wack where I live.
So noted. You might want to take that up with Mr. Shiller if you disagree with his data.
Shiller thinks it will take a generation for housing to recovery. I believe him.
But what IF we have a currency crisis (runaway inflation)? They will need
interest rates well above the rate of inflation to slow it down. Rates in 1981
went above 18%!
I do not believe that we can have inflation due to there being no wage inflation. All price inflation must eventually be supported by wage inflation or credit expansion. I believe that most people do not have the capacity to take on more credit. I also believe that most people are not getting raises that cover anything but there increased costs for healthcare. I believe that without wage inflation will we see price deflation and low interest rates for decades. In other words we are Japan. Lowering prices, lowering wages, lowering asset values. I doubt the average Japanese investor in 1990 though the market and houses would be lower in 2012 than in 1990 but in fact they are, MUCH lower.
Shiller thinks it will take a generation for housing to recovery. I believe him.
So is your "end all be all" date a generation? Assuming a generation is 20 years, maybe that was my acquaintances benchmark too.
I do not believe that we can have inflation due to there being no wage inflation. All price inflation must eventually be supported by wage inflation or credit expansion. I believe that most people do not have the capacity to take on more credit. I also believe that most people are not getting raises that cover anything but there increased costs for healthcare. I believe that without wage inflation will we see price deflation and low interest rates for decades. In other words we are Japan. Lowering prices, lowering wages, lowering asset values. I doubt the average Japanese investor in 1990 though the market and houses would be lower in 2012 than in 1990 but in fact they are, MUCH lower.
I agree that is definitely a possibility. The money velocity is at a historic low. It can go either way but I'm leaning towards inflation as the end result. The only thing the Fed is good at is creating inflation. I think they will eventually make it happen but you have a valid point.
So is your "end all be all" date a generation? Assuming a generation is 20 years, maybe that was my acquaintances benchmark too.
Personally, I'm going to wait 2-4 yrs to buy a home. We should see some fireworks by then.
So is your "end all be all" date a generation? Assuming a generation is 20 years, maybe that was my acquaintances benchmark too.
Personally, I'm going to wait 2-4 yrs to buy a home. We should see some fireworks by then.
And if by 2014-2016 we dont see any "fireworks", will you then jump in, ignoring the massive debt overhang? Or will you just wait say another 2-4 years, thinking "we should see some fireworks by then"?
Again, sorry to be a dick about this. Its an intellectual exercise and Im just curious if you have thought this out, or if this too, is just a sliding date.
And if by 2014-2016 we dont see any "fireworks", will you then jump in, ignoring the massive debt overhang? Or will you just wait say another 2-4 years, thinking "we should see some fireworks by then"?
I'll have to reevaluate then.
And if by 2014-2016 we dont see any "fireworks", will you then jump in, ignoring the massive debt overhang? Or will you just wait say another 2-4 years, thinking "we should see some fireworks by then"?
I'll have to reevaluate then.
LOL - its tough isnt it! This is the exact exercise I went through back in 1999, and if I hadnt, there is a very good chance that I would be here now, in my 14th year of renting.
BTW - you may find that you are simply incapable of setting a hard and fast date. IMO, there is nothing wrong with this - some people have very small risk tolerances such that they should never own.
If that is you, its best to be honest with yourself - embrace your renter 4 life persona and the freedom it gives you - dont delude yourself into thinking there will be some magic date, only suffer decades of disappointment (all in 2-4 year chunks of continual date adjustments) when it doesnt appear.
LOL - its tough isnt it! This is the exact exercise I went through back in 1999, and if I hadnt, there is a very good chance that I would be here now, in my 14th year of renting.
BTW - you may find that you are simply incapable of setting a hard and fast date. IMO, there is nothing wrong with this - some people have very small risk tolerances such that they should never own.
If that is you, its best to be honest with yourself - embrace your renter 4 life persona and the freedom it gives you - dont delude yourself into thinking there will be some magic date, only suffer decades of disappointment (all in 2-4 year chunks of continual date adjustments) when it doesnt appear.
Who says I have to have a specific date? We just had the largest housing boom in history and I don't believe we hit bottom. Why is that so difficult to understand? I think we should see much more downside within 2-4 years and that is my target.
Rates are at all time lows, banks are holding most of their REO's off the market and wages are still way out of wack with home prices. This tells me that home prices will most likely fall much further to the downside.
I believe we are only in the eye of the storm and the 2nd half will be worse than the 2008 collapse. I plan to buy during or after the next economic recession.
Roberto: Ready, Aim, Fire. great shot, reload and prepare again.
Do you make regular attempts to suck your own dick?
Roberto: Ready, Aim, Fire. great shot, reload and prepare again.
Do you make regular attempts to suck your own dick?
I don't see this post. Oh yeah I forgot robertoaribas is on my ignore list
Who says I have to have a specific date?
Because if you dont, you will continuously re-evaluate, over and over again. As you just noted you thought you had a hard and fast date "2-4 years since there will be fireworks by then", but as you just admitted to yourself, if no fireworks, by 2014-2016, you will "re-evaluate" likely setting another target of "2-4 years". Now we are up to 2020. And if by 2020, you still havent seen the fireworks - will you jump in then - or will you again set a benchmark juuuust out of your reach.
When you do this, you nickel and dime yourself to death - doing this over and over til suddenly you wake up, and its been 20 years later, and you STILL are waiting. This is no way to live IMO.
Right now, in 2013, you can look at 20 years and say "Oh, no - thats too long - I wont do that - I wont be waiting that long". Still, if you dont set a hard and fast date, down that slippery slope many go.
This is no way to live IMO.
I knew a guy who told me in 2006 that I should buy a house and not to live in fear. He ended up foreclosing, destroyed his credit and lost his savings. lol. "This is no way to live IMO."
Working hard for your money only to lose everything because you're too stupid to look a few years ahead.
This is no way to live IMO.
I knew a guy who told me in 2006 that I should buy a house and not to live in fear. He ended up foreclosing, destroyed his credit and lost his savings. lol. "This is no way to live IMO."
Working hard for your money only to lose everything because you're too stupid to look a few years ahead.
Yep - think I liked being a freshly minted homeowner in 1999 watching the stock markets crash like nothing I could have ever contemplated? Sure sucked. Still, no one is saying you have to buy a house that you cannot afford.
In all seriousness, given you are (thusfar) incapable of setting a hard and fast date, perhaps you should re-consider if homeownership is for you. There is nothing wrong with renting for life - europeans do it all the time.
In all seriousness, given you are (thusfar) incapable of setting a hard and fast date, perhaps you should re-consider if homeownership is for you. There is nothing wrong with renting for life - europeans do it all the time.
Something tells me you were a 2006 home buyer and are envious of renters. lol.
Homeowners were the biggest loser (in terms of dollars) in the last 6 years. We'll see about the next 5 years.
In all seriousness, given you are (thusfar) incapable of setting a hard and fast date, perhaps you should re-consider if homeownership is for you.
anyone who gives a "hard and fast date" will be wrong. The fact that you're even asking for one proves to me that you're a mental midget. You belong on my ignore list
In all seriousness, given you are (thusfar) incapable of setting a hard and fast date, perhaps you should re-consider if homeownership is for you.
anyone who gives a "hard and fast date" will be wrong. It's obvious that you're a mental midget so you belong on my ignore list
What did I do to upset you? I tried to be as dispassionate as I could when I wrote that. Still, given that you dont seem ever willing to set a hard and fast date, is it not, in fact a given that if the fireworks do not come, you will in fact, be waiting for a lifetime?
What did I do to upset you? I tried to be as dispassionate as I could when I wrote that. Still, given that you dont seem ever willing to set a hard and fast date, is it not, in fact a given that if the fireworks do not come, you will in fact, be waiting for a lifetime?
Like I said, I believe that we are on the verge of a massive economic downturn. After this downturn, I think it would be an ideal to buy. I do believe prices will fall 20-35% during this time. If you want an exact date, it will be wrong of course. This is the reason I am not giving a hard date. It's not because I am "incapable". If you think anyone can give a "hard date" then I think you're the one who is incompetent. My time frame is 2-4 years. We should see a severe recession within this time and the latest GDP numbers is proof
Do you understand the antecedent of that statement (i.e. printing trillions) is likely to continue so long as the fed exists? Are you willing to spend, potentially your full lifetime, "waiting out" the fed?
IMO, the Fed won't be able to print like this and keep rates down for very long. It will eventually destroy the currency. If rates go up to over 5%, then that itself will crush housing and the economy.
I wish more people realized this.
I wish more people realized this.
No kidding! Most people think we can print our way out of this problem and everything will be all dandy. lol
We will see massive deflation or massive inflation as the end game. Either way, it won't be pretty.
What did I do to upset you? I tried to be as dispassionate as I could when I wrote that. Still, given that you dont seem ever willing to set a hard and fast date, is it not, in fact a given that if the fireworks do not come, you will in fact, be waiting for a lifetime?
Like I said, I believe that we are on the verge of a massive economic downturn. After this downturn, I think it would be an ideal to buy. I do believe prices will fall 20-35% during this time. If you want an exact date, it will be wrong of course. My timeframe is 2-4 years. We should see a severe recession within this time.
And if 5 years from now, we continue to kick the can, your plan will be (a) realize you are wrong and then buy or (b) wait juuuuust a little longer. My suspicion is B, but I guess we shall see.
Incidentally, you should maybe also set upside and downside targets too. Downside is easy enough, but what if its say, 2016 and prices have gone up another 8% to 10% - will that be enough to put you into action, or do you then still wait for your 20-35% (or perhaps that + the 8-10% in the interim)? I dont expect you to answer that, as these are really really tough questions - the type that cannot be answered on the fly in the middle of a discourse.
Again, I am sorry I upset you, but I offer this as some constructive criticism. The manner in which you write, the near "certainty" of your conviction of an imminent decline - and the fact that (despite 2+ years of seeing nothinburgers) your conviction has not changed in the slightest - it all reminds me of the guy I happen to know who spent 20+ years, constantly putting his target just out of his reach.
Thus, if we do get to 1/31/2017 and the debt is still massive, and the printing continues, and the various interweb pundits are still screeching "imminent calamity", just remember that conversation you had with that Cdon asshole on 1/31/2013 before you decide what you do next.
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