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"confrontational but really trying to understand how sustainable the system really is? Is it people taking more risk? Is it people living above their mean? Is it investors? Is it Chinese buyers? Who can sustain such growth?
Thanks for your explanations
"
@ above. I think I said the same exact thing to BMWman whom ponder the exact same thing in 2011? Where is the growth? Who are the buyer's. This is not sustainable?
Well guess what, I told him look in the mirror, you are the demand and sure enough, he bought six months later. lol easy freakin call.
Well guess what, look in the mirror, you are the demand. It sounds like you make around 350K which is at least 18K a month net of tax. You can afford 5K in mortgage (permanent cost of interest, tax and direct payments) and still save 100K a year (some will be forced saving, 401K match deferred), so not understanding crying poor. If you are unwilling, plenty are willing due to income position (250K+ income) or wealth (plenty of millionaires). Housing is competed for at the margins and you have plenty of margins.
Of course it is sustainable, in fact, 2014 and 2015 will be more like 2013 and 2012 so there will be more escalation in your 3/2/2. The system has too much money with brutally nowhere to go and for basic property in coveted area (and you are competing for the same 5% of the housing stock in the SFBA) , no one is selling or even close to selling. (housingtracker) Not only are there too much money, you'll have a permanent low transactions due to the majority locking interest rate sub 3.5%. Worst, there is no new homes for sale, especially SFH as an alternative. Household income for the top 20% are rising and wealth is exploding, those will not change anytime soon.
You are competing for the same 5-10% of the housing stock so stop thinking in terms of median. You are not living like a median person. The median household is a renter or lives in a 300K deep east bay home or an old time homeowner who owned the damn place since 1970's with living cost cheaper than anywhere in the USA.
This is the USA, where interest rate is never really a risk as you know they always take the same low interest pill and the tax environment always favor landowners and deter transactions. Hoarding land is hoarding wealth which will be the trend going forward. The entire world kinda works that way.
It's been about 40 years since we last lost control of inflation. What does the average investor know about it? We were kids (at best) the last time. In my opinion, the 15 Trillion in liquidity-from-nowhere is only now reaching Main Street. Inflation will be the result and higher interest rates, the only Fed tool to combat it.
There are trillions of reasons why fundamentals have nothing to do with real estate prices. Your investments may well increase by another 20 percent this year, but so may french fries.
the 15 Trillion in liquidity-from-nowhere is only now reaching Main Street.
Inflation will be the result and higher interest rates, the only Fed tool to
combat it.
OR money supply and price levels are not related. What if the inflation of the 70s was caused by increased demand driven by a 10% increase in the labor force participation rate from 1966-1980? In fact, the number in the labor force increased from 75M to 107M from 1966-80. That is a 2.5% annual increase.
2.5% more workers every year, many of whom just added to household income (1 income to 2) generating more household disposable income = more demand, higher prices.
Unless we get more income earners out of a household, or wage inflation, or both - we are not getting inflation.
Why do you ignore the obvious evidence that aliens killed Kennedy?
I'm convinced. There are video's, it must be true.
Why don't both you nitwits expand your myopic horizons and listen to this interview from Guns and Butter; one of the best programs on KPFA (non-corporate public radio in the Bay Area and a few other markets).
http://www.kpfa.org/archive/id/98011
LBJ had a hand in it, that's for sure. The Warren Commission Report was bunk and was full of loose ends.
Needless to say, you got what you voted for.. dismal 8 years, worst ever.
It's a worldwide phenomenon. Is Obama the Emperor of the Earth?
Inflation will be the result and higher interest rates, the only Fed tool to combat it.
http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=qGp
is consumer debt / wages.
This is not a graph that can support "higher interest rates".
Should they appear somehow, the economy would crash in a deflationary cross-default spiral, like what we were seeing in 2008-2009.
Similarly, we're in an extreme regime with Federal debt:
http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/GFDEGDQ188S
At 100% debt-to-GDP, we're getting into weird feedback effects, like what Japan is dealing with.
Interest paid by the government is an upward form of distribution, from taxpayers to "savers".
But if these "savers" don't spend, this is deflationary.
Basically our entire economy is fucked. Too much money with the "savers", not enough remaining within the paycheck economy.
3/4 of the country don't have 6 months income saved, hell 2/3 don't have $1000
Bill: I agree. We can't support higher interest rates.
Control Point: Keep raising the rent and the wage pressure will increase. People will not begin "sharing" single family homes.
Needless to say, you got what you voted for.. dismal 8 years, worst ever.
It's a worldwide phenomenon. Is Obama the Emperor of the Earth?
You mean he cant fix it like Reagan did back in the 80s ?
Is increasing Min wage his only solution to the economic and
unemployment problems...
I predict a sudden and (to democrats) completely unexplainable drop in crime for the Windy City next year!
It's a much bigger risk when the person you're mugging might have a gun in their possession.
Bill: I agree. We can't support higher interest rates.
Control Point: Keep raising the rent and the wage pressure will increase. People will not begin "sharing" single family homes.
Employers will respond to higher wage pressure with a hearty FUCK YOU and pink slips. Then they will then renew their shill cries of employment shortages to swell the labor pool with labor more willing to compromise on living standards.
Its worked great so far.
You mean he cant fix it like Reagan did back in the 80s ?
Reagan "fixed" the world? OMG, you really are delusional.
Only if the person's name is Fooscin.
It would be nice to hear some Fooscin and Yellen at the Fed for a change.
More people went to Disneyland the last week of the year, than signed up for Ohnobuycare.
Another thing employers do is raise prices, cut quality, quantity or all of the above But that is price inflation which is no longer possible as we've heard.
Plus, the 35 year old kids are already living with their parents, what is the next big compromise? Sharing a kitchen with strangers?
They are going to need to find quite a few undocumented immigrant C++ programmers crossing the Rio Grande, because 130k per year won't cut it with rents going any higher.
It really all comes down to blind faith in the "brilliance" of derivatives gambling. ALL of the liquidity in real estate is a result of those derivatives and the Central Bank's hopes that the money won't trickle down into the general markets. But look at the stock market. Of course it has trickled down.
Surprisingly perhaps, I'm more sure of a stock market crash than a real estate one, but they are not mutually exclusive.
Personally I don't prefer beef and think for many Americans it's a HABIT more than anything.
Cornfed CAFO beef is an unhealthy, subsidized (see how those two tend to go together) example of lemon socialism. The producers get the subsidies and keep the profits, while everyone else pays the price: direct subsidies for corn, obese customers' enlarged medical costs shifted onto everyone ("thanks, Obamacare"), pollution and disease from the runoff, environmental damage including the dead zone in the gulf of Mexico, etc. And that's when Democrats are in power; read Molly Ivins' pungent description of what happens when Republicans are in power and allow the beef to be smeared in its own feces so long as the feces aren't "fibrous".
Subsidized prices don't tell you much about the underlying costs, and can produce all sorts of distortions. In Soviet times, farmers sometimes gave bread to their cattle, because the bread was cheaper than the grain it contained. The recipients of corn subsidies argue that if their subsidies end, then we will see inflation in the retail price of beef. That's true, but we would see a reduction in the total cost of everything else, for example cornfields would become available for vegetables and the Gulf "dead zone" might become available for fishing if it isn't full of crude oil. Cornfed beef is a product that no rational person would buy at its actual cost, so the producers pay politicians to subsidize it, thus making it an artificially cheap habit.
I keep a spreadsheet of food prices, and over time I find they tend to revert to CPI, though I do observe volatility and shifts. For example, healthy food tends to get more expensive, while subsidized crap on the "Dollar Menu" stays the same, with the result that the people eating the subsidized crap become unhealthier and more unhappy, fattening them for medication (homefool's toxic SSRI placebos, "thanks Obamacare") and slaughter (don't even get me started on the consolidation in the funeral industry, raising prices dramatically for added "services" that haven't really improved on the ancient process of digging a hole and filling it in).
Congratulations. The "stupidity alarm" has been tripped, which triggers the ignore function. Adios!
pushes for higher wages
http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=qGG
blue is jobs
red is prime age 25-54 population
green is # job-seekers / jobs, right axis
"reserve army of labour"
the takeaway here is that the economy is generally doing pretty well on a jobs vs. population basis, 1970-1990 these were at parity, the 1990s good times and 2000s bubble boom time got us pretty high over the red curve, and we've recovered most of that now.
The green line, though, shows that times are still tough for jobseekers.
http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=qGI
shows that people are quitting jobs now at the rate they were at the bottom of the dotcom recession.
You can delete my posts all you want, but fortunately, you can't delete the truth. I know it, you know it, and your alien masters know it.
Keep trying to distract people with your CIA and organized crime BS--we know better. We know the truth.
How much are you getting paid, anyway??
Disgusting.
All invertebrates that allow themselves to be infringed upon by carrying a permit for an "arms" which is not a requirement listed in the 2nd Amendment know that in a medical emergency taking the gunpowder from a cartridge with juice & chewing on the lead will cure any ill including the gunshot wound they received when they were shot by another CCer.
"Insurance! We don't need no stinkin' insurance."
And food , once consumed, has no store of value and is never resold.
Thus, the "greater fool" theory does not apply to food, except in times of extreme scarcity or hyperinflation. During wartime, or in current Zimbabwe, food prices can inflate dramatically. Bubbles Ben (and his faithful replacement, Old Yellen) have been playing with fire, jeopardizing currency stability in order to prop up housing prices. As with bankruptcy, price inflation can happen gradually, then suddenly.
I wonder if part of the issue is that housing is used to stratify--housing is bid up so that only people similar to you can afford it.
The trophy effect explains much of the inflation in trophy destinations like Nantucket, where the rise of the 1% has lifted the price of trophy housing dramatically. It also explains some of the effect in the RSFBA, but proportionally less as you look beyond the 1% neighborhoods. Realtors might tell you that every shack has the potential to lure the 1%, e.g. if a dot-con CEO moves in next door and decides to buy the whole neighborhood, but the actual likelihood of that happening trails off to lottery probabilities.
Debt plays a much more substantial role in consumption and production of housing than in that of food. And food , once consumed, has no store of value and is never resold.
How to explain rent then? Debt shouldn't influence rental costs. But housing costs are generally at or near rental parity...
How to explain rent then? Debt shouldn't influence rental costs.
Of course it does. Renting is the substitute to buying. If the price of either goes up, then the value of the substitute increases along with it. In the "zoned zone," where supply of both is fixed, Fed QE yield suppression drives price inflation in both buying and renting.
The trophy effect explains much of the inflation in trophy destinations like Nantucket, where the rise of the 1% has lifted the price of trophy housing dramatically. It also explains some of the effect in the RSFBA, but proportionally less as you look beyond the 1% neighborhoods. Realtors might tell you that every shack has the potential to lure the 1%, e.g. if a dot-con CEO moves in next door and decides to buy the whole neighborhood, but the actual likelihood of that happening trails off to lottery probabilities.
I think it's more widespread than that. There are CEOs in every area that want to live near other CEOs or high income people. And even if you can't afford to live with the 1%-- someone making $100K/year wants to live with other people making $100K... It might not be the top neighborhood, but it's in the next tier, and so on...
Should illegal alien be allowed to practice law?
In this particular case with the young man granted a law license, his dad was a legal alien, and applied for that status for his son. Apparently that was accepted, but the government is so shorthanded it didn't process the application.
Boo-fuckin-hoo: millions of people wait for years (or even decades) to get their status adjusted legally. But this guy can't wait - he's special. Because, apparently, we don't have enough sleazeball lawyers.
And even if you can't afford to live with the 1%-- someone making $100K/year wants to live with other people making $100K... It might not be the top neighborhood, but it's in the next tier, and so on...
That is an interesting point, perhaps Americans want to pay as much as they can for housing, to live among others similarly situated and avoid the riff raff. The availability of mortgage debt enables them to bid up prices, which buyers choose to do so they can dwell among a higher socioeconomic class, and send their kids to public school with those kids. It might explain why many people accept current Fed policy, i.e. they think the privilege of living among others with good credit is worth incurring a lifetime of debt. Money (via credit) is merely the medium of exchange, while exclusivity is a perceived value.
If you're not too kooked out about Big Data, then very often, the discounts that accompany filling out a survey with a few benign questions can save you big.
Congratulations. The "stupidity alarm" has been tripped, which triggers the ignore function. Adios!
Do you print out your shit list out, and go over it late at night with a Scotch and rocks and make drunken comments on each one on your list, into a tape recorder?
Hey that gives me an idea for an app. "The Shit Lister".
You can put all of the social network pariahs on it, and manage them share them with other like minded haters.
Pissed off at every body? There's an app for that!
Among the increasing costs to raise cattle is a doubling of corn prices due to its demand for use to produce ethanol. The use corn ultimately results in better barbecue if it is mixed into the cow’s diet, Early said. “That’s what they feed to the cows for the white fat, which is what we want,†Early said. â€If they feed them $8 corn, that’s going to run our prices up.â€
This sounds like bullshit. The leftover mash from distilleries (silage) makes excellent animal feed. The demand for ethanol should DECREASE the cost of animal feed as there is very little else ethanol producers can do with this waste product.
Thanks to persistent unemployment and low availability of low-skill jobs....
and dairy subsidies and the fact that sugar is addictive so people buy ice cream and get fat....
Don't all these 1600 people have houses? Why do they need to work, they can just use the houseATM card and pay themselves while they sleep. Working is for fools in this country.
Obligatory: More people applied for that job than signed up for Obamacare.
See this aint so hard? I don't see what all the fuss about John Stewart, Steve Cobert and Bill Mahr is about, it's easy when your President is a fucking Moron.
article says.....
The survey of AFIRE members said that the United States is the most "stable and secure" country for real-estate investment "by a wide margin." Survey respondents also said that the United States is also the best market in terms of capital appreciation and for real estate purchases in 2014.
strategist says......
If that won't turn you into a bull, nothing will.
The top 5 were all tourist attractions, commercial centers, sun belt, coastal. This is where the future is my friends.
Don't all these 1600 people have houses? Why do they need to work, they can just use the houseATM card and pay themselves while they sleep. Working is for fools in this country.
They need to work to pay the rent that keeps going up.
Most of you are acting like the Fed's creation of 15 Trillion dollars has not been the largest factor in prices of real estate.
The derivatives nightmare that began with the RE crash will take decades to unwind. bit by the Fed's own admission, it's already found its way into the stock market. It will find its way to main street and the result will be inflation.
You are betting everything on the manager of Kmart living in a 900 square foot home with two other families rather than pressing for higher wages or higher prices of goods.
Didn't anyone notice all of the money that flowed into shorts-coverage the day the Fed announced a future decrease in QE? The actual equities did nothing to justify that huge jump in the index.
I would predict huge crashes in common consumer-oriented stocks to be the catalyst more than steadily decreasing living standards and wage pressure. The stock market is based on nothing but faith in derivatives at this point. The amount the US consumes on behalf of the world is leveraged 50 to 1.
What is happening in Spain can happen anywhere.
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