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Lol@ "I posted more words than you and I said so" as an argument
LOL @ "I can't think critically and therefore ignore data and analysis" as an argument.
Point me to the data and analysis in this thread.
This report from the Royal Society and the US National Academy of Sciences came out last week.
Here is the table of contents to whet your whistle:
Correction: Estoniation FM (Foreign Minister), not PM, made the statements.
Now, the fact that police and demonstrators were shot at with the same type ammunition proves exactly NOTHING. Do I really need to spell this out? There are many common types of ammunition, and no reason to believe that only certain groups of people have access to certain rifles and ammunition.
Type of ammunition neither supprts not detracts from any particular theory at this point.
Assuming by that time the prices of Chilean beach homes don't make a corner Manhattan apartment with a park view look cheap.
Fortunately that won't happen because of Pinochet's legacy, although a Monetarist at least they do not suffer from Keynesian propaganda
So give me a link. I'll be waiting, and waiting, and waiting, and waiting.
Find it yourself you lazy ass. Ok here it is because you are a pig and can't find it:
http://www.haaretz.com/news/features/.premium-1.533382
Now that you know it is true, perhaps you will give Putin a little more respect and our leaders no respect for selling out to the Zionists.
Your link is subscription only. I'd rather have a 32 root canals without novacane than subscribe to anything you read. So where are the dual citizens? Got names? Still waiting and waiting and waiting. What happened to your girlfriend facebooksux? She didn't come up with anything either. Which one of you is dumb and which one is dumber?
The thing is if you hit on the right company, at the right time, at the right executive level from someone I know. You didn't buy one house in Cupertino, you just bought four houses, one for each of his four kids, aged 10-18.
This fact dispels the theory that the RE rally is unstable because houses are bought by investors and not first-time buyers. The truth is, look like investment properties, actually have been bought by four first-time buyers!
The thing is if you hit on the right company, at the right time, at the right executive level from someone I know. You didn't buy one house in Cupertino, you just bought four houses, one for each of his four kids, aged 10-18.
This fact dispels the theory that the RE rally is unstable because houses are bought by investors and not first-time buyers. The truth is, look like investment properties, actually have been bought by four first-time buyers!
I think what I am trying to say is wealth more so than income drives price. Income is a small component of wealth which are accumulated , transferred won/last in many ways.
While many people don't see future demand (For example, what will happen when no one buys the boomers homes thread as an example). It's ridicolous, with the sheer amount of growing wealth, it will be more competitive than ever.
The truth is, look like investment properties, actually have been bought by four first-time buyers!
Not when you see the homes in question:
But of course the value is all in the land.
She says it's the weather keeping everyone from buying....in So Cal.
Hahaha. A couple of them told me they will look for the house for me using door to door campaigning.
While many people don't see future demand (For example, what will happen when no one buys the boomers homes thread as an example). It's ridicolous, with the sheer amount of growing wealth, it will be more competitive than ever.
I agree with you. The QE gift from the Fed inflated bay area company values way beyond any fundamentals. People here are not stupid, they've seen this movie before. They cash out their equity positions and diversify in real estate. Even if their company values deflate, they usually don't sell their real estate holdings since they are here waiting for the next cycle.
They cash out their equity positions and diversify in real estate.
Another good point, supporting my suspicion that the current RE rally in SFBA is mainly driven by tech folks and not foreigners.
Another good point, supporting my suspicion that the current RE rally in SFBA is mainly driven by tech folks and not foreigners.
I think it's a bit of both. A house for sale on my street in Mountain View had a full sized bus of asian investors pull up on a real estate investment tour. When I was bidding on houses, several houses that I bid on were picked up by all-cash absentee buyers (aka, investors). When housing is in such short supply, any demand drives up the prices.
I'm one of these people who's been working in tech here for almost 20 years, and after this long, I could barely afford a starter home here. Granted, I never won the startup or stock option lottery, so I had to do this on savings and paycheck income. I think I'm more typical than the guys hitting the huge fortunes at Google, Apple and Facebook, and I can hardly afford to live here anymore.
about the size of the Fed balance sheet
which is immaterial unless and until actual wage inflation comes.
full employment 1990s-style is still 12 million jobs away.
http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=sMf
or 2018 if we gain 250,000/mo
though I do suppose Fed balance sheet -> weaker dollar -> higher Brent -> higher gold
Inflation (wage or otherwise) can happen irrespective of employment rates. Unemployment is caused by lots of things - regulation, recession, health care costs, etc. You can have rising wages and rising unemployment in a zombie economy like ours.
The Fed's balance sheet matters because it's related to bidding up prices of assets, namely, real estate and equities, which are the only things that can soak up trillions of dollars. Equities/real estate are very coupled to each other and to fed policy.
I think I'm more typical than the guys hitting the huge fortunes at Google, Apple and Facebook, and I can hardly afford to live here anymore.
I had a friend who *did* win the AAPL lottery who couldn't afford to live there an more.
Well, after he finally quit after 20+ years and didn't need to live so close to Cupertino he found $1M+ could buy 2 very nice acres above Santa Cruz vs. some shitbox in noise range of the 85.
which is immaterial unless and until actual wage inflation comes.
4.5 Trillion is about 2/3 of the total value of gold in existence. To me it's a relative value thing. If the Fed balance sheet gets to 5T and gold to $1000 which would put its total value somewhere in 5-6T range, which one would you buy?
5T is a lot of money that most people don't comprehend yet. There is no way to unwind it except to hold it to maturity.
Are you implying that interest rate would stay low for a long time? Any increase would spur Fed to sell into it, hence keep it low.
I am implying that selling off bonds on the Fed balance sheet is not an option, because even small taper caused havoc in emerging markets. The Fed will hold the bond to maturity even if interest rates rise. They don't have to recognize the loss on the bond.
Assuming by that time the prices of Chilean beach homes don't make a corner Manhattan apartment with a park view look cheap.
Fortunately that won't happen because of Pinochet's legacy, although a Monetarist at least they do not suffer from Keynesian propaganda
???
Because Pinochet did not subscribe to the idea of fixing the economy by printing money. He decided to get advise from Milton Friedman so he did not suffer from as many western fallacies.
Mox News? In other words, some bloke posting up Youtube videos of someone talking to conspiracists. "Jon made a mockery of mainstream science." Dear me. That's your 'proof'? It was a laughable bit of one-sided conspiracy guff. An absolute embarrassment.
WOW! The UNtrustworthy are certainly in control of what information is apparent to the people!
Say hey! This was in the Wall Street Journal on March 30, 1999. Note "... how much it will buy."
Holy cow/interesting/compelling ...!
And where is it up to date??? Right here ... see the first chart shown in this thread.
Recent Dow day is Thursday, March 6, 2014 __ Level is 104.8
WOW! It is hideous that this is hidden! Is there any such "Homes, Inflation Adjusted"? Yes! This was in the New York Times on August 27, 2006:
And up to date (by me) is here:
http://patrick.net/?p=1219038&c=999083#comment-999083
WOW! The UNtrustworthy are certainly in control of what information is apparent to the people!
some bloke
Shame on you. The guy lost a child at 9/11. Have you no shame Bigsby?
Who? And what has that got to do with anything? Lots of people lost relatives on 9/11. Does that suddenly make all of them experts?
Is jojo an old codger & the first BB to go on SS & medicare & just needs something to fill his empty hours?
The average annual return of the S&P 500 from January 1, 2000 to present day is 3.30%. The last 13 years for index investing has been lost essentially.
I've totally flipped on my pessimism btw. I don't think the Yellen Fed is going to taper until we hit the full-employment condition of the 1990s.
It was this graph that enlightened me:
http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=sO8
showing we're still 10M jobs away from full employment. If the Fed stops before that, they will be economic terrorists given how dysfunctional Congress is.
also it's the debt-to-GDP thing that makes me think Fed intervention is a bigger game-changer.
actual deficit (not counting Fed purchases, which we shouldn't:)
http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=sNm
debt to GDP, ex-Fed:
http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=sNo
This indicates Congress will have leeway to boost spending again in 2017. I don't expect the GOP to get with the program before then, but I do expect the program to include tax cuts for everyone later this decade.
I agree that prices in CA are going to continue to climb. I've been to several open houses in the BA recently, and it is just amazing how many people swarm to $1.3M+ houses. One place I went to must have had over 100 people/families visit.
Although I think prices will climb, I'm concerned we're still somewhat close to a peak. Plus, the price to rent ratio isn't very good where I've been looking. So, I've been looking at non-BA real estate.
Any thoughts on where to invest - either other parts of CA or other states?
I'd not invest in real estate right now in the US. If you need a place to live, great, buy a place for that, but not as an investment. There are other assets that shield you from inflation, like commodities or even the stock market.
I'd not invest in real estate right now in the US. If you need a place to live, great, buy a place for that, but not as an investment. There are other assets that shield you from inflation, like commodities or even the stock market.
I've got a good amount in the stock market already. With the way it is so manipulated too, I'm not that comfortable putting too much more in. I've got a little in commodities, but they fluctuate so much, and as pretty as gold is, I can't do much with it. I can't imagine real estate in all of the US or elsewhere is overpriced.
Because the boomers have climbed the ladder and kicked it down behind them.
The Entry Level jobs have all been outsourced or insourced via H1B. When you have no Programmer Is and IIs, you don't get IIIs, IVs, and Vs later on. Even Accounting and Chart Reading jobs have been outsourced and this trend is rapidly increasing.
Why pay more?
Comp Sci grads have a 9+% unemployment rate.
I've got a good amount in the stock market already. With the way it is so manipulated too, I'm not that comfortable putting too much more in. I've got a little in commodities, but they fluctuate so much, and as pretty as gold is, I can't do much with it. I can't imagine real estate in all of the US or elsewhere is overpriced.
If you don't mind sharing, what is the ratio of your investment, Stocks: RE (include owner-occupied): Cash: Bonds: Commodities? Mine is 57:35:8. Nothing in Bonds and commodities.
No one will buy a house returning 2% when inflation is 10%. That means the price would have to fall 80% to return more than inflation.
Correct, the return should go up to 10% and not stay at 2% but it doesn't necessary lead to a price decline. Rent can go up to compensate for the inflation. Why do you think a price decline is more likely than a rent increase?
If you don't mind sharing, what is the ratio of your investment, Stocks: RE (include owner-occupied): Cash: Bonds: Commodities? Mine is 57:35:8. Nothing in Bonds and commodities.
I'd say approx 25%: 40%: 30% with the other 5% in bonds and commodities (give or take 5% here and there).
Housing crash… ok. See ya next time.
That graph shows household wealth going from $60 trillion in 2000 to $80 trillion at end of 2013. That means wealth growth was only about 2% annually over inflation. If inflation is assumed safely to be 3%, then that is a return of only 5% annually.
Now compare that to the S&P 500 which grew about 10.5% annually from 1987 to the end of 2013. Just reaffirms that the 2000's was truly the lost decade (primarily due to the effects of globalization on the middle class and government spending on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan).
Correct, the return should go up to 10% and not stay at 2% but it doesn't necessary lead to a price decline. Rent can go up to compensate for the inflation. Why do you think a price decline is more likely than a rent increase?
Oh sorry... rent goes up 10% so your return in fact is 2.2% and your house loses only 78%.
By bad.
"there is simply no reason for real-estate to outperform inflation"
inflation is not one-size-fits all.
inflation represents the exertion of pricing power on prices, nothing more.
http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=sQb
is CPI of 4 items; housing, energy, clothing, computers, all showing different price trends.
Clothing is flat! How can this beee??
And look at computers! Inflation? What inflation?
Thing is, housing is service good of very high necessity. Try living a couple of days without it. New clothing, cars, etc, can be deferred. We can't import housing by the boat from low-wage countries, and if we could it wouldn't matter because the land itself is fixed in supply, and the cheaper the fixed improvement gets we'll just take the savings and bid up the price of land.
This is why houses sold for $40,000 in the 1970s sell for $1M today. Same house, it's the land that rose in value, mostly.
Additionally, as far as purchase prices go, the rise of dual-income households:
http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=sQd
and falling interest-rate regime:
http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/MORTG
has boosted purchasing power and thus prices since 1974, when the Equal Credit Opportunity Act was passed IIRC.
"Let's wait to see how it will flow into these bonds if inflation reaches 10%."
inflation CANNOT "reach" 10% until WAGES rise 10%.
http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=sPq
cluephone, ringing for YOU
inflation CANNOT "reach" 10% until WAGES rise 10%.
Look, I don't know what inflation will be in the future. I don't pretend I know. Maybe we fall back into deflation. It is certainly not impossible. It certainly not impossible either that wages go up 10% because of inflation. It happened before.
I answered a post that claimed real-estate is an inflation edge. So we're talking of a scenario where there is inflation.
Well, in a scenario with 10% inflation, people holding assets returning 2% will get their collective asses handed back to them.
That should be simple enough to understand.
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