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Do you even know?
Since I posted THAT EXACT FUCKING LINK in my original above, yes.
Now go back to that link and compare China's holdings YOY, and you will find my point.
I wonder if that has anything at all with the unbalanced trade policies they FORCE on us?
They don't force shit on us. We're just being sold down the river.
Do you even know?
Since I posted THAT EXACT FUCKING LINK in my original above, yes.
Now go back to that link and compare China’s holdings YOY, and you will find my point.
As Peter Schiff explains in this video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NkEtArDFNYA :
"Of Course We're Not Going To Pay Back The Chinese" (Greatest Schiff Clip Of All Time).
I wonder if that has anything at all with the unbalanced trade policies they FORCE on us?
They don’t force shit on us. We’re just being sold down the river.
No way are we that stupid, we'll just run the printing presses at the Fed full steam 24x7 until inflation takes care of all of our problems. Who cares if we owe 900+ billion to the Chinese, in Zimbabwe, everyone's a billionaire: http://reynaelena.com/2009/02/13/in-zimbabwe-everybody-is-a-billionaire/
We'll hire this little boy to pay back Hu Jintao his 900+ billion, but in U.S. Dollars:
That'll show them not to try to pull a fast one on us in the future by trying to make us their debt slaves! That's the beauty and the power we hold by the U.S. Dollar being the world's primary reserve currency.
I’m partial to the SNL skit:
http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=d9c_1258865433
Oh yes, paying them back with those clunkers the government bought a short while ago is always an option!
Peter Schiff explains
While I like Schiff, seeing a room full of rich white guys cackle about middle America's fuckedness is not that pleasant.
This nation is so broken we can't even put the upper brackets back to Clinton levels without a drag-out battle.
We have serious income and outgo problems, I don't want to minimize the spending challenge we face. Non-pension gummint spending is allegedly going to be $5.7T next year. Divided by $50,000 per year that's 114M jobs, about the number of households in this country. Something's rotten in the State of Denmark with these numbers.
I have been following House Hunters on HGTV as another poster indicated and there are so many idiots in this country that I suspect housing will collapse further. Why does a family of three need a 5000 square foot home at a 750k price?
Our own excessive consumption will be our ruin. I wish I could do a show that shows the results of these home purchases after the housing collapse.
And it is so funny watching the realtors totally f with and play on the buyers stupid ideals. I bet this family in Richmond VA cannot even furnish their home.
They bought a colonial with a pool and they have two toddlers.
Stupid idea
Why is it every time I read anything written by Nat'l Assoc. of Realtors economist Lawrence Yun .... I always picture a Duck?
Another account proving the Duck Dude is all wet:
http://www.businessinsider.com/gary-shilling-house-prices?source=patrick.net#yui-main
Why is it every time I read anything written by Nat’l Assoc. of Realtors economist Lawrence Yun …. I always picture a Duck?
Its getting to be very common.
Its getting to be very common.
You know the old saying; if it looks like a duck, quacks like a duck ......
Of course there's always a market with homes...provided that the seller and buyer agree on a price ...AND they both have a means.
The baby boomer were the largest generation in the USA...now it's all scattered. Everything these days is made smaller and lighter so the idea that someone MUST have a house is laughable at best.
Heck look at the home shows on TLC and HGTV and you see a few funny things
1) some of the shows are filmed in canada. Canada's currency is nearly equal to the dollar but the housing market is in better shape...
2) some of the show are reruns from five or so years ago....pretty shady
A house is not freedom. How much sense does it logically make to get a house given that businesses can be free to move here and there but yet with a house you are stuck...houses are not liquid assets. You rent an apartment here's first and last months rent and you can leave...I've seen properties on the market for years and years. Let's not also forget the amount of maintenance.
If you can afford it and you know you'll have your same job with same pay for 30+ years ok then it might be a good market. But for everyone else...
Oh no! More bad news for Larry the Duck. Let's see how he spins this one:
Oh no! More bad news for Larry the Duck. Let’s see how he spins this one:
http://finance.yahoo.com/real-estate/article/110931/the-housing-market-stumbles-again?mod=patrick.net#yfi_pf_main
Let me guess. Answer would be "this is just a report, there is no data" :)
Let me guess. Answer would be “this is just a report, there is no dataâ€
What would ever give you that idea? LOL
in 2-4 years. Once the interest rates have bottomed out the house prices will be next. My guess is mortgage rate of 3.75 percent by May 2011 and a bottom of housing around 2013
the fraud by lenders (and borrowers) happened at the inception of 90% of these loans. Why is this being ignored?
A couple years ago Psychic Sylvia Browne predicted:
"The housing market gets stronger.
Moguls will come in, buy up foreclosures, get richer."
What is the definition of Stronger? higher prices? lower prices and higher volume through more foreclosures?
Who are the Moguls? China? Sovereign wealth funds?
The problem with Psychics making monetary predictions is a s soon as they are made public, the timeline changes.
The most ABSURD real estate bubbles have been going on in India and China for the past 20-30 years, where homes have appreciated about a THOUSAND times. A one thousand US dollar investment in India’s metro real estate in the 1970s is now worth more than a million US dollars. Home owners in India and China are unbelievably rich and are far more wealthy than their Western counterparts. Despite the ABSURD appreciation in the past 30 years, the mentality in India and China is that real estate is the easiest and best form of investment, with values doubling every 2-3 years. Note that these so called homes in India and China are small, with little features, very low quality, have no good infrastructure and so filthy that no sensible person would spend even a 100 bucks on, yet are being sold and bought for millions of dollars each in the greatest PONZI game ever played. You read that right, an apartment will cost you USD 500,000 and a small independent house will cost you at least USD 1 million in the cities of India and China. Note also that the median income in these places is still just a few thousand dollars per year, yet the median home prices are about a million dollars. Very few of the local population can afford to buy homes and so live in makeshift huts. This PONZI game has created inflation, which then fuels the PONZI game even more and you get the idea. Compare all of this to the United States. Homes have hardly even tripled in value in the last 30 years, and yet, we are quick to point this out as a bubble. We are playing the reverse PONZI here, where we want to destroy absolutely fabulous homes to complete worthlessness. A regular 2000 sqft 4-BR American home would cost several million dollars everywhere in the world except in the USA, where it costs a measly USD 200000. Yep, Americans want everything for free. If it is not free, it has to be a bubble.
I believe that real estate is ridiculously undervalued in the USA compared to the rest of the world, when you compare features, quality, size, surrounding infrastructure, median income and so on.
That may be true, but has nothing to do with your LOCAL real estate market.
A lot of people believe that jobs drive housing. I am one of the few that has vast international exposure and perspective, and believe that it is actually the other way. Housing is the backbone of every economy, and housing drives jobs. A strong wealth effect created by stable or appreciating house values makes people spend more on all types of goods, which then support the retailers/service providers, who then create or sustain jobs. If we self-destruct housing like we have in America over the past few years, households have lost a vast amount of their home equity wealth, and so they cut back spending, which then impacts the retailers/service providers, who then cut jobs. China has realized this, and has been inflating a government sponsored massive real estate bubble for the past several years, and real estate activity is a very major component of China's GDP.
Robert Shiller and other "bubble" claimers keep talking about home price appreciation needing to be the same as inflation. If they truely believe in that, the vast majority of America, including all of the MidWest, has severely trailed inflation for the past 20 years. Home prices have barely even DOUBLED in 25 years in the MidWest, and now even in Los Angeles, the median home price now, after the decline in the past few years, is not even double of what it was 20 years ago. So answer this Shiller et al, with inflation at 3% per year for the majority of the past 20-25 years, are not home prices UNDERVALUED even by your own analysis, regardless of its merit?
Some sarcasm here....
Why stop at saying that just housing needs to be so cheap and almost free for everyone? I want to expand this "I want to have everything for cheap or free" passion. Can you believe that a brand new sedan costs over $20,000.00? Who can afford that? It should be less than $5.00, with used cars between $1.00 and $4.00 depending on mileage. We have a huge bubble in auto prices. Restaurant pizza prices are just absurd. A large pie with 3 toppings should not cost more than 5 cents. Pure greed and speculation has made it cost over $10.00. Everybody deserves a free gallon of milk per day, everyday. That is our birthright, and yet greedy grocery stores are charging between $3.00 and $5.00, which is unsustainable. My index of milk prices starting in 1500 A.D shows that gallon milk prices have historically been one thousandth of minimum wage, so it should be less than a cent now. I look at all the idiots buying all these goods at inflated prices and laugh...
What was the supply and demand for milk in 1500 A.D.? Please support your claims with some references. I fully understand why you agree with the Duck Dude.
RayAmerica,
You clearly do not understand sarcasm....I wonder if you ask such smart questions to the Yale professor Shiller when he makes claims about housing in 1890?
The most ABSURD real estate bubbles have been going on in India and China for the past 20-30 years, where homes have appreciated about a THOUSAND times. A one thousand US dollar investment in India’s metro real estate in the 1970s is now worth more than a million US dollars. Home owners in India and China are unbelievably rich and are far more wealthy than their Western counterparts. Despite the ABSURD appreciation in the past 30 years, the mentality in India and China is that real estate is the easiest and best form of investment, with values doubling every 2-3 years. Note that these so called homes in India and China are small, with little features, very low quality, have no good infrastructure and so filthy that no sensible person would spend even a 100 bucks on, yet are being sold and bought for millions of dollars each in the greatest PONZI game ever played. You read that right, an apartment will cost you USD 500,000 and a small independent house will cost you at least USD 1 million in the cities of India and China. Note also that the median income in these places is still just a few thousand dollars per year, yet the median home prices are about a million dollars. Very few of the local population can afford to buy homes and so live in makeshift huts. This PONZI game has created inflation, which then fuels the PONZI game even more and you get the idea. Compare all of this to the United States. Homes have hardly even tripled in value in the last 30 years, and yet, we are quick to point this out as a bubble. We are playing the reverse PONZI here, where we want to destroy absolutely fabulous homes to complete worthlessness. A regular 2000 sqft 4-BR American home would cost several million dollars everywhere in the world except in the USA, where it costs a measly USD 200000. Yep, Americans want everything for free. If it is not free, it has to be a bubble.
Comparison of USA housing to India,China is worthless. India,China is not a bubble, it is pure supply and demand. There is a huge trend of urbanization in those countries. Every single person living in rural areas wants to move to cities like Mumbai(because of great job opportunities) and with that size of population property values are bound to go up, but USA? I don't see any strong urbanization trend and I don't see tremendous job opportunities in Metro areas. Apple/Orange comparison.
The most ABSURD real estate bubbles have been going on in India and China for the past 20-30 years, where homes have appreciated about a THOUSAND times. A one thousand US dollar investment in India’s metro real estate in the 1970s is now worth more than a million US dollars. Home owners in India and China are unbelievably rich and are far more wealthy than their Western counterparts. Despite the ABSURD appreciation in the past 30 years, the mentality in India and China is that real estate is the easiest and best form of investment, with values doubling every 2-3 years. Note that these so called homes in India and China are small, with little features, very low quality, have no good infrastructure and so filthy that no sensible person would spend even a 100 bucks on, yet are being sold and bought for millions of dollars each in the greatest PONZI game ever played. You read that right, an apartment will cost you USD 500,000 and a small independent house will cost you at least USD 1 million in the cities of India and China. Note also that the median income in these places is still just a few thousand dollars per year, yet the median home prices are about a million dollars. Very few of the local population can afford to buy homes and so live in makeshift huts. This PONZI game has created inflation, which then fuels the PONZI game even more and you get the idea. Compare all of this to the United States. Homes have hardly even tripled in value in the last 30 years, and yet, we are quick to point this out as a bubble. We are playing the reverse PONZI here, where we want to destroy absolutely fabulous homes to complete worthlessness. A regular 2000 sqft 4-BR American home would cost several million dollars everywhere in the world except in the USA, where it costs a measly USD 200000. Yep, Americans want everything for free. If it is not free, it has to be a bubble.
Population density, GDP growth, rising liquidity levels / disposable incomes make these markets very different. I'm not making any comment on whether American homes are fairly priced. Your argument comparing India & China with the US is fallacious.
Population density, urbanization etc are the most common reasons given to justify the ABSURD bubbles in India and China. These do not make any sense when the median apartment costs over 50 times the median income and the median single family home costs over 100 times the income, especially with loan rates close to 10%. The total lack of affordability indicates there cannot be any big demand to meet the supply. Rental yields in India and China are very low compared to the cost of the home, so it makes a lot more sense for the "newcomers" to just rent instead of buying at inflated prices, another reason that the "population density" theory is utterly false. Also, the majority of the "new" people moving to the metros do not aim at downtown or older neighborhoods. There are plenty of new satellite towns/suburbs that they move into, so it is just a sprawl into previously vacant land. Finally, it is common for 5-10 people to share an apartment in India and China, unlike in America, which also reduces any real demand and dents a hole in the "density" logic. Tokyo has over 30 million people, but home prices have actually been declining for the past 20 years as part of the nation's deflating economy. Home prices in India and China are going up merely on speculation, and all other given reasons are cliche. It is not widely known that over 65 million apartments in major Chinese metros are lying vacant. No demand, period. However, prices keep going up in the ponzi scheme so that the next set of speculators can play the game
By some of your arguments, home prices should keep going up with increasing urbanization/population density forever. Currently, single family home prices in India and China's metros are over USD 1 million, which is already way more than what it is in most American cities. Are you guys saying that in another 20 years, these home prices in India and China would be much higher, say over USD 50 million, while America stays stagnant. What if the Chinese and Indians with their massive muli-million net worth start buying the really cheap homes in America real soon?
Maybe I'm part of the "self-destruction" crowd. I call it reality. Prices will continue to stagnate/fall slightly for the next several years. The psychological damage has been done and the baby boomers are hanging onto what's left of their nest-eggs. That means unemployment will stay high for a few more years.
Why only a "few more years?" What mechanism exists that would cause an improvement in the domestic UE rate five years or so down the road? I can't think of any with the exception of a marvelous new large-scale invention/production capacity.
Clay, housing around the world IS a massive bubble, the largest that has ever existed. Worldwide interest rates were held far too low for far too long in an attempt to salvage the world economy after 9/11 with Greenspan leading the way. Central bankers around the world followed suit. The free money flowed into housing almost exclusively via unprecedented speculation.
Dubai's housing bubble blew up even worse than ours did (nationally). Check out Ireland, Spain, Iceland too - big busts across the board.
China's housing bubble is ridiculous - read some of the articles on patrick.net - it's so ridiculously extreme so as to make any rational person laugh. Homes that cost 10-20 times the median income? I mean, HONESTLY. Empty cities and rows of empty apartment buildings - sounds like Miami on steroids, doesn't it? Canada and Australia have tiny but healthy economies as they export to the bubble that is Chindia, but there are signs of exhaustion in Australia (24K subsidies from the gubmint) and outright drops in Canada.
It was fake money that never really existed and was never justified by any fundamental - world economic output has not gone up nearly enough to increase RE valuations to these levels, and GENUINE economic output (that which is not based on ZIRP/speculative bubbles) certainly has not increased sufficiently to justify these levels.
Currently, single family home prices in India and China’s metros are over USD 1 million
You read that right, an apartment will cost you USD 500,000 and a small independent house will cost you at least USD 1 million in the cities of India and China.
I'm calling shenanigans on this for India. There is no way a median apartment or median single family home costs that much. It is possible that a prime apartment in a prime location costs that much, but you would have to be among the prime earners in India as well. Please explain to us where you are getting your figures and how applicable they are to our discussion.
Here is a recent link to Mumbai's bubble prices. Remember that this is for apartments. The Indian currency "Rupee" is about 44 to a US dollar, so the apartment rate is over a 1000 dollars per sqft. So a 1000 sqft apartment would cost USD 1 million. Even the non-prime areas will have at least half that rate, so those apartments will touch half a million dollars. Again, these are small apartments. Do not even get started on single family homes.
http://jllindia.wordpress.com/2010/10/03/mumbai-property-rates-up-50-pc/
Please read my earlier posts on why it is relevant to this discussion.
So a 1000 sqft apartment would cost USD 1 million.
Might as well be quoting Miami. Some developer quotes $1000 per sq ft or so and what? Heck we had the same happen here not to long ago and they all went bust dropped like a rock! Someone is smoking some Hash in Mumbai.
Unsold Homes Pile Up As Prices Put Off Buyers(Financial Expresss, Oct 08, 2010)
http://jllindia.wordpress.com/2010/10/08/unsold-homes-pile-up-as-prices-put-off-buyers/
New Delhi: The festive season is around the corner, but it could spell bleak times for India’s realty sector, as unsold inventory piles up. With the prices of residential units exorbitantly high especially in Delhi and Mumbai and a deluge of residential project launches quarter after quarter, it’s a clear demand-supply mismatch. The lean July-September quarter has been marked by oversupply.
"The Indian currency “Rupee†is about 44 to a US dollar, so the apartment rate is over a 1000 dollars per sqft. So a 1000 sqft apartment would cost USD 1 million. Even the non-prime areas will have at least half that rate, so those apartments will touch half a million dollars. Again, these are small apartments. Do not even get started on single family homes."
You don't know what you're talking about. Prime areas in city centers always cost a ton of money, whether you're in Mumbai, Lagos, Almaty, or New York. What you're stating is not an accurate measure of anything in particular. Give us median stats and not the highest of the high, and then tell us why this is relevant once again.
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Please do not comment about your local real estate market. Nationwide, when and why do you think residential real estate will bottom out and begin to rebound to the point where prices not only stabilize but actually begin to appreciate?
#housing