by HARM follow (0)
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The only real question is how can a bubble sitter escape inflation?
My own strategy so far is foreign stocks, or stocks that earn foreign currency, and PUTs on the banks, and RYWBX, which I just heard about this morning. RYWBX is an inverse dollar index fund. Seems like it ought to do great as the dollar continues to tank.
Not investment advice! More of an investment question, really.
Patrick
Did the comedy writers in Hollywood go on strike so they would have time to write a script for the banks?
Which are the best financial stocks to short? I do not want to buy inverse ETFs because I prefer to maintain a long-short portfolio. On the other hand, PUT options requires much better timing.
There is no escape! Whether FB's have their plastic w/ WaMu and their mortgage at Citi (or vice versa) really doesn't matter at this point. You guys really out smarted yourselves on this one!
Finally! Someone listened to Jim Cramer.
"This is like March 2000 all over again! Look at all the investors that continued to cover margin calls on their tech stocks only to watch them go all the way down! They should have walked away from a depreciating asset! The same thing is going on right now with your house, just dump it and walk away! What you SHOULD be doing is keeping your payments current on your credit cards so you'll have money to cover your living expenses while you wait this thing out!"
Was that close? I realize they probably took the video link down so I've commited it to memory. Anyone have that link?
Farnoush Torabi (or something like that did the interview). I think it ran on "thestreet.com" and they made him take it down almost immediately. I was referred to it through HousingDoom but the PPT probably made him take it down too?
That is my question as well. All of us who have saved some money by not paying huge mortgages, where do we put that money? I mean, prices aren't going to hit rock bottom for awhile and meanwhile, inflation is eating at my savings.
Can't they just take out the equity in their home and pay down those high rate credit cards?
(Ditech commercial with guy feeding credit cards into lawn mulcher)
Anyone remember that one? Well now you can just disassemble your house one board at a time and feed it into that wood chipper! And if your banker gets p*ssy just feed that m%ther f@cker in there too!
Fargo Style Baby!
DinOR, I trust that you are not suggesting any illegal behavior. :lol:
@Peter P,
Not at all. As long as my lender "mod's" the loan and takes minimum payments on my credit cards there will be no need for me to go down to Home Despot (TM) and put a wood chipper on my Visa before they repo my truck.
(Kidding) :)
All of us who have saved some money by not paying huge mortgages, where do we put that money?
FYI... Finally called Wells Fargo. The smallest safety deposit box (2"x5"x21") goes for $40 a year, so break even with GLD (management fees) is approx. at a 10 oz. bar. If purchasing more, then maybe the box is worth it to go physical (no dollar value placed on personal safety). Plus you have to take into account losses on dealer spreads. NIA. Usual tinfoil hat disclaimers about gov't seizure of gold.
It depends on your risk appetite. The best hedge against inflation, once the inflationary trend of confirmed, has always been gold and commodity historically. When the store of value, aka USD, is in trouble, people will try to store value elsewhere, and in most situations, in real stuff.
Foreign stocks will take a hit as well, because this is a global asset bubble, everyone will be affected. There may be very select stock sectors that will benefit from this.
I don't see hyperinflation happening in the US because we are a military super power. However, inflation in the 20s or even 30s is completely reasonable in the great unwinding. China's reported inflation is already in the double digits, and it can't take too long for them to shoulder that pressure alone. They will have to export the inflation.
Foreign currencies can only appreciate so much, because they don't want to take a hit in their employment and export trade either. One should also try to stay away from emerging markets, this is the time to flee to quality, if you are just after capital preservation, or slight depreciation in exchange for safety, commodity currencies like CAD and AUD are the best bets, especially the latter due to the high yield. Australia may raise interest rate in Dec bringing the total yield to 7%, further widening the interest gap with USD.
I put a few grand here and there for shorting and buying puts, but you can hardly build a portfolio on shorting and puts.
Once again with the new BK law we that government intervention in free markets causes all real estate bubbles.
I suppose its inescapable - in fact you can argue the private ownership of land cant even exist without a government to enforce the ownership laws. And when the country grows this government needs more revenue to continue, so the tax laws change over time morphing the markets as they pass thier laws to get revenue. 200 years later we have p13, any 2 will do rule, etc.....
Stupid bastards.
Citi's trying to loan me $4500 and I'm FAR in default, they're desperately trying to prime the pump.......
EBGuy,
I'd heard that people used to put their gold in the upper tank of their toilet in the event of a total loss by fire. I suppose the theory is that the fire will run out of fuel before it evaporates the water in the tank turning your life savings into candy wrapper thick puddles of what used to be gold.
No Peter, I'm not advocating anyone burn their house down to test the theory. Sounds like a good one for the Mythbusters though?
You know, cash is getting more valuable in terms of houses per million dollars. Used to be 1 house/million. Soon it will be 2 houses per million, and perhaps eventually 3 houses per million.
So cash is actually appreciating if you look at it that way. And houses are the biggest expense I can think of. If I can save $500,000 on a house, that pays for a lot of inflation in bread, milk, gasoline, etc...
Patrick
Comments 1 - 17 of 161 Next » Last » Search these comments
Bankruptcy Law Backfires as Foreclosures Offset Gains (Update1)
All I can say is... BWAAAAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!!!
It looks like the Law of Unintended Consequences rules the day (again). So much for the "no bankster left behind" BK bill. Couldn't have happened to a greedier, more evil group of thugs.
Pigs getting their just desserts.
Chickens coming home to roost.
Life for a debt-free bubble sitter: wonderful.
Discuss, enjoy...
HARM
#housing