Bubble Trouble

Topic by Aposematic

Aposematic

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This topic contains 7 replies, has 8 voices, and was last updated by Princekie  Princekie 2 years, 2 months ago.

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  • #637360
    +4
    Aposematic
    Aposematic
    Participant
    2671

    article is mainly correct, although some of the graphs look dodgy… sheeple are being set up to be hosed. Opinions?

    Afinogyny.. from the Greek Afino {to abandon/ to set down/ to leave /to allow/ to let } + Gyny {Women} MGHOW’s philosophy to not engage women without “hating them”. Narcorca =Narcissistic Orca typically spouting to a bathroom mirror taking an arms length selfie ; Wallinate describes post wall females whose SMV is terminally negligible New Years resolution "To not make women happy" . Instadestitue: yet another Neologism for Men that cohabit with women that decide to pull the handle of intervention orders.

    #637371
    +4
    Foolsgold
    foolsgold
    Participant
    5645

    Next year here in the U.S. a ton of mortgages are going to adjust. That is when we will know where we are at. I know many people who can buy that don’t because they don’t want to be holding the bag when the next crash hits. The housing market is grossly overpriced and we are due for a correction. Same as the stock market. There WILL be another collapse but I hope it isn’t as bad as the last one. We will be in big trouble if it’s as bad as I think it’s going to be.

    #637415
    +1
    MarketWatcher
    MarketWatcher
    Participant

    Yes. When it does go south in the United States buy SDOW.

    /f~~~ socialism/

    #637518
    +1

    Anonymous
    14

    Some have been saying that the bailout bubble will burst one day. Round and round we go, where it stops, nobody knows. Well, I think the dudes at the top know…The magical hand that tightens the purse of printed money and debt that will never be paid back, all made up bulls~~~… The only reason at all for all of it is to create instability and via insider information buy low sell high… So many people have gotten insanely rich in the last 20 years or so due to this roller coaster ride.

    #637545
    DarkRyu
    DarkRyu
    Participant
    2354

    Next year here in the U.S. a ton of mortgages are going to adjust. That is when we will know where we are at. I know many people who can buy that don’t because they don’t want to be holding the bag when the next crash hits. The housing market is grossly overpriced and we are due for a correction. Same as the stock market. There WILL be another collapse but I hope it isn’t as bad as the last one. We will be in big trouble if it’s as bad as I think it’s going to be.

    Depends on where you live. Where I live housing is still relatively “cheap.” The house I just bought appraised at $480k and I bought it for $362,500. It cost $350,000 back in 1994 when it was built. I’m not worried as it’s very unlikely that housing prices are going to drop below what they were 20+ years ago. Now if my house was $120k back in 1994 I’d be worried. There are still a lot of places where houses are going for 10x what they were 20 years ago. It’s insane.

    #637635
    +1
    Xanthine
    xanthine
    Participant
    4903

    Thank you for the link. Very fascinating read, and i have been predicting something along these lines for a long time.

    It isn’t hard to figure out what’s going on if you do the research. The bankers embezzled most of the money and passed the bill to the taxpayers. That is what caused the recession in 2008 and why countries all over the world basically experienced the same thing at the same time. Iceland was the only country that did anything about it. They withdrew from the International Monetary Fund and investigated where the money went. The bankers, as well as politicians and corporate pigs they colluded with went to jail and the money was taken back. They uncovered connections to corrupt institutions in many other countries, particularly the UK and germany, but no other country did any investigating in spite of their warnings.

    Joke is on them. They killed the goose the laid the golden egg. Now infinite quantitative easing is just life support keeping the western banking infrastructure intact for now. Once the next bubble bursts there will be nothing anyone can do. Either hyperinflation or a liquidity crisis like the one in 2008 will be the inevitable outcome. There are so many bubbles…student loan debt, housing and real estate, the stock market. It is all built on debt, and artificially propped up with more debt. The whole house of cards will collapse next time, it will be the biggest economic catastrophe the world has ever seen.

    Anyway…interesting times we live in.

    #647091
    King Soloman
    King Soloman
    Participant
    64

    Agreed, a reversion of asset and equity prices to the mean or much lower is due.

    Hard to say when it will happen as no one indicator can predict it. I am keeping a finger on the pulse of the Treasury Yield Rates on Fixed Income securities.

    This isn’t a silver bullet, however when short term interest rates start paying more than their long term counterparts, it’s an indicator that we are edging closer to the cliff edge. Historically low interest rates suggest the invisible hands have been trying to curtail the inevitable. And so the cycle continues….

    Learning by others past mistakes doesn't make me better than them but grateful for their sacrifice

    #662606
    Princekie
    Princekie
    Participant
    1042

    Next year here in the U.S. a ton of mortgages are going to adjust. That is when we will know where we are at. I know many people who can buy that don’t because they don’t want to be holding the bag when the next crash hits. The housing market is grossly overpriced and we are due for a correction. Same as the stock market. There WILL be another collapse but I hope it isn’t as bad as the last one. We will be in big trouble if it’s as bad as I think it’s going to be.

    Depends on where you live. Where I live housing is still relatively “cheap.” The house I just bought appraised at $480k and I bought it for $362,500. It cost $350,000 back in 1994 when it was built. I’m not worried as it’s very unlikely that housing prices are going to drop below what they were 20+ years ago. Now if my house was $120k back in 1994 I’d be worried. There are still a lot of places where houses are going for 10x what they were 20 years ago. It’s insane.

    …..And I thought UK housing was crazy money….

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