Home › Forums › Closed Forums › Buying and Selling RE › Higher End Declines?
- This topic has 150 replies, 16 voices, and was last updated 17 years ago by sdrealtor.
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December 29, 2007 at 5:16 PM #126429December 29, 2007 at 6:38 PM #126189sdrealtorParticipant
In the last 5 years the dollar to euro excanhge has gone from about $1 to 1 EU to where it stands today which is around $1.5 to 1EU. That means the Euro version of J6P has seen his purchasing power increase by 50%. That doesnt even factor in investing in a strong market. Its not just wealthy foreigners as relative to the US the rest of the world is getting alot wealthier.
December 29, 2007 at 6:38 PM #126346sdrealtorParticipantIn the last 5 years the dollar to euro excanhge has gone from about $1 to 1 EU to where it stands today which is around $1.5 to 1EU. That means the Euro version of J6P has seen his purchasing power increase by 50%. That doesnt even factor in investing in a strong market. Its not just wealthy foreigners as relative to the US the rest of the world is getting alot wealthier.
December 29, 2007 at 6:38 PM #126358sdrealtorParticipantIn the last 5 years the dollar to euro excanhge has gone from about $1 to 1 EU to where it stands today which is around $1.5 to 1EU. That means the Euro version of J6P has seen his purchasing power increase by 50%. That doesnt even factor in investing in a strong market. Its not just wealthy foreigners as relative to the US the rest of the world is getting alot wealthier.
December 29, 2007 at 6:38 PM #126425sdrealtorParticipantIn the last 5 years the dollar to euro excanhge has gone from about $1 to 1 EU to where it stands today which is around $1.5 to 1EU. That means the Euro version of J6P has seen his purchasing power increase by 50%. That doesnt even factor in investing in a strong market. Its not just wealthy foreigners as relative to the US the rest of the world is getting alot wealthier.
December 29, 2007 at 6:38 PM #126450sdrealtorParticipantIn the last 5 years the dollar to euro excanhge has gone from about $1 to 1 EU to where it stands today which is around $1.5 to 1EU. That means the Euro version of J6P has seen his purchasing power increase by 50%. That doesnt even factor in investing in a strong market. Its not just wealthy foreigners as relative to the US the rest of the world is getting alot wealthier.
December 30, 2007 at 9:05 AM #12637834f3f3fParticipantI agree with contrarian on what may motivate foreign buyers. But, if the weak dollar is the incentive, and they are property speculators, wouldn’t they be sitting on their newly acquired dollars, until the market corrects itself?
December 30, 2007 at 9:05 AM #12653534f3f3fParticipantI agree with contrarian on what may motivate foreign buyers. But, if the weak dollar is the incentive, and they are property speculators, wouldn’t they be sitting on their newly acquired dollars, until the market corrects itself?
December 30, 2007 at 9:05 AM #12654734f3f3fParticipantI agree with contrarian on what may motivate foreign buyers. But, if the weak dollar is the incentive, and they are property speculators, wouldn’t they be sitting on their newly acquired dollars, until the market corrects itself?
December 30, 2007 at 9:05 AM #12661434f3f3fParticipantI agree with contrarian on what may motivate foreign buyers. But, if the weak dollar is the incentive, and they are property speculators, wouldn’t they be sitting on their newly acquired dollars, until the market corrects itself?
December 30, 2007 at 9:05 AM #12664034f3f3fParticipantI agree with contrarian on what may motivate foreign buyers. But, if the weak dollar is the incentive, and they are property speculators, wouldn’t they be sitting on their newly acquired dollars, until the market corrects itself?
December 30, 2007 at 10:43 AM #126422sdrealtorParticipantI agree with contrarian also but its not just uber wealthy folks. The average Euro has seen their currency appreciate by 50% vis a vis the US $ the last few years. That means we are effectively at roughly 2001 pricing for them.
December 30, 2007 at 10:43 AM #126581sdrealtorParticipantI agree with contrarian also but its not just uber wealthy folks. The average Euro has seen their currency appreciate by 50% vis a vis the US $ the last few years. That means we are effectively at roughly 2001 pricing for them.
December 30, 2007 at 10:43 AM #126592sdrealtorParticipantI agree with contrarian also but its not just uber wealthy folks. The average Euro has seen their currency appreciate by 50% vis a vis the US $ the last few years. That means we are effectively at roughly 2001 pricing for them.
December 30, 2007 at 10:43 AM #126659sdrealtorParticipantI agree with contrarian also but its not just uber wealthy folks. The average Euro has seen their currency appreciate by 50% vis a vis the US $ the last few years. That means we are effectively at roughly 2001 pricing for them.
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