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April 2, 2008 at 10:27 PM #180447April 2, 2008 at 11:05 PM #180017sd_mattParticipant
My friend predicted what would happen, albeit three years off. He was always talking about stats and figures though. I don’t believe he was looking at the psychology.
In terms of momentum where is the avg Joe’s psychology at? Has the media doom and gloom blitz yet blossomed into a media blitzkrieg? My casual observation is that as of 06 the mentality was “buy now because this thing is gonna go sky high forever and don’t get priced out”. Have we hit the opposite side of that mentality yet?
I guess what I am asking is can these measures offset psychology…and everything else for that matter? Or are we just applying brakes to just one car on the freight train going down hill?
April 2, 2008 at 11:05 PM #180384sd_mattParticipantMy friend predicted what would happen, albeit three years off. He was always talking about stats and figures though. I don’t believe he was looking at the psychology.
In terms of momentum where is the avg Joe’s psychology at? Has the media doom and gloom blitz yet blossomed into a media blitzkrieg? My casual observation is that as of 06 the mentality was “buy now because this thing is gonna go sky high forever and don’t get priced out”. Have we hit the opposite side of that mentality yet?
I guess what I am asking is can these measures offset psychology…and everything else for that matter? Or are we just applying brakes to just one car on the freight train going down hill?
April 2, 2008 at 11:05 PM #180388sd_mattParticipantMy friend predicted what would happen, albeit three years off. He was always talking about stats and figures though. I don’t believe he was looking at the psychology.
In terms of momentum where is the avg Joe’s psychology at? Has the media doom and gloom blitz yet blossomed into a media blitzkrieg? My casual observation is that as of 06 the mentality was “buy now because this thing is gonna go sky high forever and don’t get priced out”. Have we hit the opposite side of that mentality yet?
I guess what I am asking is can these measures offset psychology…and everything else for that matter? Or are we just applying brakes to just one car on the freight train going down hill?
April 2, 2008 at 11:05 PM #180400sd_mattParticipantMy friend predicted what would happen, albeit three years off. He was always talking about stats and figures though. I don’t believe he was looking at the psychology.
In terms of momentum where is the avg Joe’s psychology at? Has the media doom and gloom blitz yet blossomed into a media blitzkrieg? My casual observation is that as of 06 the mentality was “buy now because this thing is gonna go sky high forever and don’t get priced out”. Have we hit the opposite side of that mentality yet?
I guess what I am asking is can these measures offset psychology…and everything else for that matter? Or are we just applying brakes to just one car on the freight train going down hill?
April 2, 2008 at 11:05 PM #180476sd_mattParticipantMy friend predicted what would happen, albeit three years off. He was always talking about stats and figures though. I don’t believe he was looking at the psychology.
In terms of momentum where is the avg Joe’s psychology at? Has the media doom and gloom blitz yet blossomed into a media blitzkrieg? My casual observation is that as of 06 the mentality was “buy now because this thing is gonna go sky high forever and don’t get priced out”. Have we hit the opposite side of that mentality yet?
I guess what I am asking is can these measures offset psychology…and everything else for that matter? Or are we just applying brakes to just one car on the freight train going down hill?
April 3, 2008 at 12:15 AM #180052jonnycsdParticipantSD Realtor, yes, I have heard the $300BB number. However, I do not see it mentioned in the NYTs coverage of the bipartisan bill coming together in the Senate.
Is the $300BB a real / approved plan? Any insight on how it will be executed? Any links to articles explaining it would be much appreciated.
April 3, 2008 at 12:15 AM #180419jonnycsdParticipantSD Realtor, yes, I have heard the $300BB number. However, I do not see it mentioned in the NYTs coverage of the bipartisan bill coming together in the Senate.
Is the $300BB a real / approved plan? Any insight on how it will be executed? Any links to articles explaining it would be much appreciated.
April 3, 2008 at 12:15 AM #180423jonnycsdParticipantSD Realtor, yes, I have heard the $300BB number. However, I do not see it mentioned in the NYTs coverage of the bipartisan bill coming together in the Senate.
Is the $300BB a real / approved plan? Any insight on how it will be executed? Any links to articles explaining it would be much appreciated.
April 3, 2008 at 12:15 AM #180436jonnycsdParticipantSD Realtor, yes, I have heard the $300BB number. However, I do not see it mentioned in the NYTs coverage of the bipartisan bill coming together in the Senate.
Is the $300BB a real / approved plan? Any insight on how it will be executed? Any links to articles explaining it would be much appreciated.
April 3, 2008 at 12:15 AM #180512jonnycsdParticipantSD Realtor, yes, I have heard the $300BB number. However, I do not see it mentioned in the NYTs coverage of the bipartisan bill coming together in the Senate.
Is the $300BB a real / approved plan? Any insight on how it will be executed? Any links to articles explaining it would be much appreciated.
April 3, 2008 at 12:33 AM #180067SD RealtorParticipantjohnny
The main problem here is that you are not seeing the forest through the trees. In the month of March alone we have witnessed events that could be construed as somewhat cataclyzmic by historical standards. We have witnessed our government literally bailout a huge financial institution that was basically run by incompetents. We have seen a flurry (and I posted about this over and over again in the past 2 years) of polical tomfoolery that will result in 100s of billions, AT THE VERY LEAST, in taxpayer monies that will be used to back loans, bailout loans, and the FED has basically opened a window for financial institutions that are NOT BANKS. We have seen the GSE have the capital requirements loosened. We are now seeing mortgage reworks with reduced principal.
Most scary of all and not even discussed on this site, we have seen a proposal of what will be the most intrusive policy yet of empowering the FED with respect to regulation of the financial industry EVER.
Think about it, all of this has recently gone down in the past month man.
Seriously, yes all of us responsible renters who didn’t give into the housing rush, who pay our bills, who all have great credit scores can all pat ourselves on the back. Where has that gotten us? While we have been prudent, we are going to witness our government basically surrender our currency and virtually nationalize housing in an effort to keep our consumption based economy afloat.
Will housing continue to go down? Of course it will. Will we ALL be hurt by it, by the responsibility of foolish buyers compounded by the actions of our government. Yes we will…
Sorry about the rant…It just gets to me that people are not more enraged by this stuff. To sit back and keep saying, well this measure doesn’t matter, this move by the Feds will not stop things, this proposal by Schumer or Reid will not matter… jeez it is just as bad as listening to NAR spout crap as well. These things do matter. They are costly, they are bad, it is just taking a free market and manipulating it beyond belief.
SD Realtor
April 3, 2008 at 12:33 AM #180434SD RealtorParticipantjohnny
The main problem here is that you are not seeing the forest through the trees. In the month of March alone we have witnessed events that could be construed as somewhat cataclyzmic by historical standards. We have witnessed our government literally bailout a huge financial institution that was basically run by incompetents. We have seen a flurry (and I posted about this over and over again in the past 2 years) of polical tomfoolery that will result in 100s of billions, AT THE VERY LEAST, in taxpayer monies that will be used to back loans, bailout loans, and the FED has basically opened a window for financial institutions that are NOT BANKS. We have seen the GSE have the capital requirements loosened. We are now seeing mortgage reworks with reduced principal.
Most scary of all and not even discussed on this site, we have seen a proposal of what will be the most intrusive policy yet of empowering the FED with respect to regulation of the financial industry EVER.
Think about it, all of this has recently gone down in the past month man.
Seriously, yes all of us responsible renters who didn’t give into the housing rush, who pay our bills, who all have great credit scores can all pat ourselves on the back. Where has that gotten us? While we have been prudent, we are going to witness our government basically surrender our currency and virtually nationalize housing in an effort to keep our consumption based economy afloat.
Will housing continue to go down? Of course it will. Will we ALL be hurt by it, by the responsibility of foolish buyers compounded by the actions of our government. Yes we will…
Sorry about the rant…It just gets to me that people are not more enraged by this stuff. To sit back and keep saying, well this measure doesn’t matter, this move by the Feds will not stop things, this proposal by Schumer or Reid will not matter… jeez it is just as bad as listening to NAR spout crap as well. These things do matter. They are costly, they are bad, it is just taking a free market and manipulating it beyond belief.
SD Realtor
April 3, 2008 at 12:33 AM #180438SD RealtorParticipantjohnny
The main problem here is that you are not seeing the forest through the trees. In the month of March alone we have witnessed events that could be construed as somewhat cataclyzmic by historical standards. We have witnessed our government literally bailout a huge financial institution that was basically run by incompetents. We have seen a flurry (and I posted about this over and over again in the past 2 years) of polical tomfoolery that will result in 100s of billions, AT THE VERY LEAST, in taxpayer monies that will be used to back loans, bailout loans, and the FED has basically opened a window for financial institutions that are NOT BANKS. We have seen the GSE have the capital requirements loosened. We are now seeing mortgage reworks with reduced principal.
Most scary of all and not even discussed on this site, we have seen a proposal of what will be the most intrusive policy yet of empowering the FED with respect to regulation of the financial industry EVER.
Think about it, all of this has recently gone down in the past month man.
Seriously, yes all of us responsible renters who didn’t give into the housing rush, who pay our bills, who all have great credit scores can all pat ourselves on the back. Where has that gotten us? While we have been prudent, we are going to witness our government basically surrender our currency and virtually nationalize housing in an effort to keep our consumption based economy afloat.
Will housing continue to go down? Of course it will. Will we ALL be hurt by it, by the responsibility of foolish buyers compounded by the actions of our government. Yes we will…
Sorry about the rant…It just gets to me that people are not more enraged by this stuff. To sit back and keep saying, well this measure doesn’t matter, this move by the Feds will not stop things, this proposal by Schumer or Reid will not matter… jeez it is just as bad as listening to NAR spout crap as well. These things do matter. They are costly, they are bad, it is just taking a free market and manipulating it beyond belief.
SD Realtor
April 3, 2008 at 12:33 AM #180452SD RealtorParticipantjohnny
The main problem here is that you are not seeing the forest through the trees. In the month of March alone we have witnessed events that could be construed as somewhat cataclyzmic by historical standards. We have witnessed our government literally bailout a huge financial institution that was basically run by incompetents. We have seen a flurry (and I posted about this over and over again in the past 2 years) of polical tomfoolery that will result in 100s of billions, AT THE VERY LEAST, in taxpayer monies that will be used to back loans, bailout loans, and the FED has basically opened a window for financial institutions that are NOT BANKS. We have seen the GSE have the capital requirements loosened. We are now seeing mortgage reworks with reduced principal.
Most scary of all and not even discussed on this site, we have seen a proposal of what will be the most intrusive policy yet of empowering the FED with respect to regulation of the financial industry EVER.
Think about it, all of this has recently gone down in the past month man.
Seriously, yes all of us responsible renters who didn’t give into the housing rush, who pay our bills, who all have great credit scores can all pat ourselves on the back. Where has that gotten us? While we have been prudent, we are going to witness our government basically surrender our currency and virtually nationalize housing in an effort to keep our consumption based economy afloat.
Will housing continue to go down? Of course it will. Will we ALL be hurt by it, by the responsibility of foolish buyers compounded by the actions of our government. Yes we will…
Sorry about the rant…It just gets to me that people are not more enraged by this stuff. To sit back and keep saying, well this measure doesn’t matter, this move by the Feds will not stop things, this proposal by Schumer or Reid will not matter… jeez it is just as bad as listening to NAR spout crap as well. These things do matter. They are costly, they are bad, it is just taking a free market and manipulating it beyond belief.
SD Realtor
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