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June 13, 2008 at 7:49 AM #13031June 13, 2008 at 5:24 PM #222701Ex-SDParticipant
“It’s clear that these voluntary efforts in and of themselves cannot really make a dent,” said Allen Fishbein, director of credit and housing policy at the Consumer Federation of America. “Government intervention is going to be necessary.”
Here comes the pleas for government intervention which will only make it worse and last longer.
Story here:
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/business/20080613-1132-foreclosurerates.htmlJune 13, 2008 at 5:24 PM #222805Ex-SDParticipant“It’s clear that these voluntary efforts in and of themselves cannot really make a dent,” said Allen Fishbein, director of credit and housing policy at the Consumer Federation of America. “Government intervention is going to be necessary.”
Here comes the pleas for government intervention which will only make it worse and last longer.
Story here:
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/business/20080613-1132-foreclosurerates.htmlJune 13, 2008 at 5:24 PM #222818Ex-SDParticipant“It’s clear that these voluntary efforts in and of themselves cannot really make a dent,” said Allen Fishbein, director of credit and housing policy at the Consumer Federation of America. “Government intervention is going to be necessary.”
Here comes the pleas for government intervention which will only make it worse and last longer.
Story here:
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/business/20080613-1132-foreclosurerates.htmlJune 13, 2008 at 5:24 PM #222850Ex-SDParticipant“It’s clear that these voluntary efforts in and of themselves cannot really make a dent,” said Allen Fishbein, director of credit and housing policy at the Consumer Federation of America. “Government intervention is going to be necessary.”
Here comes the pleas for government intervention which will only make it worse and last longer.
Story here:
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/business/20080613-1132-foreclosurerates.htmlJune 13, 2008 at 5:24 PM #222865Ex-SDParticipant“It’s clear that these voluntary efforts in and of themselves cannot really make a dent,” said Allen Fishbein, director of credit and housing policy at the Consumer Federation of America. “Government intervention is going to be necessary.”
Here comes the pleas for government intervention which will only make it worse and last longer.
Story here:
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/business/20080613-1132-foreclosurerates.htmlJune 15, 2008 at 5:22 PM #222822CAwiremanParticipantHM,
Nice find. Several bottom calls throughout the article. But, some reality mixed in.
Rich’s chart here raised some good points about the up/down bubble symmetry (# 3 and # 5):
If we roughly, (and I me ROUGHLY) look at the preceeding dip in about 1996 and take that to the peak of 2005, we have about 9 years. So, 9 years up to the peak and what,
9 years down to the next trough? So, that would be about 2014.Who knows, maybe things will settle out before that. But, calling the bottom has become a pastime that will likely end up desensitizing buyer and non-buyers alike to ingnore the pundits, and just keep watching the inventory, prices, foreclosure rates, and 30-year mortgage rates.
But for things to be as bad as they are, there still seems to be a lot of positve buyer sentiment out there. Just blows me away….
June 15, 2008 at 5:22 PM #222924CAwiremanParticipantHM,
Nice find. Several bottom calls throughout the article. But, some reality mixed in.
Rich’s chart here raised some good points about the up/down bubble symmetry (# 3 and # 5):
If we roughly, (and I me ROUGHLY) look at the preceeding dip in about 1996 and take that to the peak of 2005, we have about 9 years. So, 9 years up to the peak and what,
9 years down to the next trough? So, that would be about 2014.Who knows, maybe things will settle out before that. But, calling the bottom has become a pastime that will likely end up desensitizing buyer and non-buyers alike to ingnore the pundits, and just keep watching the inventory, prices, foreclosure rates, and 30-year mortgage rates.
But for things to be as bad as they are, there still seems to be a lot of positve buyer sentiment out there. Just blows me away….
June 15, 2008 at 5:22 PM #222938CAwiremanParticipantHM,
Nice find. Several bottom calls throughout the article. But, some reality mixed in.
Rich’s chart here raised some good points about the up/down bubble symmetry (# 3 and # 5):
If we roughly, (and I me ROUGHLY) look at the preceeding dip in about 1996 and take that to the peak of 2005, we have about 9 years. So, 9 years up to the peak and what,
9 years down to the next trough? So, that would be about 2014.Who knows, maybe things will settle out before that. But, calling the bottom has become a pastime that will likely end up desensitizing buyer and non-buyers alike to ingnore the pundits, and just keep watching the inventory, prices, foreclosure rates, and 30-year mortgage rates.
But for things to be as bad as they are, there still seems to be a lot of positve buyer sentiment out there. Just blows me away….
June 15, 2008 at 5:22 PM #222969CAwiremanParticipantHM,
Nice find. Several bottom calls throughout the article. But, some reality mixed in.
Rich’s chart here raised some good points about the up/down bubble symmetry (# 3 and # 5):
If we roughly, (and I me ROUGHLY) look at the preceeding dip in about 1996 and take that to the peak of 2005, we have about 9 years. So, 9 years up to the peak and what,
9 years down to the next trough? So, that would be about 2014.Who knows, maybe things will settle out before that. But, calling the bottom has become a pastime that will likely end up desensitizing buyer and non-buyers alike to ingnore the pundits, and just keep watching the inventory, prices, foreclosure rates, and 30-year mortgage rates.
But for things to be as bad as they are, there still seems to be a lot of positve buyer sentiment out there. Just blows me away….
June 15, 2008 at 5:22 PM #222985CAwiremanParticipantHM,
Nice find. Several bottom calls throughout the article. But, some reality mixed in.
Rich’s chart here raised some good points about the up/down bubble symmetry (# 3 and # 5):
If we roughly, (and I me ROUGHLY) look at the preceeding dip in about 1996 and take that to the peak of 2005, we have about 9 years. So, 9 years up to the peak and what,
9 years down to the next trough? So, that would be about 2014.Who knows, maybe things will settle out before that. But, calling the bottom has become a pastime that will likely end up desensitizing buyer and non-buyers alike to ingnore the pundits, and just keep watching the inventory, prices, foreclosure rates, and 30-year mortgage rates.
But for things to be as bad as they are, there still seems to be a lot of positve buyer sentiment out there. Just blows me away….
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