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February 26, 2008 at 10:48 PM in reply to: Are you looking to get in on the ground floor? Think again. #160806February 26, 2008 at 10:48 PM in reply to: Are you looking to get in on the ground floor? Think again. #160825dontfollowtheherdParticipant
4plex,
LOL!
After today’s wonderful news from the Case-Shiller index, oil prices, consumer sentiment etc. etc., I think some might be inclined to try the “swallow it like a sword” technique…
February 26, 2008 at 10:48 PM in reply to: Are you looking to get in on the ground floor? Think again. #160794dontfollowtheherdParticipant4plex,
LOL!
After today’s wonderful news from the Case-Shiller index, oil prices, consumer sentiment etc. etc., I think some might be inclined to try the “swallow it like a sword” technique…
February 26, 2008 at 10:48 PM in reply to: Are you looking to get in on the ground floor? Think again. #160498dontfollowtheherdParticipant4plex,
LOL!
After today’s wonderful news from the Case-Shiller index, oil prices, consumer sentiment etc. etc., I think some might be inclined to try the “swallow it like a sword” technique…
February 26, 2008 at 10:48 PM in reply to: Are you looking to get in on the ground floor? Think again. #160894dontfollowtheherdParticipant4plex,
LOL!
After today’s wonderful news from the Case-Shiller index, oil prices, consumer sentiment etc. etc., I think some might be inclined to try the “swallow it like a sword” technique…
February 26, 2008 at 7:23 AM in reply to: Are you looking to get in on the ground floor? Think again. #160377dontfollowtheherdParticipantkewp,
I think you’re right on as far as this going on for a while. It’s been running in cycles for 100 years or so – as long as the government started keeping records it’s been averaging nine year cycles. Supply and demand along with market psychology play a large part in it. Getting the financing won’t be that easy after the billions lost this time around. Anyone betting on a much shorter time line might want to invest in a pair of these Kevlar babies:
[img_assist|nid=6659|title=Knife Catchers|desc=|link=node|align=left|width=466|height=356]
dfth
February 26, 2008 at 7:23 AM in reply to: Are you looking to get in on the ground floor? Think again. #160061dontfollowtheherdParticipantkewp,
I think you’re right on as far as this going on for a while. It’s been running in cycles for 100 years or so – as long as the government started keeping records it’s been averaging nine year cycles. Supply and demand along with market psychology play a large part in it. Getting the financing won’t be that easy after the billions lost this time around. Anyone betting on a much shorter time line might want to invest in a pair of these Kevlar babies:
[img_assist|nid=6659|title=Knife Catchers|desc=|link=node|align=left|width=466|height=356]
dfth
February 26, 2008 at 7:23 AM in reply to: Are you looking to get in on the ground floor? Think again. #160455dontfollowtheherdParticipantkewp,
I think you’re right on as far as this going on for a while. It’s been running in cycles for 100 years or so – as long as the government started keeping records it’s been averaging nine year cycles. Supply and demand along with market psychology play a large part in it. Getting the financing won’t be that easy after the billions lost this time around. Anyone betting on a much shorter time line might want to invest in a pair of these Kevlar babies:
[img_assist|nid=6659|title=Knife Catchers|desc=|link=node|align=left|width=466|height=356]
dfth
February 26, 2008 at 7:23 AM in reply to: Are you looking to get in on the ground floor? Think again. #160374dontfollowtheherdParticipantkewp,
I think you’re right on as far as this going on for a while. It’s been running in cycles for 100 years or so – as long as the government started keeping records it’s been averaging nine year cycles. Supply and demand along with market psychology play a large part in it. Getting the financing won’t be that easy after the billions lost this time around. Anyone betting on a much shorter time line might want to invest in a pair of these Kevlar babies:
[img_assist|nid=6659|title=Knife Catchers|desc=|link=node|align=left|width=466|height=356]
dfth
February 26, 2008 at 7:23 AM in reply to: Are you looking to get in on the ground floor? Think again. #160358dontfollowtheherdParticipantkewp,
I think you’re right on as far as this going on for a while. It’s been running in cycles for 100 years or so – as long as the government started keeping records it’s been averaging nine year cycles. Supply and demand along with market psychology play a large part in it. Getting the financing won’t be that easy after the billions lost this time around. Anyone betting on a much shorter time line might want to invest in a pair of these Kevlar babies:
[img_assist|nid=6659|title=Knife Catchers|desc=|link=node|align=left|width=466|height=356]
dfth
dontfollowtheherdParticipantBugs,
Bill Gross from Pimco made the comment about 2 years ago I believe that we could be in a Japan-style recession where interest rates went to 0% and housing still fell for years. It was the closest business model to anything we experienced post 9/11. We obviously won’t see zero but we could see 4%. We will eventually get back to 7 or 8 % but I don’t think you’ll see it for 3-4 years minimum. If we see 7-8 % prices would have to be significantly lower than they are right now.
30 Years
Interest rate: 7.500%
Loan amount: $ 500,000.00
Monthly payment:$ 3,496.07 a monthRatchet that up another 1/2 % and its $3,668.82 a month
Add in taxes, HOA, utilities, car payment etc. and it’s a tough nut to crack for the average Joe. I’m sorry but going forward with the outsourcing and downsizing going on we’re not going to be seeing the kind of salaries that can make this mortgage payment. It’s exactly the environment that has been unsustainable today. A $300,000 loan @ 7.5 % is at least at a more manageable $2097.64. That’s where the scales tilt in buy vs. rent favor again. How many houses are there in these ranges and buyers with enough equity to make the deal? Not many. Prices are still 2-3 x higher.
The gov’t is in a squeeze between keeping the dollar low enough to attract foreign money to buy our goods and balance our trade deficit and maintaining attractive enough rates to spur more dollar-denominated investments. We’re on the cusp of a bad recession with inflation everywhere you turn. Banks are taking more writedowns and we haven’t seen the end of it. This could go on for another year or more. The losses won’t be as bad but there will still be a fair amount of red ink flowing.
Citi says UBS may need up to $18 billion in writedowns
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080215/bs_nm/ubs_citigroup_dc_1
With the feds keeping interest rates down banks can get more qualified – and I mean QUALIFIED buyers into homes again. The problem is the ratio of qualified buyers to available properties is probably going to be 1/50 which doesn’t lend itself to brisk business levels. Time will tell.
dontfollowtheherdParticipantBugs,
Bill Gross from Pimco made the comment about 2 years ago I believe that we could be in a Japan-style recession where interest rates went to 0% and housing still fell for years. It was the closest business model to anything we experienced post 9/11. We obviously won’t see zero but we could see 4%. We will eventually get back to 7 or 8 % but I don’t think you’ll see it for 3-4 years minimum. If we see 7-8 % prices would have to be significantly lower than they are right now.
30 Years
Interest rate: 7.500%
Loan amount: $ 500,000.00
Monthly payment:$ 3,496.07 a monthRatchet that up another 1/2 % and its $3,668.82 a month
Add in taxes, HOA, utilities, car payment etc. and it’s a tough nut to crack for the average Joe. I’m sorry but going forward with the outsourcing and downsizing going on we’re not going to be seeing the kind of salaries that can make this mortgage payment. It’s exactly the environment that has been unsustainable today. A $300,000 loan @ 7.5 % is at least at a more manageable $2097.64. That’s where the scales tilt in buy vs. rent favor again. How many houses are there in these ranges and buyers with enough equity to make the deal? Not many. Prices are still 2-3 x higher.
The gov’t is in a squeeze between keeping the dollar low enough to attract foreign money to buy our goods and balance our trade deficit and maintaining attractive enough rates to spur more dollar-denominated investments. We’re on the cusp of a bad recession with inflation everywhere you turn. Banks are taking more writedowns and we haven’t seen the end of it. This could go on for another year or more. The losses won’t be as bad but there will still be a fair amount of red ink flowing.
Citi says UBS may need up to $18 billion in writedowns
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080215/bs_nm/ubs_citigroup_dc_1
With the feds keeping interest rates down banks can get more qualified – and I mean QUALIFIED buyers into homes again. The problem is the ratio of qualified buyers to available properties is probably going to be 1/50 which doesn’t lend itself to brisk business levels. Time will tell.
dontfollowtheherdParticipantBugs,
Bill Gross from Pimco made the comment about 2 years ago I believe that we could be in a Japan-style recession where interest rates went to 0% and housing still fell for years. It was the closest business model to anything we experienced post 9/11. We obviously won’t see zero but we could see 4%. We will eventually get back to 7 or 8 % but I don’t think you’ll see it for 3-4 years minimum. If we see 7-8 % prices would have to be significantly lower than they are right now.
30 Years
Interest rate: 7.500%
Loan amount: $ 500,000.00
Monthly payment:$ 3,496.07 a monthRatchet that up another 1/2 % and its $3,668.82 a month
Add in taxes, HOA, utilities, car payment etc. and it’s a tough nut to crack for the average Joe. I’m sorry but going forward with the outsourcing and downsizing going on we’re not going to be seeing the kind of salaries that can make this mortgage payment. It’s exactly the environment that has been unsustainable today. A $300,000 loan @ 7.5 % is at least at a more manageable $2097.64. That’s where the scales tilt in buy vs. rent favor again. How many houses are there in these ranges and buyers with enough equity to make the deal? Not many. Prices are still 2-3 x higher.
The gov’t is in a squeeze between keeping the dollar low enough to attract foreign money to buy our goods and balance our trade deficit and maintaining attractive enough rates to spur more dollar-denominated investments. We’re on the cusp of a bad recession with inflation everywhere you turn. Banks are taking more writedowns and we haven’t seen the end of it. This could go on for another year or more. The losses won’t be as bad but there will still be a fair amount of red ink flowing.
Citi says UBS may need up to $18 billion in writedowns
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080215/bs_nm/ubs_citigroup_dc_1
With the feds keeping interest rates down banks can get more qualified – and I mean QUALIFIED buyers into homes again. The problem is the ratio of qualified buyers to available properties is probably going to be 1/50 which doesn’t lend itself to brisk business levels. Time will tell.
dontfollowtheherdParticipantBugs,
Bill Gross from Pimco made the comment about 2 years ago I believe that we could be in a Japan-style recession where interest rates went to 0% and housing still fell for years. It was the closest business model to anything we experienced post 9/11. We obviously won’t see zero but we could see 4%. We will eventually get back to 7 or 8 % but I don’t think you’ll see it for 3-4 years minimum. If we see 7-8 % prices would have to be significantly lower than they are right now.
30 Years
Interest rate: 7.500%
Loan amount: $ 500,000.00
Monthly payment:$ 3,496.07 a monthRatchet that up another 1/2 % and its $3,668.82 a month
Add in taxes, HOA, utilities, car payment etc. and it’s a tough nut to crack for the average Joe. I’m sorry but going forward with the outsourcing and downsizing going on we’re not going to be seeing the kind of salaries that can make this mortgage payment. It’s exactly the environment that has been unsustainable today. A $300,000 loan @ 7.5 % is at least at a more manageable $2097.64. That’s where the scales tilt in buy vs. rent favor again. How many houses are there in these ranges and buyers with enough equity to make the deal? Not many. Prices are still 2-3 x higher.
The gov’t is in a squeeze between keeping the dollar low enough to attract foreign money to buy our goods and balance our trade deficit and maintaining attractive enough rates to spur more dollar-denominated investments. We’re on the cusp of a bad recession with inflation everywhere you turn. Banks are taking more writedowns and we haven’t seen the end of it. This could go on for another year or more. The losses won’t be as bad but there will still be a fair amount of red ink flowing.
Citi says UBS may need up to $18 billion in writedowns
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080215/bs_nm/ubs_citigroup_dc_1
With the feds keeping interest rates down banks can get more qualified – and I mean QUALIFIED buyers into homes again. The problem is the ratio of qualified buyers to available properties is probably going to be 1/50 which doesn’t lend itself to brisk business levels. Time will tell.
dontfollowtheherdParticipantBugs,
Bill Gross from Pimco made the comment about 2 years ago I believe that we could be in a Japan-style recession where interest rates went to 0% and housing still fell for years. It was the closest business model to anything we experienced post 9/11. We obviously won’t see zero but we could see 4%. We will eventually get back to 7 or 8 % but I don’t think you’ll see it for 3-4 years minimum. If we see 7-8 % prices would have to be significantly lower than they are right now.
30 Years
Interest rate: 7.500%
Loan amount: $ 500,000.00
Monthly payment:$ 3,496.07 a monthRatchet that up another 1/2 % and its $3,668.82 a month
Add in taxes, HOA, utilities, car payment etc. and it’s a tough nut to crack for the average Joe. I’m sorry but going forward with the outsourcing and downsizing going on we’re not going to be seeing the kind of salaries that can make this mortgage payment. It’s exactly the environment that has been unsustainable today. A $300,000 loan @ 7.5 % is at least at a more manageable $2097.64. That’s where the scales tilt in buy vs. rent favor again. How many houses are there in these ranges and buyers with enough equity to make the deal? Not many. Prices are still 2-3 x higher.
The gov’t is in a squeeze between keeping the dollar low enough to attract foreign money to buy our goods and balance our trade deficit and maintaining attractive enough rates to spur more dollar-denominated investments. We’re on the cusp of a bad recession with inflation everywhere you turn. Banks are taking more writedowns and we haven’t seen the end of it. This could go on for another year or more. The losses won’t be as bad but there will still be a fair amount of red ink flowing.
Citi says UBS may need up to $18 billion in writedowns
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080215/bs_nm/ubs_citigroup_dc_1
With the feds keeping interest rates down banks can get more qualified – and I mean QUALIFIED buyers into homes again. The problem is the ratio of qualified buyers to available properties is probably going to be 1/50 which doesn’t lend itself to brisk business levels. Time will tell.
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