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peterb
ParticipantAPMEX has beed reliable. The premiums are annoying, though.
peterb
ParticipantAPMEX has beed reliable. The premiums are annoying, though.
peterb
ParticipantAPMEX has beed reliable. The premiums are annoying, though.
peterb
ParticipantYou may want to wait until it starts to trend up. Or bottom? The latest demand numbers for crude and gas were pretty low. Worth a listen.
http://www.howestreet.com/audiovideo/index.php?pl=/goldradio/index.php/mediaplayer/1057
peterb
ParticipantYou may want to wait until it starts to trend up. Or bottom? The latest demand numbers for crude and gas were pretty low. Worth a listen.
http://www.howestreet.com/audiovideo/index.php?pl=/goldradio/index.php/mediaplayer/1057
peterb
ParticipantYou may want to wait until it starts to trend up. Or bottom? The latest demand numbers for crude and gas were pretty low. Worth a listen.
http://www.howestreet.com/audiovideo/index.php?pl=/goldradio/index.php/mediaplayer/1057
peterb
ParticipantYou may want to wait until it starts to trend up. Or bottom? The latest demand numbers for crude and gas were pretty low. Worth a listen.
http://www.howestreet.com/audiovideo/index.php?pl=/goldradio/index.php/mediaplayer/1057
peterb
ParticipantYou may want to wait until it starts to trend up. Or bottom? The latest demand numbers for crude and gas were pretty low. Worth a listen.
http://www.howestreet.com/audiovideo/index.php?pl=/goldradio/index.php/mediaplayer/1057
December 18, 2008 at 10:34 AM in reply to: Fed empties the Armory, expends all ammo, housing has bottomed. SD RE will cost more in August of 09 than it does now. #317413peterb
ParticipantThere’s a little thing called “unemployment” that may foil your prediction of rising house prices. Rates come down in a crash, but the historical evidence shows that there’s not a strong correlation to rising prices just because the rates are low.
The charts indicate that rising employment is the clearest and strongest single indicator of home prices rising, not the cost of money. When low rates are combined with rising employment, then you’ve got the strongest possibility for rising home prices.The late 1980’s had very high interest rates and prices rose, but there was employment growth. Rates bottomed in 1993, but home prices did not rise until employment started to rise in 1995.
December 18, 2008 at 10:34 AM in reply to: Fed empties the Armory, expends all ammo, housing has bottomed. SD RE will cost more in August of 09 than it does now. #317766peterb
ParticipantThere’s a little thing called “unemployment” that may foil your prediction of rising house prices. Rates come down in a crash, but the historical evidence shows that there’s not a strong correlation to rising prices just because the rates are low.
The charts indicate that rising employment is the clearest and strongest single indicator of home prices rising, not the cost of money. When low rates are combined with rising employment, then you’ve got the strongest possibility for rising home prices.The late 1980’s had very high interest rates and prices rose, but there was employment growth. Rates bottomed in 1993, but home prices did not rise until employment started to rise in 1995.
December 18, 2008 at 10:34 AM in reply to: Fed empties the Armory, expends all ammo, housing has bottomed. SD RE will cost more in August of 09 than it does now. #317808peterb
ParticipantThere’s a little thing called “unemployment” that may foil your prediction of rising house prices. Rates come down in a crash, but the historical evidence shows that there’s not a strong correlation to rising prices just because the rates are low.
The charts indicate that rising employment is the clearest and strongest single indicator of home prices rising, not the cost of money. When low rates are combined with rising employment, then you’ve got the strongest possibility for rising home prices.The late 1980’s had very high interest rates and prices rose, but there was employment growth. Rates bottomed in 1993, but home prices did not rise until employment started to rise in 1995.
December 18, 2008 at 10:34 AM in reply to: Fed empties the Armory, expends all ammo, housing has bottomed. SD RE will cost more in August of 09 than it does now. #317829peterb
ParticipantThere’s a little thing called “unemployment” that may foil your prediction of rising house prices. Rates come down in a crash, but the historical evidence shows that there’s not a strong correlation to rising prices just because the rates are low.
The charts indicate that rising employment is the clearest and strongest single indicator of home prices rising, not the cost of money. When low rates are combined with rising employment, then you’ve got the strongest possibility for rising home prices.The late 1980’s had very high interest rates and prices rose, but there was employment growth. Rates bottomed in 1993, but home prices did not rise until employment started to rise in 1995.
December 18, 2008 at 10:34 AM in reply to: Fed empties the Armory, expends all ammo, housing has bottomed. SD RE will cost more in August of 09 than it does now. #317905peterb
ParticipantThere’s a little thing called “unemployment” that may foil your prediction of rising house prices. Rates come down in a crash, but the historical evidence shows that there’s not a strong correlation to rising prices just because the rates are low.
The charts indicate that rising employment is the clearest and strongest single indicator of home prices rising, not the cost of money. When low rates are combined with rising employment, then you’ve got the strongest possibility for rising home prices.The late 1980’s had very high interest rates and prices rose, but there was employment growth. Rates bottomed in 1993, but home prices did not rise until employment started to rise in 1995.
December 17, 2008 at 5:47 PM in reply to: Fed empties the Armory, expends all ammo, housing has bottomed. SD RE will cost more in August of 09 than it does now. #317181peterb
ParticipantLevel 3 assets. Tell me what you see? There’s a huge lack of transparency. Not splitting hairs at all. When was the last time someone hid good news? If regulations were actually being enforced, we’d have bank failures that would stop the clocks.
This is major panic mode for the TPTB. They’re not shooting for recovery, they’re trying to set-up an environment to avoid collapse. Big difference. We are seeing things that have not happened since the 1930’s and everyone keeps making excuses for it, like it’s no big deal. US society is far less self-sufficient than it was back in those days. Obama better get crackin with those shovel jobs!!
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