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sdduuuude
ParticipantRead somewhere that Japan entered their period of deflation with net savings. We enter ours in debt.
sdduuuude
ParticipantRead somewhere that Japan entered their period of deflation with net savings. We enter ours in debt.
sdduuuude
ParticipantRead somewhere that Japan entered their period of deflation with net savings. We enter ours in debt.
sdduuuude
Participant[quote=kewp]Then, the actual Tsunami hits (inflation) as people are standing there on what used to be dry ground.
I’ve heard this analogy a couple times and I’m not sure what mechanism could cause an ‘Inflation Tsunami’.[/quote]
I suspect it would be an overreaction of pumping money into the system. By the time they stop pumping money, the pendulum is swinging the other way.
sdduuuude
Participant[quote=kewp]Then, the actual Tsunami hits (inflation) as people are standing there on what used to be dry ground.
I’ve heard this analogy a couple times and I’m not sure what mechanism could cause an ‘Inflation Tsunami’.[/quote]
I suspect it would be an overreaction of pumping money into the system. By the time they stop pumping money, the pendulum is swinging the other way.
sdduuuude
Participant[quote=kewp]Then, the actual Tsunami hits (inflation) as people are standing there on what used to be dry ground.
I’ve heard this analogy a couple times and I’m not sure what mechanism could cause an ‘Inflation Tsunami’.[/quote]
I suspect it would be an overreaction of pumping money into the system. By the time they stop pumping money, the pendulum is swinging the other way.
sdduuuude
Participant[quote=kewp]Then, the actual Tsunami hits (inflation) as people are standing there on what used to be dry ground.
I’ve heard this analogy a couple times and I’m not sure what mechanism could cause an ‘Inflation Tsunami’.[/quote]
I suspect it would be an overreaction of pumping money into the system. By the time they stop pumping money, the pendulum is swinging the other way.
sdduuuude
Participant[quote=kewp]Then, the actual Tsunami hits (inflation) as people are standing there on what used to be dry ground.
I’ve heard this analogy a couple times and I’m not sure what mechanism could cause an ‘Inflation Tsunami’.[/quote]
I suspect it would be an overreaction of pumping money into the system. By the time they stop pumping money, the pendulum is swinging the other way.
sdduuuude
ParticipantI just hope I’m enjoying the show from a desk instead of a couch.
sdduuuude
ParticipantI just hope I’m enjoying the show from a desk instead of a couch.
sdduuuude
ParticipantI just hope I’m enjoying the show from a desk instead of a couch.
sdduuuude
ParticipantI just hope I’m enjoying the show from a desk instead of a couch.
sdduuuude
ParticipantI just hope I’m enjoying the show from a desk instead of a couch.
sdduuuude
ParticipantFrom what I have seen, this is driven by sales in the lower end where foreclosures abound and prices are way down.
I think this is really bad news for the higher end. If there is so much price disparity to cause a large sales surge at the low end, it will have the long-term effect of sucking buyers away from the nicer areas and eventually depressing prices. This has been a long time coming and I think this big jump in sales at the low end may signal it is finally happening.
That is, the pain train is heading “uptown” very soon. This, combined with the October credit crash, means we are a mere month or two away from the first set of “holy shit” data that will flow until Spring.
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