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#1
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John S. wrote:
Dick Chisel wrote: mike maghakian wrote: over the last few years I have been saying how stupid people have been for paying crazy prices for homes. I said they would be sorry in the end and it is starting to happen: this is from an MSN article on home sales: I recently sold a house in Rochester Hills," Waquad says. "It was purchased a year ago by the seller for $615,000 -- a newer house. He changed all the appliances, the carpets and painted. He never lived in it. He must have spent at least $20,000 to $30,000 fixing it. We got it for a buyer for $440,000." the point is that there are consequences to being a stupid buyer. I am just trying to get people to think before they throw away money. dxAce wrote: All well and good, but it is THEIR money. Not MY money, not YOUR money, but THEIR money. All well and good, but paying insane prices for real estate is a "bubble" and when the bubble bursts (as they all do), the -ENTIRE- country gets hurt. How do you figure the entire country will get hurt by real estate prices slowing down. First, I sincerely hope it just "slows down", not collapses. Next, it's intuitively obvious and I shouldn't have to explain to you why a bust is a bad thing for the economy...but on a very simplistic basis, try this on for size: People buy a large house, too big for their needs (stupidity, greed or both), the bottom falls out of the real estate market, the bank repossesses, the stupid/greedy original buyers now homeless, have to go on welfare, thus driving up taxes for the rest of us. Just one of hundreds or thousands of possible scenarios why a bubble bursting is bad for the country in general. Another fairly obvious scenario is that there will be a -lot- of repossessed houses on the market, causing the real estate market to stagnate, with related ripple effects (and yes, a -few- will profit from the misfortune and/or stupidity of others). Unfortunately though, the major portion of the people in this country are in debt up to their eyeballs, have a zero % or negative rate of savings and a major bubble going bust could push everything over the edge. The only crowd to get burned in this speculative madness will be those who got in late. Sorry, Jack--I don't buy that. Very naive of you. That's like saying a Ponzi (pyramid) scheme is good for the early but bad for the latecomers. I believe the Ponzi scam/scheme is ultimately going to be bad for -everybody-, all the time, every time, early or late. Those who tired of reading stories about double digit price increases in real estate and jumped in. Unfortunately those junior speculators may get their hands burned if they are over extended and have to sell. And some of the lenders who financed such buying excess may have to pop the property and be burned on the sale. Most of us who sat on the sidelines won't be hurt. True, but still very short-sighted of you; see above. Also true that "most of you" who are savers won't be hurt. Unfortunately, the "most of you" that are savers with minimal or no debt are a very, very small minority. Again, a large portion of this country is in debt up to their eyeballs and beyond. And some of us who are interested in buying may find some real opportnities. Absolutely true. If you get the chance please look up a book written in 1848 by Charles MacKay. It's been reprinted and quoted numerous times. "Memoirs of Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds" details the many speculative manias that occured over the centuries prior to 1848 including the well known dutch tulip craze. Forgive me if I don't look it up but I have read in other places of the Tulip craze, the "South Seas" bubble, etc. The tendency of the people to follow the crowd continues to this day. Must be why, even today, they are known as "sheeple". ..even maroons in Holland Michigan. How about the oranges, blues, greens, violets, purples, browns, greys, pinks, reds. (Hint...use the dictionary). Hint... please try not to be so cryptic. "Maroon" was a word play on "moron", not talking about the tulips in Holland nor referring to the "Tulip craze". (Or doesn't your feeble brain remember how bad the -country- got hurt when the "dot com" bubble went bust????) Well, tell us exactly how badly the entire country got hurt by the dot com speculative mania. Please be precise. Please do your own research. It has been well written up in ALL the media. BY DEFINITION, when a bubble bursts, it is bad for the economy and therefore bad for a large portion of the populace, especially a populace like ours that is so very deeply in debt. The real issue here is why you think a bubble bursting wouldn't hurt the country. |
#2
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![]() Dick Chisel wrote: John S. wrote: Dick Chisel wrote: mike maghakian wrote: over the last few years I have been saying how stupid people have been for paying crazy prices for homes. I said they would be sorry in the end and it is starting to happen: this is from an MSN article on home sales: I recently sold a house in Rochester Hills," Waquad says. "It was purchased a year ago by the seller for $615,000 -- a newer house. He changed all the appliances, the carpets and painted. He never lived in it. He must have spent at least $20,000 to $30,000 fixing it. We got it for a buyer for $440,000." the point is that there are consequences to being a stupid buyer. I am just trying to get people to think before they throw away money. dxAce wrote: All well and good, but it is THEIR money. Not MY money, not YOUR money, but THEIR money. All well and good, but paying insane prices for real estate is a "bubble" and when the bubble bursts (as they all do), the -ENTIRE- country gets hurt. How do you figure the entire country will get hurt by real estate prices slowing down. First, I sincerely hope it just "slows down", not collapses. What exactly is a collapse. Next, it's intuitively obvious and I shouldn't have to explain to you why a bust is a bad thing for the economy...but on a very simplistic basis, try this on for size: People buy a large house, too big for their needs (stupidity, greed or both), the bottom falls out of the real estate market, the bank repossesses, the stupid/greedy original buyers now homeless, have to go on welfare, thus driving up taxes for the rest of us. Just one of hundreds or thousands of possible scenarios why a bubble bursting is bad for the country in general. You have avoided telling us exactly how the "entire country" (your words) will be hurt by a slowdown or even downturn in real estate prices. Please tell us precisely how the entire country will be hurt. Remember entire country means just that...each and every person, business and governmental unit. Another fairly obvious scenario is that there will be a -lot- of repossessed houses on the market, causing the real estate market to stagnate, with related ripple effects (and yes, a -few- will profit from the misfortune and/or stupidity of others). To the extent that those who bought with the intent of flippping, yes there will be some losses taken by purchasers as well as lenders who have to pop the house. But even if I bought the house 6 months before the downturn if my intent is to use it as a home then I suffer no loss and the lender gets his money every month. Many more of the purchases are for occupancy, not flipping. Unfortunately though, the major portion of the people in this country are in debt up to their eyeballs, have a zero % or negative rate of savings and a major bubble going bust could push everything over the edge. What is your source for this information. I've been in banking for the past 30 years and cannot find a citation that says "a major portion" presumably at least 50% of homwowners have those kinds of financial problems. Please give us a specific citation. The only crowd to get burned in this speculative madness will be those who got in late. Sorry, Jack--I don't buy that. Very naive of you. That's like saying a Ponzi (pyramid) scheme is good for the early but bad for the latecomers. I believe the Ponzi scam/scheme is ultimately going to be bad for -everybody-, all the time, every time, early or late. You need to look up the definitions of ponzi scheme, pyramids, etc before throwing them around. You look like a fool by using them inappropriately here. But to follow up on your statement, how does the homeowner who purchased early in this housing cycle get burned. All he has to do is do as others have - continue to use the house as a home and make the payments. Those who tired of reading stories about double digit price increases in real estate and jumped in. Unfortunately those junior speculators may get their hands burned if they are over extended and have to sell. And some of the lenders who financed such buying excess may have to pop the property and be burned on the sale. Most of us who sat on the sidelines won't be hurt. True, but still very short-sighted of you; see above. Also true that "most of you" who are savers won't be hurt. Unfortunately, the "most of you" that are savers with minimal or no debt are a very, very small minority. Again, a large portion of this country is in debt up to their eyeballs and beyond. Again, where is your citation that a large proportion, presumably a number well above 50% of the residents of this country are in debt to unmannageable proportions. Please provide a specific citation. I'm interested because I've been in banking for over 30 years. And some of us who are interested in buying may find some real opportnities. Absolutely true. If you get the chance please look up a book written in 1848 by Charles MacKay. It's been reprinted and quoted numerous times. "Memoirs of Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds" details the many speculative manias that occured over the centuries prior to 1848 including the well known dutch tulip craze. Forgive me if I don't look it up but I have read in other places of the Tulip craze, the "South Seas" bubble, etc. You are missing the point - speculative manias have happened and will continue to happen. They happened with real estate over and over and over. Go back 30 years to the crunch in the 1970's, move forward to the 1980's, etc. None of those speculative runups are new and in each and every instance the most of the country survived just fine. It is instructive in MacKay's book that in each and every of the speculative manias documented over the centuries those who were greedy late in the cycle usually got burned the worst. As it will happen with this real estate cycle. The tendency of the people to follow the crowd continues to this day. Must be why, even today, they are known as "sheeple". ..even maroons in Holland Michigan. How about the oranges, blues, greens, violets, purples, browns, greys, pinks, reds. (Hint...use the dictionary). Hint... please try not to be so cryptic. "Maroon" was a word play on "moron", not talking about the tulips in Holland nor referring to the "Tulip craze". Nothing cryptic about your apparent misunderstanding of how maroon and moron differ. (Or doesn't your feeble brain remember how bad the -country- got hurt when the "dot com" bubble went bust????) Well, tell us exactly how badly the entire country got hurt by the dot com speculative mania. Please be precise. Please do your own research. It has been well written up in ALL the media. I lived first hand through the dot com experience. Both in banking and as participant in the dot com business. Please provide a specific citation that shows the "entire country" and not just a small portion of it was hurt by the dot com bubble bursting. You appear to be good a creating sensational statements, but back away quickly when asked to provide any substantiation for them. WHERE did you get this nonsense. BY DEFINITION, when a bubble bursts, it is bad for the economy and therefore bad for a large portion of the populace, especially a populace like ours that is so very deeply in debt. The real issue here is why you think a bubble bursting wouldn't hurt the country. |
#3
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If you do buy gold! be sure people dont find out about it.
cuhulin |
#4
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John S. wrote:
First, I sincerely hope it just "slows down", not collapses. What exactly is a collapse. If you claim to have "been in banking for 30 years" and have to ask what a collapse is, you've not been doing your homework or reading your history and should perhaps consider a different occupation. You have avoided telling us exactly how the "entire country" (your words) will be hurt by a slowdown or even downturn in real estate prices. Please tell us precisely how the entire country will be hurt. Remember entire country means just that...each and every person, business and governmental unit. There were two reasons I used the phrase "entire country". The first is that it is just a figure of speech; don't try and read too much into it. The other reason is -context-. This was originally written to answer a previous responder that said the only people affected were -just- the sellers, a premise I disagreed with. Please don't be so foolish or naive as to think that my figure of speech -literally- meant every man, woman and child in the country. Furthermore, I fully realize that even during the Great Depression of the 1930s, as horrible as it was, there were people who weren't hurt and even those who profited. Yet, this didn't mean the Depression was a good thing for the country. Petty nit picking on your part notwithstanding, I fully believe that the collapse of any bubble, housing or otherwise, affects more of society than just the seller and that, generally speaking, is detrimental to the nation's economic well being. The only crowd to get burned in this speculative madness will be those who got in late. Sorry, Jack--I don't buy that. Very naive of you. That's like saying a Ponzi (pyramid) scheme is good for the early but bad for the latecomers. I believe the Ponzi scam/scheme is ultimately going to be bad for -everybody-, all the time, every time, early or late. You need to look up the definitions of ponzi scheme, pyramids, etc before throwing them around. You look like a fool by using them inappropriately here. I know the definition of a Ponzi scheme. YOU look the fool by missing the analogy here--early vs. late profiting, NOT to imply that the housing bubble is a Ponzi scheme. But to follow up on your statement, how does the homeowner who purchased early in this housing cycle get burned. All he has to do is do as others have - continue to use the house as a home and make the payments. Yeah, right. In some instances, I am sure this will happen---BUT, how long is the happy homeowner going to keep making payments on his $400,000 house that is now worth $300,000? It's just like being "upside down" with your car payments...you owe more than the car is worth. Pardon me for not responding to the rest of your nit-picking, but it comes down to this irreducible minimum: I believe that the the housing bubble going bust is bad for the economic well being of this country; you, apparently, believe otherwise. We are each entitled to our opinions. No sense going any further. |
#5
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![]() Rather than using attention getting statements that place results at the extreme why not take the time to tell us what you really think. Yes, if the country isn't really going to collapse then what will the problems be and what impact will they have. Yes, tell us what you think will really happen rather than using using unsupportably wild statements that project a collapse. |
#6
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www.devilfinder.com U.S.federal government and new world order
Another devilfinder.com srarch, RSF article about yahoo Be sure to read what it says about yahoo and google and msn. And bush is not the real prez (he is the so-called ''prez'' in name only) of U.S.A. SHOTGUN cheney is. cuhulin |
#7
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Dick Chisel wrote that the housing bubble going bust would hurt the
whole economy. dxAce then wrote: All well and good, but it is THEIR money. Not MY money, not YOUR money, but THEIR money. [implying that the -only- one to be hurt would be the home seller] John S. wrote: Yes, if the country isn't really going to collapse then what will the problems be and what impact will they have. Well, just for a start, here are two answers to your question of "what will the problems be"... On September 1, 2006, the Wall Street Journal wrote: (Page A1, column 2) "But retailers reported mixed sales for August, stoking concern that a -slow housing market- may damp the fall and holiday shopping seasons". and (Page C1, column 5 headline) "Housing Chill Begins to Pinch Nation's Banks" Let's see now...the housing bubble is causing the WSJ to express concern, the retailers are worried and the banking industry is beginning to get pinched. Maybe it's time for you guys to drop them a note saying not to worry... As John S. has been in the banking industry for 30 years, I will let him figure out "what impact it will have". |
#8
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There is a building boom in the greater metro Jackson,Mississippi
area.They are even fixing up that old vancant since the 1960's old 14 story crappy King Edward hotel in down town Jackson on Capitol Street. cuhulin |
#9
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In article ,
Dick Chisel wrote: Dick Chisel wrote that the housing bubble going bust would hurt the whole economy. Snip Congratulations on being the first financial subject Troll in the news group. Plonk -- Telamon Ventura, California |
#10
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You need to go back and read (possibly for the first time) the history
of retailing and real estate for the past 40 years. You will find upturns and wownturns. But none of them resulted in the all out bust that you indicated would happen. You have the unfortunate habit of writing in sensationalistic extremes...black and white, bust and boom, etc.. The economic reality is that most activity is much milder than that. Even the so-called dot-com bubble really did little more than wipe out a lot of overvalued options and stocks with no underlying fundamental value and force a lot of dot commers into realistic sources of employment. Think of businesses with no plan and no source of income other than venture capital funding like FooFoo.com and you will see the reality of what happened in the dot com bubble.. Dick Chisel wrote: Dick Chisel wrote that the housing bubble going bust would hurt the whole economy. dxAce then wrote: All well and good, but it is THEIR money. Not MY money, not YOUR money, but THEIR money. [implying that the -only- one to be hurt would be the home seller] John S. wrote: Yes, if the country isn't really going to collapse then what will the problems be and what impact will they have. Well, just for a start, here are two answers to your question of "what will the problems be"... On September 1, 2006, the Wall Street Journal wrote: (Page A1, column 2) "But retailers reported mixed sales for August, stoking concern that a -slow housing market- may damp the fall and holiday shopping seasons". and (Page C1, column 5 headline) "Housing Chill Begins to Pinch Nation's Banks" Let's see now...the housing bubble is causing the WSJ to express concern, the retailers are worried and the banking industry is beginning to get pinched. Maybe it's time for you guys to drop them a note saying not to worry... As John S. has been in the banking industry for 30 years, I will let him figure out "what impact it will have". |
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