ZeroHedge is picturing gloom and doom scenarios all the time. I was their fan at the beginning but later on, I realized, no matter what the economic climate is, no matter what is happening in the macro scene, they are perpetuating the same thing over and over again. That's why my respect for their analyses felt dramatically last few years, but I still use them as a source of some news, especially the bearish side news, but nothing more.
My belief is that as Ray Dalio says every credit cycle has periods of expansion and contractions and there are multiple short and longterm cycles over each other. We had a prolonged period of low-interest rates globally which propelled the housing prices everywhere on Earth, with few exceptions of course. Now we may be close to the top of the current debt cycle, we are in for the last 10 years, and inevitably we can face some kind of price suppression, but will this happen today or in two years very hard to predict. Also, my other concern is for how long rates can sustain rising? I am pretty sure we will see again easing in a year or two and this will lead to beautiful deleveraging, where nobody will feel it on the surface. That's why maybe I am 60% in favor of the later scenario where we won't see any major corrections in the prices, but stagnation in the market for sure.