sure people buy a hiouse to live in it, and tax laws benefit homemoaners too boot. but when you hear stories of people with under $1,000 in lifetime savings buying homes, you are seeing the start of trouble.
i'd argue that we have seen massive under-employment and disclocations w/in the labor markets. what does the real agent or mortgage whore do when they cant generate commissions? im seeing 40+ yo bag boys at the grocery store, he is employed, and although and extreme example, he is certainly under-employed. i posted before about the electrical engineer that is bouncing around jobs, and believe me she is brialliant and smoking hot. i went into my buddy's shop & an airline pilot was working for free and a software engineer, tired of getting made redundant, was working as a trainee. if you can hire, you can get good people at relatively cheap wages.
overall, i agree with you on the surface, we have low unemployment and rates that allow most homemoanership. i have noted equity lines near 8% now, where they have been near 6%. CC usage is up again, as the home equity spiggots are closing.
i agree with your insights, but i believe people have been living beyond their means for too long, and the bill is coming due.
wait until the mass psychology is that prices are decreasing, you gonna see a country sitting on their hands. if the chinese come bargain shopping ala japan circa 1989, then we have another leg up before the rug gets pulled. i want to buy a nicer home & a 740 BMW, but i see auctions in teh future, so im waiting.
i'd argue that we have seen massive under-employment and disclocations w/in the labor markets. what does the real agent or mortgage whore do when they cant generate commissions? im seeing 40+ yo bag boys at the grocery store, he is employed, and although and extreme example, he is certainly under-employed. i posted before about the electrical engineer that is bouncing around jobs, and believe me she is brialliant and smoking hot. i went into my buddy's shop & an airline pilot was working for free and a software engineer, tired of getting made redundant, was working as a trainee. if you can hire, you can get good people at relatively cheap wages.
overall, i agree with you on the surface, we have low unemployment and rates that allow most homemoanership. i have noted equity lines near 8% now, where they have been near 6%. CC usage is up again, as the home equity spiggots are closing.
i agree with your insights, but i believe people have been living beyond their means for too long, and the bill is coming due.
wait until the mass psychology is that prices are decreasing, you gonna see a country sitting on their hands. if the chinese come bargain shopping ala japan circa 1989, then we have another leg up before the rug gets pulled. i want to buy a nicer home & a 740 BMW, but i see auctions in teh future, so im waiting.
Quote from SteveD:
I believe if one looks back most real estate problems have been rising interest rates along with rising unemployment.
We have neither at this time.
Some "over heated" markets will see some consolidation, some speculators with lose some money.
But people running down the hall screaming like their hair is on fire are just plain wrong.
The VAST MAJORITY of people buy a house to LIVE IN.
Why you people cannot understand basic economics is beyond my comprehension., LOL
SteveD