I really worry what is in store for the future of America if Ron Paul is not elected President.
Saturday, September 10, 2011
When do you think the housing market will recover?
I posted a Poll in the sidebar.
I had originally predicted back when I started writing this blog in 2007 that the Housing Market would recover in 2012. However, I warned that if the government tried to get involved they would simply make matters worse.
This is exactly what happened with failed policy's like the first time home buyers credit that simply pushed all the demand into a small window and dried up demand for the next year. This also upset people who were not technically first time buyers, but chose to delay a house purchase because the credit was an unfair playing field that they did not have access too and had to compete against.
To make matters worse the government is now talking about selling off foreclosed homes to private investors in bulk, and letting them make a fortune on it. (I will write an article on this later). Once again the government is in the business of picking winners and losers. They need to learn to stay out of the way of the free market, let prices drop, and then let a natural recover occur.
Of course...That would make to much sense.
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Chris
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7:25 PM
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Friday, September 2, 2011
Monday, August 15, 2011
Saturday, April 16, 2011
Arab Spring
There is a lot of unrest and anger in a lot of third world nations right now in the middle east. The problem is that the governments that are being thrown, Egypt for example, were friendly with the United States.
Its laughable to watch the media cover this like it is a great victory for America's war on terror. When in reality most of the rebels are AL-Qaeda extremists. I think time will show that this uprising is a direct result of Americas flawed foreign policy, and the result will not be what the media portrayed it to be. I would not be surprised if the new government of Libya is much worse then Gaddafi himself.
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Chris
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7:40 PM
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Sunday, February 20, 2011
Thursday, November 11, 2010
Shadow Inventory may take Years to Clear
If you thought the U.S. housing market is showing any signs of improvement, a
new report by New York City-based Fitch Ratings puts the damper on that view.
Fitch says seven million homes in the "shadows" will take 40 months to
clear.
The agency defines the shadow supply of properties as loans that
are delinquent, in foreclosure, or real-estate-owned (REO) by the servicer.
Fitch says based on recent liquidation trends, it will take at least 3 ½ years
to clear this existing distressed inventory.
DSNews.com reports that
according to the ratings agency, the number of months between the date of the
borrower's last payment and the date of liquidation has steadily increased over
the past several years, and is now at more than 18 months on average.
Fitch says that is the highest figure on record.Clearly there is a ton of inventory on the market, but even more awaits in the shadows. This blog will continue on untill the housing market returns to normal and my condo is sold. Housing Fear is still alive!
Posted by
Chris
at
5:34 AM
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Wednesday, November 10, 2010
Ben Bernanke’s Worst Nightmare: Chairman Ron Paul
Auditing the Fed is only the beginning, as one might expect from the author of End the Fed. Carney writes that Paul told NetNet, “I will approach that committee like no one has ever approached it because we’re living in times like no one has ever seen.” Among his other objectives: using subcommittee hearings to educate the public about Austrian economists’ view of the business cycle, namely that it is a result of central banks’ shenanigans rather than something inherent in the free market, and auditing the US gold reserves in preparation for monetary reform, either by legalizing competing currencies or by returning to the gold standard (or both). Also on his agenda is scrutiny of the International Monetary Fund and other global financial institutions, probably as part of monetary reform.
For people like me who live and breath this stuff this, I feel like I am on cloud nine. This is going to be the most entertaining, groundbreaking, and possibly game changing next 2 years in American financial history.
An Audit of the Federal Reserve, Return to the Gold Standard. These are things that will return America to the constitution and possibly save this country from bankruptcy.
RON PAUL is a patriot, an American hero, and I cannot wait to watch him make some real waves in Washington.
Posted by
Chris
at
6:34 AM
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Monday, October 18, 2010
Dollar Collapse and Hyperinflation
For those of you who have read this blog from the start, I have been writing about hyperinflation since 2007. I was a strong advocate of buying Gold and those who have followed my advice have made a killing.
If you look at the recent rise in the stock market, huge gold price increase and huge drop in the dollar....You have to wonder if this worst case scenario beginning to occur....A dollar collapse.
America is Greece. The only reason why we are not having the same crisis is because we are the worlds reserve currency and we can simply print more money, and monetize more debt. Greece did not have that luxury.
I actually sold my Gold around July and I am now regretting it seeing what is going on right now. My feelings were that when the conservatives won the mid term elections it would bring about an era of fiscal responsibility and a stabilization of the US Dollar.
The question is...Is it already too late? Have we already spent and taxed so much that our prosperity as a nation is now irreversibly in peril.
What do you think?
Posted by
Chris
at
6:30 AM
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Tuesday, October 5, 2010
MONOPOLY: RECESSION EDITION
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Chris
at
5:38 AM
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Tuesday, September 28, 2010
Housing is Still Flat
Home sales rose over 7% from July's record lows....good news correct?
...NOT REALLY...August is still the second worse month for existing home sales on record.
Even though home sale prices are up...actual home sales are down and there is an 11.6 month supply of inventory.
The interesting question is how much shadow inventory is there on the market. You would assume that there are a bunch of people who have capitulated and are not even listing their house for what they owe on it because they know it won't sell. You would think as price do rise that loads of new inventory will be dumped on the market by people who want to leave the state, or move up in house thus increasing inventory and lowering prices.
We may have reached a bottom....but with all this inventory... we will be bumping along it for a long time.
Posted by
Chris
at
5:43 AM
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Monday, September 20, 2010
Housing Data Not Expected to Sparkle
Posted by
Chris
at
7:13 AM
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Tuesday, August 24, 2010
July Home Sale Numbers Keep Dropping
WASHINGTON (Dow Jones)--Existing home sales plunged to their lowest level in 15 years in July as inventories soared, painting a grim picture for the housing market absent government support in a stubbornly sluggish economy.
Home resales dropped a record 27.2%--nearly twice as much as analysts had expected--to an annual rate of 3.83 million in July, the National Association of Realtors said Tuesday. Meanwhile, inventories rose to 12.5 months from 8.9 months in June, pressuring already depressed home prices. Inventories are at their highest level in more than a decade.
"Historically July is the peak inventory month in any given year," NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun said.
Economists surveyed by Dow Jones Newswires had expected existing home sales to fall by 14.3% to an annual rate of 4.6 million.
Tuesday's data drove the Dow Jones Industrial Average down more than 100 points and pulled down yields on 10-year Treasury notes.
"The report shows the housing industry has hit more turbulence, is not leveling off and is worried about a nosedive," said Mitchell Hochberg, a principal at Madden Real Estate Ventures in New York. "Unemployment, foreclosures and shadow inventory are keeping consumers on the sidelines waiting for prices to drop further."
The realtors revised their existing home sales figures for June downward, saying existing home sales dropped to a 5.26 million annual rate instead of the initially estimated 5.37 million annual rate.
"The question is whether this pause is a temporary pause," Yun said. The National Association of Realtors is expecting sales to remain soft for much of the rest of the year.
The steep decline in sales in July reflects both a souring in the U.S. economic recovery and the expiration of a government tax credit program that has been supporting the housing market for more than a year.
The tax credits offered certain buyers up to $8,000 to sign a contract by April 30. Deals originally needed to close by June 30, but lawmakers pushed that deadline to Sept. 30.
Still, the tax credit's expiration drove pending home sales down 30% in May and caused a double-digit dive in mortgage application volumes even as interest rates hovered near their lowest levels in generations. July's existing home sales data reflects the May plunge in pending sales, which typically become existing sales within a couple of months.
Mortgage rates remain low, but lingering troubles in the labor market continue to restrain the nation's housing recovery. That trend likely will continue for some time.
The Federal Reserve, in its latest forecast, scaled back its growth projections, saying it expects the soft job market to continue to hold back economic progress.
In July, existing home sales dropped 29.5% in the Northeast, 22.6% in the South, 25% in the West and 35% in the Midwest.
On a year-over-year basis, July existing home sales were down 25.5% from an annual rate of 5.14 million in July 2009.
A growing number of the existing homes sold across the U.S. in July were distressed properties.
Median home prices in July rose 0.7% to $182,600.
The last sentance is what I want to focus on...In Michigan, Realtors are trying to claim that the housing market has bottomed. They say that home prices are rising since 2009 even though sales are way down. Realtors are trying to flaunt the price increase as a good sign of housing recovery while ignoring the fact sales are way down.
All this proves to me is that people are overpricing their houses. Banks are listing foreclosures as too pricey. The price has risen but not many people are biting because they know it is not a good deal in this economy.
Drop the price and sales will rise again. Thats the bottom line.
Posted by
Chris
at
10:16 AM
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Housing Fear Quote of the day
“There is no iron law that real estate must appreciate,” said Stan Humphries, chief economist for the real estate site Zillow. “All those theories advanced during the boom about why housing is special — that more people are choosing to spend more on housing, that more people are moving to the coasts, that we were running out of usable land — didn’t hold up.”
Instead, Mr. Humphries and other economists say, housing values will only keep up with inflation. A home will return the money an owner puts in each month, but will not multiply the investment.
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Chris
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4:32 AM
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Friday, August 20, 2010
Wednesday, August 18, 2010
FANNIE AND FREDDIE ARE KAPUT!
News Flash: Fannie, Freddie Kaput
By Lauren Tara LaCapra (THE STREET)
WASHINGTON (TheStreet) - For the first time in almost two years, some actual news came out of Washington about Fannie Mae (FNMA.OB) and Freddie Mac (FMCC.OB).
The Treasury Department held a press-and-policy-maker event on Tuesday to start the discussion about housing-finance system reform. High-profile experts representing the government, borrowers and various parts of the industry were featured speakers in panel discussions.
The crib notes are thus: The Fannie-Freddie model of housing-finance is kaput; the new system will almost certainly include (explicit) guarantees on certain types of residential mortgage-backed securities to help middle-class borrowers; and low-income borrowers will be incentivized to rent until they can afford to buy.
Wow.
These are the kinds of things that have been vaguely suggested by the power set in Washington and the bankers on Wall Street for the past couple years of uncertainty. But now they've nearly been said explicitly, and with the molasses-like speed of Capitol Hill progress, that's saying a lot.
"This is a test for Washington," said Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, after his keynote speech. "The stakes are high."
Most of the official news on policy came from reading between the lines of Geithner's speech. The Treasury Secretary indicated that Fannie and Freddie will die -- albeit with an "elegant funeral" -- and their legacy portfolios will be wound down. While he didn't outline any explicit policy objectives, he said "I believe there is a strong case to be made for a carefully designed guarantee."
With widespread industry support for such a move, it's nearly certain that Fannie and Freddie will be replaced by a system that's similar but with important distinctions: No "hybrid" structure where shareholder gains are subsidized by taxpayer support; an explicit guarantee on debt, rather than an assumed one; pricing on guarantees that's more favorable to taxpayers; and capital requirements that give private players a chance to compete in the mortgage-buying space.
Beyond that, in group sessions after the main panel discussion, conversation was dominated by the various interests who have a stake in housing reform.
Representatives from Bank of America (BAC), Wells Fargo (WFC), JPMorgan Chase (JPM), PNC (PNC), Citigroup (C), U.S. Bancorp (USB), Morgan Stanley (MS), Blackrock (BLK), State Street (STT) and a variety of other firms were there to offer the "industry"'s side of the story. Then there were the buyers of mortgage bonds outside the banking industry, like Bill Gross, chief investment officer of Allianz's (AZ) PIMCO, who manages its most prominent bond fund; and Bill Irving, who manages a big fixed-income fund for Fidelity. The Chamber of Commerce was there to represent the non-bank industry side, which will see economic effects of major housing-industry changes as well....
What do you think? Will average Americans still be able to get good mortgage rates after this goes though? will they even be approved at all? Pretty big news.
Posted by
Chris
at
9:42 AM
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Sunday, July 11, 2010
Mortgage Rates at 50 Year Lows and Houses Still are not Selling.
As I wrote last year, the first time home buyer tax credit would simply force all the demand to occur during the tax credit period leaving a dead zone in its aftermath and I have once again been proven correct.
The thing that most troubles me is that normally, low interest rates tend to cause a house purchase boom as we saw back in 2001-2004. Of course this is the worse time to buy a house because house prices will rise sharply as financining, affordability and demand increase due to lower monthly payments.
When interest rates rise, most people avoid buying houses because affordability decreases due to a higher interest rate and higher monthly interest payment. It simply cost more money in financing to buy the same home. This normally causes house prices to drop so that affordability remains the same for buyers.
experts say, even though this is contrary to what most people do, to buy a house when interest rates are high and house prices are low. because you can refinance the house at a lower rate down the road while enjoying your lower principal payment.
They say to not buy in a low interest, high home price enviroment (circa 2005) because that is simply a bad financial choice even though that is when the house boom mania and quickly rising house prices entices everyone to get in on the action.
Now we have a situation with low interest rates, low house prices. Perfect time to buy?...........Right?......right?
What happens when interest rates start rising?
historically this would mean house prices have to drop even further in order for affordability to stay constant.
Ex. A $100,000 mortgage at 4.5% cost you $507 dollars a month. If interest rates rise to 6.5% the same $100,000 mortgage costs you $632 a month.
If someone can only afford a 507 a month payment then the house price must drop to $80,000 for affordability to remain the same.
The question is....is now the best time to buy houses due to low interest rates and house prices....OR....is it the worse time to buy because an inevitable rise in interest rates will cause house prices to drop even further.
I really don't know.
Posted by
Chris
at
8:06 AM
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