This is what I was saying a year ago. Around me, in rural country, housing prices have skyrocketed from people moving out of cities and buying too high. So many sellers have been their prices exorbitantly high to try to catch someone moving from the cities. That made everyone else who lives here longterm unable to afford to buy, so if they are tied to the location and need to move or their kids move they are renting instead. With interest rates rising though, the prices will have to drop some, at least locally.To whom this may concern,
Let's fucking go, norwegian cruise line up 7% yesterday, 4% today and another 2% after hours. Bag held this during thier stock dilution. Finally positive.
This is what I was saying a year ago. Around me, in rural country, housing prices have skyrocketed from people moving out of cities and buying too high. So many sellers have been their prices exorbitantly high to try to catch someone moving from the cities. That made everyone else who lives here longterm unable to afford to buy, so if they are tied to the location and need to move or their kids move they are renting instead. With interest rates rising though, the prices will have to drop some, at least locally.
Goodness....
House prices are crazy all around me. I bought 3.5 years ago here and everything is up 25-30% from then suddenly.
Awesome. Best way to make money is real estate. Unless someone lives in a shitty town where people are leaving and the city doesn't want to put money to cleaning up the streets (derelict homes), home prices go up in time. And if you get lucky, your market shooting up.House prices are crazy all around me. I bought 3.5 years ago here and everything is up 25-30% from then suddenly.
Small Ontario towns jumped like crazy. People want out of the city due to covid, no more condos and flex work arrangements.This is what I was saying a year ago. Around me, in rural country, housing prices have skyrocketed from people moving out of cities and buying too high. So many sellers have been their prices exorbitantly high to try to catch someone moving from the cities. That made everyone else who lives here longterm unable to afford to buy, so if they are tied to the location and need to move or their kids move they are renting instead. With interest rates rising though, the prices will have to drop some, at least locally.
No worries. Toronto and area has got to be outlier for pricing stupidity in North America, but it's been like this for probably 10 years. There was a lull from 2017-2020 due to extra tests and covid, but prices still held fine. Starting late last year, it's back.Really interesting read StreetsofBeige . I enjoyed that. Thanks for the info
No worries. Toronto and area has got to be outlier for pricing stupidity in North America, but it's been like this for probably 10 years. There was a lull from 2017-2020 due to extra tests and covid, but prices still held fine. Starting late last year, it's back.
There's too much demand for places (esp detached homes). And the low mortgage rates seem to trump any slow down policies they add.
And the work from home flexibility is real for propping up home prices an hour away. I know two people who bought a place last year due to covid and work telling workers there is WFH flex plans, so they are approved to come in only when needed. It's all planned out. At worst, the worker comes in once in a while for important stuff with a super long commute, but who cares if that barely happens.
They sold their places and bought a new place literally twice as big for the same price at probably triple the commute time if done. So not a money banking situation, but for them more of a pure house size upgrade.
As Toronto has been condomania for probably 15-20 years, it's got to a point the builder puts policies in that someone can only buy a single unit (or some limit). If they don't foreign investors swoop in and buy up entire floors!Plenty of pricing stupidity in the US as well. DC is a complete shit show and has been for a while now. Private and foreign investors coming in and scooping up homes in droves with all cash offers. Then renting them out at exorbitant prices. Suburbs just outside of Manhattan are starting to see that as well. My folks live in Westchester and they've gotten multiple all cash offers for their home, even though their house is not on the market nor are they planning to move.
I'm big in dividends. HUGEGoing to start adding value and more dividend exposure today.
Also buying some SOS because why the fuck not. The markets crazy so I'm just putting in what I'll allow to go to zero and see what happens.
Holy shit. I didn't follow Viacom and just read about why it crashed from $100 to $40s in 2 weeks. Wow.Weird I did a $43.61 limit order for viac and it got executed after hours but the ticket never went below $43.64
It was an after hours order cause 2 days ago the stock sold for way less during after hours/premarket then popped up when the market opened so I just put a low ball order just surprised it got filled but the after hours never appeared to hit that low.That means $43.64 was the last market price. At least that's hour my broker displays it. Surprised it would execute after hours if you aren't signed up for it. I don't know the rules though.
So I gonna put something crazy out here.
Before the March dip in the NASDAQ, I had placed something of a 10% correction on the market ( I got the correction right but the index wrong). I also have a idea that the market could pull back another 10% if inflation builds ( we will see the next report on April 13th). Plus a greater higher chance of market pull back if actual inflation exceeds expected in Q3-Q4
However, there is a greater more looming threat, that I think could lead to the mother of all market melt ups. Economic warefare. Basically the concept is that countries will seek to strain their opposition's economy by exploiting current weaknesses. War or war like scenarios are not cheap. Countries like the U.S rack up a fairly large bill during actual wars. For example WW2, the country had issue war bonds to help fund their campaign. In today's dollars that would nearly be $4 trillion dollars. In the 1970s the Vietnam war cost nearly $1 trillion dollars (2019 dollars) which would be nearly the same amount for the Iraq war (which we are still paying to this day).
However, over the last few weeks we've seen an escalation of tensions by Israel against Iran, Russia against Ukraine and China against Taiwan. These events would normally be consider the typical posturing for a new administration. However, I'm going suggest something different.
The costs to continually enhance surveillance and make preparations is certainly not cheap. With the 10 year yield on the rise, for every 100 basis point increase in government lending rates, the net interest expense for the federal government increases by $200 billion.
So if continue aggression is shown the U.S would most certainly have to step in to protect its allies and its interest. That cost a pretty dime. If an actual war break out, that too cost a pretty dime.
Overall the U.S will have to either print more money and release more bonds and use a larger portion of its budget to pay off interest. All of which will overheat is economy and destroy the value of the dollar in the process. Maybe this is what China and Russia wants. To destroy the store of value in the U.S dollar and get rid of it as being the world's reserve economy.
What do you guys think?
I get what you're saying and I agree to an extent, specifically China throwing around their financial weight, they're on par with the US in terms of GDP but I consider China far more aggressive in other areas e.g. cyber or economic warfare. I shudder to think of the capabilities China has been developing that we're not aware of as yet. They've been underestimated by the US, and allies, for a long time now. In relation to money markets I feel you're spot on, currently cyber and politics are the wild west with little recourse of action besides war itself, which no-one really wants. China and similar are willing to go further in many areas and the global community very much lacks cohesion and gumption to halt such advances.
I think that's what China's been in the process of doing for a long time. It feels like they've had help within the government for a long time with things that Trump brought to the forefront that no one else has discussed for 30 years. Why would we still grant China favored nation status when they blatantly steal IP, medical technology, etc? How are US companies supposed to compete with Chinese companies when China backs them financially from profits gained by stealing from US companies?So I gonna put something crazy out here.
Before the March dip in the NASDAQ, I had placed something of a 10% correction on the market ( I got the correction right but the index wrong). I also have a idea that the market could pull back another 10% if inflation builds ( we will see the next report on April 13th). Plus a greater higher chance of market pull back if actual inflation exceeds expected in Q3-Q4
However, there is a greater more looming threat, that I think could lead to the mother of all market melt ups. Economic warefare. Basically the concept is that countries will seek to strain their opposition's economy by exploiting current weaknesses. War or war like scenarios are not cheap. Countries like the U.S rack up a fairly large bill during actual wars. For example WW2, the country had issue war bonds to help fund their campaign. In today's dollars that would nearly be $4 trillion dollars. In the 1970s the Vietnam war cost nearly $1 trillion dollars (2019 dollars) which would be nearly the same amount for the Iraq war (which we are still paying to this day).
However, over the last few weeks we've seen an escalation of tensions by Israel against Iran, Russia against Ukraine and China against Taiwan. These events would normally be consider the typical posturing for a new administration. However, I'm going suggest something different.
The costs to continually enhance surveillance and make preparations is certainly not cheap. With the 10 year yield on the rise, for every 100 basis point increase in government lending rates, the net interest expense for the federal government increases by $200 billion.
So if continue aggression is shown the U.S would most certainly have to step in to protect its allies and its interest. That cost a pretty dime. If an actual war break out, that too cost a pretty dime.
Overall the U.S will have to either print more money and release more bonds and use a larger portion of its budget to pay off interest. All of which will overheat is economy and destroy the value of the dollar in the process. Maybe this is what China and Russia wants. To destroy the store of value in the U.S dollar and get rid of it as being the world's reserve economy.
What do you guys think?
So what would be a good investment to hold during a cross-continental war?
You're right, China and Russia has long made their economic goals clear. I've always wondered what would be a good way for China to capitalize on the U.S losses. Now would be a good time to do so and make a move.
The DXY is expect to go lower as more federal bonds hit the market. Normally a cheaper dollar would be phenomenal for a trade in the U.S but the dollar also serves as a stable store of value. If the U.S keeps printing it puts its economic goals in harms way.
I think China and Russia are sensing weakness, rather go into a direct full escalation, they will strain U.S resources via making things more expensive, war like activities have tendency to do that. Geopoltical events will be the next black swan imo.
China is quickly growing into the world’s most extensive commercial empire. By way of comparison, after World War II, the Marshall Plan provided the equivalent of $800 billion in reconstruction funds to Europe (if calculated as a percentage of today’s GDP). In the decades after the war the United States was also the world’s largest trading nation, and its largest bilateral lender to others.
Now it’s China’s turn. The scale and scope of the Belt and Road initiative is staggering. Estimates vary, but over $300 billion have already been spent, and China plans to spend $1 trillion more in the next decade or so. According to the CIA, 92 countries counted China as their largest exports or imports partner in 2015, far more than the United States at 57. What’s most astounding is the speed with which China achieved this. While the country was the world’s largest recipient of World Bank and Asian Development Bank loans in the 1980s and 90s, in recent years, China alone loaned more to developing countries than did the World Bank.
The scary part is China isn't just leaning on the US, example Belt and Road Initiative.
Cherry picking just one local example in Cambodia.
China loaned more to developing countries than the World Bank and is close to double that of the US. What you're suggesting is well and truly underway the world over already. China is merely going to bankroll and amass in the short term. Long term they're gunning for the US to move more than just one rung down the ladder. Yes this will affect the US centric world markets.
Yah, their debt trap has been pretty well documented. In Latin America, the bank I work for has been advising governments to diversify their external loan portoflio. Most of them owe China more than 35.0% of the total external debt. Caribbean countries are the worst of in this case.
China been biding its time. If I were Xi JingPing, I would use this next year to weaken the U.S further.
If we were playing Monopoly and people were paying each other, and mortgaging properties due to being one step away from bankruptcy, I'd agree.So I gonna put something crazy out here.
Before the March dip in the NASDAQ, I had placed something of a 10% correction on the market ( I got the correction right but the index wrong). I also have a idea that the market could pull back another 10% if inflation builds ( we will see the next report on April 13th). Plus a greater higher chance of market pull back if actual inflation exceeds expected in Q3-Q4
However, there is a greater more looming threat, that I think could lead to the mother of all market melt ups. Economic warefare. Basically the concept is that countries will seek to strain their opposition's economy by exploiting current weaknesses. War or war like scenarios are not cheap. Countries like the U.S rack up a fairly large bill during actual wars. For example WW2, the country had issue war bonds to help fund their campaign. In today's dollars that would nearly be $4 trillion dollars. In the 1970s the Vietnam war cost nearly $1 trillion dollars (2019 dollars) which would be nearly the same amount for the Iraq war (which we are still paying to this day).
However, over the last few weeks we've seen an escalation of tensions by Israel against Iran, Russia against Ukraine and China against Taiwan. These events would normally be consider the typical posturing for a new administration. However, I'm going suggest something different.
The costs to continually enhance surveillance and make preparations is certainly not cheap. With the 10 year yield on the rise, for every 100 basis point increase in government lending rates, the net interest expense for the federal government increases by $200 billion.
So if continue aggression is shown the U.S would most certainly have to step in to protect its allies and its interest. That cost a pretty dime. If an actual war break out, that too cost a pretty dime.
Overall the U.S will have to either print more money and release more bonds and use a larger portion of its budget to pay off interest. All of which will overheat its economy and destroy the value of the dollar in the process. Maybe this is what China and Russia wants. To destroy the store of value in the U.S dollar and get rid of it as being the world's reserve economy.
What do you guys think?
If we were playing Monopoly and people were paying each other, and mortgaging properties due to being one step away from bankruptcy, I'd agree.
But with countries seemingly being able to go into infinite debt (the US is what? Over $10 trillion?), it seems like some countries are teflon. Places like Greece got nailed to the cross, but for the big boys it seems like whatever they do in terms of borrowing makes no difference to every day life or economy.
The biggest factors to kill the economy and markets in the powerhouse countries arent even debt and printing money. It's shit like dot.com bust, covid shutdowns and global financial mortgage crisis, which are all different vs. something like naturally going into the shitter due to debt.