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Well, there really is no diverse economy in W.A, it is all attached at the hip to mining.Just wondering if that's "middle of nowhere" or mining towns or is it in places with a more diverse economy?
Yep, everything is part of the plan, it isn't anything to do with peoples choices. Just part of the plan.lolScrewing the young new money is part of the plan too.
Yep, everything is part of the plan, it isn't anything to do with peoples choices. Just part of the plan.lol
Let's not blame those who chose to take the risk, to make a killing, let's just blame the plan.
We may well be saying the same about Sydney and Melbourne, in a few years, then it will be yes it was all about ripping us investors off.lol
I have cash in a business bank account right now earning 0.01%, and another $18k sitting in a term deposit paying 2%, and that's about all those two holdings diserve to earn, offcourse my funds that I want to earn investment returns on I put them into investments.Have been telling you.
Anyway, would you deposit your cash, even for a day, for zero real interest? No? Then why is it fair that depositors ought to?
It's a safe place for their money? It's supposed to be safe. And depositors aren't exactly hiring a safety deposit box are they? Their cash is being use the moment it comes into the bank, use to make money for the bank.
I have cash in a business bank account right now earning 0.01%, and another $18k sitting in a term deposit paying 2%, and that's about all those two holdings diserve to earn, offcourse my funds that I want to earn investment returns on I put them into investments.
I have cash in a business bank account right now earning 0.01%, and another $18k sitting in a term deposit paying 2%, and that's about all those two holdings diserve to earn, offcourse my funds that I want to earn investment returns on I put them into investments.
You know all these policies are made by people right? It's not some invisible hand of "the market" dictating policies based on rational analysis of demand/supply blah blah.
That's not to say that investors aren't also to blame. But not all investor have the knowledge or experience to know when they're being played... and most don't believe their own gov't would be playing them instead of looking after their interests.
Take interest rate.
If interest is low, what will most likely happen to the stock market, the property market? What will investors most likely do when rate is low?
These are known facts. They have worked before and will work again. That's why they're implemented.
Say you run a country... how do you keep the plebs in line? Make sure they keep their heads down, get to work and don't question or annoy you?
Can't beat them up, we're not some dictatorship. We're law and order.
So you get them into debt, most of them. If they don't work, can't pay their debt; if they ask or complaint too much, might get fired; if they take time off to protest, might get fired... How will they pay off all that debt and mortgages if they're fired? So better behave.
How to get them into a mortgage? Put fire under the property market for a few years... see if they wouldn't run out and just buy in case they can't afford it anymore later.
Then with $1M or so mortgage... that'll take a lifetime to pay off. Pretty hard to invisibly push people into "voluntary" good behaviour that long.
In case you think I'm making this up, check out an old Senate hearing where God Greenspan was giddy about how he managed to make the economy going so well (for the rich)...
His secret: worker insecurity.
Create policies where workers aren't paid much, have high debt, and can easily be fired. See if they're brave enough to not work real hard at low wages.
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That's not to say that such policy intention are productive or moral. They're not that effective if other costs are taken into account.
Costs like marriage breakup; stress and related illnesses; broken homes and highly stressed population.
That's fuel for revolution.
But 5% (correction) is the CBA's actual current dividend yield ie what the investors are currently getting on their capital and they are not complaining as far as I can see.
If you have CBA at 5% yield and you thought 8% was a bad return you are in for a shock.
You are being ripped off.
1% in a deposit account and 2.6 in a term.
Less fees of course.
Why, even I can see his business account would attract 30% tax. why would he have it in a high yielding account, when it attracts high tax and a lot of accounting fees.You are being ripped off.
1% in a deposit account and 2.6 in a term.
Less fees of course.
What is important is how much the assets owned by share holders inside the business is earning.
So what is your problem?
Wanting to save the greedy investor, or wanting to put the first home buyer into an overheated market?
Market forces will bring about a correction, at the moment the Government is supporting the boom, it has a two fold effect creates jobs and supplies housing.
The supply of houses and the demand for houses, will match eventually, but usually there is an overrun.
This results in a glut, as as happened in W.A, then you have a resultant drop in prices, or do you think there are endless investors to buy properties they can't rent.
You seem to think, the Banks should be a not for profit organisation?Yes, but if I buy shares in a company and I'm interested in dividend income, what I look for is dividend divided by what I pay for the shares so I can compare that with what I would get from a bank for that amount of money.
So you seem to be saying that for CBA the banks assets (in reality the depositors money) is earning 16% , but they are only paying 5% on their share price, then shareholders are being ripped off as well ?
You seem to think, the Banks should be a not for profit organisation?
They don't have to buy in Sydney, or Melbourne, there are opportunities in regional centres, but those who want a quick profit focus on Sydney and Melbourne.It's not always the greedy investors that get burnt.
First home buyers are also among them.
Those lucky enough to have decent job and a partner with a job, planning on starting a family soon... in an overheated market most that can somewhat afford it will rush in "in case" it goes beyond their reach.
The inexperienced, or the over-confident or bored investor might still jump into an overheated market... but most would have already sold out and bagged that profit.
So when the market crash, guess who have the cash lying around to scoop up, rinse and repeat?
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There are other ways to encourage jobs in the building industry. It does not need to be new houses.
You make property affordable to most Australians to buy; they buy it and with savings and some spare cash, will start to rennovate, fix up their castle, make it all nice and pretty.
That create just as many jobs, and jobs for small contractors rather than the big master builder who's screwing over the little sub-contractors...
When a person own their home and rennovate it, they tend to not go cheap and build dodgy stuff. They, like my Dad, will over-engineer and overdo water-proofing and painting like it's supposed to be.
Most new houses from master builders are pieces of crap. Be lucky if any would last 20 years.
That and when property are high, most would rent... the owner won't be fixing or rennovating it; so it become a slump.
See how there's at least two ways to get the same economic results. But one is chosen over another. And it tend to happen that the chosen way benefits the rich.
There are classes in society. Serves us well to recognise it even if we ourselves don't think it's right.
Funnily enough, I'm a member of P & N Bank, previously I was a member of Energy Credit, which was absorbed, so I really aren't talking from a vested interest.There is little competition isn't there ?
We used to have mutual societies where the depositors were also shareholders. But they obviously disappeared when greed took hold.
They don't have to buy in Sydney, or Melbourne, there are opportunities in regional centres, but those who want a quick profit focus on Sydney and Melbourne.
Don't expect me to be sympathetic to their cause.lol
You seem to think, the Banks should be a not for profit organisation?
Yes, but if I buy shares in a company and I'm interested in dividend income, what I look for is dividend divided by what I pay for the shares so I can compare that with what I would get from a bank for that amount of money.
So you seem to be saying that for CBA the banks assets (in reality the depositors money) is earning 16% , but they are only paying 5% on their share price, then shareholders are being ripped off as well ?
Cba is currently earning 16% on the funds its share holders have put in.
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