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and "maybe" a .25 increase coming up
gee that will knock things over wayne
We also today have a Triple Leveraged Economy - Leveraged investors, who buy highly leveraged companies, that rely on the leveraged consumer . . . So you need to think off the implications of a 0.25% rise outside of the housing market too, and what effect that will have on employment and people's abilities to service their mortgages.
Would your comments apply outside of the ASX? i.e. How highly geared are the larger and more influential foreign markets, US, Europe et al?On average - listed companies are by no means highly leveraged at the moment
Corporate balance sheets are historically lowly geared at the moment - hence all the buybacks and private equity involvement
I don't disagree with the rest of your comments
25 bps is way more effective than 10 years ago
Personal leverage is high - corporate leverage is not
Would your comments apply outside of the ASX? i.e. How highly geared are the larger and more influential foreign markets, US, Europe et al?
OK thanks.As far as my un-referenced knowledge extends - yes. I would like to provide some links.
US and Aust corporate debt levels are low and many balance sheets are ridiculously flushed with cash - hence the activities of private equity.
Credit Defaults Swaps are at all time lows. Some of this pricing results from exuberance, but just as much is related to very low gearing across the majority of companies.
I would say that large leverage remains in property and infrastructure - but the volatility of cash flows in this sector will always lend themselves to a heap of leverage and financial engineering/wizardry.
With the exception of the warmongering US - government debt is very low across the major countries
The first-world consumer is the debt laden party at the moment
Nobody is jumping down anyones throat. It's called a discussion. People may hold opposing points of view in discussions.hello,
people dont carry heaps of debt, the "majority" I think are in reasonable positions
things are no different to somebody's parents buying a house thirty years ago
they were nervous then when purchasing and thought it was huge step just like most people today but they dont regret it for one moment
it is all talk, just get out and have a look for yourself before jumping down my throat
thankyou
robots
Again unreferenced, but I think the UK gummint is up to its @rsehole in alligators as well, with reference to debt.
Agree re the first world consumer; he's up to his nostrils.
Redcliffes boom has a lot to do with the promoting of the area in Brisbane TV ads. But, this area is still real cheap for what you get. Where else in Australia can you buy 400m from the water & 20 mins from CBD for 300k?
If I was running the UK Central Bank I would be printing sooooo many GBPs I would be out of debt in a second
The GBP is so overvalued; a printing flurry would hardly be a bad policy
I bristle when I hear 'fraudulent' and 'inflation measure' combined.
I want to do some more numbers on the UK scenario before I make a call - but why do you think the GB inflation numbers are fraudulant and what effect do you think a 10% - 20% fall in property values would have on this number(?) with the flow through effect on rents and overall demand.
I bristle when I hear 'fraudulent' and 'inflation measure' combined.
I want to do some more numbers on the UK scenario before I make a call - but why do you think the GB inflation numbers are fraudulant and what effect do you think a 10% - 20% fall in property values would have on this number(?) with the flow through effect on rents and overall demand.
Perhaps a stagnation in the property market for 5-10 years (like in Australia through the 90s) would sort this out without a more severe event.
I am not a property bull by the way and think the Aussie, USA and GB property markets need to stagnate for years - as per the thread topic.
I just dont see a savage depression.
CPI is dubbed the Chav Price Index (Chav is a yobbo bludger) as its contents reflect mainly frivolous discretionary expenditure and specifically excludes larger and more important expenditures. One of the latest additions to the CPI is mobile ring tones ffs!!!
hello,
people dont carry heaps of debt, the "majority" I think are in reasonable positions
things are no different to somebody's parents buying a house thirty years ago
they were nervous then when purchasing and thought it was huge step just like most people today but they dont regret it for one moment
it is all talk, just get out and have a look for yourself before jumping down my throat
thankyou
robots
Not yet, next month I think.Wayne,
Are you in England at the moment? I am moving my family across there in late December this year. In terms of money management and creative ways to budget are there any wizz bang products over there that I can research?
Brad
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