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there will be a significant number of 'millionaires ' in the Brisbane area ( and nearby regions ) as well , the hard part is getting that cash into the bank ( and back out again )How many people own a house in Sydney? They're all millionaires, if not this week, definitely next week. ?
That's when interest rates stop going up, that's crunch time, how many immigrants are coming again?
How many people own a house in Sydney? They're all millionaires, if not this week, definitely next week. ?
The rich make money from inflation, because as their asset value increases their borrowing capacity increases and they can buy up distressed assets at a mortgagee sale price."Own" being the operative word.
We bought our ponderosa via an end date sale process. We were in fact the lowest offer (and 300k lower than the highest offer ? ), but the only all cash offer.
There are a lot of stonking big mortgages out there (and maybe neg equity for some).
This was my whole point - it hasn't been the 1% spending their money like madmen on loius vuitton or whatever.Genuine wealth or top 1% is above 8.5m AUD wealth..somewhat doubt many of these are affected by much taxes or unemployment or holiday parks?
Ehhh dunno about that greg. People can only borrow so much, especially with rate increases.It will take a substantial increase in the unemployment rate before this happens. As long as people have a job they will spend on services and demand will not be affected. Once people lose jobs and have to rely on savings (if they have any) or family, that's when spending on services falls off a cliff.
"Own" being the operative word.
We bought our ponderosa via an end date sale process. We were in fact the lowest offer (and 300k lower than the highest offer ? ), but the only all cash offer.
There are a lot of stonking big mortgages out there (and maybe neg equity for some).
Exactly what I'm doing lowballing the f**k out of places at airlie beach with cash offersbuy up distressed assets at a mortgagee sale price.
Ehhh dunno about that greg. People can only borrow so much, especially with rate increases.
The better question might be to ask exactly when people are actually going to be tapped out?
Exactly what I'm doing lowballing the f**k out of places at airlie beach with cash offers
There's a lot of real estate agents that are the proverbial meat in the sandwich between people like me that know it's a buyers' market (and know why) and vendors in complete denial about the reality of the holiday housing market (the most luxury of luxury goods) situation.
This happened back in the GFC with entire towns that were just annihilated and retirees or those close to retirement just sat on their IP going "We'll just have to wait for prices to go back up, they always do".
This is the kind of strife you get yourself into when you buy a place because "housing always goes up" while simultaneously having absolutely no idea WHY housing "always goes up".
It's only the immigration that's keeping sydney/melbourne pumping even now. Anywhere that migrants haven't moved to is an absolute bloodbath.
Same. I'm even getting agents texting/emailing me asking if I still want to make an offer, "Oh the seller has revised their asking price" etc etc. They get the "Nah that was two months ago, now I'll only offer X" every time....happy to stand aside until there is value.
Extension of this point: It's exactly what's been happening with housing too. Nobody that's bought a, say, holiday place in airlie beach with cash is going to be panic-selling.This was my whole point - it hasn't been the 1% spending their money like madmen on loius vuitton or whatever.
It's been the plebs using credit.
well if industry has moved elsewhere ( outside of Europe ) why would anyone be surprisedMeanwhile, here's the XYZ billion euro question for europe:
View attachment 157332
It seems they might have concluded that it'll be cheaper to just mothball the factories than to pay the inflated gas prices. I don't see how they keep doing that for long, you can't just shut an entire continent down every time it gets cold forever.
a buddy i was talking to tonight suggested BHP around $39.99 was a reasonable target , i thought that was a bit low ( am thinking sub $41.25A drop in AUD will only serve to pummel energy costs (and therefore raise inflation) here more as the demand side for most of this country's exports (I'm looking at you, iron ore) is toast and not coming back.
I'd start pricing this in to your ASX trades now if you haven't already. I mean I own basically nothing denominated in AUD except a few coal miners as I think this country's headed for some major strife but this is an aus based forum so I know most of you have your wealth in aus companies rather than overseas.
Well a drop in AUD actually helps exports (not entirely, it still raises the costs of inputs to produce the export) but it's the demand side that's done for with iron ore.a buddy i was talking to tonight suggested BHP around $39.99 was a reasonable target , i thought that was a bit low ( am thinking sub $41.25
i guess we will find out tomorrow
A quick search online finds that 20 litres of kerosene costs $85 or $4.25 per litre.Meanwhile, another heritage listed building in sydney that they wanted to demolish and build high-rise on just happens to burn to the ground:
I run E98 though, it burns much cleaner/hotter for only $5/drum more:A quick search online finds that 20 litres of kerosene costs $85 or $4.25 per litre.
From an offline record the price in 1983 was 40 cents / litre back when service stations commonly sold it. So that's a fair bit of price inflation but it's still a bargain if you've got a good enough use for it.
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