what should i do to prepare?
Well that sort of example can be created for anything where you are looking at a gross national statistic of course. So I really don't see your point. You are still fretting about a single stat - gross private debt/GDP, without considering all the other pertinent stats like assets and income. Even in your example, if the 4 neighbours with $2.5M in loans each (which you would be getting the interest on technically via the bank), all earned good incomes from export related activities such that they can easily service their loans, and own houses worth $5M each, then everybody wins. They live the lifestyle they want and will in the future have no debt. You perhaps choose to live more frugally, maybe not working at all but live off the interest that your neighbours in effect pay you through their export derived productive earnings.Bottom line is if the whole balance sheet adds up then your little neighbourhood nation example can get along just fine!
I love it how you forget that it is not my example that you are disregarding, as all I did is restate what you said, but using alternative figures. Plus you then changed the figures, eg tdoubled the value of the houses etc. and laughingly stated that people were working in jobs which are export related, which very few people are actually involved in.
It is similar to robots ridiculous post where he calculates the cap rate of houses, I just hope he was just joking and actually didn't believe his post.
btw robots, by what percentage do you think housing will rise by the end of 2010? or are you still just blindly following the herd? FYI the people who blindly followed the herd of the ASX200 during the GFC surely regretted their decisions.
My point was (and still is) that you can't just look at a single number/stat/ratio in isolation and declare the inevitability of the world coming to an end - you need to look a little broader and deeper at the picture to understand what is really happening.
PS: Re the herds, the ASX200 and the GFC - are you talking about the people that sold during the panic and locked in all their losses? Or are you talking about people that didn't sell out prior to the crash and rode through the whole thing to date?
Cheers,
Beej
Just because someone else has zero gearing does not help someone else geared up to the eyeballs,
just like the ASX200 herd who were geared up and who were forced to sell their investments.
btw you make it sound like selling out was a bad thing, I sold out at around 5700-5800 and have never looked back. Still mainly in cash waiting to buy robot's properties
Just because someone else has zero gearing does not help someone else geared up to the eyeballs,
just like the ASX200 herd who were geared up and who were forced to sell their investments.
btw you make it sound like selling out was a bad thing, I sold out at around 5700-5800 and have never looked back. Still mainly in cash waiting to buy robot's properties
Hi robots,
No tall poppy syndrome here, I too own my piece of the aussie dream but I am very skeptical of a continuing boom.
The so called housing shortage seems like a load of baloney, it's a developers paradise around Melbourne at the moment, you just gotta open your eyes. High rise developments going up left right and center, it's like there's a scramble to get projects built before inevitable occurs.
Anyway I'm no guru, just putting 2 and 2 together.
Good luck with it all bro.
CNBC had a documentary on the other day called The Bubble Decade. First part talked about the dot com bubble and the second part talked about the real estate.
The aussie housing bubble hasn't popped yet but in the documentary they talked to (former) developers and right before the bubble popped they were trying to get their developments completed as quickly as possible as they could feel the tension in the air that things were about to go, as they said.
But this is paradise isn't it. This time it's different
PS: Actual new dwelling completions have since fallen well short of what was forecast in the below chart.
Cheers,
Beej
Beej is that a US or Aust chart...and a link please to where you found it.
Dr David Gruen said:Combined with lower interest rates, the introduction of the First Home Owners Boost in October 2008 saw a huge rise in finance commitments by first home buyers (Chart 6).
Thanks Beej
Some interesting reading on that link and googling Dr David Gruen the chart author.
Here,s another one of his charts (and comment) from this document.
http://www.treasury.gov.au/document...s_Economists_Annual_Forecasting_Conf_2009.pdf
So it would seem obvious that its these people, the recent first home owners who are the most at risk when it comes to falling house prices, and i imagine its also obvious that its these people being forced to sell that would drive the overall market lower.
Because people not selling or under any pressure to sell have little or no impact on prices, as we recently saw in the stock market crash...Now if we consider for just a moment that with interest rates raising and the economy hitting a short term peak, if there's any broad event that gives us a little knock backward and these FHO start selling and have to sell at a loss.
Then its easy to see how the banks will just stop any marginal lending and that will accelerate the fall...because the recent rises are unquestionably based on handouts and easyish credit (rising, holding prices)
No matter how you try and dress up the recent housing debt numbers...its still a matter of you just putting a positive spin on a negative (for housing) event....there's just no way around that.IMO
what negative event is that?
news.com.au said:FAMILIES have plunged dangerously into the red - for the first time owing more in household debt than the entire economy earns in a year...The record credit binge – fuelled largely by the first-home buyer's grant – means every adult, on average, owes more than $74,000.
news.com.au said:"It shows we are living beyond our means."
Mortgages account for almost 90 per cent of annual GDP, up from 17 per cent in 1990.
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