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1,So both are one and the same, and have the same impact on residential house values?
2,IOW instead of directly hedging inflation with property, I can hedge inflation via mortgage/credit instruments, since they are all correlated?
3,With your other post mentioning a bubble - I am not analyzing/inferring anything regarding that - this is from a hedging perspective. If your asset is say driven by two variables, one which has a larger effect on your asset [e.g. credit & money supply, whether you agree or not] and it also drives the other variable e.g. inflation [multicollinearity, I'll leave the debate about causation aside], then is it worth using that asset to hedge the smaller effect?
Rental income, is separate, and I have already stated my view on that - so please don't bring that in.
It is about the devaluation of paper money. Houses going up is merely a match to the falling value of money.
A problem now, (not so much here yet), is that paper money is devaluing faster than property is going up.
However good land will hold its tangible value in the long term.
One could say that inflation itself is predominantly correlated to credit and money supply.
I've always wanted to make a set of rebuttal videos to the 'money as debt' series, but alas I cannot commit the timeThis video from the 3 minute mark touches on this subject.
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I've always wanted to make a set of rebuttal videos to the 'money as debt' series, but alas I cannot commit the time. There is so much wrong in that series it boggles the mind. But they got one thing right, mismatched debt maturities which rely on roll-overs (i.e. bank lending out 30 year loans and receiving instantly-callable loans) gives the illusion of there being more money in existence than there is. But in reality, since these loans to the bank (demand deposits) are usually not called in any large part, they effectively average a high debt maturity in aggregate.
The biggest thing about the videos that irks me is that it fails to point out that people can hold shares in these banking operations, and instead uses the concept of 'banker bogey-men'.
I guess the root of the issue is that people consider their account at the bank to be "money in the bank", rather than what it really is - "money the bank owes me".
This question is for Tysonboss
7/3/11 saw a drop in share value, with some "volatility" (asx200 down 66 points)
What volatility was experienced by house prices today?
This question is for Tysonboss
7/3/11 saw a drop in share value, with some "volatility" (asx200 down 66 points)
What volatility was experienced by house prices today?
One the thing I will just point out is that it was the share prices that dropped, Not the share values, their is a difference. Price is what you pay, value is what you get. Prices change by the minute, values rise or fall slowly over time with the earning power of the asset.
is THERE?
1, It truly sounds like you have been listening to real estate agents too long.
2, You failed to answer my question, and since you are a staunch believer that realestate is not as volatile as shares (btw I agree, but just not by the magnitude you infer), can you please quantify how much volatility was in the property on that particular day, because as you use the daily fluctuations in share values to support your argument, obviously you have a comparison rate for residential properties to support your claims.
So, are they justifiable claims, or merely beliefs?
These are the top five you suggested,Perhaps the top 5 will show that the word value can be used to infer price.
•fix or determine the value of; assign a value to; "value the jewelry and art work in the estate" You can value the jewelery and artwork in the estate, But it can then sell higher or lower than that figure on any given day, so again this is not infering price
One the thing I will just point out is that it was the share prices that dropped, Not the share values, their is a difference. Price is what you pay, value is what you get. Prices change by the minute, values rise or fall slowly over time with the earning power of the asset.
What I was saying here was that if,
Woolworths sold bought 10 cans of baked beans per year for $1 per can and sold at $2 a can and in 2010 made $10 profit, the crowd may value the business at $100, because they want a 10% return.
10years later after hyper inflation woolworth buys the baked beans for $1000 a can and now sell for $2000 a can and they make a profit of $10,000 per year, the crowd will probably value the business at $100,000.
So with nothing changing in the way of sales except inflation, the fair price for the business rose from $100 to $100,000.
Just for the record, I have been keeping track of the numbers supplied by realestate.com.au, specifically the ratio "Advertised property" which represents supply vs "People looking" which represents demand.
While most of the charts aren't declining as severely as they were during the later portion of last year, we are still way way down on supply/demand levels. Early last year we were seeing over 100 people per house in almost all the suburbs and now it's half of that. For example in Richmond, VIC demand is down 51% YoY. In Marrickville NSW 53% down YoY. In Windsor QLD 52% down YoY.
This is in combination with decreased home sales volume below preGFC levels which leads to an inherent increase in supply, an increase in the total number of new dwellings available in 2009 which remains unmatched by incremental demand (see previous posts by me for charts), continued stress in overseas credit markets (take a look at Eurodollar -not EURUSD- futures to see what I mean) which is the biggest threat to ongoing mortgage origination by our banks, continued lack of deposit growth to match loans growth, strong Aussie dollar introducing serious structural imbalances and reducing global competitiveness to the non resource portion of the economy, etc.
Meanwhile, I would ask, does anyones wage growth over the past 25 years match this curve?
Yet somehow, we are expected to believe that this time, it's different. To me, credit risk exposes this whole thing as a farce. If we wake up tomorrow and Aussie banks/corporates can't find overseas credit to rollover their ****ty short term debt (you know, the accepted practice of paying off debt with more debt), it will be all over a lot sooner than most think.
****
"Meanwhile, I would ask, does anyones wage growth over the past 25 years match this curve?"
Just taking the last 15years for example..
I think the answer is yes....assuming 1995 = 200 and 15 years later = 600. So triple salary overall....
When I left Oz in 95 the average accounting Graduate salary was around $30k...most of my mates are pulling down $100k+ now that stayed in that space....thats over triple increase in base.
I know others that moved into Investment Banking and are pulling down 10times+ the starting Acctg salary now.
Property is to some extent linked to affordability otherwise the masses could not afford to own it.
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"Meanwhile, I would ask, does anyones wage growth over the past 25 years match this curve?"
Just taking the last 15years for example..
I think the answer is yes....assuming 1995 = 200 and 15 years later = 600. So triple salary overall....
When I left Oz in 95 the average accounting Graduate salary was around $30k...most of my mates are pulling down $100k+ now that stayed in that space....thats over triple increase in base..
1, Introducing more credit increases the total money supply in the economy, the money supply is not fixed it expands and can contract, as the money supply expands (inflates) faster than the total goods and services produced in the economy you will see inflation of prices accross the board, So expanding credit should generally see increasing inflation, thats why the RBA increases rates to try and slow inflation.
If the money supply contracted compared to the total amounts of goods and service moving deflation would occur, Inflation is regarded as the lesser evil hence the rba has a policy of allowing a small % of inflation to occur over time, rather than fact deflation and depression.
2, not sure how you would go about doing that
3, you lost from here in
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