Housing Bubble

Tyler Durden's picture

Weekend Reading: Market Forecasting





The mainstream media is increasingly suggesting that we have once again entered into a 'Goldilocks Economy.' The problem is that in the rush to come up with a 'bullish thesis' as to why stocks should continue to elevate in the future, they have forgotten the last time the U.S. entered into such a state of 'economic bliss.' You might remember this: "The Fed's official forecast, an average of forecasts by Fed governors and the Fed's district banks, essentially portrays a 'Goldilocks' economy that is neither too hot, with inflation, nor too cold, with rising unemployment." - WSJ Feb 15, 2007. Of course, it was just 10-months later that the U.S. entered into a recession followed by the worst financial crisis since the 'Great Depression.'

 
Tyler Durden's picture

Hong Kong Housing Bubble Suffers Spectacular Collapse As Sales Plunge 42% To Record Low





Hong Kong's once-upon-a-time raging housing bubble just got its last rites after November home sales sank to a record low as an imminent interest rate in the US this month scared away prospective buyers. According to Land Registry data, reported by SCMP, November saw 2,826 registered residential transactions, down 14.4% from October and 41.7% less than in November last year. This was the lowest print in the history of the series.

 
Tyler Durden's picture

Housing Bubble 2.0 Exposed (In 1 Simple Chart)





The gap between real house prices and real earnings is even wider than it was in Housing Bubble 1. History (and common sense) suggest that housing prices will once again fall sharply until the black line of house prices is well below the red line of real earnings. To expect anything different is unrealistic and highly dangerous to one's financial well-being.

 
Tyler Durden's picture

Looney Plunges As Canadian GDP Collapses Most Since 2009





Who could have seen that coming? It appears, for America's northern brethren, low oil proces are unequivocally terrible. Against expectations of a flat 0.0% unchanged September, Canadian GDP plunged 0.5% - its largest MoM drop since March 2009 and the biggest miss since Dec 2008. With Canada's housing bubble bursting, it's time for the central planners to get back to work and re-invigorate the massive mal-invesment boom (and ban pawning of luxury goods).

 
Tyler Durden's picture

Giving "Thanks" To The Fed - Holiday Dinner Has Never Been More Expensive





Price for Thanksgiving dinner pre-Fed: $0.50

Price for Thanksgiving dinner 102 years after establishement of the Fed: $50

 
Tyler Durden's picture

Swiss Bank "Goes There", Applies Negative Rates To Retail Deposits





"We have determined that applying a negative rate was a more transparent and fairer solution for our clientele. This decision on negative rates is costing us a lot of money -- pretty much the equivalent of our entire annual profit last year."

 
Tyler Durden's picture

Subprime Auto Lending Soars As Fed Report Shows Spike In Loans To Underqualified Borrowers





In what amounts to evidence that the subprime auto problem is indeed growing, The New York Fed's Quarterly Report on Household Debt and Credit (out today) shows that lenders extended more than $110 billion in auto loans to borrowers with credit scores below 660 over the past six months alone. 

 
Phoenix Capital Research's picture

Central Banks Will Not Be Able to Halt This Economic Collapse





Stripped of accounting gimmicks, real GDP growth shows economic collapse. And it will culminate in another stock market crash.

 
Tyler Durden's picture

Rich Nation Problems: Even If Norway Wanted To Do QE, They Couldn't





"My guess is that we will have negative rates in Norway before there will be any talk of QE"...

 
Tyler Durden's picture

The Wheels Are About To Come Off This Bubble





New car loans used to be 36 months (three years) and then 48 months (four years). Back when the economy was sane. Today, the typical new car loan is 72 months (six years). This is almost double the formerly typical length of a new car loan. But even that is not – apparently – enough to keep the music playing. Enter the eight-year loan... Are people really that stupid?

 
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