Housing Solution: Crashing Home Prices or Cheaper Mortgages? [View article]
Peak-bubble housing prices must be protected at all costs! Remember, housing is unique, unlike any other commodity (where lower prices is generally viewed as a good thing for regular working people). And government is much better at setting the fair market value than Mr. Market, everyone knows that.
Sky-high housing costs at insane DTI levels --like we *still* have in CA-- encourages people to take on massive levels of debt they will never pay off, and to become captive to the banking and real estate industry. This "stimulates" the economy, when people must work 2-3 jobs apiece and spend every dime they have to service that hungry 'gator.
What do you people think would happen if people stopped getting mortgages at 10-11X HH incomes? Utter chaos, desolation... Max Max, that's what! Why... without monster mortgages people might begin... (*gasp*) SAVING again --the Horror! The absolute worst outcome for our economy is for housing along the bubble coasts to come down to a level truly affordable for working or middle-class family incomes. We must do *anything* to prevent this!
Please write your Congresscritter and demand that they man those ramparts!
MORE BAILOUT SCHEMES to protect high prices & executive bonuses! MORE ARTIFICIALLY CHEAP MONEY from the Fed! MORE COMPLICATED, DODGY LOANS to help prop up those prices!
Credit Suisse: Housing Bottom More Than a Year Away [View article]
@jimmy46,
Let's also not forget more recent "incentives" for Wall Street and reckless borrowers & lenders:
2008: Congress & Bushco raises the CLL from $417k to $729k, hands the Fed a blank check to bailout the GSEs, passes "Hope Now", Fed bails out Bear-Stearns, etc.
And yet, despite all the tax breaks, incentives and plain-old taxpayer bailouts, prices are still falling. Guess all the king's men can't put Humpty-Bubble back together again...
U.S. Home Prices Go From Bad To Worse [View article]
Even though this was a fairly straightforward data-driven post, I thought it was interesting it was titled "U.S. Home Prices Go From Bad To Worse".
Why are falling prices (especially in hyper-inflated markets) invariably interpreted by the media as a "bad" thing, while rising prices are invariably greeted as a "good" thing?
When prices were rising at double-digit clips, reckless lending was going gangbusters, and affordability levels dropped to single digits here in CA, very few pundits showed much concern. And yet this was a very real bread-and-butter problem for the 98% or so of residents whose main reason for purchasing real estate was for (*gasp*) actual shelter --not speculation.
What falling prices means to me (and I suspect, the vast majority of the home-buying public) is a long-overdue correction, and a much needed boost to real affordability. I could give a rat's ass whether some crooked Wall Street financial alchemist gets his multi-million-dollar bonus this year, or whether some lazy, greedbag Casey Serin clone can retire rich at 30 by driving up prices on me (preferably 'not' to both). However, I DO care whether or not I --and millions of other working class people like me-- can afford to buy shelter in the communities in which they live and work.
I tend to put working-class peoples' interests ahead of speculators and Wall Street banksters, but I guess I'm just crazy that way.
Housing Solution: Crashing Home Prices or Cheaper Mortgages? [View article]
Sky-high housing costs at insane DTI levels --like we *still* have in CA-- encourages people to take on massive levels of debt they will never pay off, and to become captive to the banking and real estate industry. This "stimulates" the economy, when people must work 2-3 jobs apiece and spend every dime they have to service that hungry 'gator.
What do you people think would happen if people stopped getting mortgages at 10-11X HH incomes? Utter chaos, desolation... Max Max, that's what! Why... without monster mortgages people might begin... (*gasp*) SAVING again --the Horror! The absolute worst outcome for our economy is for housing along the bubble coasts to come down to a level truly affordable for working or middle-class family incomes. We must do *anything* to prevent this!
Please write your Congresscritter and demand that they man those ramparts!
MORE BAILOUT SCHEMES to protect high prices & executive bonuses!
MORE ARTIFICIALLY CHEAP MONEY from the Fed!
MORE COMPLICATED, DODGY LOANS to help prop up those prices!
Credit Suisse: Housing Bottom More Than a Year Away [View article]
Let's also not forget more recent "incentives" for Wall Street and reckless borrowers & lenders:
2008: Congress & Bushco raises the CLL from $417k to $729k, hands the Fed a blank check to bailout the GSEs, passes "Hope Now", Fed bails out Bear-Stearns, etc.
And yet, despite all the tax breaks, incentives and plain-old taxpayer bailouts, prices are still falling. Guess all the king's men can't put Humpty-Bubble back together again...
Plotting the April Case/Shiller Housing Numbers [View article]
www.housingwire.com/wp...
www.financialsense.com...
Biggest. Housing Bubble. Ever.
(game over)
U.S. Home Prices Go From Bad To Worse [View article]
Amen!
U.S. Home Prices Go From Bad To Worse [View article]
Why are falling prices (especially in hyper-inflated markets) invariably interpreted by the media as a "bad" thing, while rising prices are invariably greeted as a "good" thing?
When prices were rising at double-digit clips, reckless lending was going gangbusters, and affordability levels dropped to single digits here in CA, very few pundits showed much concern. And yet this was a very real bread-and-butter problem for the 98% or so of residents whose main reason for purchasing real estate was for (*gasp*) actual shelter --not speculation.
What falling prices means to me (and I suspect, the vast majority of the home-buying public) is a long-overdue correction, and a much needed boost to real affordability. I could give a rat's ass whether some crooked Wall Street financial alchemist gets his multi-million-dollar bonus this year, or whether some lazy, greedbag Casey Serin clone can retire rich at 30 by driving up prices on me (preferably 'not' to both). However, I DO care whether or not I --and millions of other working class people like me-- can afford to buy shelter in the communities in which they live and work.
I tend to put working-class peoples' interests ahead of speculators and Wall Street banksters, but I guess I'm just crazy that way.