Seeking Alpha

mlimberg » Comments » DHI

  • Housing Bubble and Real Estate Market Tracker [View article]
    At the peak of the market in 1991, property in Japan was worth four times the value of all property in the US – on paper anyway.
    Buoyed by low interest rates, financiers introduced the concept of intergenerational loans, and eased credit standards as a way of helping people attain the booming prices.
    Every day investors were caught up in the mania. Many salarymen, fearing they'd be priced out of the market as it continued higher, bought properties they knew they couldn't afford, in the hope that price increases would wipe away their folly.
    Between 1989 and 1990 the Bank of Japan became worried that the property boom was becoming a bubble and took preventative steps, tightening interest rates. The bubble popped.
    The resulting bust saw housing prices fall for 14 years in a row, and prices retreated as far as 60 per cent in Japan's capital cities.
    The stockmarket crashed 80 per cent, consumers slowed their spending and the economy plunged into a prolonged recession.
    Daisuke Sato was one bloke I met who was caught in the crash. He bought an apartment in 1990 for (roughly) $500,000, and 17 years later the pad is worth only $280,000.
    Sato has a constant reminder of the mania – a massive mortgage that needs to be paid back regardless of the price of his home.
    Nov 12 19:26 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • Caveat Emptor: The Tumbling Housing Market [View article]
    At the peak of the market in 1991, property in Japan was worth four times the value of all property in the US – on paper anyway.
    Buoyed by low interest rates, financiers introduced the concept of intergenerational loans, and eased credit standards as a way of helping people attain the booming prices.
    Every day investors were caught up in the mania. Many salarymen, fearing they'd be priced out of the market as it continued higher, bought properties they knew they couldn't afford, in the hope that price increases would wipe away their folly.
    Between 1989 and 1990 the Bank of Japan became worried that the property boom was becoming a bubble and took preventative steps, tightening interest rates. The bubble popped.
    The resulting bust saw housing prices fall for 14 years in a row, and prices retreated as far as 60 per cent in Japan's capital cities.
    The stockmarket crashed 80 per cent, consumers slowed their spending and the economy plunged into a prolonged recession.
    Daisuke Sato was one bloke I met who was caught in the crash. He bought an apartment in 1990 for (roughly) $500,000, and 17 years later the pad is worth only $280,000.
    Sato has a constant reminder of the mania – a massive mortgage that needs to be paid back regardless of the price of his home.
    Nov 12 19:18 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
More on DHI by mlimberg
Comments by Ticker
mlimberg's
Comments Stats
16 comments
Rating: 1 (4 - 3 )