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My Questions About Negative-Yielding DebtBloomberg shared a graph recently that shows there is now $13 trillion of negative-yielding government debt in the world:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/jul/07/toronto-housing-owner-occupied-canada-affordabilityCitarNearly 40% of Toronto homes not owner-occupied, new figures reveal (...) data shows that housing prices have “decoupled” from income, and are instead driven by access to capital – giving investors a clear advantage over average Canadians.
Nearly 40% of Toronto homes not owner-occupied, new figures reveal (...) data shows that housing prices have “decoupled” from income, and are instead driven by access to capital – giving investors a clear advantage over average Canadians.
Trump praises jobs numbers, says economy would be ‘like a rocket ship’ if Fed were to cut ratesPresident Donald Trump praised the jobs numbers Friday morning, telling reporters at the White House the economy “would be like a rocket ship,” if the Federal Reserve were to cut rates. “But we don’t have a Fed that knows what it’s doing,” he said.
http://awealthofcommonsense.com/2019/07/my-questions-about-negative-yielding-debt/CitarMy Questions About Negative-Yielding DebtBloomberg shared a graph recently that shows there is now $13 trillion of negative-yielding government debt in the world:
https://loganmohtashami.com/2019/07/07/housing-bubble-2019/CitarHousing Bubble 2019?For those anticipating a housing bubble 2.0, I ask you to consider the difference between real home price gains from 2002-2005 vs. 2012-2019 as charted below. We don’t have the rapid adjusted to inflation price gains in this cycle like we did during the housing bubble years of 2002-2005. Since mortgage rates are lower in this cycle than the previous one, demand will be good enough to prevent an epic collapse.
Housing Bubble 2019?For those anticipating a housing bubble 2.0, I ask you to consider the difference between real home price gains from 2002-2005 vs. 2012-2019 as charted below. We don’t have the rapid adjusted to inflation price gains in this cycle like we did during the housing bubble years of 2002-2005. Since mortgage rates are lower in this cycle than the previous one, demand will be good enough to prevent an epic collapse.
CitarA Housing Economy for the Many The AlternativeA whole host of policies implemented in recent decades have pushed up costs for ordinary homebuyers and renters and turned investments in land and housing into some of the safest avenues for profit for the wealthiest people around the globe. With financial interests seeking to increase housing asset values at any social cost, it becomes clear why simply building more housing cannot solve the affordability crisis.What is the alternative? In the United States, housing advocates and activists not pursuing the “build more” agenda are already occupied with pressing immediate concerns such as resisting landlord harassment, discrimination, and eviction, and promoting rent control, public housing, community land trusts. and other forms of decommodified housing. But there is a related, and potentially more difficult, task that requires our attention: the rollback of the financialization of housing.Aalbers suggests four measures to start this process: first, a housing policy that would not favor homeownership, as current policy does, and instead “shift fiscal support from mortgage loans to building and maintaining social [public] housing”; second, promotion of alternate forms of housing such as limited-equity coops and community land trusts, to prioritize “housing as a social good over housing as a commodity or financial asset”; third, regulation to tighten requirements for mortgages, which would ultimately bring down housing costs; and fourth, regulation of mortgage securitization and interest rates. Others have endorsed an additional reform: a land-value tax to address “the problem of rent.” If this were enacted, land would be taxed, but not the housing or other improvements on it, returning socially created value to the public.https://www.dissentmagazine.org/online_articles/a-housing-economy-for-the-many
A Housing Economy for the Many The AlternativeA whole host of policies implemented in recent decades have pushed up costs for ordinary homebuyers and renters and turned investments in land and housing into some of the safest avenues for profit for the wealthiest people around the globe. With financial interests seeking to increase housing asset values at any social cost, it becomes clear why simply building more housing cannot solve the affordability crisis.What is the alternative? In the United States, housing advocates and activists not pursuing the “build more” agenda are already occupied with pressing immediate concerns such as resisting landlord harassment, discrimination, and eviction, and promoting rent control, public housing, community land trusts. and other forms of decommodified housing. But there is a related, and potentially more difficult, task that requires our attention: the rollback of the financialization of housing.Aalbers suggests four measures to start this process: first, a housing policy that would not favor homeownership, as current policy does, and instead “shift fiscal support from mortgage loans to building and maintaining social [public] housing”; second, promotion of alternate forms of housing such as limited-equity coops and community land trusts, to prioritize “housing as a social good over housing as a commodity or financial asset”; third, regulation to tighten requirements for mortgages, which would ultimately bring down housing costs; and fourth, regulation of mortgage securitization and interest rates. Others have endorsed an additional reform: a land-value tax to address “the problem of rent.” If this were enacted, land would be taxed, but not the housing or other improvements on it, returning socially created value to the public.
Cita de: breades en Julio 07, 2019, 19:26:38 pmCitarA Housing Economy for the Many The AlternativeA whole host of policies implemented in recent decades have pushed up costs for ordinary homebuyers and renters and turned investments in land and housing into some of the safest avenues for profit for the wealthiest people around the globe. With financial interests seeking to increase housing asset values at any social cost, it becomes clear why simply building more housing cannot solve the affordability crisis.What is the alternative? In the United States, housing advocates and activists not pursuing the “build more” agenda are already occupied with pressing immediate concerns such as resisting landlord harassment, discrimination, and eviction, and promoting rent control, public housing, community land trusts. and other forms of decommodified housing. But there is a related, and potentially more difficult, task that requires our attention: the rollback of the financialization of housing.Aalbers suggests four measures to start this process: first, a housing policy that would not favor homeownership, as current policy does, and instead “shift fiscal support from mortgage loans to building and maintaining social [public] housing”; second, promotion of alternate forms of housing such as limited-equity coops and community land trusts, to prioritize “housing as a social good over housing as a commodity or financial asset”; third, regulation to tighten requirements for mortgages, which would ultimately bring down housing costs; and fourth, regulation of mortgage securitization and interest rates. Others have endorsed an additional reform: a land-value tax to address “the problem of rent.” If this were enacted, land would be taxed, but not the housing or other improvements on it, returning socially created value to the public.https://www.dissentmagazine.org/online_articles/a-housing-economy-for-the-manyfirst, a housing policy that would not favor homeownership, as current policy doesfirst...and last. Ya no hace falta seguir leyendo más. Esa sería la última medida que tomaría el gobierno de turno antes de que la pisitofilía quemara el palacio presidencial...y todo el pais, hasta recuperar la cotización de sus pisitos.Excelente artículo el que nos ha traido Derby, pero ya es tarde; la pisitofilia va a impedir cualquier Alternative. Al final, arderá todo menos el pisito, que será lo último en caer. Para los spanish homeownership, puede derrumbarse el mundo a su aldededor, que ellos dormiran tranquilos sabiendo que algún día venderán su pisito por el doble de lo que pagaron con el. En eso se sustenta el regimen, y es algo que tienen clarisimo las aristocracias político-mediáticas que están en el poder. Lo demás, es llenar papers con obviedades para divertimento de la pisitofilia, que saben que mientras mantengan el poder, la cotización de sus pisitos será la prioridad de los policymakers.
¿Dónde sube más la vivienda en España?
“Recomendamos tener un 20% en ‘cash’ por el poco valor de bonos y acciones”
https://www.expansion.com/economia/2019/07/07/5d222046e5fdea3a7e8b4612.htmlCitar¿Dónde sube más la vivienda en España?
Cita de: Derby en Julio 08, 2019, 08:56:40 amhttps://www.expansion.com/economia/2019/07/07/5d222046e5fdea3a7e8b4612.htmlCitar¿Dónde sube más la vivienda en España?Como los subidones de precios inmobiliarios son buenos, los coloreamos en verde. Como las bajadas son malas y alarmantes, las coloreamos en rojo
Titulares de ayer sobre Deutsche Bank:https://twitter.com/nchrysoloras/status/1147879723172859904