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/biz/ - Business & Finance


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22010144 No.22010144 [Reply] [Original]

It'll pop soon, right?
R-right?

>> No.22010221

>>22010144
Not until interest rates goes up, lending goes down or money printer gets shut down.

Japan in the late 1980's got jew'd like that.

>> No.22010326

Real estate is one asset that I actually understand why rises faster than the consumer price index. Unlike consumer goods that technology makes easier and easier to produce, with near endless access to materials and energy, real estate is very limited. We could spread out more but that's against human nature, we will always cluster together in or near cities. And yet the demand just keeps rising, both from population growth and from our increasing standards: More people want to live alone, closer to city center, and with more floorspace. Unless the population itself crashes I don't see how real estate prices will.

>> No.22010692

>>22010326
covid is already slowly moving populations away from city centers. EVERYTHING moves in cycles

>> No.22010738

>>22010326
>endless access to energy and materials?

You do know that we live on a finite planet, don't you? We are not close to mine asteroids either

>> No.22010778

Housing prices are artificially inflated through ZIRP, as well as the artificial price rigging of lumber prices and construction materials.

Expect a coming crash when "the virus blows over" and "we have nothing to worry about". Prices will continue to remain high until normies realize that the pandemic is already over and the Fed can stop having an excuse to intervene in the market.

>> No.22010863

When we stop having a reason to borrow ungodly amounts of money, the economy will crash.

Typically this kind of deleveraging is seen after the resolution of a war, or when spending drops significantly. The Wuhan coronavirus technically prolonged the bullrun, but when it resolves, markets will likely revert to their mean, and interest rates on the 10-year will pop back up to 2%.

>> No.22010926

>>22010738
>You do know that we live on a finite planet, don't you? We are not close to mine asteroids either
Most of the material we use are recyclable, and even if we don't recycle them the supply will last for centuries.

>> No.22012072
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22012072

>> No.22012397

>>22012072

What year was the Eichler Homes advertisement supposed to be?

>> No.22012911

>>22012397
I can only guess the 40's or 50's.
Doesn't really matter because inflation didn't hit until nixon.
all I know is they go for millions now.

>> No.22013040
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22013040

Here we go again, another schizo thread, thinking the fed trying to fix the economy is a bad thing.

>> No.22013664

>>22013040
>artificially inflating a bubble is a good thing

>> No.22013697

>>22013040
by creating a spring board rendering the peasants wealth worthless is a good thing

>> No.22013741

>>22013664
Go buy jfc and fmetf if you don’t like free money.