Dow 7000 ......................
Started by RealEstateNY
over 14 years ago
Posts: 772
Member since: Aug 2009
Discussion about
This guy makes a pretty good case for a 4000 point crash......Interesting. "European policymakers would like you to believe we can never have another Lehman Brothers-style implosion. They want you to believe that their banks are safe … that the markets are just going through a temporary soft patch … and that they have the political willpower and financial ability to plug all the holes in the... [more]
This guy makes a pretty good case for a 4000 point crash......Interesting. "European policymakers would like you to believe we can never have another Lehman Brothers-style implosion. They want you to believe that their banks are safe … that the markets are just going through a temporary soft patch … and that they have the political willpower and financial ability to plug all the holes in the financial dike over there. Don’t listen to that malarkey! The markets are telling you the exact OPPOSITE story! Just consider … * Earlier this week, Greek 2-year note yields surged above 50 percent. FIFTY PERCENT! Subprime credit card borrowers don’t even pay rates like that, which tells you everything you need to know about how serious their debt crisis is. * Italian bonds just fell in value for 11 straight days, erasing most of the gains notched after the European Central Bank agreed to step into the breach and buy Italian and Spanish bonds. * Belgian bond yields just blew out to the widest premium against core German bond yields since the euro currency was introduced in 1999! That indicates the crisis is spreading even beyond the so-called “PIIGS” countries. If all the problems were “across the pond,” as they say, our markets could potentially shrug off some of the European selling. But they’re not! Here in the U.S., the economy is clearly slumping toward recession for the second time in the past couple of years. The hard evidence? ==> Our country created precisely zero jobs last month for the first time since the 1940s. ZERO! Job losses were widespread across a wide range of industries, from construction to manufacturing to retail. As if that weren’t enough, average hourly earnings actually FELL … the first time that has happened since January 2008. Over the year that followed, the Dow plunged roughly 4,000 points. ==> The Conference Board’s consumer confidence index just sank to 44.5 in August from 59.2 in July. That was the worst reading since April 2009. At that time, the Dow was trading around 8,100 … ==> GDP grew at a rate of only 0.4 percent in the first quarter. The last time the U.S. economy grew that slowly, the Dow was trading for around 7,500 … ==> The Philadelphia Fed index just tanked to -10, the lowest since March 2009. The last time it was this lousy, the Dow traded for roughly 7,200 … ==> Purchase mortgage application activity just slumped to its lowest level since December 1996. The last time this few home buyers were applying for loans, the Dow was going for 6,300. Bottom line: Major European and U.S. bank stocks are plunging to levels last seen in the 2007-2009 crisis. Key economic data is slumping to levels last seen during the 2007-2009 crisis. And credit market risk indicators are soaring toward levels last seen in the chaotic days of 2007-2009. http://www.moneyandmarkets.com/the-shocking-case-for-dow-7000-47127?FIELD9=3 [less]
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No effect on Manhattan real estate. Move on.
Don't move on. The 2nd dip will be confirmed. Worse than first as Europe looks sorta late to the party. China has it's own massive re bubble about to pop.
Erasure of QE equity mkt gains over the last 3 yrs will make re owners who bought in 1995-2003 to lock in gains. Massive selling in nyc re wo regard for high-water mark pricing will inevitably flush out the peckers who keep listing at 2005-2007 prices.
Goodz luckz.
so now with belgium it's PIBIGS
oh wait...then there's that the french bank are getting sizebly greeked
how to insert an F?
Want to create jobs? Stop policies that encourage the concentration of capital in fewer hands -- that's what got us into this mess!
Instead pass green regulations on business that will both preserve environmental resources and force the distribution of capital to workers who perform green tasks, like measuring a company's carbon footprint or lowering its energy use.
Recycling at the city level, for instance, creates hundres (or thousands) of new jobs at less than the cost of incinerating the trash. And the benefits to our air and land are immeasurable!
when will you be buying on cpw for 500 p/ft west67?
"Want to create jobs? Stop policies that encourage the concentration of capital in fewer hands -- that's what got us into this mess!"
As a friend sarcastically says "You can't hurt the 'job creators'!"
Our economy has significant structural issues that have been formed thanks to a lax regulatory and anti-trust environment, a political system that is manipulated by the uber rich, reliance on super low interest rates and an explosion in moral hazard. On top of that, the average Joe thinks that big finance and business are the key to our country's employment issues (and corporate sponsored commercials certainly try to sell this concept), when the reality is just the opposite.
Big business has screwed over our economy and taxpayers for years and now are trying to hold us hostage claiming that they are the key to economic recovery.
@memito
u r prob correct about all of this. thkfully in this country, the employees will continue to vote for policies that hurt them personally in lieu of being called socialist (gasp)!