Facing A Reckoning For Behaviour In The Boom Times
A report from the Toronto Star in Canada. “The competition among homebuyers is increasing in the Toronto region even though year-over-year prices fell 6.6 per cent on average to $805,320 last month, from $862,149 in May 2017. The number of resale home transactions declined 22.2 per cent in the same period. Detached and semi-detached houses continued to see the steepest decline in sales compared to condos and townhouses. The average detached house price fell 8.2 per cent in the Toronto region to $1.05 million, with the biggest drop in the communities surrounding Toronto, where there was a 9 per cent price drop compared to the same month last year. In the city of Toronto, detached house prices fell only 5.6 per cent.”
“York Region is still suffering disproportionate price declines compared to the rest of the GTA. While the benchmark Home Price Index was down 5.4 per cent overall, the same indicator showed a 15.6 per cent drop in York. Detached house prices were down 17.5 per cent on the index. This year to date, the home price index shows the average price of a detached home has fallen 13.8 per cent in the Toronto region.”
From Infosurhoy on Canada. “Real estate developer Fortress Real Developments Inc. is facing a flurry of legal actions from mortgage lenders who have filed applications to foreclose on land earmarked for development projects. Court documents show senior lenders have launched actions against at least four Fortress affiliates following recent payment defaults.”
“The targeted companies include Fortress Brookdale Inc., which is building a condo project on Avenue Road in Toronto; Brookhill Holdings Inc., which is planning a single-family housing project in Bowmanville, Ont.; and Fortress Collier Centre Ltd., which is developing a commercial tower in Barrie, Ont. Another lender also filed legal warning that it plans to seize land slated for the Glens of Halton Hills project, a planned residential development in Georgetown, northwest of Toronto. Fortress lists more than 50 projects on its website that it has under development or construction across Canada.”
The Vancouver Sun in Canada. “A former Metro Vancouver realtor who has been leasing luxury properties to B.C. gangsters is behind bars in the U.S. charged with international money laundering. Omid Mashinchi, 35, appeared in a Boston courtroom last month and was ordered held pending trial. U.S. authorities allege that he wired hundreds of thousands of dollars in drug money over several months last year to banks in Massachusetts through one of his company’s accounts.”
“A Postmedia investigation has found that Mashinchi has started at least three companies in B.C. since 2006, all related to the real estate industry. And for years, police say, Mashinchi has been associating with B.C. gangsters, including leasing them condos that were used both as stash houses and as residences. Postmedia has learned that his company Mashinchi Investments, also known as the Residence Club, leased the luxury North Vancouver condo where Brothers Keepers boss Gavinder Grewal was shot to death last December.”
“And Mashinchi also leased out a West Vancouver house that was targeted in an unsolved drive-by shooting on October 8, 2017. ‘Mashinchi is well-known to the policing community and has rented several properties to known gang members,’ Mike Porteous, a Vancouver police superintendent. ‘Many of these properties have been tied to criminal activity such as drug dealing and violent events including murder and drive-by shootings, which are gang-related.’”
“B.C. Attorney General David Eby has repeatedly raised concerns about organized crime laundering money through casinos and the province’s hot real estate market. But the charges against Mashinchi suggest dirty cash could also be infusing property leasing and high-end rentals. So how could organized crime use condo leases to launder illicit proceeds?”
“Christine Duhaime, an anti-money laundering expert and lawyer, said leases or rental properties could be misused through ‘trade-based money laundering — where you inflate the price to get a fake invoice to then move money.’ For example, if a property rented for $10,000 a month, the landlord could actually put twice that amount into the bank as the rent, effectively laundering $10,000.”
“RCMP Chief Supt. Keith Finn said there is obvious concern about money laundering through the real estate sector in B.C. ‘Whenever you have a quick increase in prices there is an opportunity there for the criminals among us to use the flipping of houses and purchase and disposal as means to launder their money,’ he said.”
The Sydney Morning Herald in Australia. “ANZ Bank has warned the pace of decline in Australia’s house prices is ‘quite a bit larger’ than expected, and likely to last longer than it previously forecast. With national auction clearance rates at a five-year low, ANZ senior economist Daniel Gradwell predicted in a research note published on Wednesday that further weakness was in store for the housing market, before it would start stabilising later this year.”
“Mr Gradwell pointed to recent figures showing that the rate of price decline had accelerated in Sydney. The weakness was also affecting Melbourne amid a slump in national auction clearance rates and a tightening in credit availability.
Mr Gradwell said the bank had previously expected the market would have ’stabilised’ by now, based on higher auction clearance rates at the start of this year. It had expected prices would finish 2018 slightly higher in annual terms. But ANZ is now revising these forecasts. ‘Weakness in Australia’s housing market has persisted longer than we expected, and the rate of decline in prices has recently accelerated,’ the economist wrote. ‘This weakness is challenging our previous view that prices would stabilise and then recover somewhat to finish the year in positive territory.’”
“‘Additional headwinds are possible, such as the shift away from interest only loans,’ he warned. ‘There could also be further tightening of credit as the impact of the current regulatory focus on mortgages flows through into lender behaviour. All of this suggests that the fall in house prices will be quite a bit larger than we previously expected, with recovery coming later.’”
From Business Insider Australia. “At this time last year, house prices in the exclusive suburbs of Sydney — regarded as the hottest pockets of the Australian property market — were still rising by more than 10%. But now those same areas are seeing discounts running into hundreds of thousands of dollars on individual homes amid a weakening market, Business Insider has established. Several Sydney real estate agents confirmed common discounting of around 10% on price guides as sellers have struggled to generate interest — even in the prized eastern suburbs and inner west areas of Sydney, which benefited most from the rapid price growth of recent years.”
“Agents from a range of firms said properties around the $2 million mark were most affected, and that the market conditions would persist for some time. Some said they expected the discounting to spread to higher and lower price brackets. One agent said he thought it would be ‘four years or more before prices go up.’”
“In one clear example, a property on Park Parade, Bondi, was recently revised weeks ago to $2.1 million from its previous guide price of $2.3 million, in an email to the agents’ list of prospective buyers. Another property on Ormond Street, Paddington, had its guide price cut to $1.9 million from $2.1 million. Both Bondi and Paddington are among the most desirable suburbs in Australia.”
“Kenji Fukushima works at Phillips Pantzer Donnelley, a real estate agency based in the eastern Sydney suburb of Woollahra, said he had seen instances of discounting, particularly when sellers put themselves in a tight spot. ‘That can be the case, say if a buyer has already bought somewhere else before the sale. So if they’ve upgraded to a more expensive property and they need to offload their old place to balance up,’ Fukushima said.”
“In other words, buyers were would take a lower price if they were stuck in a liquidity trap as repayments become due on their new mortgage.”
From Domain News in Australia. “The foreign buyer boom in Australia may be over, but the fallout from a $47 billion drop-off in property investment is just beginning. While there was a growing chorus calling for tightened regulations on foreign purchases to slow down astronomical house prices in the past few years, there are now concerns the measures may have swung the pendulum too far in the other direction. Fewer overseas buyers could create an oversupply of apartments in the short term and subsequent discounting could have a knock-on effect, according to AMP Capital chief economist Dr Shane Oliver.”
“‘The risk is if you don’t have the foreign buyers there in the same degree as in the past it may lead to a glut of apartments, and if it does it may be at lower prices and that may discourage future construction activity,’ Dr Oliver said. Another consequence of this massive foreign investor bust, according to Dr Rogers, was an oversupply of one to two-bedroom units as developers designed housing with specific buyers in mind.”
“‘Developers from 2013 were actively trying to work out how much capital was coming from Asian countries and what type of properties they were interested in and how they should design them,’ he said. Dr Rogers said developers sat on a wealth of information profiling foreign investors and described this information as part of the ‘invisible data story’ that could paint a better picture of what’s happening on the ground.”
From Your Mortgage in Australia. “After several years of robust performance, the Australian housing market is starting to languish, much to the disappointment of foreign buyers and investors who are now fleeing to greener pastures. In a commentary on News.com.au, industry watcher and economist Jason Murphy said foreign approvals to buy Australian residential property dropped by two-thirds last financial year, from 40,000 to 13,000 in 2016-17.”
“‘That takes billions of dollars out of the market and reverses three years of surging foreign enthusiasm for Aussie homes,’ Murphy said. Meanwhile, the current condition of the financial system is also making the market unattractive for property buyers, as it is which is riddled by controversies surrounding the ongoing investigation of the royal banking commission. ‘Not only is there a crackdown on investor loans taking the heat out of the market, but banks are facing a reckoning for their behaviour in the boom times,’ he said.”
“Murphy said global interest rates are also a factor — sooner or later, Australian interest rates will follow the footsteps of the US, where mortgage interest rates have been increasing fast. ‘It is easy to find reasons to be cautious about Australian property and tough to see too many reasons for enthusiasm. No wonder foreign investors are cooling on Australian property,’ Murphy concluded.”
‘Mr Gradwell said the bank had previously expected the market would have ’stabilised’ by now, based on higher auction clearance rates at the start of this year. It had expected prices would finish 2018 slightly higher in annual terms. But ANZ is now revising these forecasts. ‘Weakness in Australia’s housing market has persisted longer than we expected, and the rate of decline in prices has recently accelerated,’ the economist wrote. ‘This weakness is challenging our previous view that prices would stabilise and then recover’
Yeah, that’s how it works. 25 years up like a rocket, 6 months down and back to the moon Alice!
Their central bank better get to pumping, and quick.
‘In one clear example, a property on Park Parade, Bondi, was recently revised weeks ago to $2.1 million from its previous guide price of $2.3 million, in an email to the agents’ list of prospective buyers. Another property on Ormond Street, Paddington, had its guide price cut to $1.9 million from $2.1 million. Both Bondi and Paddington are among the most desirable suburbs in Australia’
See a trend here?
‘The average detached house price fell 8.2 per cent in the Toronto region to $1.05 million, with the biggest drop in the communities surrounding Toronto, where there was a 9 per cent price drop compared to the same month last year. …the same indicator showed a 15.6 per cent drop in York. Detached house prices were down 17.5 per cent on the index. This year to date, the home price index shows the average price of a detached home has fallen 13.8 per cent in the Toronto region.’
Golly, this is exactly what’s happened in Manhattan, Hamptons, New Canaan, Greenwich, London, and Miami Beach. The most expensive and “desirable” shacks and airboxes fall the fastest and the most. It’s almost like the hype was never real to begin with.
‘According to new Housing Finance data from the Australian Bureau of Statics (ABS), investor loan demand dropped by $1.07 billion (9 per cent) when seasonally adjusted between February and March 2018. According to RateCity money editor Sally Tindall, investors have been deterred by the slowdown in the housing market.’
“The falls in property prices in Sydney and Melbourne have investors spooked,” Ms Tindall said. “Nothing sends investment lending off a cliff quite like a drop in property prices.”
Insight like this is why you make the big bucks Sally.
‘A Subiaco-based building contractor is poised to join the growing list of residential builders in Western Australia to go bust. The company billed itself as a “medium size building company” that “specialises in luxury houses and apartments”.
‘The company collapsed just weeks after Building Commissioner Ken Bowron warned creditors and homeowners about the status of the builder’s ability to pay off its debts.’
‘Clients who have paid deposits and work hasn’t started have also been advised to contact their insurer. If defects arise on completed home or projects, claims must be lodged with insurers within six years after the practical completion date.’
‘Subcontractors and suppliers should contact Hallchadwick and register as a creditor. Mr Bowan said the building commission was working with ArchiApps liquidators moving forward. “With the company now in liquidation, I encourage home owners to contact their insurer for advice on making a claim with a view to progressing their projects,” he said.’
‘Houses are flying off the shelves in Shenton Park and Subiaco according to The Property Exchange director Niki Peinke. Last weekend 100 groups attended a home open on Murchison Street, Shenton Park, six offers were received and the house sold cash unconditional on the day. It was priced offers over $1.095 million.’
‘Ms Peinke said it was a great result, but not uncommon. The Property Exchange sold a renovated character home on Lawler Street, Subiaco – marketed at offers over $1.849 million – on the first day. An older two-bedroom home on Evans Street, Shenton Park, priced at offers over $1.195 million, sold within the first week.’
‘While Ms Peinke said the market was generally displaying a great deal more confidence now, and even high end properties were attracting attention, the improved conditions were not being experienced across the board.’
“The apartment market is still suffering from an oversupply and has been hit hard with price drops, and I think that this will continue whilst apartments continue to be constructed,” she said.’
‘Earlier this year Shenton Park and Subiaco were named among Perth’s fastest selling suburbs and it looks like that trend is set to continue.’
So they still have fools paying over a million Australian pesos in Perth? Why are builders going bust?
I guess it depends on what the builders paid for the land
“Real estate developer Fortress Real Developments Inc. is facing a flurry of legal actions from mortgage lenders who have filed applications to foreclose on land earmarked for development projects. Court documents show senior lenders have launched actions against at least four Fortress affiliates following recent payment defaults…Fortress lists more than 50 projects on its website that it has under development or construction across Canada.”
Give this a read. And last week I posted a report on a lender having to buy back over $100 million in questionable Canadian loans. Interesting that all this isn’t getting mentioned in the US much.
In the US, we’re busy making homes affordable.
CNN Money: “Since taking office last year, President Trump has signed laws that have chipped away at post-crisis regulations. Trump has also handpicked leaders for regulatory agencies who support rolling back rules. Mick Mulvaney, the acting head of the CFPB, once called the agency a “joke” and pushed to eliminate it.”
God bless President Trump…… And God bless America.
Best Trump story of the day: Leaked from a “tense” phone call with Turdeau regarding tariffs: “Didn’t you guys burn down the White House?”
https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2018-06-06/its-family-quarrel-kudlow-says-after-trump-blames-canada-burning-down-white-house
See what he did there? Trump knows darned well it was the British who burned down the White House and much of Washington during the War of 1812. The question accomplishes three things: 1) Establishes Canada as being ruled over by and part of England.
2) Gets the MSM talking about England, establishes the grievances that the US has against England going way back. Laying the groundwork for what’s to come, considering gross British interference in the election. Bye-bye, Five Eyes!
3) Takes a nice slap at the Crown, lol.
It might even get some in Canada to thinking they might want to be part of the US.
BwahahahahaHAH!
Or elect Jordan Peterson as their next PM. Libtards fear him and he’s not even a conservative, just a logical thinker.
Or elect Jordan Peterson as their next PM.
Yup. I’ve got meet and greet tickets with him in Sacramento in a couple of weeks.
“Or elect Jordan Peterson as their next PM”
But they’re still part of The Crown, which is trying to assert its supremacy over the US as well, through GCHQ and its spying apparatus. That’s why you see the Awan spy ring in Congress, and nothing being done about it.
Jordan Peterson = #BadThink.
I learned this from reading the New York Times, the Washington Post, the New Yorker, the UK Guardian, the Globe and Mail, the Atlantic, the Huffington Post, and Salon dot com.
I have learned, that Jordan Peterson is a “leader” of the Alt-Right Manosphere that includes Elliot Rodgers (Santa Barbara shooting) and some Canadian forgot-his-name who plowed his car into a sidewalk full of people in Toronto recently after declaring on Facebook that it was “the start of the incel [involuntarily celibate] revolution.”
Know that 50% of all marriages end in divorce, and that 70% of all marriages are initiated by women.
Go talk to any 40-50-something guy whose wife dropped the divorce papers bomb on him, and what they all say in common is “I can’t believe she would do this to me” or “I didn’t see it coming.”
No single man with assets and options should ever get married. Ever. It’s a broken institution, with only infinite financial losses.
Now go read some more Huffington Post articles about how women in their 30s and 40s can’t find husbands, and enjoy the cats, boxed wine, SSRI antidepressant drugs, and an inescapable path toward mortality characterized only by loneliness and despair, because you rode the train on Alpha C*cks, and missed the train on Beta Bucks.
LOLZ
Seriously, do you have anything to add? Because you’ve been posting essentially the same 3-4 paragraphs for 3-4 years now.
And I thought I was stirring things up the other day with my rant.
Seriously though, Divorce, and living in countries where it essentially encouraged has had some nasty effects on the economic state of the people gone through it that I don’t think have been studied or understood enough to appreciate the impact.
Groups in previous generations that would make up a nice chunk of the home-owning, economically secure families that comprised many middle class neighborhoods, for the most part have been shifted into different categories with different needs for housing and different abilities and timetables for affording it.
But they’re not the only ‘new’ group that is basically having to invent new rules as they go. We’re talking about boomers today who are not retiring - out of necessity. And like the unprecedented number of divorced, the impact that non-retiring boomers are causing (and will cause) on the economy, housing, other generations, etc isn’t really being talked about or studied as much as it warrants.
The more the media and academics/economists ignore various segments of the population that don’t fit the old happy models, the more surprised they will continue to be when things don’t go as expected.
Truth never gets stale, IMHO.
Yet housing prices are way up in these places?
++++++
Violent crime and poverty place Detroit, Flint, St. Louis and Las Vegas as the WORST cities in America to live in… and it’s not good news for LeBron’s Cleveland
UK Daily Mail | June 6, 2018 | Valerie Bauman
Detroit, Michigan holds the dubious title of being the country’s worst city to live in, according to a new report ranking America’s 50 most unappealing places to call home.
Detroit has just the right combination of poverty, unemployment, crime and other factors to hold its first-place position, followed by Flint, Michigan and St. Louis, Missouri.
1. Detroit, Michigan
2. Flint, Michigan
3. St. Louis, Missouri
4. Las Vegas
5. Memphis, Tennessee
6. Cleveland, Ohio
7. Wilmington, Delaware
8. Albany, Georgia
9. Springfield, Missouri
10. Baltimore, Maryland
Vegas baby. It is interesting all the other cities are past their prime. You could never get me to live in Vegas, but I concede it is still growing. I guess it should not be too surprising that a city that markets itself as sin city has a high crime rate, even if it has glitzy if over the top tacky areas.
Nasty place, is Vegas. I pulled over just after dark for some fuel while passing through one evening. I was near MLK Jr. blvd., which is never a good place no matter the city, and even though it was early evening it had almost a south central LA vibe. I was happy to gtfo of that gas station.
I was near MLK Jr. blvd., which is never a good place no matter the city
Wasn’t it Chris Rock that initially noted that?
These cities are always high up there. So when houing prices increase nationally the rankings dont channge.
But it is also misleading. Las Vegas has a lot of crime that is tourist related, which doesnt affect someone who lives in Summerlin for example. St Louis and inner burbs are a pit. But the outer burbs are quite nice and safe. Detroit crime…yeah in the areas where houses go for $1. Not so much in Grosse Pointe.
And also I call BS that no city in CA is in the top 10. Reason is of course, police knock down charges for illegals down to midemeanors to avoid having to get ICE involved. If they bother arresting them at all. Illegals can virtually commit any crime short of killing someone without much worry. And even when they do kill someone like Kate Steinle they serve no time.
you can steal $999 and get ticket in CA
VA just went to $499
Price the riff raff out, replace with urban pioneers like west Harlem back 15 years ago, now 75 year old townhouses sell for a couple of million, streets are safe i have friends on 123 and manhattan ave , 3 blocks from 125th st subway i dont feel threatened like i used to
There’s something to be said for this. Unfortunately, when you have an economic system that’s actively creating a larger and larger number and percentage of economically disadvantaged people, the future looks bleak.
“Price the riff raff out…”
This has happened in San Jose. All that remains now are the homeless street people. Anyone who has been around the south bay for a while knows it.
OK.
A massive money pit. About as unpractical as you can get.
But SOOOOOOOOO COOL!!!!
+++++
Buy your own ISLAND: Fort designed to defend Britain from Napoleon goes on sale for £400,000
UK Daily Mail | June 6, 2018 | Simon Rushton
A historic island fort is being sold for less than the price of a one-bedroom flat in London.
Stack Rock Fort, off the coast of Milford Haven in Pembrokeshire, was built to defend Britain from an invasion from France’s Napoleon III.
Made up of three floors with spiral staircases leading to each one, with cannon rooms, former sleeping quarters, the island provides a 360-degree view of the Haven waterway.
The average cost of buying a home in London is £471,944 and the average cost in Wales is £152,999, according to the UK Land Registry.
Cool photos here:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-5811693/Historic-Stack-Rock-Fort-island-sold-400-000-one-bed-London-flat.html
Built between 1850 and 1852, and upgraded in 1859 with a new building that completely encased the original gun tower, the Grade II-listed fortification is on sale for £400,000.
In 2015, it was put up for sale for £150,000.
so maybe fetches 90 pounds
ben excellent work as usual. i’m sure you’ve found greaterfool.ca in your travels? yourself and garth would i’m sure get along famously. no way could the canadian house of cards be mentioned too much in US. must keep the punch bowl line stepping right up to those Homebuyer Advantage loans etc. musnt startle the lemmings at this crucial juncture of “last in close the door i mean gate behind you!”
I’d like to meet him someday.
July 28th, 2016
‘A Toronto economic analyst and former politician has blamed governments and “our own house horniness”—and not foreign investors—for sky-high Canadian home prices.’
“There’s simply no data showing foreign guys caused houses to go ballistic, and overwhelming evidence Canadians have done this themselves (with the help of politicians),” wrote Garth Turner on his blog, The Greater Fool. “Even the latest Van stats reveal locals and foreigners spent an identical amount per purchase, and Canadians outnumbered them by nine-to-one. Case closed.”
“In fact for decades, there’ve been strong pro-real estate measures enacted by every successive group of politicians, leading us directly to now—when the average family can no longer afford the average home,” Turner writes. “Artificially-low borrowing rates, government-backed mortgage insurance, legislated 5% down payments, RRSP homebuyer loans, first-timers grants, property tax rebates, land transfer tax exemptions—the list of interventions is endless. So now crap houses cost a million. Good job, government.”
Wow - no wonder he is a former politician…
++++
“Artificially-low borrowing rates, government-backed mortgage insurance, legislated 5% down payments, RRSP homebuyer loans, first-timers grants, property tax rebates, land transfer tax exemptions—the list of interventions is endless. So now crap houses cost a million. Good job, government.”
You pukes are looking at this all wrong; Crap houses costing a million reflect the enormous quantity of equity wealth that was created AND that could be (and probably was) cashed out and spent.
Spending does wondrous things for an economy but you ungrateful pukes refuse to acknowledge this fact.
Dire $trait$
Monie$ for nothing$ & the house$ for free …
Now that ain’t workin’ that’s the way you do it
Lemme tell ya them guy$ ain’t dumb
Maybe get a bli$ter on your little finger
Maybe get a bli$ter on your thumb
Central Wanker$ theme $ong
$trait
strāt … noun
plural noun: $traits
1.used in reference to a $ituation characterized by a specified degree of trouble or difficulty.
“the economy i$ in dire strait$”
synonyms: a bad/difficult situation, difficulty, trouble, crisis, a mess, a predicament, a plight
Real estate purchases go to whoever pays the most. One in nine are foreigners and they set the market price. Because they are not spending their own money. They are gambling.
‘There’s simply no data showing foreign guys caused houses to go ballistic, and overwhelming evidence Canadians have done this themselves (with the help of politicians)’
Almost every bubble I’ve watched had something like foreign buyers. Back in 2006 in Sedona it was Californians! Californians are rushing in to snap up the whole town. It was true to some extent, but the notion facilitated much gambling by everybody involved.
Oh and these outsiders have more money (insert reasoning) so that explains why locals can’t afford the shacks, according to the REIC.
Bend(Century West), OR Housing Prices Crater 16% YOY As Defaults Balloon
https://www.zillow.com/century-west-bend-or/home-values/
*Select price from dropdown menu on first chart
I do not think that higher prices are a bug in the system they are a designer feature. If you base your economic system on consumer spending and allow your factories to go overseas to promote globalization, increasing debt levels is your only option. You want some collateral for that so increasing home prices is a must. It works until is does not work. However ii gives politicians the chance to stay in office long enough to get rich. Bill Clinton rode the wealth effect to reelection and a successful blocking of being removed from office after the impeachment. Then, was rewarded with hundreds of millions by the globalists. The lesson was not lost by other politicians. Sorry Paul Ryan, Trump messed things up. California and Canada, you were good sheep but it is mutton time.
“If you base your economic system on consumer spending and allow your factories to go overseas to promote globalization, increasing debt levels is your only option.”
Yes!
“You want some collateral for that so increasing home prices is a must.”
Yes! An orgasmic yes!
“It works until is does not work.”
Pessimist!
Mr Banker, you crack me up. I gladly pay you 20% for the money you got at 1%
Massive corruption, pay to play, bribery…
And the fake legacy media ignores it
++++++
Bill Clinton says he left the White House $16 million in debt
https://www.cnbc.com/2018/06/04/the-clintons-erased-16-million-in-debt-and-accumulated-45-million.html
Clinton’s tax returns show that she and former President Bill Clinton have made $240 million since leaving the White House
https://www.townandcountrymag.com/society/money-and-power/a12831454/hillary-clinton-net-worth/
Proposition 13 was passed in California in 1978, 40 years ago.
Tax Freedom Day 2018: May 6
Tax Freedom Day 1979: April 22
https://taxfoundation.org/tax-freedom-day-2014-data-tables/
Hillary could probably turn lead into gold. She turned $1,000 into $100,000 in less than a year, IIRC.
Iffin’ $he didn’t pay$ taxe$, that makes her $mart!
You ignore the millions of manufacturing jobs that were lost under George W. Bush’s watch, and the trillions in trade deficits that Obama allowed while sitting on his ass for eight years. All three of them sucked as presidents. If Trump doesn’t show some results soon, he can look forward to thousands of democratic conventioneers laughing and chanting “loser” to a giant photo of him while President Biden promises to finally fix what Trump couldn’t.
President Biden promises to finally fix what Trump couldn’t
I was with you until there. I don’t think people hungry for even faster results will go with anybody from a previous administration. If people can’t get results with Trump I think they’re more likely to go even farther outside the mainstream until they get what they want. If we’re not careful we’ll end up with somebody that leaves the establishment pining for Trump the way they currently pine for Dubya.
“…President Biden promises…”
Biden is starting to look effeminate, feeble and old. Even the #MeToo ladies won’t vote for him.
Rumor has it, he’s soon to beeseen tooling around in 1,000 horsepower mid.engine Corvette with Jay Leno!
All Aboard Amtrak!
Isn’t the next Democratic presidential nominee to be Howard Schultz?
By the way, haven’t been on here for a while. Was up in Jackson Hole when Kanye and Hollywood crew happened to be there. Talk about a culture clash. Eastern Idaho is gorgeous though.
“Eastern Idaho is gorgeous though.”
Did you swing by the failed Teton Dam site near Driggs, ID?
Was up in Jackson Hole when Kanye and Hollywood crew happened to be there. Talk about a culture clash.
Hahah, yeah…I was surprised when I heard he did that. I grew up not too far from there. Reminds me of back in the 80s when the Wyoming kid won the MTV contest to have Prince play in her hometown. There’s still video of that on youtube and it was pretty funny too.
Did you swing by the failed Teton Dam site near Driggs, ID?
As a matter of fact, I spent time in Victor. I have family who own property there and are putting up a small resort. It’s a work in progress, but it is really cool. Lots of tipis, glamping units, RV hookups, cabins, etc. From what I understand, Victor has historically been just a pit stop on the way to Jackson. But it’s starting to develop its own character.
“As a matter of fact, I spent time in Victor.”
That drive between Victor and Jackson was really something with its twisty turns and steep grades besides the elevation… not a road to get stuck following an RV.
When drove south on the return trip following the Snake river. It was a great dad and son adventure.
It goes way farther back than that. Delco Electronics (then part of GM) outsourced jobs to Singapore (1978) and to Mexico (1980) in the Carter/Reagan years, and once Reagan got into office, outsourcing really ratcheted up across the board.
Globalists gonna globe . . .
“The competition among homebuyers is increasing in the Toronto region even though [the world is coming to an end]”
What competition is that? Who can gnaw their arm off the fastest to get out from under the boulder they are trapped under?
Addison, TX Housing Prices Crater 14% YOY As Oil Bust Thrashes Dallas Area
https://www.movoto.com/addison-tx/market-trends/
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/housings-big-problem-boomers-arent-downsizing/
Real estate headache: Baby boomers who won’t sell their homes
Thanks to their sheer numbers, the baby boomers have shaped society, driving social change and the economic expansion since the 1970s. But now they’re influencing society in a new way — by holding on to their homes.
The oldest baby boomers are now in their early 70s, an age that in previous generations signaled a desire to downsize into condos and apartments. But economists are finding that boomers aren’t yet downsizing, at least not in the numbers that some of them had predicted.
With 10,000/day dying off, mother nature will take care of matters.
It’s almost as if all that talk of boomers moving into hip lofts downtown was total BS or something. Turns out living like you did in college doesn’t appeal to 70 year olds after all. And maybe, just maybe 70 yos want peace and quiet in the burbs not gunfire in the city, even without access to 28 organic food stores within walking distance.
Weird huh?
my next stop should be a 2200 sq ft villa- none here,but they’re coming
Well, average life expectancy is low 80s…
So these houses will be coming on the market sooner than later.
The boomer bashing is bullshit. I was 7 years old when JFK and MLK were assassinated. The Deep State entrenched itself and proceeded to loot our wealth and take away our freedoms since way back then and earier. And so all of this would come to be. Many of these looters are criminals from WWII. Yes, my retirement funds are inadequate and I plan to work until I am 70 years old. And my savings will probably still be inadequate so if they do away with SS, I will probably die at my desk.
The retirement age boomers I work with have not retired because of the healthcare costs. My employer pays $16,000 per year towards my health insurance. That is a family, group plan. I work for the state of Florida and the governors favorite form of graft is healthcare.
And before you start bitching about state workers, we are second to lowest paid in the country and I more than earn my salary.
So do not tell me I was supposed to stop the election of Bush or BO and his Deathcare or the looting and lying. It happened to the whole world and it started long ago.
Whew, that was an awesome post. Nothing like getting hit right in the kisser with a truth blivet.
Yep, the crime wave began with WW2 and the evil of the Dulles brothers.
“I was 7 years old when…”
I was 11. I think every day about how I will live, not how I will die.
One ship sails East,
And another West,
By the self-same winds that blow,
‘Tis the set of the sails
And not the gales,
That tells the way we go.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Fl_Skeptic
I’m the same age as you. You did well when you bought. I listened to those who said prices would continue to go down. I’m in trouble now.
I hope your short term inconvenience will resolve itself. Long term debt for something drastically overpriced is some serious trouble.
“I listened to…”
Nobody can make rational decisions these days. I (we) moved 1,000-miles north where it was certain that we could buy with little downside risk. On the flip side, there has been no upside either.
“The Deep State entrenched itself and proceeded to loot our wealth and take away our freedoms since way back then and earier. And so all of this would come to be. Many of these looters are criminals from WWII.”
There is a quick read, “Pandaemonium: Ethnicity in International Politics” by Daniel Patrick Moynihan. It really put things in order for me back in the day.
FL-Skeptic……So you were born roughly in 1956 and you’re 62ish now, so I assume that you are probably under the FRS pension plan and not the investment plan. That being said, let’s say you started work with the State at age 29 and you do work until you’re 70 so you have 41 years of service. FRS regular class members receive 1.60% per year so your pension would be 65.6% of the average of your highest 5 years of salary…… If you can’t live off 65.6% of what you regularly made at that late stage in life, then you suck at financial planning.
Around here the boomer houses (Brady bunch style built in the 60s and 70s) where all their kids grew up tend to be pretty beat up and the least desirable of all the housing stock. Flippers seem to pay more attention to the really old downtown stuff within walking distance of bars and the 2000ish later model stuff with green pools.
Boomers bought houses in the 80s and 90s not the 60s.
OK. I guess now that you mention it my parents and their friends were nearer to the leading edge of the boomers (graduated 67-68). And lots of them bought used houses in the 70s and 80s. So I associate them with that style of house.
It’s not that they won’t sell, it’s that they CAN’T sell. 1 in 5 Boomers have nothing saved for retirement. Nothing. Add in the HELOCs, deferred maintenance, CC bills, supporting a young kid, supporting an aging parent, etc…… The list goes on. Plus they are the entitled “Not gonna give it away” crowd. Everything makes money because they are geniuses!
+1 on the HELOCs. A chunk of those Boomers cashed out equity for kids’ college or toys or both. They are barely above water even now.
😁
“Baby boomers who won’t sell their homes”
They’re an ornery bunch aren’t they.
Baby boomers are refusing to leave the workforce
By John Crudele June 4, 2018 | 10:21pm
A startling number of baby boomers are refusing to leave the workforce.
And that’s going to have an impact on everyone in younger generations wanting to replace them.
In fact, people over 65 are staying in the workforce at a rate not seen in more than 50 years.
https://nypost.com/2018/06/04/baby-boomers-are-refusing-to-leave-the-workforce/
Refuse to leave the workforce? All it takes is a layoff and most of them will be permanently unemployed.
“Baby boomers are refusing to leave the workforce”
Why leave when you can sit back and enjoy your latte while looking at charts and tables half the day on your big-screen panel with your Schwab ticker happily trending up and a news alert standing by on your taskbar ready to broadcast the next high speed chase or police beating? Life is good!
Ain’t this the truth?! Outstanding comment.
Reminds me of what I see each and every time I walk into an IT establishment. Lots of screwing around, with an occasional glance at a screen. Much blown time in meetings and surfing the net and web forums as well.
I think Graeber has captured the essence of the “bullsh*t job well in his new book:
“Meanwhile, says Graeber, practitioners in the fields that directly benefit mankind or offer personal fulfillment, such as teaching, caregiving, waiting, writing, performing carpentry, or making art, are (with the exception of some doctors) poorly paid and secretly resented by those forced to waste their time pursuing a paycheck. Being occupied for long hours of the day fulfilling tasks that, at best, are useless and, at worst, hurt others—building the aforementioned phone systems, foisting software on budget-starved elementary schools, creating paperwork morasses for the homeless—is “a profound psychological violence” that causes anxiety and depression. Basically, our collective soul is being crushed by a rise in what Graeber sees as make-work.”
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-05-15/bullshit-jobs-by-david-graeber-review
Sounds great, maybe I should go back to work!
“More than one-third of adult children between the age of 18 to 34 are living with their parents.”
That’s an amazing demographic trend.
How do you spell “Enabler$”? … “Parent$”
This is how much supporting your adult kid is costing both of you
By Andrea Coombes
Published: June 6, 2018 MarketWatch
This article is reprinted by permission from NerdWallet.
You can’t blame parents for wanting to help their adult children. But when they fork over cash for their kids’ daily living expenses, parents may jeopardize their children’s long-term financial success — and put their own retirement at risk.
Fifty-six percent of parents with children age 18 or older said they’ve paid for their adult children’s groceries, 40% have covered their health insurance and 21% have paid for rent or housing, according to a new NerdWallet survey, conducted by Harris Poll, of 656 parents with children age 18 and older.
That’s not all. Parents have also helped their adult children in these ways:
39% have paid a cellphone bill
34% helped out with car insurance
32% paid for clothing
20% paid for entertainment
Living at home at 18 is a crime?
I think I moved out when I was 20 or 21.
I’d love to sell but you can’t find any smaller homes to buy. They don’t make them anymore, and the old ones are rentals.
Realtors are liars.
….. and every closing a crime scene.
After the midterms.
Voting for the Democrat Party = prioritizing illegal aliens over United States citizens.
Voting for the Democrat Party = voting to increase black unemployment.
Voting for the Democrat Party = voting to raise taxes (I have recently been working on a $250,000 home remodel job, note to Democrats: government does not create jobs, poor people do not create jobs).
Voting for the Democrat Party = supporting AntiFa communist domestic terrorists who only leave their moms’ basements to violently protest against First Amendment freedom of speech.
Voting for the Democrat Party = advocating the repeal of the Second Amendment, which in their delusional logic somehow requires the police (Democrats hate the police) or military (Democrats hate the military) under the leadership of a Republican president Trump (no comment needed) somehow going door to door and confiscating all of the 100+ million guns in the hands of law abiding private citizens in the United States.
The Democrat Party is ideologically bankrupt.
Democrapt$ receive free rent$ in the mind @ Apt # 401
I recently got an email from Karl Rove info@nrsc dot org urging me to contribute to the GOP to keep the Senate.
Karl Rove? Seriously?
AUs,UK,CAn who cares ,how about your hood
22151 is smoking now that the orangeman is spending 1.3 trillion
NoVA here as well. Currently trying to move to a higher paying job to keep up. The jobs are out there, just need to find the right one. Then I too can snag a overpriced shack.
San Francisco Just Made It A Lot Harder For Smokers To Quit
Former smokers relying on electronic cigarettes were dealt a blow by San Francisco voters who approved a ban on all flavored nicotine liquid for vapor products Tuesday.
https://www.chicksonright.com/2018/06/06/san-francisco-just-made-it-a-lot-harder-for-smokers-to-quit/
most folks over 60 smoked-and quit
cut off their HC and they’ll quit
“cut off their HC and they’ll quit”
Many doctors enjoy a wonderful living serving the penniless.
I sense a business opportunity
SF residents are experts at dealing blows.
Just sayin’
Trump’s war on the Washington bureaucracy
https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/white-house/trumps-reforms-target-union-power
chop heads
Melania chopped 40%
Tampa, FL Housing Prices Crater 6% YOY As Boomers Liquidate Retirement Housing
https://www.zillow.com/ballast-point-tampa-fl/home-values/
*Select price from dropdown menu on first chart
Are you hedged against the dangerous economy in 2019?
The world’s biggest hedge fund warns: ‘2019 is setting up to be a dangerous period for the economy’
Graham Rapier
The Bottom
Line Ray Dalio
Hollis Johnson
- Bridgewater Associates is bearish on nearly every financial asset, it said in a recent note to clients.
- “2019 is setting up to be a dangerous period for the economy,” the giant hedge fund said.
- The firm said earlier this month that a major driver of the stock market is nearing its end.
…
“‘Whenever you have a quick increase in prices there is an opportunity there for the criminals among us to use the flipping of houses and purchase and disposal as means to launder their money,’ he said.”
I wonder if the Fed bosses have any regrets at this point about helping real estate prices skyrocket in the post-2012 period.
Which mixed-use buildings get biggest tax breaks? Search 200 parcels in Upstate NY
https://www.syracuse.com/state/index.ssf/2018/05/biggest_tax_breaks_for_mixing_residential_and_commercial_tenants_search_upstate.html
See 40 Syracuse properties that save $5.3 million a year from generous tax break
https://www.syracuse.com/expo/erry-2018/05/4bc3eb92ff3358/tax_break_lets_43_syracuse_bui.html
Syracuse assessor to council: I’ll yank tax break if mixed-use buildings abuse it
https://www.syracuse.com/news/index.ssf/2018/05/syracuse_assessor_to_councilors_ill_review_tax_breaks_for_mixed-use_buildings.html
Syracuse a city without jobs to rent these luxury properties but the politicians repeatedly repeat like a parrot that they are 99 percent full. I live near all these buildings in the downtown area and at night there are very few lights on. Don’t even get me started on the Hotels they are building around here.
SUGuy shakes his head with eye rolls