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Warren Buffet Predicts Real Estate Bubble Burst & More
http://money.cnn.com/2005/05/01/news...ex.htm?cnn=yes
This old man sure knows how to call em'. Check out not only his real estate predictions but his Hedge Fund, terrorism, and pharmaceutical predictions. Some shit is about to hit the fan and I'll bet it'll be either this summer or just before Christmas. What I mean about shit is anything that would damage either the summer travel industry or the Christmas holiday shopping season. Both seasons are the foundation of not only ours but the world's economies. Everyone else lives off America's fat and we're getting to much fat in the wrong places. |
Buffet is always right.
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He is like the modern day Nostradamous.
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Self-fulfilling prophecy
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Thanks for the link. Good stuff. :thumbsup
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he's an over the hill windbag.
I've seen many housing market spikes and predictions of housing market bubble bursts. The burst never happends. at worst you see a couple years where your house doesn't appriciate for a few years. You never see a decline in real value only a short term flattening. |
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Real estate outside of cartoons and porn is the only thing that can make you rich fast. Every post hurricane season people pick up and haul ass and sell their shit cheap. Same with blizzards too. In California when the ground rumbles, people haul ass. After 9-11 you coulda snagged up real estate in NYC like it was going out of style. Shit happens-prices drop is an equation you can always bank on. Not to say everything you've pointed out is wrong, but check history. |
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and niether did I. :winkwink: |
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At their peak, Vancouver prices in real terms were 55% above their 1980 level, whereas today, they are 40% above the 1980 level. In other western markets(such as Calgary),however, real prices today are lower than they were in 1980 ? 25 years ago. This is just one example for those who believe one can never lose money in the ?fail-safe? investment of real estate. Timing is everything. Markets can go through long periods when investors make no money in real terms. Real estate markets are not all the same. You may now continue with your insults, 12clicks. |
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But hes a really rich windbag.........I wish I was rich as that windbag..... the ho's I'de have............... :winkwink: |
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Yale economist who predicted "tech-crash" also predicts real estate crash:globe and mail link
I personally think we will not have a "major crash" but a minor correction in my market. |
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Why am I even trying to talk rationally to you; you've got a fucking mustache! :1orglaugh :1orglaugh |
Lol, all he did was comment on the extreme appreciation that some area's are seeing.
Like 12clicks said, and all you guys were so quick to attack, based on your feelings for him... At the worst, we'll see a period of time where housing appreciation will stagnate, or slow down. The market isn't going to crash... If appreciation slows, it'll be mainly investors and people on interest only arms, that will need to rethink their strategy... The majority of the public won't. |
As long as there's no upcoming shortage in HOES then I'm cool. I'm drowning in "raw materials" right about now.
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there will be no national bubble burst. There will be small local bursts that all these guys can point to and thump their chests about being right.
Mr. Yale says this is the biggest bubble of the last 100 years. This isn't correct either. there's an area I'm familiar with where in 1969 a house sold for 11,000. 7 years later, that house sold for 33,000 or triple the price 7 years later the house was worth 100,000 or again triple the price. today the house is worth about 150,000. Those 14 years were a serious bubble. today, during this great boom, it will take quite a bit more time for MY house, in a town where there are always more buyers than sellers, to triple in price. :winkwink: its a nice run, its no bursting bubble. |
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Nor were we talking about non-US markets. Quote:
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of course it's going to burst anybody can tell you that
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While I am young and might be mistaken, there are some differences in how housing figures into people's overall budgets...
I've been told it used to be considered a good rule of thumb that one's housing costs amounted to 25% of their income (I don't remember whether that is post or pre taxes). However, that figure is more like 30-40% for people in many urban markets - so therefore, they have less financial flexibility. Also, it used to be that you had to have 20% downpayment to get a mortage. Now people are using 100% financing with little or no downpayment and dont have the kind of reserves in case of any financial problems... Plus, what about rising personal debt levels? That makes people more at risk for not being able to make their mortage payments. Add in some major national or regional economic problems and that could start a bubble burst :( well... just my cheap two cents :) |
They don't call him the "Oracle of Omaha" for nothing. :2 cents:
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there was a huge real estate bubble in Florida in the 1920's before the depression..
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http://www.economist.com/images/20020330/CSF597.gif http://www.economist.com/finance/dis...ory_id=1057057 |
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flattening decline bubble burst
geez enough, please talk about something else! |
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The housing market is driven by the low interest rate. that rises the bubble bursts. Then the house of cards collapses. So long as the rest of the world keeps lending the US money it's safe. When they stop then the fun ends. |
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I'm not the one hiding behind a keyboard. :1orglaugh |
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In terms of the RE bubble, I think you have to look at who is selling to who. If people are selling to people, it'll keep going up, as long as interest rates, bond rates and inflation are relatively constant.
However, if investors and speculators are selling to other investors and speculators, then the bubble is sure to burst before too long. Depends on who you are, what kind of capital you are working with and if you are able to ride-out a burst and turn your acquisitions during the next bubble. |
Berkshire Hathaway stock's last quote is $86,000/share. Buffet refuses to let it split, essencially saying he only wanted serious long-term investors in his company. Judging by the shareholder's faith in him, it must have worked. :)
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