The speculative mania in housing has been extended by massive Federal Reserve and government intervention; the government now owns or guarantees 2/3 of U.S. mortgages.
While speculative bubbles may pop in terms of sales and valuations, the psychology that underpinned the mania lives on for some time--especially if government extends the speculation with massive interventions.
I sincerely doubt the average American understands the full measure of Federal intervention to prop up the U.S. housing market. The numbers casually dropped (with little context, of course--this is pure MSM "coverage," after all) in the Wall Street Journal report No Easy Exit for Government as Housing Market's Savior (WSJ.com) are truly mind-boggling:
To keep funds flowing to the housing market, the government bailed out Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac last year and now effectively owns the mortgage finance giants and their combined $5.4 trillion in loan portfolios. To keep mortgage rates low, the Federal Reserve is on track to purchase nearly $1.5 trillion in debt issued or guaranteed by the government's various mortgage arms and another $300 billion in Treasurys, which set the benchmark for home lending.
What the reporters fail to mention is the value of all U.S. mortgages is about $10 trillion-- meaning the U.S. government now guarantees over half of all mortgages just with Fannie and Freddie.
But wait--it gets worse--much worse:
LINK HERE
VANCOUVER CANADA
Five days after that open house, seven agents lined up to make their offers. The asking price was $959,000, but because of the competition, the bidding war pushed the price higher. Only two bids came in at less than $1 million. In the end, the home sold for a staggering $1.142 million – more than $180,000 over the original price tag. 10x10 Master Bedroom. Backs onto a condo complex...and it is just half a block off one of the city's busiest thoroughfares.
Cliffside, and the dirt and rocks are starting to shift downward.
ReplyDeletewhere is the link to this story..?
ReplyDeleteHousing is doing good, house prices are going up, new house starts rising, this recession is over.
ReplyDeleteThe article quotes how much the house was sold for in US dollars...must be inflation?
ReplyDeleteDrug lords need shacks like these for money laundering and low profile looky lou's wouldn't attract any attention. Drug money drives vancouver's economy. Thats why it takes a year to bust a grow op. You wouldn't want to slow down production now would you.
ReplyDelete