The author is alive and well and living somewhere west of the Greenwich meridian.
 
Google
Long Dark Tea-Time Web
Site hosted by DreamHost
 
Archives
March 2003
April 2003
May 2003
June 2003
July 2003
August 2003
September 2003
October 2003
November 2003
December 2003
January 2004
February 2004
March 2004
April 2004
May 2004
June 2004
July 2004
August 2004
September 2004
October 2004
November 2004
December 2004
January 2005
February 2005
March 2005
April 2005
May 2005
June 2005
July 2005
August 2005
September 2005
October 2005
November 2005
<< current
 
Tea-Time Feeds
Atom feed Atom feed
Subscribe with Bloglines Bloglines subscribe
Add to Yahoo MyYahoo subscribe
 
All your links are belong to us
Chicken or Beef?
eAsylum.net
Hateful Things
KnowProSE
K'vitsh
The Long Dark Tech-time of the Soul
The Mad Prophet Blog
Meg Does Blogs
Net Politik
Rush Limbaughtomy the Dittohead Recovery Site
South Knox Bubba
 
Rolling, rolling, rolling
Alternet.org
Angry Bear
Arianna's Blog
The Big Picture
Curry Blog
General Glut's Globblog
GuvWurld
In These Times
It's Still The Economy Stupid
Let's run the numbers
Tufte's Economics Classes Blog

SF  Bay Blogger
 
Douglas Adams
1952/3/11 - 2001/5/11

DNA Home Page
Wikipedia Entry
The Long Dark Tea-Time of the Soul Novel
H2G2
 
StatCounter:
SiteMeter:
 
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License

The Long Dark Tea-Time of the Soul
Miscellaneous ramblings written as my soul endures a long dark tea-time
 
Saturday, July 16, 2005  
Can anyone say "dot com" over again?

A recent Chrisitian Science Monitor article pretty much sums up how insane the real estate market is getting in the USA, and perhaps even globally. When people are using chocolate clad women in bikinis to sell unbuilt condos there must surely be something up. I mean, as far as end of the bubble omens go that really has to beat getting stock tips from shoe shine boys, right? The only thing this over-hyped and over-here bubble lacks is a catchy monica. How about "brick com", or even "brick con"? However if overseas investors keep pouring their bucks into this country (and then sucking them out later) it may just keep the pot boiling for a few more years.

I begin to wonder how much the real-estate boom is fueling the "economic recovery" in the USA? I'll bet its quite a significant factor - some friends of my who are appraisers said this month they've seen a record number of people getting foreclosed because they re-fied their properties to the max and spent all the money on household goods like home entertainment systems and new cars - all stuff that depreciated faster than it becomes obsolete.

Also being surrounded by new condo developments under construction I'd love to see some statistics on how many housing units are lying empty now, compared to during the stock market boom days. Certainly back then it seemed you couldn't buy or rent property for love nor money. However now there seems to be a real surfiet of rental property at well below the cost of paying the mortgage on the same space if you bought it. That leads me to believe their must be a lot of vaccant properties that have been bought as investments with the owners banking on increasing prices that will cover the money they are sinking into mortgage interest payments.

In California and other areas people make the case that the hottest markets are those where land is scarce and the population is growing. In these places the law of supply and demand will ensure that prices keep going, going, up! However the point is that prices are going up faster than wages and sooner or later pretty much everyone will get to the point where they can no longer afford to move anywhere but out of the State, into a smaller property (why bother?) or just not buy anywhere at all and start renting until prices fall again, or wages rise to exceed prices.

7/16/2005 04:53:00 PM 0 comments

0 Comments:

Post a Comment