1-888-683-3052
Click Here For Webinar Video Page
Search REIClub Website
Site Navigation
Investor Information
Home
Monthly Update
Real Estate Articles
Real Estate Videos
Real Estate Success Stories
Real Estate Blog
Free Investing Books, Audios
Real Estate Books
Investing Glossary
Investing Abbreviations
Real Estate Products
No Risk Guarantee
Best Sellers
All Investing Products
Real Estate Courses
Real Estate Audios
Real Estate Ebooks
Real Estate Books
Real Estate Seminars
Real Estate Games
Special Offers
Investor Resources
Hard Money Lenders
Real Estate Agents
Handyman Services
Real Estate Clubs
Cashflow 101 Clubs
Business Tools
Tax Appraisal Districts
State Property Codes
State Foreclosure Laws
Proof of Funds Letter
Discussion Forums
Networking Forum
Beginners, Carlton Sheets
Bird Dogs, Wholesaling
Foreclosures, Short Sales
Sub2, Lease Options
Rehabbing, Landlording
Financing, Hard Money
Asset Protection, Legal
Commercial, Mobile Homes
Real Estate Marketing
Random Ramblings
Site Information
About Us
Advertise on REIClub
Contact REIClub
Link to REIClub
REIClub Facebook
REIClub Twitter
REIClub YouTube
REIClub Testimonials
Learn Wholesaling
CD's Plus Transcripts
Click Here Now!
--------------------------
REO Experts
Reveal Their Secrets
Click Here Now!
Welcome,
Guest
. Please
login
or
register
.
Did you miss your
activation email?
May 25, 2012, 09:55:08 PM
Free Monthly Update
Subscribe today and get
four free bonus gifts!
Name:
Email:
Click Here to Register for the Discussion Forums
Real Estate Investing Forums
|
Real Estate Investing
|
Random Ramblings
(Moderators:
$Cash$
,
Bluemoon06
,
kdhastedt
,
Mdhaas
,
motivatedceo
) | Topic:
Housing Recovery Shaky - Who Would Have Thought It?
« previous
next »
Pages:
[
1
]
Tweet
Author
Topic: Housing Recovery Shaky - Who Would Have Thought It? (Read 382 times)
propertymanager
Member
Offline
Posts: 4854
Housing Recovery Shaky - Who Would Have Thought It?
«
on:
March 03, 2010, 08:48:02 AM »
Here's the very long link:
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Housing-Recovery-Is-Looking-A-cnbc-1706073918.html%3B_ylt%3DAnVMV0thPQjsveijQzJ_SZq7YWsA%3B_ylu%3DX3oDMTE1aDZwdm5sBHBvcwMyBHNlYwN0b3BTdG9yaWVzBHNsawNob3VzaW5ncmVjb3Y-?x=0&sec=topStories&pos=main&asset=&ccode=
Quote
New homes sales fell to a record low in January, extending a two-month slide; pending and existing home sales were down in December; homebuilder sentiment in January fell back to where it was last June, and mortgage applications have fallen three of the past four weeks,
Existing-Home Sales Plunge In January:
"The data is telling us that it is weaker than we've been anticipating," says Pat Newport, a housing analyst at IHS Global Insight. "What the housing market has needed all along is a better economy."
As I've been saying, this "recovery" is nothing but a fake. The only reason that there has been any improvement in housing or autos or banking or anything else is that the government is propping it up with stimulus. The real demand is almost non-existent. Furthermore, the government has just extended unemployment benefits AGAIN (now almost 2 years) and there is little incentive for people to look for work. When you're paying people to stay home - THEY AREN'T GOING TO WORK! This is another government program which is actually causing the economy to worsen. Hungry people look for work. People with unending unemployment sit on their butts!
Quote
Smith says the government's mortgage modification program meant to avert foreclosures "is doing nothing more than prolonging the housing recovery. It is doing more harm than good."
EXACTLY!
Quote
Some 4.5 million homes are expected to fall to foreclosure this year, following 2.8 million in 2009. In contrast, existing homes sales for the two-year period will average about 5.5 million.
If things are getting better, why are there 2 MILLION more foreclosures this year than in 2009. That doesn't sound like improvement to me.
Quote
That's the Federal Reserve's massive $1.42 billion dollar program to buy mortgage backed securities, MBS, and government agency debt.
Yep, $1.42 billion would be a massive program (a billion is a lot of money), however, IT'S A $1.42 TRILLION dollar program and yes - that IS MASSIVE!
Who's going to pay for all this reckless spending?
«
Last Edit: March 03, 2010, 08:51:05 AM by propertymanager
»
Report to moderator
Logged
www.1MinuteToRentalPropertyRichs.com
This No-Hype, No-Nonsense Book is a step by step course in making money and building wealth with rental properties! Everything from buying properties at a discount to dealing with terrible tenants. Now In Paperback!
fdjake
Member
Offline
Posts: 1880
Re: Housing Recovery Shaky - Who Would Have Thought It?
«
Reply #1 on:
March 03, 2010, 12:18:53 PM »
There's nothing FAKE about the $250,000 PLUS I've put in my bank account in the last 4 months!!!
WOW.....What a NEWS FLASH......There's a shaky housing recovery AFTER the worst housing BUST in HISTORY!!!!
OH MY GOD......I can't believe it.....You mean to tell me that the HOUSING RECOVERY won't bring things back to 2006 LEVELS??????
I thought I could just go out and BUY ANYTHING and MAKE MONEY???
This is a HUGE dissapointment.
I'll tell you what I'm gonna do.......I'm NOT BUYING another property....THAT'S IT.....I'm done.....Even though I've made a QUARTER OF A MILLION DOLLARS.....That ARTICLE got me thinking!!!
I'm throwing out EVERYTHING I KNOW about REAL ESTATE and INVESTING CYCLES and I'm just listening to NEWS WEB SITES from now on!!!
«
Last Edit: March 03, 2010, 02:11:48 PM by fdjake
»
Report to moderator
Logged
rookieNYC
Member
Offline
Posts: 991
Re: Housing Recovery Shaky - Who Would Have Thought It?
«
Reply #2 on:
March 03, 2010, 02:24:40 PM »
"Foreclosed homes are selling at remarkable pace," says Richard Smith, CEO of Realogy, the national real estate company, whose brands include Coldwell Banker, Century 21 and The Corcoran Group. "People are looking for the value play. The majority of homes are being bought by investors and first-time buyers..
The market's range for that increase is somewhat large--between a fifth of a percentage point and a full percentage point. A consensus, however, seems to have formed around half a percentage point. At the worst then, 30-year mortgage rates would be around 6 percent, which is still historically low and thus presumably attractive to borrowers.
"It will have a negative impact, but not a great negative impact," says Jed Smith, an economist with the National Association of Realtors. "I don't think it will kill the housing market recovery."
"The credit markets are still dysfunctional, the banking system is still in distress," says Brian Bethune, chief U.S. financial economist at IHS Global Insight. "There's no new credit flowing. The Fed is obviously getting too impatient about tightening credit."
I read alot of positives in that article also..
Report to moderator
Logged
Pages:
[
1
]
Tweet
Real Estate Investing Forums
|
Real Estate Investing
|
Random Ramblings
(Moderators:
$Cash$
,
Bluemoon06
,
kdhastedt
,
Mdhaas
,
motivatedceo
) | Topic:
Housing Recovery Shaky - Who Would Have Thought It?
« previous
next »
Jump to:
Please select a destination:
-----------------------------
Real Estate Investing
-----------------------------
=> Carlton Sheets, Beginners, Courses, Gurus, General Forum
=> Bird Dogs, Wholesaling, Flipping Properties Forum
=> Foreclosures, Short Sales, Tax Foreclosures, Tax Liens Forum
=> Sub2, Owner Finance, Options, Lease Options Forum
=> Rehabbing, Landlording Forum
=> Financing, Hard Money Lenders, Credit, Qualifying
=> Asset Protection, Legal and Contract Issues, Income Taxes, 1031 Exchanges
=> Commercial, Mobile Homes, Self Storage, Notes, Land Forum
=> Marketing Forum
=> Random Ramblings
-----------------------------
Investor Networking
-----------------------------
=> Network With Other Investors
1 Hour
1 Day
1 Week
1 Month
Forever
Login with username, password and session length
Powered by SMF 1.1.8
|
SMF © 2006-2012, Simple Machines LLC
Loading...
Anti-Spam Policy
|
Compensation Disclosure
|
DMCA Notice
|
Earnings Disclaimer
|
External Links Policy
|
Privacy Policy
|
Terms And Conditions
|
View Cart
©2002-2012 All Rights Reserved. REIClub.com