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The Greatest Depression has arrived!!!!!


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2011 Aug 13, 3:36pm   15,258 views  97 comments

by HousingBoom   ➕follow (1)   💰tip   ignore  

For those that believe that the economy is recovering or even moving sideways, you will be extremely disappointed. The economy has begun its next leg down. This is obviously not good for the housing market. Rates will end up in double-digits in the coming years.

I'm sure many people did not see the S&P downgrade coming. It is inevitable that the US gov't will default within a few years (or much sooner). We will have more downgrades just like Greece in the coming years if not months! The housing market is doomed to fail.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rOmHHUSiWAA&feature=channel_video_title

#housing

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19   Clara   2011 Aug 14, 8:08am  

There's no Great Depression. It's a lie!!! We all got food on the table and lots of us still got a job. People bung iPad, expensive cars all the time!!!

20   uomo_senza_nome   2011 Aug 14, 8:27am  

Clara says

People bung iPad, expensive cars all the time!!!

lol, you can't eat an Ipad.

Anyway, here are two graphs to prove that we are heading to, if not already in a depression. over 13 million Americans will live on about one third what the cheapest iPad costs in about a year.

zhfoodstampaug

Here's the graph of unemployment rate, true unemployment rate should include long-term discouraged workers as well.

shadowstatsuerate

21   uomo_senza_nome   2011 Aug 14, 8:33am  

Nomograph says

Wake me when the line at the Apple store becomes a soup line.

Its up to you to wake up and look at the data.

22   HousingBoom   2011 Aug 14, 8:54am  

Nomograph says

HousingBoom says

The Greatest Depression has arrived!!!!!

If you have to try really hard to convince people that we are in a Great Depression, then we probably ARE NOT in a Great Depression.

Wake me when the line at the Apple store becomes a soup line.

Let other pens dwell on guilt and misery -- Jane Austen

lol soup line? have you heard of food stamps? there's your modern day soup line. take a look at the "soup line" chart. it's at record highs.

people who think like you are the reason I need to make these posts

23   HousingBoom   2011 Aug 14, 8:57am  

austrian_man says

Well, if Alan Greenspan is telling the truth - why wouldn't you accept it? he is saying we'll print money to pay the deficits - which part of it is not true?

Peter Schiff is a good guy, but he has been wrong in some of his calls too. He said US will have hyper-inflation in 2010. Did we?

US is not going to have an imminent hyper-inflation for example and Schiff keeps ignoring the fact that credit is contracting at a faster rate than Fed is printing money.

I agree. We will most likely not going to see hyperinflation in the near future. I am actually betting on massive deflation in the short term. I said in my original post that we should see double-digit rates in the coming YEARS.

Alan Greenspan is nothing but a puppet. I don't believe a word that comes out of his mouth. Schiff did make a few incorrect (short-term) calls but he is usually right with his long term predictions.

24   Done!   2011 Aug 14, 9:24am  

That chart is dishonest, to call it an all time high, on percentage when the chart starts less than ten years ago.

25   Done!   2011 Aug 14, 9:30am  

Participants

According to the United States Department of Agriculture (based on a study of data gathered in Fiscal Year 2006), statistics for the food stamp program are as follows:[15]

49% of all participants are children (17 or younger), and 61% of them live in single-parent households.
52% of food stamp households include children.
9% of all participants are elderly (age 60 or over).
76% of all benefits go to households with children, 16% go to households with disabled persons, and 9% go to households with elderly persons.
33% of households with children were headed by a single parent, the overwhelming majority of whom were women.
The average household size is 2.3 persons.
The average gross monthly income per food stamp household is $673.
43% of participants are white; 33% are African-American, non-Hispanic; 19% are Hispanic; 2% are Asian, 2% are Native American, and 1% are of unknown race or ethnicity.[15]
From the above data 8% of the white population of the United States of America are participants, 39% of African-American non-Hispanics are participants, 15% of the Hispanic population are participants, 9% of the Asian population are participants and 31% of the Native American population are participants.

An annual report released by the USDA about the composition of households participating in the Food Stamp Program is identified as the Characteristics Report.

Aside from nutritional assistance, SNAP Employment and Training (E&T) funds can also be used to provide recipients with education and training and career pathways programs. SNAP outreach funds can also be integrated with screening tools for other public benefit programs.

26   FortWayne   2011 Aug 14, 10:55am  

bubblesitter says

As AF says prepare for upcoming cannibal anarchy. Just kidding. I am not sure rates are going up anytime soon. If a republican is elected as a president it may change though. In any case home prices will keep tanking,even with rock bottom rates.

Fed promised to keep rates low until mid 2013. So they are certainly not going up anytime soon.

27   uomo_senza_nome   2011 Aug 14, 10:59am  

HousingBoom says

I said in my original post that we should see double-digit rates in the coming YEARS.

Put a time-frame. For instance, I'll tell you this - rates are not going to double digits until 2013 given that Fed is keeping their funds rate low and also euro is in a shittier place than dollar right now.

Tell me the time frame, then planning towards that may be useful. A prospective buyer won't get good prices for houses at least until 2013, given that loose money continues to distort the market.

28   uomo_senza_nome   2011 Aug 14, 11:01am  

HousingBoom says

Alan Greenspan is nothing but a puppet. I don't believe a word that comes out of his mouth.

I agree he is a puppet. but I don't think he's a complete doofus. Come on, after all -- he wrote the paper "GOLD AND ECONOMIC FREEDOM". He understood the role of gold in today's monetary system and why out-of-control spending and monster derivatives market came to exist today.

29   HousingBoom   2011 Aug 14, 12:27pm  

austrian_man says

Put a time-frame. For instance, I'll tell you this - rates are not going to double digits until 2013 given that Fed is keeping their funds rate low and also euro is in a shittier place than dollar right now.

IMO, we should see double-digit rates within 3 years from today. The Fed's statement about keeping rates low until mid-2013 means absolutely nothing. All they do is make and break promises.

The minute the run on the dollar begins (who knows when), rates will start to skyrocket.

30   HousingBoom   2011 Aug 14, 12:30pm  

austrian_man says

I agree he is a puppet. but I don't think he's a complete doofus. Come on, after all -- he wrote the paper "GOLD AND ECONOMIC FREEDOM". He understood the role of gold in today's monetary system and why out-of-control spending and monster derivatives market came to exist today.

Don't get me wrong, I am sure Alan Greenspan is extremely intelligent. What use is it when he's told what to say. Ron Paul just asked Bernanke why the Fed holds gold and his answer was "tradition". lol Bernanke is probably very intelligent but that the was one of the dumbest answers I have ever heard. They are all puppets so anything they say is worthless in my opinion.

31   Â¥   2011 Aug 14, 1:15pm  

HousingBoom says

The minute the run on the dollar begins (who knows when), rates will start to skyrocket.

The minute rates skyrocket $50T in debt starts to get defaulted on.

32   Â¥   2011 Aug 14, 1:22pm  

Nomograph says

If you have to try really hard to convince people that we are in a Great Depression

Debt to the penny:

08/11/2008 5,403,503,090,045.93
08/11/2011 9,921,146,601,533.97

$4.5T of deficit spending in 3 years. ~$40,000 per household. Technically (just the basics) $40,000 should be enough to tide a household over for 3 years.

And that was just the money we borrowed.

If Hoover had dumped 10% of GDP into the economy 1929-1931, there wouldn't have been a GD I, either.

33   HousingBoom   2011 Aug 14, 1:31pm  

Troy says

HousingBoom says

The minute the run on the dollar begins (who knows when), rates will start to skyrocket.

The minute rates skyrocket $50T in debt starts to get defaulted on.

“Nessuna soluzione . . . nessun problema!„

Yes, that's when the real crisis starts. We'll have no choice but to raise rates and the interest on our debt will break the bank. Where will we get that money? The printing press of course. This will most likely snowball into a full blown currency crisis with skyrocketing interest rates. It's a lose lose situation. The housing market is doomed!!!

34   jdavidadams@email.com   2011 Aug 14, 1:41pm  

It will be interesting to see what happens. A currency crisis with the predominant currency in the world. That blazes new ground. It is ineresting to see other coutries indicate that the US is no longer the predominant currency. It might be true soon, but not right now. You can spend USD in many places and if it implodes - nobody can predict what will happen. My bet would be that China will not sit idly by and let our currency de-value. I do not see how they can. The part I have never understood is that even though we are bankrupt, the US still has massive real assets. I do not understand why China does not start buying them all as a hedge. Maybe they already are.

35   robbie   2011 Aug 14, 1:49pm  

This week will reveal a lot of things as many reports are due. Lets hope for the best but be prepared for the worst.

36   bubblesitter   2011 Aug 14, 1:59pm  

HousingBoom says

The housing market is doomed!!!

You forgot add "for a long time"!!!

37   jdavidadams@email.com   2011 Aug 14, 2:09pm  

The bing cosby song was re-mixed.

Now it is called "Brother can you spare a trillion".

38   HousingBoom   2011 Aug 14, 2:30pm  

Nomograph says

Is the U.S. ANYWHERE close to where we were during the Great Depression? Nope.

it's because you're still waiting for a soup line! LOL

39   Â¥   2011 Aug 14, 2:55pm  

Nomograph says

Is the U.S. ANYWHERE close to where we were during the Great Depression? Nope.

1929 -- 2008
1930 -- 2009
1931 -- 2010
1932 -- 2011

This shit's just getting started.

$600B/yr flowing out of the country:

http://articles.latimes.com/2011/aug/12/business/la-fi-trade-imbalance-20110812

Debt To The Penny shows:

08/11/2011 9,921,146,601,533.97
02/11/2011 9,455,006,722,927.41

$500B of deficit spending just in the past 6 months.

California failing:

http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/08/10/us-economy-california-budget-gap-idUSTRE7796LO20110810

We've screwed ourselves 2002-2007 and what's left now is to figure out where we crash.

The 1920s were probity compared to the 2000s -- Gov't spending was held to 4% of GDP -- $80B in 2007 dollars. 2010 spending was $2.7T, and that's not even counting social security.

I don't think we're just going to pick ourselves up and get back to work this time. Perhaps my living in Japan colors my thinking here but I do know that there's no goddamn reason for things to start getting better and lot of reasons for things to resume getting worse.

Mind-bogglingly massive fiscal policy intervention -- trillions! -- has kept the economy from pancaking completely. But what exists now is a bunch of IOUs and promises and none of this is remotely sustainable through the end of the decade, when the baby boom will be aged 59 ~ 74 and cashing in these promises en masse.

The 2010s is not the 1930s but I think it's going to get a lot worse. Higher energy costs, reduced gov't intervention, who knows what else, but higher & higher unemployment as the post-Reagan system we built continues its collapse.

Total government spending in 2010 was $50,000 per household. Unbelievable. That's not even counting SSA. Federal spending in the 1920s was ~$200/household, nominal, $2500 in today's money.

It's all fixable, but the fixes are politically impossible at this time since the core problem is trying to run a Eurosocialist spending program on a Minarchist tax base.

Something's going to have to give here.

Other things we need to get into are: economic war with China, dramatically higher tax burdens, complete reform of health insurance (PPACA is a joke), and a return to Truman's aborted Fair Deal.

Things are going to have to get a lot worse before the get any better.

40   bubblesitter   2011 Aug 15, 12:05am  

Troy says

higher & higher unemployment

Reversing this is the key to recovery.

41   Clara   2011 Aug 15, 1:48am  

We are not in a great depression and never will worry about food on the table. This is non-sense. We are no in a survival mode here in US. It's about lowering standard of living due to a economic downturn. That's it. If you invest like we are in a Great Depression, then I guarantee you will miss out the great buying opportunities like it happened when S&P dropped to 750 last time.

Bas news sell good and draw attention. Thats about it.

42   Â¥   2011 Aug 15, 1:55am  

bubblesitter says

eversing this is the key to recovery.

We're spending $50,000 per household on government. This simply has to be cut. Cutting this burden will mean fewer government jobs.

The yuan is still 3-5X too weak. Adjusting the FX to strengthen their yen will give them more buying power, a mixed blessing to us as we have to work more to provide the same output in yuan-denominated terms (I'm thinking of ag and raw materials, not mfg here). A stronger yuan will therefore send more wealth to China, but in balance things from China will cost more here.

This is more sustainable but not an unalloyed good thing for us. Much more fun to just get cheap stuff and send our money back instead.

We're starting to create a Jetson's economy, where productivity increases simply eliminate jobs. This is great if you can find work or have money, not so great if you can't or don't.

Household debt rose $6T in the previous decade, from $8T to $14T -- the Bush Boom was floated on a sea of consumer debt.

Now the Obama recovery is being floated on a bigger sea of government debt.

I don't buy the Keynesian thing that we can just spend our way out of this. The problems go much deeper than lack of demand, if we don't fix the actual problems we'll just dig the hole deeper.

The problems we face have a commonality -- rent-seeking. In real estate (a trillion or two), medicine (another trillion), financial services (another trillion).

These are the flows that are killing us economically.

43   bubblesitter   2011 Aug 15, 2:02am  

Troy says

Cutting this burden will mean fewer government jobs.

I agree. They are very inefficient bunch wasting tax $$ and getting raises without any output and then get a hefty pension equivalent to the max salary. They are 50% overstaffed IMO and there is no powerful taxpayer watchdog to take on them.

44   bubblesitter   2011 Aug 15, 2:06am  

Troy says

Household debt rose $6T in the previous decade, from $8T to $14T -- the Bush Boom was floated on a sea of consumer debt.

Now the Obama recovery is being floated on a bigger sea of government debt.

That is why I think we have a lost decade,decade and a half ahead of us. Very slow suffering that will be becomes intense as we move forward. Thinks are getting worst? Wait for 10 more years and at that time one would think 2011 was much better. We are SCRWED.

45   HousingBoom   2011 Aug 15, 2:07am  

Clara says

We are not in a great depression and never will worry about food on the table.

you're joking right? do you sit at home and watch Snookie all day? there are middle class families living in tents and are on food stamps right now.

46   bubblesitter   2011 Aug 15, 2:38am  

HousingBoom says

middle class families living in tents and are on food stamps right now

+1. Moving in with retired parents,other family + living on food stamps = modern day depression. Times change so the appearance of depression also changes.

47   Truthplease   2011 Aug 15, 2:49am  

Troy says

The problems we face have a commonality -- rent-seeking. In real estate (a trillion or two), medicine (another trillion), financial services (another trillion).

This is why I come on this website and read some of these discussions. I just learned something new today. Thanks for sharing Troy.

Wiki: From a theoretical standpoint, the moral hazard of rent-seeking can be considerable. If "buying" a favorable regulatory environment is cheaper than building more efficient production, a firm may choose the former option, reaping incomes entirely unrelated to any contribution to total wealth or well-being. This results in a sub-optimal allocation of resources — money spent on lobbyists and counter-lobbyists rather than on research and development, improved business practices, employee training, or additional capital goods — which retards economic growth. Claims that a firm is rent-seeking therefore often accompany allegations of government corruption, or the undue influence of special interests.[8]

48   michaelsch   2011 Aug 15, 3:39am  

Troy says

Debt to the penny:

08/11/2008 5,403,503,090,045.93

08/11/2011 9,921,146,601,533.97

$4.5T of deficit spending in 3 years. ~$40,000 per household. Technically (just the basics) $40,000 should be enough to tide a household over for 3 years.

And that was just the money we borrowed.

Exactly, Troy.
All this money is additional national debt. It was created to replace disappearing corporate and private debt. However, debt (=money) destruction goes on. Corporations do not borrow, consumers do not borrow. At the same time, existing debt requires repayment or at least interest payment. This is pure money destruction.

So, US national debt has to increase much much more. The amount of already created debt increases money destruction. The only way out of this mess is to raise interest rates the way Paul Volker did, but we don't have him around. It would cause a furious but short recession, no politicion today will agree to loose his sit to fix US economy. We do not have Jimmy Carter either.

So, there is no way out, but to have a very very long destruction of US economy (and partially World economy).

There is no way out of Greater Depression.

49   Â¥   2011 Aug 15, 4:18am  

The Volcker rates were in response to wage-price inflation, partially if not probably caused by the expansion of credit as the baby boom entered their 20s and 30s.

Just raising rates won't fix what's wrong with the current economy.

What's wrong is that we can't pay our way in the world ($600B/yr trade deficit) and the top 5% is clearing ~33% of the income.

In graphic terms:

☺takes $
☹ ☹ ☹ ☹ ☹ ☹ ☹ ☹ ☹ ☹ ☹ ☹ ☹ ☹ ☹ ☹ ☹ ☹ ☹ has to share $$

Raising real interest rates will just make the rich richer.

Remember that debt is the flip-side of savings. For every debtor there is a creditor.

50   Vicente   2011 Aug 15, 4:34am  

Truthplease says

moral hazard of rent-seeking can be considerable

The rent-seeking problem is EVERYWHERE in our culture right now. One blatant one that everyone talks about, but nobody DOES ANYTHING about is patent law. Patent portfolios are traded like baseball cards. The billions spent on that activity does nothing to advance our lives. Patent law is strangling real invention and advance.

51   Â¥   2011 Aug 15, 4:38am  

Show me a person with a professional degree and I'll show you a rent-seeker : )

52   mdovell   2011 Aug 15, 4:42am  

There's a fair amount the government can do on various levels that won't cost a penny.

For example under what argument can it be said that we should have sanctions on countries during an economic downturn? It would be hard to take sanctions off of Iran due to political reasons but what reasons are there at this point for Cuba?

On the state level some states prevent towns from sharing equipment without filing red tape. If one town needs to use some piece of equipment once they could save money by borrowing it from another rather than renting it from some company.

Local governments have great leeway. Zoning laws can pretty much prevent a fair number of businesses from opening up, licenses can be denied etc

I agree on the rates..this "We can't raise rates because it will hurt the economy" argument fails. Heck remember post 9/11 about 0% financing for everything?

We have low interest rates, a dollar we think is strong, lower taxes relative to the past and much higher government spending. This cannot hold.

53   michaelsch   2011 Aug 15, 4:48am  

Troy says

The Volcker rates were in response to wage-price inflation.

Just raising rates won't fix what's wrong with the current economy.

It would prevent it, would it done in 1998-1999 instead of printing hundreds of billion using Y2K scare. It would fix it even in 2001, but we got such a good excuse to create hundreds of billions more. Even in March 2003 it would fix most of the problems, but we prefered to believe in WMD and to print, print, print. Yes 18% interest rate will wash away most of our current economy, but we need to recognize that most of it is nothing but shit that need to be washed away, if we want to be more than a banana republic.

What's wrong is that we can't pay our way in the world ($600B/yr trade deficit) and the top 5% is clearing ~33% of the income.

Right, the only responsible way is the default. After the default start with a balanced budget. Anything else is just misleading ourselves.

Raising real interest rates will just make the rich richer.

Not sure about this.

Remember that debt is the flip-side of savings. For every debtor there is a creditor.

Not necessary. When banks issued mortgages there were no savings side to it. When they create Government Guaranteed loans today, there is no savings on the other side. There is a lot of debt created by the Government, or created using Government Guaranties, or created with assuming Government bailout as the endgame, which has no savings side at all.

54   Â¥   2011 Aug 15, 5:02am  

michaelsch says

When banks issued mortgages there were no savings side to it. When they create Government Guaranteed loans today, there is no savings on the other side.

There's always someone's savings being used when new debt is issued.

That's how CALPERS lost billions in real estate and how BAC has $2T of liabilities (customer's money) against $2.1T in assets (loans and stuff).

That's how the system works. Banks don't get money from the Fed without giving the Fed an asset in return, that's why there's almost $3T on the Fed's balance sheet now.

Government guaranteed debt is another kettle of fish. Some of this is funded from government but most is not, AFAIK.

55   nope   2011 Aug 15, 8:31am  

Anyone who thinks that interest rates will be high during an economic depression is smoking crack. Interest rates usually change in response to inflation concerns, and you're not going to get inflation in a depression.

56   HousingBoom   2011 Aug 15, 8:37am  

Kevin says

Anyone who thinks that interest rates will be high during an economic depression is smoking crack. Interest rates usually change in response to inflation concerns, and you're not going to get inflation in a depression.

You need to Google "hyperinflationary depression" and read up on it. A depression does not need to be deflationary. Who's smoking crack now?

57   Clara   2011 Aug 15, 9:08am  

HousingBoom says

Clara says

We are not in a great depression and never will worry about food on the table.

you're joking right? do you sit at home and watch Snookie all day? there are middle class families living in tents and are on food stamps right now.

Show my the actual numbers of middle class people living in tent please?

58   HousingBoom   2011 Aug 15, 9:19am  

Clara says

HousingBoom says

Clara says

We are not in a great depression and never will worry about food on the table.

you're joking right? do you sit at home and watch Snookie all day? there are middle class families living in tents and are on food stamps right now.

Show my the actual numbers of middle class people living in tent please?

Here's a vid on OPRAH. If it's on OPRAH, it must be big....http://www.oprah.com/oprahshow/Lisa-Ling-Goes-Inside-a-Tent-City

This was recorded in 2009. I will see if I can find more data on "the middle class living in tents"

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