I really want to sell my house now, when the prices are high, then wait for the crash and buy another one at the bottom of the market but I don't want to have to pay capital gains on the equity if I don't find another place within a year.
The other issue is what to do with all my stuff while I wait for the market to crash?
It's not necessarily an inevitability? - that the market will crash?
Is there a q post saying it will?
Is it not possible that part of the plan involves market stabilisation and assets changing hands peacefully (albeit with cabal bubbles like Disney, Netflix, etc popping) instead of a crash?
If debts are forgiven and usury ended, wouldn't that cause the market to boom?
I know higher oil prices are helping, but after Russia kicked out the Rothschild banking cartel and ended usury in their country, their economy seems to be doing a lot better.
After all, in an economy with limited corruption much of the economic gains are reinvested instead of wired overseas or hoarded.
However, this isn't inflation due to too much money sloshing around, it's more about lack of supply vs. huge demand, and people will be focussing on food/water.
I don't see it creating a huge upsurge in demand for property, so how would high interest rates curb inflation in this scenario? It wouldn't, it just sounds like another one of their scams.
I'm no financial expert, so I may be missing something obvious here :)
Interest rates were double digits when we bought our first house (about forty years ago). We bought one with an assumable mortgage,and a low interest rate, which required a larger down payment. At the time I was disappointed about it, but my husband is a smart guy and knew what we could afford. He's still a smart guy and we paid off our current house in ten years. That wasn't easy, but turned out to be a great move. People need to stop buying property they can't really afford. We saw the effects of that in 2008 and later, when people couldn't afford their McMansions as interest rates shot up and they had variable rates mortgages.
My best friend sold and bought a big beautiful home in a free state. Every single person in his life told him not to do it and that "he will regret it" etc... Now he's settled and enjoying a way better life. I've tried hard with my parents in CA to consider getting out of the housing market. People just can't make those huge decisions until the herd is also doing it.
In CA we currently have homes that are $900k for 3 bed 1 bath in neighborhoods that have considerably got worse and worse over time. Its just a fact. The hedgies like Black Rock are buying up all the properties which puzzles me a bit. I know they want to kill the middle class and make homes unaffordable aka rent your whole life. But I can't understand why they'd do that if they knew the home market was going to collapse. Maybe their money is safer being parked in land and they know it will eventually go back up? At the same time they can charge ridiculous rent.
The bond market is toast (like a 2 week dead body in the spare bedroom no one wants to deal with). Equities are not far behind if you haven't been watching. They have to park that money someplace else ... ergo, real estate. It's actually genius. A rental home is a defacto bond. It has a coupon rate - interest rate (monthly rents), face value (purchase price), but no 'maturity' time variable ... which is the genius part. Most bonds have a maturity date where the bond will no longer pay interest. At that point it's just cash under your bed. Property however can last 100 years if well maintained.
They are turning the US housing market into the next investment vehicle market ... a De facto Bond market. They can drive up prices to muscle out new home buyers without a second thought. It's easy when you manage 8 Trillion in assets.
When you mention the bond market I have a few questions. I believe my parents are heavily invested in bonds with their old financial advisor. I've tried very hard to guide and wake up my family in these areas but I have little understanding with bonds. Is there anything I could say to get their attention? If the bond market goes under I'm assuming so will their investments? It blows my mind that financial advisors just continue to take their commissions and not guide them.
I'm a huge advocate for precious metals especially gold/silver. Been trying to get my Dad and family to take a small investment but they laugh it off. Funny how a good family friend owns an LCS and they still won't buy any. Got my lil bro invested but had to buy it for him. Anyways, I appreciate your time anon!
God bless
First, Im not a financial advisor. I do have an MBA and have studied markets EXTENSIVELY. Second, ur question about the bonds depends on WHAT KIND of bonds. There are all kinds … treasury, corporate, municipal, cds … they all have a’rating’ (A+ Thru F). The worse the rating, the higher risk but better interest (in theory). Not likely they own junk bonds. They wont ‘loose it all’. But if their interest rate is for shit (2-3%) as most existing bonds are, when rates start going up, the value of those bonds with garbage low rates will drop. Its inverse relationship.
Last year I liquidated ALL my stocks, CDs, IRA, mutual funds and bought a $3000 safe and started filling it with Silver
That's crazy, in europe you have homes that are up from the 1600s, but building from stone vs building from plywood, pine 2x4 (1.5 X 3.5) and tar shingles shouldn't be expected to last.
I agree! Thanks for the input. The amount of houses they have been buying in CA is unbelievable. They are pricing out young families etc... Maybe in a weird way it's a blessing to these young families that can't buy in CA and end up leaving the state
I was thinking the same. Put stuff into storage. Move into an apartment. But....no storage units to rent. No apts to rent, no houses to rent. Everything is at a total stand still. Bot this place 5 years ago for 150K and it's now worth 300K+. Ridiculous but that gave the city means to hike up all the property taxes. So high now we might lose the house if it keeps going up. Yet....if the values go down you think they will lower the property taxes?
I think if you lived in it over two years there is no capital gains tax for under 500K increase. Anything over the 500K is taxed as capital gains. At least that is what my accountant told me when we sold two years ago and downsized.
I am going to be moving in the next year or so.
I really want to sell my house now, when the prices are high, then wait for the crash and buy another one at the bottom of the market but I don't want to have to pay capital gains on the equity if I don't find another place within a year.
The other issue is what to do with all my stuff while I wait for the market to crash?
It's not necessarily an inevitability? - that the market will crash?
Is there a q post saying it will?
Is it not possible that part of the plan involves market stabilisation and assets changing hands peacefully (albeit with cabal bubbles like Disney, Netflix, etc popping) instead of a crash?
If debts are forgiven and usury ended, wouldn't that cause the market to boom?
I know higher oil prices are helping, but after Russia kicked out the Rothschild banking cartel and ended usury in their country, their economy seems to be doing a lot better.
After all, in an economy with limited corruption much of the economic gains are reinvested instead of wired overseas or hoarded.
Interest rates are going to be double digits soon and housing is already grossly inflated.
The housing market will crash, it's just a matter of when it will happen.
Inflation might have something to say about that
However, this isn't inflation due to too much money sloshing around, it's more about lack of supply vs. huge demand, and people will be focussing on food/water.
I don't see it creating a huge upsurge in demand for property, so how would high interest rates curb inflation in this scenario? It wouldn't, it just sounds like another one of their scams.
I'm no financial expert, so I may be missing something obvious here :)
Interest rates were double digits when we bought our first house (about forty years ago). We bought one with an assumable mortgage,and a low interest rate, which required a larger down payment. At the time I was disappointed about it, but my husband is a smart guy and knew what we could afford. He's still a smart guy and we paid off our current house in ten years. That wasn't easy, but turned out to be a great move. People need to stop buying property they can't really afford. We saw the effects of that in 2008 and later, when people couldn't afford their McMansions as interest rates shot up and they had variable rates mortgages.
My best friend sold and bought a big beautiful home in a free state. Every single person in his life told him not to do it and that "he will regret it" etc... Now he's settled and enjoying a way better life. I've tried hard with my parents in CA to consider getting out of the housing market. People just can't make those huge decisions until the herd is also doing it.
In CA we currently have homes that are $900k for 3 bed 1 bath in neighborhoods that have considerably got worse and worse over time. Its just a fact. The hedgies like Black Rock are buying up all the properties which puzzles me a bit. I know they want to kill the middle class and make homes unaffordable aka rent your whole life. But I can't understand why they'd do that if they knew the home market was going to collapse. Maybe their money is safer being parked in land and they know it will eventually go back up? At the same time they can charge ridiculous rent.
That is EXACTLY what they are doing.
The bond market is toast (like a 2 week dead body in the spare bedroom no one wants to deal with). Equities are not far behind if you haven't been watching. They have to park that money someplace else ... ergo, real estate. It's actually genius. A rental home is a defacto bond. It has a coupon rate - interest rate (monthly rents), face value (purchase price), but no 'maturity' time variable ... which is the genius part. Most bonds have a maturity date where the bond will no longer pay interest. At that point it's just cash under your bed. Property however can last 100 years if well maintained.
They are turning the US housing market into the next investment vehicle market ... a De facto Bond market. They can drive up prices to muscle out new home buyers without a second thought. It's easy when you manage 8 Trillion in assets.
When you mention the bond market I have a few questions. I believe my parents are heavily invested in bonds with their old financial advisor. I've tried very hard to guide and wake up my family in these areas but I have little understanding with bonds. Is there anything I could say to get their attention? If the bond market goes under I'm assuming so will their investments? It blows my mind that financial advisors just continue to take their commissions and not guide them.
I'm a huge advocate for precious metals especially gold/silver. Been trying to get my Dad and family to take a small investment but they laugh it off. Funny how a good family friend owns an LCS and they still won't buy any. Got my lil bro invested but had to buy it for him. Anyways, I appreciate your time anon!
God bless
First, Im not a financial advisor. I do have an MBA and have studied markets EXTENSIVELY. Second, ur question about the bonds depends on WHAT KIND of bonds. There are all kinds … treasury, corporate, municipal, cds … they all have a’rating’ (A+ Thru F). The worse the rating, the higher risk but better interest (in theory). Not likely they own junk bonds. They wont ‘loose it all’. But if their interest rate is for shit (2-3%) as most existing bonds are, when rates start going up, the value of those bonds with garbage low rates will drop. Its inverse relationship.
Last year I liquidated ALL my stocks, CDs, IRA, mutual funds and bought a $3000 safe and started filling it with Silver
That's crazy, in europe you have homes that are up from the 1600s, but building from stone vs building from plywood, pine 2x4 (1.5 X 3.5) and tar shingles shouldn't be expected to last.
With Black Rock it's not about making money on the homes they buy, it's about the "You'll Own Nothing and Be Happy" tyranny they're setting up for us.
When Elite-controlled organizations own the house you live in, it'll be just another lever of control over you.
Long term, of course, owning all the land will also be another mountain of real (not paper) wealth for them -- and taken out of reach from us.
I agree! Thanks for the input. The amount of houses they have been buying in CA is unbelievable. They are pricing out young families etc... Maybe in a weird way it's a blessing to these young families that can't buy in CA and end up leaving the state
they can charge ridiculous rent. or offer it up as part of the compliance package.
public storage?
I was thinking the same. Put stuff into storage. Move into an apartment. But....no storage units to rent. No apts to rent, no houses to rent. Everything is at a total stand still. Bot this place 5 years ago for 150K and it's now worth 300K+. Ridiculous but that gave the city means to hike up all the property taxes. So high now we might lose the house if it keeps going up. Yet....if the values go down you think they will lower the property taxes?
I think if you lived in it over two years there is no capital gains tax for under 500K increase. Anything over the 500K is taxed as capital gains. At least that is what my accountant told me when we sold two years ago and downsized.