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Iniciado por supertrasgu Te olvidas de que las burbujas son espectativas de revalorización, y que estallan cuando la gente deja de creer en esas espectativas. Por eso este tipo de reportajes son cruciales. No és del todo exacto. Estallan quando se cree que han espectativas de desvalorización. |
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| Yo sigo con mi cruzada personal y voy publicando el reportaje en foros de extrangeros interesados en invertir en España http://www.manilvalife.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=4619 http://spanishpropertyinsight.com/fo...?p=14393#14393 Aunque leyendolos la verdad es que no parece que haga demasiado falta darles las noticias...ellos mismos ya se han dado cuenta |
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| el reportaje lo vi el otro día; está muy bien. Y los subtitulos también, felicidades a los traductores por el curro. Yo creo que es evidente la intención que hay tras este programa: el asustar a la gente para que quién tenga el piso a la venta baje el precio y lo haga más asequible, y también para asustar a los que pensaban comprar una casa como inversión creyendo que la vivienda siempre sube... Me parece cojonudo. Todo lo que sea ahuyentar a los especuladores inmobiliarios o simplemente las compras de viviendas como inversión... bienvenido sea. Menos leña al fuego (o menos aire para el globo). Al igual que medidas impositivas progresivas por segunda, tercera vivienda... cuya recaudación se destinara a construir VPOs... ya veremos si alguno se anima a implantarlo...
__________________ -------- Ciclos economicos del capitalismo: Bonanza, crisis, bonanza, crisis... Ciclos economicos del comunismo: Crisis, crisis, crisis, crisis... ![]() " El Socialismo es la filosofia del fracaso, el credo a la ignorancia, y la prédica a la envidia, su virtud inherente es la distribucion igualitaria de la miseria" Sir Winston Churchil Última edición por Burney; 24-mar-2007 a las 11:59 |
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| No hay palabras suficientes de agradecimiento a vuesrto gran trabajo.
__________________ Se admiten donaciones! bitcoin:1P7BYZA9MSGzFzLKmYPRJKbwYoCwSE6ztw |
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| Que sí, jod**, que lo que en su día no pudieron parar los japoneses y ahora no pueden parar los americanos, lo vamos a parar los españoles con dos coj****. Como dijo alguien por aquí, este es el país donde los burros vuelan. |
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| Housing markets The trouble with the housing market Mar 22nd 2007 From The Economist print edition After the great global housing binge, the hangover is kicking in. Especially in America James Fryer JUNE is National Homeownership Month in America. National Foreclosure Month would be more apt. Some corners of the mortgage market—notably “subprime” loans aimed at those with poor credit records—have a nasty case of dry rot. One subprime borrower in eight is behind with the payments. As the introductory “teaser” rates on more loans expire and monthly payments outrun the means of more borrowers, hundreds of thousands of Americans are set to be thrown onto the street. Only a few weeks ago you could find voices claiming that the worst was over for America's sagging housing market. That is harder now. Although it is too soon to be truly gloomy about the broader economy, any structural surveyor would spot tightening credit and a glut of housing supply. The foundations are not much better: falling house prices are no good for consumer spending, which has been propping the economy up (see article). Other countries may also be looking nervously at America. And about time. An American recession would scarcely be welcome—even if for the moment Asian and European economies seem to be doing nicely on their own account. However, the true cause for concern is that just as America's housing boom was part of a synchronised global binge on cheap money, its bust may be part of a global story too. After a long, long night on the tiles Listen around the world and you can hear echoes of America's difficulties—even if prices have not yet started to tumble. Start with subprime borrowers. In America these people are, not surprisingly, poorer (and less likely to be white) than those who can obtain mortgages at lower, usually fixed rates. They tended to join the great housing-market party late, when prices were already sky-high. Many appear to have been encouraged to take out loans by brokers more bothered about their fees than their clients' ability to repay their debts. And the lenders who advanced the money—dozens of which have had to shut up shop—underestimated the rate of default. Generously, you could ascribe this to the relative youth of the subprime market. Less generously, you might point to the effect of “securitisation” on lenders' incentives: knowing that loans could be lumped together and sold, and then chopped, repackaged and sold again, made for slack judgment. To Britons, much of this will sound alarmingly familiar. “Self-certification” mortgages (translation for Americans: “undocumented” or “liar” loans) and interest-only loans have become more common as borrowers, especially young ones hoping to buy their first home or neophyte landlords who think that a string of properties will be their pensions, stretch their budgets (see article). In Spain lenders are courting the country's army of young immigrants, who often have short or patchy credit histories—and often, it seems, work on building sites themselves. The other American theme is that homebuyers and lenders are reaping the consequences of loose monetary policy. When the Federal Reserve cut interest rates after the tech bubble burst, it inflated another, in housing. In Europe you can see a similar story. The single currency has brought the euro area's star performers, Spain and Ireland, unsuitably low interest rates—and house-price increases of 180% and 250% respectively in the past decade. Now both look too dependent on housing. In Spain, where the rate of house-price inflation has eased—eased—to 9% or so, housing investment now accounts for 7.5% of GDP. Were this ratio to fall to, say, 6%, still above the average for the rest of the euro area, job losses in building could cut employment growth by a percentage point a year. Ireland looks rockier still. Housebuilding accounts directly for a staggering 15% of national income and 12% of employment. Whereas prices have soared, rents have stagnated in recent years and, at 4%, rental yields in Dublin do not cover even the cost of borrowing. Now prices are flattening too. According to Morgan Kelly, of University College, Dublin, to return the ratio of prices to rents to where it was around 2000, real prices will need to fall by 40-60% in the next eight or nine years. What next? Americans and others may be tempted to take heart from apparent soft landings in Britain and Australia. That would be a mistake. Admittedly Britain's housing market has had a second wind since a surprise interest-rate cut in 2005. But the effects of rate increases since may not have come through yet. And Australian prices have undergone huge regional variations. Buy-to-let investors in Sydney flats, who saw prices drop, may think their landing rather bumpy. Inevitably, Americans will ask what policymakers can do. It is too late to unwind monetary policy of a few years ago; cutting rates now risks compounding the error. The Fed's main worry is inflation—and rightly so. Given the slackness of lending standards, especially in the subprime market, there is an argument for tighter oversight of non-bank mortgage companies, and at the federal rather than state level. It is tempting to blame securitisation for much of the mess. But the technique has been a boon, by and large, making credit markets of all sorts more liquid. And despite the arrears and foreclosures, subprime lending has been part of what Alan Greenspan once called a democratisation of credit. More Americans are able to borrow and buy houses. Most manage. The economic consequences may yet be large; so may the political ones. Most of the gains from America's recent economic success have been scooped by those at the top of the pile—not least in the financial industry. Now many lower down face unpayable debts and the loss of their homes. Populist politicians may well make much of the contrast between a second house in the Hamptons and no house at all. Instead, they should stop making a fetish of homeownership. That people are free to borrow to buy their own home, should they wish, is fine. That politicians should encourage homeownership for its own sake is not. That they foster it with tax breaks, as they do in America, is daft.
Iniciado por >> 47 << Portada de la ultima edicion del Economist, para guardar, directa a la neurona nuncabajista:
__________________ Se puede engañar a todo el mundo por un momento, y a alguna gente todo el tiempo, pero no se puede engañar a todo el mundo todo el tiempo. |
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| Domingo 25 de marzo 2007 | Actualizado a las 12:44h El lector opina Tiempo estimado de lectura 2 min. Los bancos mandan
TOOOOOOOOMA PASTILLAS DE GOMA http://www.elpais.com/articulo/opini...lpepiopi_8/Tes Arquitectos con miedo Martín Sagrera Capdevila (Sociólogo) - Madrid - 29/03/2007 El argumento mejor elaborado cae en el ridículo cuando se enfrenta a hechos comprobados.
__________________ The Telegraph: What happens... ...when Spanish banks start coming clean on the true scale of their property losses...?22/11/2010 A pesar del cúmulo de incidencias, a favor de prorrogar la vida de nucleares obsoletas: 334. En contra: 10 CENSURADO DE NUEVO 16/03/2011 |
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| He visto el vídeo. Me gustaria que la televisión andaluza hiciera programas de ese tipo, pero es mucho pedir. Los comentarios de los yankis que aparecen en el, los veo tan cercanos...Es cierto que hay infinidad de diferencias entre España y los USA, pero creo que tanto allí como aquí los globos explotan igual. Es casi en exclusiva una cuestión de física.
__________________ "Wellington está acabado, sire. Muy mal se nos tiene que dar para perder esta batalla" (Mariscal Ney a Napoleón en Waterloo). ------------------------------------------- ...car si vous voulez faire la guerre, payez la de votre peau. (Chanson de Craonne, 1917) |
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| Me ha resultado clarificador la mención de la interrelación entre la vivienda de segunda mano con la vivienda nueva, tanto en Miami como aquí. Si te falla el salto del cuento de la lechera "con lo que me den por este piso me compraré uno nuevo con esta hipoteca", te ostias. No son mercados tan independientes. Parece una perogrullada, pero esta interrelación hace mas interesante las tensiones que pueda vivir la segunda mano, siempre mas alejada de la percepción de la realidad, pues uno aprecia bastante su casa y su coche cuando pretende que otro se lo compre.
__________________ "Wellington está acabado, sire. Muy mal se nos tiene que dar para perder esta batalla" (Mariscal Ney a Napoleón en Waterloo). ------------------------------------------- ...car si vous voulez faire la guerre, payez la de votre peau. (Chanson de Craonne, 1917) |
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| Hola,perdonar mi ignorancia ,pero me podria decir alguien como puedo grabar el video a vcd,me sale formato desconocido y no puedo grabarlo para verlo en el reproductor de dvd. |
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