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Oil's energy contribution has declined by about 12% since 1999. The world's economies have also declined by about 12%. (Using conventional metrics, which are time delayed determinations, this will only be seen in hind sight). The massive destruction of asset values now occurring testifies to it happening. Peak is well behind us, world economies have peaked and will continue to decline.

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Peakoil.com :: View topic - Housing and Economic Collapse - In Progress #3
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Housing and Economic Collapse - In Progress #3
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GASMON
Intermediate Crude
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Joined: Mar 29, 2008
Posts: 846
Location: England

PostPosted: Tue Sep 30, 2008 11:52 am    Post subject: Re: Housing and Economic Collapse - In Progress #3 Add User to Ignore List Reply with quote

ReverseEngineer wrote:
We all are Doomed anyhow for any number of reasons, at this point the best thing is to take the moral high ground and walk calmly into death, knowing the wealthy finally got their comeuppance.


Calmy into death - sod that - take a few out with you, bankers & politicians that is.

The Charge Of The Light Brigade by Alfred, Lord Tennyson

Memorializing Events in the Battle of Balaclava, October 25, 1854
Written 1854

Half a league half a league,
Half a league onward,
All in the valley of Death
Rode the six hundred:
'Forward, the Light Brigade!
Charge for the guns' he said:
Into the valley of Death
Rode the six hundred.

'Forward, the Light Brigade!'
Was there a man dismay'd ?
Not tho' the soldier knew
Some one had blunder'd:
Theirs not to make reply,
Theirs not to reason why,
Theirs but to do & die,
Into the valley of Death
Rode the six hundred.

Cannon to right of them,
Cannon to left of them,
Cannon in front of them
Volley'd & thunder'd;
Storm'd at with shot and shell,
Boldly they rode and well,
Into the jaws of Death,
Into the mouth of Hell
Rode the six hundred.

Flash'd all their sabres bare,
Flash'd as they turn'd in air
Sabring the gunners there,
Charging an army while
All the world wonder'd:
Plunged in the battery-smoke
Right thro' the line they broke;
Cossack & Russian
Reel'd from the sabre-stroke,
Shatter'd & sunder'd.
Then they rode back, but not
Not the six hundred.

Cannon to right of them,
Cannon to left of them,
Cannon behind them
Volley'd and thunder'd;
Storm'd at with shot and shell,
While horse & hero fell,
They that had fought so well
Came thro' the jaws of Death,
Back from the mouth of Hell,
All that was left of them,
Left of six hundred.

When can their glory fade?
O the wild charge they made!
All the world wonder'd.
Honour the charge they made!
Honour the Light Brigade,
Noble six hundred!

Gasmon
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Iaato
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PostPosted: Tue Sep 30, 2008 8:04 pm    Post subject: Re: Housing and Economic Collapse - In Progress #3 Add User to Ignore List Reply with quote

Telegraph-Ireland Banks are Rescued, to the tune of 200% of Irish GDP

Quote:
It is the most dramatic and comprehensive bank bail-out in Europe since the Scandinavian rescues of the early 1990s and may serve as a model for Britain and other countries that so far have been muddling through from one mishap to another with a mish-mash of ad hoc policies.

The state guarantee exceeds 200pc of Irish GDP, marking a new phase in the escalation of the crisis.

The move came as Standard & Poor's cut Iceland's sovereign credit rating from AA- to A+ following its nationalisation of Glitnir Bank. It is a warning that the cascade of bank bail-outs on both sides of the Atlantic could start to undermine the credit-worthiness of Western states.
S&P warned that the tiny Nordic island is now saddled with liabilities that dwarf its economy.

The euro suffered the sharpest drop since the launch of the currency, dropping almost 3pc at one stage to $1.40 against the dollar in a day of high drama across Europe."


I hope Aaron isn't still dabbling in currencies. The whiplash in currencies from here on out should be interesting as countries opt to bail or not--hyperinflate or deflate.
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Forney2008
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PostPosted: Tue Sep 30, 2008 8:42 pm    Post subject: Re: Housing and Economic Collapse - In Progress #3 Add User to Ignore List Reply with quote

It sure looks like Ireland's contribution of screwing around will f*ck the Euro currency up some.
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cube
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Posts: 3824

PostPosted: Wed Oct 01, 2008 12:04 pm    Post subject: Re: Housing and Economic Collapse - In Progress #3 Add User to Ignore List Reply with quote

home sold for $1.75
Quote:
SAGINAW, Mich. - With a winning bid of just $1.75, a Chicago woman has won an auction for an abandoned home in Saginaw.
ADVERTISEMENT

Joanne Smith, 30, recently was the top bidder for the home during an auction on eBay, The Saginaw News reported. Her bid was one of eight for the home.

"I am going to try and sell it," she told the newspaper. "I don't have any plans to move to Saginaw."

Smith said she hasn't seen the property or visited Saginaw, which has been hard-hit by economic troubles in recent years.

There's a notice on the door of the home saying a foreclosure hearing is pending, the newspaper said. She must pay about $850 in back taxes and yard cleanup costs.

The Saginaw News said it could not reach the seller, Southern Investments LLC, for comment.

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gnm
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PostPosted: Wed Oct 01, 2008 12:18 pm    Post subject: Re: Housing and Economic Collapse - In Progress #3 Add User to Ignore List Reply with quote

I wouldn't pay a dime for that roach motel. More like I'll take it _if_ the county pays me $1000 and nullifies any back taxes.

-G
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I Have and will continue to vote against ANY politician who supports the various bailouts. Curse you for selling out our future for status quo now!
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vtsnowedin
Intermediate Crude
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Joined: Jul 11, 2008
Posts: 633

PostPosted: Wed Oct 01, 2008 1:26 pm    Post subject: Re: Housing and Economic Collapse - In Progress #3 Add User to Ignore List Reply with quote

Cool I quess its a matter of point of view. if you were pushing around all your stuff in a shopping cart and sleeping in a cardboard box with a Michigan winter coming on that house or what there is left of it might be a big improvement. probably so full of restrictions that no one can use it. probable have to delead and de asbestos it before you could get a CoO for it. A real red neck would live in one room while he cut up and burned the rest of it to keep warm this winter and have a clean lot to start with next spring.Smile
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Iaato
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PostPosted: Wed Oct 01, 2008 3:51 pm    Post subject: Re: Housing and Economic Collapse - In Progress #3 Add User to Ignore List Reply with quote

Forney2008 wrote:
It sure looks like Ireland's contribution of screwing around will f*ck the Euro currency up some.


Yes, Forney, the Europeans are all going to have to decide to march together because of the Euro. They are probably waiting to see what we do. We all rise and fall together; if some hyperinflate to bailout and others simply allow deflation, chaos will result. And they will need to decide pretty soon.
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Ludi
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PostPosted: Wed Oct 01, 2008 4:03 pm    Post subject: Re: Housing and Economic Collapse - In Progress #3 Add User to Ignore List Reply with quote

gnm wrote:
I wouldn't pay a dime for that roach motel. More like I'll take it _if_ the county pays me $1000 and nullifies any back taxes.

-G


I think it's cute. I've always liked small houses. Smile
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gnm
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PostPosted: Wed Oct 01, 2008 4:27 pm    Post subject: Re: Housing and Economic Collapse - In Progress #3 Add User to Ignore List Reply with quote

Me as well. I live in a pretty small house myself but I was referring more to the likely repair and maintenance/recovery nightmare that place is going to be. Remodeling/deconstruction is a lot harder and more expensive than just starting from scratch.

-G
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ReverseEngineer
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PostPosted: Wed Oct 01, 2008 4:44 pm    Post subject: Re: Housing and Economic Collapse - In Progress #3 Add User to Ignore List Reply with quote

cube wrote:
home sold for $1.75
Quote:
SAGINAW, Mich. - With a winning bid of just $1.75, a Chicago woman has won an auction for an abandoned home in Saginaw.
ADVERTISEMENT

Joanne Smith, 30, recently was the top bidder for the home during an auction on eBay, The Saginaw News reported. Her bid was one of eight for the home.

"I am going to try and sell it," she told the newspaper. "I don't have any plans to move to Saginaw."

Smith said she hasn't seen the property or visited Saginaw, which has been hard-hit by economic troubles in recent years.

There's a notice on the door of the home saying a foreclosure hearing is pending, the newspaper said. She must pay about $850 in back taxes and yard cleanup costs.

The Saginaw News said it could not reach the seller, Southern Investments LLC, for comment.


The McMansion of the Future

Reverse Engineer
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eXpat
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PostPosted: Wed Oct 01, 2008 4:50 pm    Post subject: Re: Housing and Economic Collapse - In Progress #3 Add User to Ignore List Reply with quote

Trouble in Italy: UniCredit Trading Halted
Quote:
PARIS — The giant Italian and pan-European lender UniCredit declared Wednesday that it was well capitalized and was being damaged by market speculation as its shares were suspended from trading in Milan.

In a statement that had been requested by regulators after recent stock declines, the bank said that it would sell some property assets to raise its capital ratio.

The Italian stock exchange operator, Borsa Italiana, suspended trading in the shares early Wednesday after they opened sharply lower. They had fallen 22 percent this week. Trading of the shares was suspended Wednesday after they fell 1.8 percent.
...
UniCredit owns HypoVereinsbank of Germany and Bank Austria as well as a lender in Poland. A collapse of UniCredit would raise questions about the structure of a bailout that involved multiple divisions in different countries. The rescues this week of Fortis, Dexia, Hypo Real Estate of Germany and Bradford & Bingley in Britain were relatively simple, as they had mainly exposure in their local markets.

“In the current environment, contagion can spread so quickly,” said Matthieu Giuliani, a fund manager at Palatine Asset Management in Paris. He said speculators might be focusing on UniCredit because of its aggressive expansion policy in recent years and its pan-European nature.

link
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Daculling
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PostPosted: Wed Oct 01, 2008 5:57 pm    Post subject: Re: Housing and Economic Collapse - In Progress #3 Add User to Ignore List Reply with quote

Check this comment from CR's blog. It's long but worth the read.


otishertz writes:
ALL YOUR STOCKS ARE BELONG TO U.S.

If US authorities keep nationalizing mortgages and businesses the next dollar could become seen as backed by the value of people. The mortgages, loans and stocks our government is buying in bulk are people's houses and jobs. The value quantified in their work, credit and houses is being scooped up at fire sale prices. Most reasonable people realize that any bailout just delays the inevitable. Why then, do governmental entities want to subsume and consume such huge parts of the economy?

Market observers have noticed stocks rally all Summer on worsening financial news. Some suspected that the Fed and/or the Treasury were in the market buying equities to massage perceptions similarly to how they intervene in currency markets (gold and silver also are currency markets). It is now widely known and advertised that the Federal Reserve is trading U.S. Treasuries for stocks and other soured bubble “investments” at face value. While meddling in currency markets is nothing new, they have been buying tens of billions of dollars a day of mortgage toxic waste all Summer, hiding bank losses in the process. These purchases are all being made with newly printed money. $1.8 trillion so far. Printed money used this way can delay the pain of falling stock prices but it cannot prevent it. This is because nothing has changed to make business better, the fundamentals are still worsening.

The shock doctrine is now being applied to Congress by Boogieman Bush and Comrade Hank to scare them into giving at least $700 billion dollars and absolute power to the same bankers who caused the current problems by over leveraging themselves into insolvency. This money will be used to buy more mortgages, stocks, and their secret derivatives. It will legitimize any horde of stocks that may have been bought surreptitiously by government entities during the irrational price jumps of the Summer. Since this money does not exist in any government account, it too will have to be fabricated. These efforts will inflate the prices of imports and necessities.

The huge scale of purchases by our government and the private corporation that prints our dollars (the Fed) will eventually lead people to see our money as collateralized by stocks and mortgages. This opens up some very interesting issues. The largest of which is the shift from a fiat (unbacked) currency to one that is arguably backed by the value of people's work since, again, stock prices and mortgage values are ultimately tied to the value of the human effort that sustains them. The value of this collateral would be increased by preventing or limiting the discharge of debt through bankruptcy.

Why in the world would U.S. Authorities want to own so many stocks and mortgages? Clearly they intend to buy as many as they can get. They wouldn't be buying them if they didn't want them. The U.S. Government recently nationalized half of all outstanding mortgages after purchasing Freddie and Fannie. The Fed seems intent on accumulating the other half. If they own the majority of people's mortgages (their houses) and a large portion of employer's equity (their jobs) one could say the dollar will be backed by the earning potential of the U.S. Citizen, the value of it's people. What would you call a government that owns half the mortgages and half the stocks?

Though the dollar is academically a fiat, or faith based, currency it has in actuality been on a de-facto oil standard. The quantity of dollars in the system has been highly correlated to gross oil sales since until recently oil only traded in dollars all across the Earth. Thus the more oil we and the world consumed the more dollars the Fed would print to facilitate the transactions. Iran and Venezuela have begun trading their oil for Euros. This growing trend reduces the demand for dollars which are used to settle oil transactions. It also resulted in oil newly having a .9 correlation to Euros up until the bizarro market movements that began in the Summer. The oil standard has kept the dollar way higher than US fundamentals would imply. The evolution of the dollar appears to be going like this: $ off gold standard, onto oil standard > $ off oil standard onto asset standard.

Could taking the dollar which was unbacked except for being in high demand for oil transactions and backing it with financial assets be an improvement for the dollar? That remains to be seen. If a crash occurs and government entities buy a large share of US assets for a fraction of their intrinsic value with free printed cash the scheme could show large paper profits resultant of inflation already in the pipeline plus inflation caused by the printing itself. Further, the settling of $60 plus trillion or more in derivatives is likely to result in a financial neutron bomb that would flatten asset values down to pennies on the dollar. This captured value could be the underpinning of the new dollar. So, on paper the scheme could work though old fashioned civil libertarians will surely swallow their barf and shudder.

If this is indeed the scheme, and what else are they planning to do with all these formerly private assets, then, in order to hold things together, they will most likely need to impose some kind of foreign exchange controls for the extended period of time encompassing the transition. This would mean individuals would be blocked from diversifying out of US dollars, or that they would only be able to do so with expensive limitations or onerous reporting requirements. These controls will make it prohibitively expensive for most US citizens to establish life in another country.

This is the same administration that wants to move your social security money into the stock market. Anyone who hasn't sold out yet may wish to consider it while the government is still an eager buyer. At some point they will realize that lower purchase prices are in their interest and pull their buying for a while. Who knows how low stocks could go when they stop propping. Large numbers of market participants are not participating in these markets because they look rigged. Speculators in particular are being chastised and chased out of the market. It is looking more and more like the only buyers who will be left in the market will be the government and the victims of the mass media.

This stock propping with shill buying has two effects; it covers up the real problems by preventing accurate investor opinions and forecasts from being expressed in asset prices and it floods the system with money at a time when money is vanishing rapidly as loans dry up and the money multiplying effects of debt are cut off. Without debt expansion there is no economic expansion. This is how a fractional reserve fiat system works. The debt implosion has left a big black hole that is being stuffed with cash through the purchase of financial assets, at first surreptitiously but now out in the open. This is not dropping money from helicopters. It is a way better deal for the money printers. They get control of real assets while re-inflating the system; all your stocks are belong to U.S.

With the government acting as buyer of last resort, every trade is now a trade on the next move of the government. The markets no longer freely exchange. Just look at the charts and see the same move at the same time every day, regardless of fundamentals. Only in major quakes does the market briefly point in the rational direction. Markets that make the same move at the same time of day counter to news and fundamentals are not random. In free markets, one expects to not see such daily repeating patterns. Look at S&P 500 futures charts over the past few months and see the spikes around 90 minutes before the NY open while the news was getting increasingly horrendous. Look at this Summer's gold charts that are nearly identical in shape, going the wrong way for entire days while the financial system melted down and Russia invaded our Iraq ally, Georgia.

If you get in this market you need to keep in mind that you are betting against a printing press. As such the best bets are those that are anti-dollar, at least until they are outlawed (as with short sales). Never thought I'd see the day but there is now big political risk to investors here in the Homeland. The safest bets will be in tangible assets not tied exclusively to US financial markets, which clearly are no longer free.

So, is the government going to come and get you? Probably not because you will “volunteer” to be part of the new system by taking on debt. Debt slavery is a form of voluntary servitude. Currencies backed by labor or indentured “debt servitude” are slave money. If this really comes to pass along these lines your personal worth will be your balance sheet and your caste will be your credit score. The data traces of your identity will yield economic access or deny entry. You will need to work harder and pay your mortgage on time so that the dollar doesn't fall. Bankruptcy would be treason, foreclosure a currency crime. The new currency may not even have a physical form but only be a record of the units of your contribution to society. These data traces could be attached to you, perhaps electronically or biometrically. We have the technology.

The dollar was going down anyway. This is the Federales scooping up all the houses and banks on the way out to be used as the underpinning value for a new currency. The dollar's remaining value is only in the inertia of the old system which was the largest in history. It will not stop at once. However, the slowdown will accelerate because what is occurring here is exponentially entropic. Derivatives that bet the world many times over ensure catastrophic failures.

Unlike all the other recent Orwellian events we thought were science fiction, this will probably never happen because it is crazy. It may appear that it has happened but it never really will ha
otishertz | Homepage | 10.01.08 - 5:13 pm | #

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EnergyUnlimited
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PostPosted: Thu Oct 02, 2008 1:24 am    Post subject: Re: Housing and Economic Collapse - In Progress #3 Add User to Ignore List Reply with quote

Very interesting thoughts above in Dacculing's post.

So how well all those free of debt would do in that scenario?

Would they become to be a masters of of US as time goes?

Would those indebted ones end up gradually turning into slaves?

Or perhaps would those debt free folks end up in labor camps for being unpatriotic?
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cube
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PostPosted: Thu Oct 02, 2008 2:42 am    Post subject: Re: Housing and Economic Collapse - In Progress #3 Add User to Ignore List Reply with quote

Ludi wrote:
...
I think it's cute. I've always liked small houses. Smile

http://www.notsobighouse.com
Quote:
The Not So Big Showhouse 2005 and Home By Design Showhouse 2004 have become flagships for the movement to "build better, not bigger".


There is a growing movement to promote living in "smaller" houses.
I applaud the efforts.....however if this is the definition of a house that is "Not so big", I think we have a long ways to go before hitting rock bottom. Laughing
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PostPosted: Thu Oct 02, 2008 5:02 am    Post subject: Re: Housing and Economic Collapse - In Progress #3 Add User to Ignore List Reply with quote

cube wrote:

There is a growing movement to promote living in "smaller" houses.
I applaud the efforts.....however if this is the definition of a house that is "Not so big", I think we have a long ways to go before hitting rock bottom. Laughing


Very Happy

There's a reason they're called "Not So Big", and not "Small". Smile The NSBH books seem to mostly be written for buyers who could afford a 5,000+ square foot, mediocre-built McMansion, and persuading them to build a 3,000+ square foot, higher-quality house instead. The author is an architect, after all, and she's primarily interested in promoting the idea of building houses that are "interesting" and "well-made". If size had no bearing on the cost of the structure, I suspect she would've named the series "The Well-Made House" or something.

Not to say they're not useful. We found them very helpful to get us thinking about what would make a floorplan "useful" for us.

--Steve
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