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What I learned today will have devastating ramification for the real estate marketing and in turn the entire financial and stock market and the broader economy as a whole.
If true…our real estate fate is seal. There will be more housing and real estate foreclosure carnage ahead. The road is long.
Prepare yourself and protect your family from this coming economic catastrophe.
PLEASE RATE, LINK, SHARE and SPREAD the word so others can learn about the real nature of our real estate and economic crisis. Don’t be a sponge to the talking heads that spew only that which benefits them and their bosses. Wake up!
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From L.A Times:
Bulk of bank-owned homes aren’t even on the market yet
“Banks to unleash flood of REOs” at Inman News looks at the effect of foreclosures on the housing market this year:
Inventories of unsold homes are likely to swell in coming months as lenders begin to push a growing backlog of repossessed homes up for sale — often in communities already awash in distressed properties….
Because it can take weeks or months for lenders to put repossessed homes on the market, the impact of real estate-owned (REO) properties on inventories lags behind foreclosures. Government efforts to recapitalize banks through the Troubled et Relief Program (TARP) and other bailout measures may also have taken some of the heat off of lenders to unload REO properties at fire-sale prices.
But with the emphasis of TARP and other government relief efforts now expected to shift to creating jobs, helping troubled borrowers avoid foreclosure and providing incentives for home buyers, lenders could soon unleash a torrent of real-estate owned, or “REO” properties — even in markets already flooded with an oversupply of homes for sale.
“It’s almost like a tsunami — you can see it coming and you know it’s going to hit but you can’t get out of the way,” said Ann Stickel, vice president of affiliated services with Sarasota, Fla.-based brokerage Michael Saunders & Co.
So how many bank-owned properties aren’t even on the Multiple Listing Service yet? RealtyTrac senior vice president Rick Sharga puts the number at 75%. That’s a lot of houses.
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Tags: “The dollar collapse” “housing crisis” “financial crisis” subprime hyperinflation inflation economy “economic collapse” “stock market” “stock market collapse” “real estate” fed “federal reserve” money “fiat money” gold silver commodities housing bubble 2009 2008 downfall investing for sale training agent agency selling subprime Peter Schiff Jim Rogers Gerald Celente Alex Jones Ben Bernanke
Duration : 0:7:54
Sep. 17, 2008.
Major U.S. stocks slumped Wednesday as an emergency loan to one of the world’s biggest companies stoked fears about the health of financial markets.
The Dow Jones industrials tumbled more than 300 points, or about 3 percent. The Nasdaq and the S&P were recording similar percentage falls.
The selloff comes in the wake of investment bank Lehman Brothers’ bankruptcy, Merrill Lynch’s sale to Bank of America, and the U.S. government announcing an $85 billion plan to bail out insurance giant American International Group (AIG).
The fallout from the housing and credit market collapse “ripples through the entire financial industry and is stretching to other industries,” Kelli Hill, Portfolio Manager at Ashfield Capital Partners told CNNMoney. “The question everyone is asking is ‘what’s going to fix this?’”
The remaining two Wall Street investment banks were hit particularly hard with Morgan Stanley down 38 percent and Goldman Sachs down 23 percent.
Source:
http://edition.cnn.com/2008/BUSINESS/09/17/world.markets/index.html
Duration : 0:1:58
Marc Faber ger rid of your cash buy commodities while they are still cheap !!!!!!
Duration : 0:2:56
Max Keiser US Treasury Bonds dollar banks china financial crisis
recession depression decline US economy economic collapse meltdown federal reserve Ron Paun Alex Jones Peter Sciff Jim Rogers wall street capital bailout car industry Chrysler stock market
Duration : 0:4:54
Sep 15, 2008.
The venerable Lehman Brothers investment bank said early Monday that it will file for bankruptcy, while Bank of America unveiled plans to buy Merrill Lynch — two pieces of news that profoundly alter the American financial landscape.
The fast-paced changes capped a roller-coaster Wall Street weekend and threatened to stir up U.S. financial markets already reeling from woes at other major financial firms and mortgage financing titans Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
“This crisis is clearly deeper than anybody had imagined only a short time ago,” Peter Stein, an ociate editor at The Wall Street Journal in Asia, told CNN.
Lehman Brothers said in a statement early Monday that it plans to file for bankruptcy under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code. The 158-year-old investment bank had been undermined by bad bets on real estate — the value of its shares declined 94 percent this year.
The fall of Lehman followed a wild, three-day scramble by top Wall Street executives and federal regulators, who worked around the clock to come up with a solution to a still-unfolding financial crisis.
By the end of the weekend, the Federal Reserve had stepped in to try to calm the markets by announcing plans to loosen its lending restrictions on the banking industry.
A consortium of 10 leading domestic and foreign banks agreed to create a $70 billion fund for loans to troubled financial firms.
Source:
http://edition.cnn.com/2008/US/09/15/banks.bigchanges/index.html
Duration : 0:2:20