#2881
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I was thinking this also.
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#2882
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I don’t know anything about the stock market but it seems like weekend at bernies and it’s just a matter of time before someone takes off his sunglasses and figures out he’s nonresponsive. And that’s not even taking into account the crazy stuff the Republicans are going to pull between now and January whether or not Biden wins. I’m not sure if civil unrest is good or bad for the market but maybe factor that into upcoming decisions.
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#2883
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Given that the money supply has already increased, what, about 30%? due to relief packages, and likely to add another few $ Trillion, I don't think a cash position makes much sense now, but I'm no expert...
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#2884
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(I'm starting to think that) |
#2885
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#2886
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Yes housing is indeed crazy right now.
From the vantage point of my tiny microcosm of a bubble in Silicon Valley/San Francisco, I'm actually seeing 1~6 people vacating apartments per week. My colleagues I compare notes with are witnessing the same movement. For those leaving, I see 3 profiles: leaving for greater opportunity in a more affordable place, moving back with their parents, purchasing a 1st home outside of SV/SF. What I've observed is that housing has become even MORE desirable for those who can afford to WFH. Those lucky to be able to work remotely have tons of wiggle room in regards to where they can now reside. All that pent-up demand from young tech workers who toughed it out for several years in tiny apartments are spilling into all other "desirable" regions, starting with those closest to SF. There are of course exceptions, but this is the 10,000ft view. |
#2887
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With WFH being widely accepted basically everywhere there is no need for those people to stay in the high rent cities like Denver, Boulder, Bay Area, NYC, etc.
Education will follow soon after with online universities surging and expensive, in person establishments plummeting. People will just spend their money elsewhere. |
#2888
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Housing bubble
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And, they are being snapped up in a couple of days for prices that would have been laughable a year ago. I'm kind of stuck as I have a good job here that I have to show up in person too. And my family pretty happy here. Still trying to decide what to do with retirement investment. Probably end up doing nothing out of sheer inertia. Jon |
#2889
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Last edited by Clean39T; 09-02-2020 at 05:21 PM. |
#2890
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If my wife could find a job locally after finishing her program, I definitely would love to stay in the area. |
#2891
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#2892
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Students aren't loving remote learning. At all. And higher education is much, much, MUCH more than what happens in classrooms. Which leaves me unsure about the future for online universities. (Which, honestly, serve different demographics and functions than most four-year colleges and universities.) Anyway, many in-person institutions will suffer. Some will close. But the better schools won't be replaced by online alternatives any time soon. I think Covid is probably making that shift less rather than more likely.
Last edited by akelman; 09-02-2020 at 05:57 PM. |
#2893
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“The market can remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent or something” - A Guy |
#2894
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Sent from my Pixel 2 XL using Tapatalk
__________________
Io non posso vivere senza la mia strada e la mia bici -- DP |
#2895
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On topic: those endowments should be back to full strength so let's see what happens. |
Tags |
economy, freemoneyhouse, stonks, vertdoug for fed chair, wealth, yen carry trade |
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