BobTheCat
New Member
I must admit, reading all these posts brings back memories of real estate
bubbles in the past. My wife and I lived in California ( San Francisco ) during
the 80's & 90's and in NY from 2000 - 2008. The pattern is amazingly similar
to whats taking place now in Toronto.
The cost of a SFH is now pretty close (if not past) the maximum income level that
two successful people earning a good salary can support. Take every dime
they have available and amortize it at the lowest interest rates in history
and you get the price of a house ! With barely enough for a pint at the
pub left
Right about now, all those folks that purchased $1M bungalows start reading
posts like these and articles about the economy... They start to think, hey
this might impact me ! Then may postpone the purchase of the new car, the
new plasma or the new iPad. This tends to slow the economy more, which
is reflected in business slow downs, which is reflected in the press
... like the GM plant closure.. ( rinse and repeat ) It builds on itself.
It's no different here. Just another property bubble like everywhere else, it's
just the Canada came late to the party... And here I was hoping we wouldn't
follow the rest of the world off the same cliff Greed.... ugh. The funny thing
is the only ones booking the profits are the REALTORS, with fat commissions,
the BANKS, with interest and fees, the CITY, with taxes taxes taxes...
The crazy thing is that when it does crash, those of you who live within your
means will carry the debt ( bailout ) for those who borrowed recklessly. For that
we can thank our finance minister, who, like a bartender, keeps pouring drinks
while occasionally warning the drunkards not to drink too much.
bubbles in the past. My wife and I lived in California ( San Francisco ) during
the 80's & 90's and in NY from 2000 - 2008. The pattern is amazingly similar
to whats taking place now in Toronto.
The cost of a SFH is now pretty close (if not past) the maximum income level that
two successful people earning a good salary can support. Take every dime
they have available and amortize it at the lowest interest rates in history
and you get the price of a house ! With barely enough for a pint at the
pub left
Right about now, all those folks that purchased $1M bungalows start reading
posts like these and articles about the economy... They start to think, hey
this might impact me ! Then may postpone the purchase of the new car, the
new plasma or the new iPad. This tends to slow the economy more, which
is reflected in business slow downs, which is reflected in the press
... like the GM plant closure.. ( rinse and repeat ) It builds on itself.
It's no different here. Just another property bubble like everywhere else, it's
just the Canada came late to the party... And here I was hoping we wouldn't
follow the rest of the world off the same cliff Greed.... ugh. The funny thing
is the only ones booking the profits are the REALTORS, with fat commissions,
the BANKS, with interest and fees, the CITY, with taxes taxes taxes...
The crazy thing is that when it does crash, those of you who live within your
means will carry the debt ( bailout ) for those who borrowed recklessly. For that
we can thank our finance minister, who, like a bartender, keeps pouring drinks
while occasionally warning the drunkards not to drink too much.