01-24-2024, 08:46 AM | #8097 | |
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Fast forward to now... it's really hard to say what the future brings... especially for young people. Housing costs are at all time highs, unemployment is slowly rising, there is no real wage growth and there is a consistent focus on AI, outsourcing and margins... i think the true era of opportunity at this point has disappeared in this country. Just look at immigration in this country and where it's coming from... only poor countries / low skilled workers as the higher skilled workers see it doesn't make much sense to come here anymore. Not sure what needs to happen... but significant political reform needs to come to fix much of this and no one is willing to undertake this.... that or a massive recession reset needs to happen.
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01-24-2024, 11:15 AM | #8098 | |
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01-24-2024, 11:17 AM | #8099 | |
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At some point, there will be corrections in all these markets here in the US. This COL is unsustainable. How much of a correction and when? Who knows. History says just wait. Those who choose to ignore history... |
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01-24-2024, 11:31 AM | #8100 |
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Main reason I did it was for investment options not limited to the funds of Fidelity, even though I had to sacrifice the grandfathered employee share class. ETFs usually have lower expense ratios than MF. With almost all brokerage moving to $0 trades. Just wanted to play with more money on stocks, commodity ETFs, if you had the time you could basically day trade with your IRA.
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01-24-2024, 11:41 AM | #8101 |
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Almost 140k miles, have owned it for almost 14yrs, have done RBs, suspension (not shocks/springs), coils, alternator, maybe water pump I think. Starter is needed soon, belt tensioners, and so much more that in most cars would happen 80-100k, aside from the RB & SMG issues it is a well built car. Of course the F8x handles better, stops much much better, power wise about the same. But the E60 is more comfortable and the M5 comfort sport seats are possibly the best seats BMW has ever had. I had a M4 6spd and now DCT, want to get back into a 6spd just cause thats who I am, rev matching manual is pretty cool, at one time I had 4 6spds 3 of which were M's, now down to 3 total.
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01-24-2024, 04:45 PM | #8102 | |
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I'll cut it here, pleasure talking to you Buff Bagwell! |
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01-24-2024, 06:52 PM | #8103 | |
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From 1980-1990 the Dow delivered a 17% CAGR on a total return basis. Unemployment had a 7-handle, on its way to 10%. Is it worse now, or was it worse then? |
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01-24-2024, 08:20 PM | #8104 | |
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What worked about that era was that wages, with a lag, generally kept up with prices, and opportunities returned as unemployment fell. Today we have such high immigration and offshoring opportunities, along with automation, so wages are not keeping up mainly in the low-mid income jobs. And entry-level or min-wage jobs are being eliminated by technology. In other words, there is a real squeeze at income levels where you pretty much have to rent (can’t fix the housing cost by owning). This is a problem already, and a major issue going forward if not corrected. |
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01-24-2024, 10:07 PM | #8105 | |
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In a smaller time window from November 2018 to November 2023, income increased only a bit more than 5% per year, through the pandemic and inflation bumpiness. |
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01-24-2024, 10:42 PM | #8106 | |
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we've never had prices as high as now COMBINED w interest rates as high eductation wasn't remotely as expensive back then neither was health care wage growth YoY was also higher... whe the economic scenario back then may not have been rosy, the inequality between haves and have nots was not even remotely as far off... this was also back when employers actually cared about their employees and gave out pensions i personally know people that came here to the us in the 80s w nothing and become millionaires... their cousins today, wouldn't even remotely entertain the idea as the baseline is so hard to reach today
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01-24-2024, 11:07 PM | #8107 |
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So question: is now a good time to buy a house (or another house)? I’m in NorCal and it’s just so expensive that I’m hesitant because I don’t wanna be house poor.
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01-24-2024, 11:15 PM | #8108 | |
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Phrased another way, has the market become freer and less regulated? |
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01-24-2024, 11:24 PM | #8109 | |
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From a corporate standpoint, far freer and less regulated... there is almost no regulations lol... corp taxes were cut, deregulation hit and all mergers were allowed to go thru. From a govt policy standpoint, the governments use of the fed, printing money, interest rates and overall policy has benefited only the wealthy and govt bailouts, stimulus were utter failes for the common man. Basically they got involved in what they shouldnt have... and didn't get involved in what they should have.
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01-25-2024, 09:47 AM | #8110 | |
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In the 1970s, when we had persistent inflation and low growth (“Stagflation - stagnant economy with inflation), in growing markets like Calif (again, not the entire state but the major population areas and growth/expansion areas), you could buy a house and make more money in its appreciation over 2 years than your salary. It was common to buy in and trade up, but after only a few years if you hadn’t bought in already, you weren’t going to be able to. New lending “products” emerged, like the variable rate loan (ARM - adjustable rate mortgage) and some with a fixed/variable (5 year fixed, then variable rate for 25 years). The idea was either your income would increase over the 5 years so you could afford the higher rate, or rates would come down and the variable would be affordable, or you’d get the appreciation and sell or refi. Quite a gamble, but it worked for a lot of people. Those lending products are part of why it is hard to compare affordability between the 1970s/1980s and today. Different products, different down payment requirements, etc. Also housing stock has changed dramatically - what was a starter house in the 1970s is not on many peoples list today (too small, too old, etc). What we called McMansions in the 1970s are the starter size homes of today. Point of this is if you want to own a house, there are ways to do it but you may have to compromise on size or location or whatever. And maybe it is a good time to get in and ride a wave of appreciation (inflation-driven, but there are some supply issues for housing as well). Just like you don’t start your career as IBM’s CEO, you don’t start with your dream house (or car, or…). |
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01-25-2024, 11:40 AM | #8111 |
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Housing supply is systemically tight across the country. This will continue for years to come, 10 years would be a guess. This means sell-side parties in housing production, ownership and operation have market power.
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01-26-2024, 10:13 AM | #8112 | |
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I didn't get a 5% raise either. Greed. So much greed out there. |
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01-26-2024, 10:14 AM | #8113 |
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01-26-2024, 10:16 AM | #8114 | |
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01-26-2024, 02:51 PM | #8115 |
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"The market can remain irrational far longer than you can remain solvent."
It was 5 years before the housing market began to recover after peaking in late 2007. We're in a situation today where the vast majority of mortgage holders have rates under 4%, and the runup in values the last 5 years has been such that buyers cannot afford these prices and sellers aren't willing to take a loss. Unless there's forced selling, expect this murky situation to continue longer than anyone cares to believe it can... |
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01-26-2024, 06:49 PM | #8117 |
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01-26-2024, 06:52 PM | #8118 | |
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It took 15 years to get here, 15 years to change it seems within the realm of the possible. |
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