Current issues with the market - Any ideas on avoiding the end?

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In regards to inflation, at least the Fed can raise rates to tackle inflation. In Europe, that is utterly impossible. Because if the ECB raises rates, the entire European South will go bankrupt since those states will be unable to service their sovereign debts causing massive instability in the Eurozone. So it is a deadlock.
We're gonna run into the same problem where Eurozone nations can't control monetary policy, only fiscal policy (and then the Troika steps in so you can't control that either.)

Nobody really wants to be the central bank that nuked the world economy, but someone's gonna pull the trigger eventually.
 
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Most of my investments pay out their dividends in US dollars. Since the dividends are exchanged from the US dollar to the Euro, I got quite the boost so far. I am not far behind my 2021 total dividend payout and we are only a bit over half into this year. Chances are that I will break the 2021 paid dividends by a huge margin this year. So it isn't all bad.

Sometimes you win. Sometimes you lose.
 
What exactly happens in EU that the economy is getting turbo fucked? You'd think the USA would be the one that's in dire straits.
Primarily Green Party bullshit. Germany is rationing gas and because they're an entire nation of rent-cucks, one of the large housing agencies is throttling gas at night to prevent people from heating their homes - good luck in winter(!)

The swamp Germans currently have riots going on because their government decided that good feels makes for solid agricultural policy and all of their farmers are shit out of luck. Maybe dumping truck loads of literal shit on government buildings and getting shot by the chromosone deficient chimps that enforce their police state will help, but I doubt it.

Everywhere in the EU shot itself in the face with regards to the Ukraine thing - who would have guessed that being majorly dependent on Russia for supplying a solid chunk of gas to the continent and doing everything in their power to piss off Russia could have backfired?

I don't know about anything on a more local level across the EU, but if Ireland is indicative of the lunatic bullshit that's going on, consider this: government bans the cutting of turf for heating because removing carbon bad (a practice that has gone on for time immemorial, because it's kinda what you have to do when perfidious Albion cut down literally all the trees to make their navy centuries ago). Government then decides that importing turf from Estonia is somehow completely OK - meaning that there's no environmental upside but it's now way more expensive for the poor rural folk who literally can't afford anything else. The city dwellers, well they're fucked because of the aforementioned Ukraine problem.



Oh, and then there's gas(oline) prices. I paid the equivalent of $8.59/US gallon last week ( That was the cheapest around by a good margin. It's only going to get worse, because, unbelievably expensive fuel is literal government policy which they refuse to reconsider (muh carbon taxes).

This winter, people are going to have to resort to burning Green party politicians for fuel because they won't be able to afford any alternative.
 
Primarily Green Party bullshit. Germany is rationing gas and because they're an entire nation of rent-cucks, one of the large housing agencies is throttling gas at night to prevent people from heating their homes - good luck in winter(!)

The swamp Germans currently have riots going on because their government decided that good feels makes for solid agricultural policy and all of their farmers are shit out of luck. Maybe dumping truck loads of literal shit on government buildings and getting shot by the chromosone deficient chimps that enforce their police state will help, but I doubt it.

Everywhere in the EU shot itself in the face with regards to the Ukraine thing - who would have guessed that being majorly dependent on Russia for supplying a solid chunk of gas to the continent and doing everything in their power to piss off Russia could have backfired?

I don't know about anything on a more local level across the EU, but if Ireland is indicative of the lunatic bullshit that's going on, consider this: government bans the cutting of turf for heating because removing carbon bad (a practice that has gone on for time immemorial, because it's kinda what you have to do when perfidious Albion cut down literally all the trees to make their navy centuries ago). Government then decides that importing turf from Estonia is somehow completely OK - meaning that there's no environmental upside but it's now way more expensive for the poor rural folk who literally can't afford anything else. The city dwellers, well they're fucked because of the aforementioned Ukraine problem.



Oh, and then there's gas(oline) prices. I paid the equivalent of $8.59/US gallon last week ( That was the cheapest around by a good margin. It's only going to get worse, because, unbelievably expensive fuel is literal government policy which they refuse to reconsider (muh carbon taxes).

This winter, people are going to have to resort to burning Green party politicians for fuel because they won't be able to afford any alternative.
In a lot of ways the EU comes off as far more dysfunctional than the USA, the latter has the excuse of a single federal government and nearly infinite amount of political organisation fighting for control. The EU should have had at least some of the countries preparing for this situation and making bank from it rather than collectively sinking into the mud.
 
In a lot of ways the EU comes off as far more dysfunctional than the USA, the latter has the excuse of a single federal government and nearly infinite amount of political organisation fighting for control. The EU should have had at least some of the countries preparing for this situation and making bank from it rather than collectively sinking into the mud.
Have you seen who gets sent to EuroParliament? It's the fuck-ups and jack-offs who were too incompetent to stay in government in their home countries. Ursula Von Der Leyen is President and during her stint as minister of defence (or whatever the equivalent title is) she had the German armed forces training with sticks because guns are too icky and expensive
 
Some update on agricultural issues.

Multiple (many) of the nurseries producing stock for fruit/nut trees and vines (some ornamental) have told me that anyone ordering more than what they did from this year/last year will be charged a 10-35% additional charge due to limited stock.
 
Some update on agricultural issues.

Multiple (many) of the nurseries producing stock for fruit/nut trees and vines (some ornamental) have told me that anyone ordering more than what they did from this year/last year will be charged a 10-35% additional charge due to limited stock.
That's odd, I would assume they would just limit orders instead of charging more for extra ones. Makes me wonder if this is gouging or genuine. 🤔
 
That's odd, I would assume they would just limit orders instead of charging more for extra ones. Makes me wonder if this is gouging or genuine. 🤔
It's hard to tell, I think it is part truth, part fiction.
I see a lot of stuff being sold that's not the proper size or is poorly rooted.

Oh don't forget stuff infected with disease. God I see way too much of that shit I'm going to murder whoever sends me a sample like that.
 
Europe is pretty fucked, guess those smug sanctions against Russia didn't quite have the impact they expected
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I remember when people were laughing the Ruble fell bellow the Roblox currency
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Meanwhile the Euro has collapsed consistently
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Globohomo, not even once.
 
The EU should have had at least some of the countries preparing for this situation and making bank from it rather than collectively sinking into the mud.
the problem with that approach is that the majority of EU countries are very dependent on germany, either through direct economic ties or indirectly through the EU financial redistribution systems. so when the german economy gets damaged, the damage propagates to these other countries very quickly.
also, like others pointed out, almost every country in the EU (and beyond, most anglo countries are the same) has gone super hard on the green/eco meme in one way or another, they've been setting themselves up for some real ugly suffering for quite a while now, and it looks like the time has now come where the price for all this retardation will be paid.
 
the problem with that approach is that the majority of EU countries are very dependent on germany, either through direct economic ties or indirectly through the EU financial redistribution systems. so when the german economy gets damaged, the damage propagates to these other countries very quickly.
also, like others pointed out, almost every country in the EU (and beyond, most anglo countries are the same) has gone super hard on the green/eco meme in one way or another, they've been setting themselves up for some real ugly suffering for quite a while now, and it looks like the time has now come where the price for all this retardation will be paid.
As a whole the EU failed to advance with time, it just kind of sat back and praised itself for how brilliant it was while the rest of the world moved on. Once the technology it still holds from around the end of WW2 cycles out of relevance it will probably be a third world shithole if nothing changes about it handles things.

The Balkans, Russia, and others in the East prior to reaching China might be retarded but at least they're trying to come up with new shit and do things differently.
 
the problem with that approach is that the majority of EU countries are very dependent on germany, either through direct economic ties or indirectly through the EU financial redistribution systems. so when the german economy gets damaged, the damage propagates to these other countries very quickly.
also, like others pointed out, almost every country in the EU (and beyond, most anglo countries are the same) has gone super hard on the green/eco meme in one way or another, they've been setting themselves up for some real ugly suffering for quite a while now, and it looks like the time has now come where the price for all this retardation will be paid.
When it comes to Europe, they are getting what they fucking deserve. The absolute morons gutted their nuclear energy industry, agitated consistently against expanding production and export capacity in North America to be able to supply them, became Russia's bitch energy wise as consequence and then decided after all of those bone headed decisions to bite the hand that fed them. After biting off every other potential hand that could have fed them.

The next European winter is going to be wild. a lot of people are going to die, and every single one of those deaths will be a deliberate and premeditated result of the idiots running Europe's economy and foreign policy.
 
When it comes to Europe, they are getting what they fucking deserve. The absolute morons gutted their nuclear energy industry, agitated consistently against expanding production and export capacity in North America to be able to supply them, became Russia's bitch energy wise as consequence and then decided after all of those bone headed decisions to bite the hand that fed them. After biting off every other potential hand that could have fed them.

The next European winter is going to be wild. a lot of people are going to die, and every single one of those deaths will be a deliberate and premeditated result of the idiots running Europe's economy and foreign policy.
nobody is going to freeze or starve to death there
what is going to happen is major economic damage. bankruptcies, inflation, a general decline in productivity and wealth across the board
 
North Texas homebuilders are seeing an alarming surge in cancelations of contracts on new homes, triggering a sharp drop in sales and pending sales last month, and a record rate of increase in new home listings in the Multiple Listing Service.
The three-month moving average of active listings in the North Texas Real Estate Information Systems jumped from 933 in April to 2,915 in June – an increase of more than 200% in 90 days, according to an analysis of NTREIS data by Dallas-based HomesUSA.com.

Builders are being “whiplashed” by buyer demand that soared in the early days of the pandemic then plunged with the onset of higher mortgage rates and other recent developments, said Ben Caballero, CEO of HomesUSA.
The numbers reflect a growing pattern of buyers backing out of contracts, he said.
“The whiplash began in March of last year when Dallas-area builders were caught flat-footed by the sudden and astonishing demand for new homes,” Caballero said in the HomesUSA report. “Then, while struggling with shortages and supply chain issues, builders pulled out all the stops to increase production, only to be whiplashed again by the sudden reduction in demand caused by cancelations due to rising mortgage rates.”
Mortgage rates rose from 3.76% in the first week of March to 5.81% by late June, according to Freddie Mac’s weekly mortgage market survey. According to the National Association of Realtors, mortgage costs are now 30% higher than a year ago for home buyers able to buy a median-priced home.
The rising rates make a big enough difference in mortgage payments on both new and resale houses to force many buyers to the sidelines, said Kent Lugrand, CEO of Plano-based InTouch Credit Union.
“With the average home prices in DFW, that could mean the difference of $500, plus or minus $100 or so, in a monthly mortgage payment,” Lugrand said.
The HomesUSA report shows an overall decline in new home sales statewide for the first time this year. The three-month moving average of Texas new home sales shows last month’s sales reported to Multiple Listing Services dropped to 4,098 from 4,300 in May. DFW new home sales in June were down month-over-month to 1,285 vs. 1,374 in May.
DFW pending sales dropped too, another indicator of buyer cancelations. In June, pending sales were 1,593 vs. 1,663 in May.
How is this impacting new construction of homes in Dallas-Fort Worth?
Perez said he’s seen cancelations climb. “We've had several deals fall apart, terminate, over mortgages,” he said. “Especially with new construction.”
Perez gave this example of how new-home deals crumble.
“They’re building their house. They went under contract nine months ago. They go to lock it in. There are ways to lock it in further ahead, but it’s hard. So now, their interest rates have doubled, so they literally can’t afford the house anymore. They can’t be approved for it.”
Nationwide, sales of new and existing homes are getting canceled at the highest rate since the start of the pandemic, according to a report from Redfin (Nasdaq: RDFN).
Roughly 60,000 home-purchase agreements nationwide fell through in June, equal to 14.9% of homes that went under contract that month. That’s the highest percentage on record with the exception of March and April 2020, when the housing market slowed dramatically with the onset of the pandemic. The June cancelation rate compares with 12.7% a month earlier and 11.2% a year earlier, according to the Redfin analysis of MLS data.
How does Dallas-Fort Worth compare to the rest of the nation?
In the Dallas metro area, the percentage of home sales that fell out of contract was 19.9% — a full 5% higher than the national average, according to Redfin. In the Fort Worth area, 18.9% of contracts fell through.
Las Vegas suffered the nation’s highest cancelation rate of 27.2%.
The Houston area had the most broken purchase contracts in Texas, with a 22.9% cancelation rate, followed by San Antonio, with a 20.3% rate. Austin’s cancelation rate was 17.9%.
The rate measures pending sales that fell out of contract as a percentage of overall pending sales.
New home prices in DFW increased last month, breaking $500,000 for the first time, according to the HomesUSA report. The three-month moving average of new home sale prices in June was a record $501,327 compared to $486,172 in May. The average new home price is up over $85,000 since June 2021, an increase of over 20% year-over-year.
Has there been any impact on homebuilding permits in the Dallas area?
Homebuilders are reacting to the diminished buyer demand by dialing back the number of homes they’re starting.
Single-family building permits issued from Jan. 1 through the end of June are down 40% in Frisco, 41% in Celina, 20% in Prosper and 23% in Princeton compared to the same period last year. Frisco has long been a leader in the state and nation for new home construction, and Prosper, Celina and Princeton have surged over the past couple of years.
In Frisco, 853 single-family home permits have been issued so far this year, compared to 1,412 permits at the halfway mark of 2021. Celina’s permits have sunk to 983 this year from 1,672 in the first half of 2021.
Permits in Prosper have fallen to 556 in the first half of this year, compared to 696 in the first half of 2021. Princeton has dropped to 651 permits this year from 843 in 2021.
A combination of supply-chain challenges for builders, higher mortgage rates, inflation, higher building materials costs and labor shortages, and general economic uncertainty are some of the reasons for the slowdown in construction.
What does this mean for home sales in Dallas-Fort Worth?
Sales of existing homes in the DFW market are down, too. Home sales dropped 4.2% from last year, according to the latest Re/Max National Housing Report, released Monday.
The median DFW home sales pricestands at $426,000, up 29.3% from $329,500 a year ago, the latest Re/Max report shows. Dallas-Fort Worth leads the U.S. for the largest percentage increase in the median home sale price.
The rapid escalation of home prices is putting home ownership out of reach for growing numbers of buyers.
For instance, prices of new and resale houses in Collin County are 27% higher than they were three years ago, and home costs as a percentage of income are 60%, according to an analysis by personal finance website MoneyGeek.
With a median home price of $403,500 and a median income of $50,681, homes in Collin County are, as a general rule, no longer affordable for people who live and work there (as opposed to newcomers to the market), the analysis concludes.
The supply of new and existing homes for sale is almost three times the number it was four months ago.
As of June 2022, there were 11,108 active listings on the DFW market. That’s been on a steady trend upward from a low of 4,154 in February. There were 4,524 active listings in DFW in March, 5,350 in April, and 7,976 in May, according to Federal Reserve Economic Data, which bases its report on property listings on the Realtor.com website.
A supply of about 8,000 homes for sale is considered a one-month supply in DFW. A balanced market should have a roughly six-month supply.
tl;dr Too many homes, not enough buyers... DFW (The new "hot" market) is about to get absolutely go touch grass in housing prices in a few days.
It begins....
Listen to the sounds of your own extinction.... Human.
 
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Everytime I look at the housing market in my area and the usual "out of state investor" faggotry that spikes the price of land/houses, I'm just glad real estate will be crashing very, very soon so I won't need to buy overvalued bullshit an hour away from where my job is. Hopefully those loathsome "land investors" lose a lot of money too along with everyone lending them money.
 
As a whole the EU failed to advance with time, it just kind of sat back and praised itself for how brilliant it was while the rest of the world moved on. Once the technology it still holds from around the end of WW2 cycles out of relevance it will probably be a third world shithole if nothing changes about it handles things.

The Balkans, Russia, and others in the East prior to reaching China might be retarded but at least they're trying to come up with new shit and do things differently.
I'm going to agree with the Balkan states. As far as Russia and China Advancing?? DEAD WRONG IMHO. They are actually going backwards as all failed Totalitarian states do.

But I also agree with about your comment with the EU in General as for many years the ASSHATS in Germany and in Belgium have been calling the shots which lead to mostly nothing and leading to the situation they are in.
Europe is pretty fucked, guess those smug sanctions against Russia didn't quite have the impact they expected
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I remember when people were laughing the Ruble fell bellow the Roblox currency
View attachment 3511773

Meanwhile the Euro has collapsed consistently
View attachment 3511775

Globohomo, not even once.
You remember I commented about doing your homework? Gathering as much data as possible and making a logical investment with your hard earn money in order to get ahead???

Well this is an example of information which could be useful for many types of people who track this sort of information.

Again when you hear the CEO of Kraft say that about inflation.

Or when Russia was hording gold.

Well Shit... guess what I did? Heh heh heh. I took advantage of the information given and...
1. Bought Energy Stocks back then
2. Increased my food pantry.
3. Increased saving money by cutting back on certain luxury things that I usually buy on a month basis. Eating T-bone steaks 3 times a week got cut down to one time a week and in its place was Top Sirlion. Just as an example of what you are control of on how you deal with your food issues.

A Year later, hell months ago, I said I would be fine and I was fine back then and I'm fine now. I'm going to make a Net Profit and it is still in line with 2021 profit line. If I'm a few thousand short hell all things considered it would still be a success. It's still a net profit.

THIS IS THE POWER OF DATA GATHERING. Using all sorts of information to get ahead in life.

This is what I am talking about of using information, cross checking the information and making a logical conclusion to get ahead.
 
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