goanna said:The United States has an oversupply of housing. We have an undersupply.willrocks said:Didn't USA have near zero percent interest for a while? Does anyone know if that boosted real estate prices?
It's different here.
goanna said:The United States has an oversupply of housing. We have an undersupply.willrocks said:Didn't USA have near zero percent interest for a while? Does anyone know if that boosted real estate prices?
JulieW said:goanna said:The United States has an oversupply of housing. We have an undersupply.willrocks said:Didn't USA have near zero percent interest for a while? Does anyone know if that boosted real estate prices?
It's different here.
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The 'ol chestnut.. Does every man woman and child need a 3 bedroom house of their own?goanna said:The United States has an oversupply of housing. We have an undersupply.willrocks said:Didn't USA have near zero percent interest for a while? Does anyone know if that boosted real estate prices?
SilverSanchez said:Everyone is paying back their mortgages with MORE valuable dollars than when the mortgage was started. Massive wealth transfer from the Australian people to the Australian banks and the Australian government.
southerncross said:JulieW said:goanna said:The United States has an oversupply of housing. We have an undersupply.
It's different here.
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Yeah, like we are severely restricted on available land donch ya know, cause of ...um like....Koala's like um, yeah the Koala's need more trees like..... and so if, um we restrict the supply of available land for housing like... um....yeah (pause)....yeah the koala's....
Jonesy said:Swan is a complete tard. He acts as though having the lowest interest rates in the nation's history is a desirable thing when in fact is is a symptom of severe structural damage to the economy caused by his incompetence and corruption.
x2Big A.D. said:Jonesy said:Swan is a complete tard. He acts as though having the lowest interest rates in the nation's history is a desirable thing when in fact is is a symptom of severe structural damage to the economy caused by his incompetence and corruption.
So when John Howard said "interest rates will always be lower under a Coalition government than under a Labor government", what he was really saying was that the Coalition would do more damage than Labor?
Sorry, that's a cheap shot.
Politicizing rates is something both sides do and it is stupid. Low rates? Great, we'll spin that in favor of property owners. High rates? Great, we'll spin that in favor of savers. Doesn't matter which side it's coming from, they'll both say the same thing as the other one if they were in the same position.
So you're a self-funded retiree cursing the Reserve Bank for cutting interest rates. Don't. If the RBA has forced you to realise your term deposits are duds, the mandarins have done you a favour.
Savers dependent on fixed interest have been poorly advised for decades, not just over the past year as interest rates have tumbled. The dividend flow from a boring portfolio of industrial stocks trounces fixed interest and whatever the best daily rate might be from the on-line banks.
And right now, even after the market has rallied to start the year, equity yields slaughter the best term deposit rates you could have grabbed last year. Of course the yields aren't as tasty as they were in January or as extremely tasty as they were a year or two ago, but they're still fine in the general scheme of things.
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As a rough and simplified demonstration using five stocks (not a recommendation), the BusinessDay quotes page shows Telstra closed yesterday with a yield of 5.6 per cent, NAB 5.5, Westpac 5.2, Wesfarmers 4.1 and Woolworths 3.7 an average of 4.8 per cent. Add the franking credits and the effective pre-tax yield is more than 6.7 per cent. Who wants term deposits?
Those who think they're risk averse or scarred after confusing trading with investing will no doubt wail at this point about shares perhaps falling in price but for someone after an income stream, the price isn't the point it's the sustainability of dividends and their potential to grow. The price will take care of itself eventually and the capital appreciates over history.
The sure thing about term deposits is that the capital is being steadily devalued and that the return from the dividends on Australian industrial stocks rapidly outpaces the best that the banks can offer. That's the key message financial commentator Peter Thornhill has been making in presentations over the past couple of decades. I've heard his story before, during and after the GFC and it has added up every time.
The search for yield has been the market's main theme over the past year and it's not over yet. The analysts suggesting bank shares had reached a bubble high last week don't seem to realise that.
Read more: http://www.theage.com.au/business/m...s-are-a-dud-20130508-2j6p1.html#ixzz2Sfi4Lnzr
bordsilver said:x2Big A.D. said:Jonesy said:Swan is a complete tard. He acts as though having the lowest interest rates in the nation's history is a desirable thing when in fact is is a symptom of severe structural damage to the economy caused by his incompetence and corruption.
So when John Howard said "interest rates will always be lower under a Coalition government than under a Labor government", what he was really saying was that the Coalition would do more damage than Labor?
Sorry, that's a cheap shot.
Politicizing rates is something both sides do and it is stupid. Low rates? Great, we'll spin that in favor of property owners. High rates? Great, we'll spin that in favor of savers. Doesn't matter which side it's coming from, they'll both say the same thing as the other one if they were in the same position.
Taking the credit for the way a group of nine people randomly choose to unnaturally muck about with one of the most fundamental prices in the economy is just frickin' stupid. Take credit for removing their existence.
Big A.D. said:Jonesy said:Swan is a complete tard. He acts as though having the lowest interest rates in the nation's history is a desirable thing when in fact is is a symptom of severe structural damage to the economy caused by his incompetence and corruption.
So when John Howard said "interest rates will always be lower under a Coalition government than under a Labor government", what he was really saying was that the Coalition would do more damage than Labor?
Sorry, that's a cheap shot.
Jonesy said:Big A.D. said:Jonesy said:Swan is a complete tard. He acts as though having the lowest interest rates in the nation's history is a desirable thing when in fact is is a symptom of severe structural damage to the economy caused by his incompetence and corruption.
So when John Howard said "interest rates will always be lower under a Coalition government than under a Labor government", what he was really saying was that the Coalition would do more damage than Labor?
Sorry, that's a cheap shot.
Nowhere did I say that low interest rates were bad. I said that having interest rates at historically low levels now is a sign of severe structural damage caused by Swan. And I am correct. Even Swan himself said that 3% indicates an emergency condition.
Wayne Swan said:"To compare this level of interest rates and the circumstances of the Australian economy now to what they were at the height of the global financial crisis is just utterly irresponsible."
Big A.D. said:Wayne Swan said:"To compare this level of interest rates and the circumstances of the Australian economy now to what they were at the height of the global financial crisis is just utterlyirresponsibleinconvenient."
VRS said:Stock market up tomorrow then...
SliderC said:VRS said:Stock market up tomorrow then...
I'm surprised no one has commented on this reply. I agree, stocks are likely to go up on this news. I think we're going to see the same rise in stock values based on cheap money speculators as the US has seen. If hedge funds ands banks expect they can inflate the market greater then 2.75%, it will be a classic pump and dump.
ASIC warns on chase for yield
Record low interest rates could push investors to chase higher returns via riskier investments, Australian Securities and Investments Commission chairman Greg Medcraft has warned.
He said interest rates were a high-level concern for the regulator amid fears it could fuel another fiscal crisis.
"This is the real high-level concern risk in the search for yield, people invest in products that are probably inappropriate for their needs or they don't understand," Mr Medcraft told The Australian Financial Review after speaking at an Australian Shareholders' Association conference in Sydney on Wednesday.
"That's going to be a very, very important thing that we'll focus on."