Today is the first of a month and so I read Marc Faber's Monthly on his gloom-boom-doom site: "...a very rare, technical-based buy signal called the Coppock has triggered, suggesting the long-term outlook for US stocks is constructive, and the bottom is potentially already in."
When US stocks shall rise, money is needed. At 6:50 David shows the Nasdaq/Russel ratio and what I want to expect is a downer for Nasdaq - not a rise in Russel stocks. Hmm.
In hyperinflation scenarios, we have steep falling currencies and real assets prices rise in these currencies, but in stable currencies these inlandian real assets are falling into dirtcheap.
If the trustworthy Coppock were right again and US stocks would from now on rise (in USD) AND David's bond view were right.... I like to add that many expect after this correction an enormous pm-ralley....
I am not ready with thinking! But "crack-up-boom" comes to mind and "unobtainium". Thanks David.
That's interesting LGWT - in Argentina when they had their 2002 Peso Crisis general equities at first fell and then rose over time but not as much as the currency debased. The key is interest rates and how long disbelief can be suspended. We are about to find out.
Good Evening David. Thank you again for another great video. You stated in your most recent video (5/31) that it is very likely that interest rates will continue to rise and inflation will continue. As a real estate investor, would it be prudent to purchase as many rental properties now (assuming the price is right and I am obtaining my desired return) and lock in the rates for 5 to 10 years?
I can't give investment advice. My view is that major centers are going to be severely disrupted by the coming social upheaval from currency disruption. Small remote communities will likely do better.
Today is the first of a month and so I read Marc Faber's Monthly on his gloom-boom-doom site: "...a very rare, technical-based buy signal called the Coppock has triggered, suggesting the long-term outlook for US stocks is constructive, and the bottom is potentially already in."
When US stocks shall rise, money is needed. At 6:50 David shows the Nasdaq/Russel ratio and what I want to expect is a downer for Nasdaq - not a rise in Russel stocks. Hmm.
In hyperinflation scenarios, we have steep falling currencies and real assets prices rise in these currencies, but in stable currencies these inlandian real assets are falling into dirtcheap.
If the trustworthy Coppock were right again and US stocks would from now on rise (in USD) AND David's bond view were right.... I like to add that many expect after this correction an enormous pm-ralley....
I am not ready with thinking! But "crack-up-boom" comes to mind and "unobtainium". Thanks David.
That's interesting LGWT - in Argentina when they had their 2002 Peso Crisis general equities at first fell and then rose over time but not as much as the currency debased. The key is interest rates and how long disbelief can be suspended. We are about to find out.
Good Evening David. Thank you again for another great video. You stated in your most recent video (5/31) that it is very likely that interest rates will continue to rise and inflation will continue. As a real estate investor, would it be prudent to purchase as many rental properties now (assuming the price is right and I am obtaining my desired return) and lock in the rates for 5 to 10 years?
I can't give investment advice. My view is that major centers are going to be severely disrupted by the coming social upheaval from currency disruption. Small remote communities will likely do better.
This is a first. Bitchute seems somewhat compromised and Brighteon uses Disqus (places I could enter with fakebock or goggle I run away from). Test.
Thank you for your very insightful videos, David. Could you do a video on economic crash signals and rising real estate prices?
Will look for some info - there is a blow-off of some asset sectors underway right now. Real estate, however, is rolling over. Existing home sales look terrible: https://wolfstreet.com/2023/05/23/prices-of-new-houses-drop-further-as-builders-stimulate-sales-with-price-cuts-incentives-pulling-demand-from-previously-owned-homes/