Real Estate Time BOMB. Foreclosures and the Collapse of the Real Estate Market

Posted on March 10, 2009
Filed Under Home Foreclosure Investing |

Support this Channel: Subscribe & Comment. Thank you all! What I learned today will have devastating ramification for the real estate marketing and in turn the entire financial and stock market and the broader economy as a whole. If true…our real estate fate is seal. There will be more housing and real estate foreclosure carnage ahead. The road is long. Prepare yourself and protect your family from this coming economic catastrophe. PLEASE RATE, LINK, SHARE and SPREAD the word so others can …

Duration : 0:7:54


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Comments

25 Responses to “Real Estate Time BOMB. Foreclosures and the Collapse of the Real Estate Market”

  1. imahamina on March 10th, 2009 9:04 am

    The Federal Reserve …
    The Federal Reserve (private Co.) are the Kings of yore, (not the good ones). The grace Commission, Reagan. States that all the money the IRS collects goes to pay the intrest on the Federal debt. We should print our own money. Coincedentally, the presidents that propose it are asinated. Lincoln, Kennedy, Reagan critisised Fed Reserve and IRS, was shot and PROBABLY a clone. Laugh, then FIND TRUTH. google project camelot. Whistleblowers from the inside. Then laugh at how you’ve been played serf

  2. UncleSon on March 10th, 2009 9:04 am

    Very good work. …
    Very good work. Commercial RE bomb starts going off in 60 days. GET OUT OF DEBT FOLKS. Cash out your IRA’s, 401k’s, they are going to take it all.

    The one thing I hvae noticed is that all the Big Name Companies going down have one thing in common, DEBT.

  3. treebucket3 on March 10th, 2009 9:04 am

    Thanks, Growby10. I …
    Thanks, Growby10. I knew nothing about this. It’s going to be disasterous - not only for the USA, but throughout the world.

  4. TanukiDori on March 10th, 2009 9:04 am

    Spot On!
    Spot On!

  5. ed841rxm on March 10th, 2009 9:04 am

    So, I’m talking …
    So, I’m talking about a classic investment style, somewhat forgotten, that was based on living in a time when bank deposits were not guaranteed, gold was more commonly dispersed among the populace, and a 10% position in gold was standard if you were going to be overweight in paper markets. This style was never the standard approach of the dominant firms the US investor was robbed by.

  6. ed841rxm on March 10th, 2009 9:04 am

    I’m talking about …
    I’m talking about classic investment strategy devoid of all the sales pitches thrown at a person by investment houses. Whether those houses were the big Wall St. names or the local offices of places like Ed Jones. When asked about gold investment by their clients, the brokers invariable told people that gold is a barbarous relic of the past. This is why so few people own gold / silver now. The idea of gold / silver as insurance was disregarded.

  7. ed841rxm on March 10th, 2009 9:04 am

    Hi, Growby, You …
    Hi, Growby, You used the term “near term” in your question to matushka. All I can say is that I have seen over the last six years many predictions I have made and others made, ended up wrong - the manipulators knock the price down.

    Not true about “classic investment style.” As close as I can tell all the investment firms told the average investor to disregard gold altogether, because it didn’t pay interest. The people that got us into this mess control the printing press.

  8. Growby10 on March 10th, 2009 9:04 am

    ed841. Is the Dow …
    ed841. Is the Dow dropping from 14k to 6k in 1 year considered short term? or how about Dow 12k to 6 k in 6 months?!?!

    Those who say developed the “classic” investment style (and the 10% in metals) are the same ones who got us into this mess…and the same ones who have been always been chanting the same old mantra…buy and hold, buy and hold..repeat.

    Is that the type of “classic” you’re referring too?

  9. ed841rxm on March 10th, 2009 9:04 am

    I have been in the …
    I have been in the precious metals market for six years. Short term price predictions are pretty much impossible. The entire problem really revolves around the idea that few people followed classic investment advice that 10% of money should always be in precious metals as insurance against currency collapse. A person would not worry about the current price if this principle were applied as intended. Thinking you can get gold 100 dollars cheaper is just a “quibble.” Gold goes to 3-6K IMO.

  10. matushka78 on March 10th, 2009 9:04 am

    I can’t tell you …
    I can’t tell you the exact number, but there has been a correction of $80 in about 2 weeks. I think, there are some redemptions being paid for by gold and there is less demand for jewellery at this point. In the near term, I think it’s going to be volatile, but hover around 880-920; but it should hit 1200 by the end of this year.

  11. Growby10 on March 10th, 2009 9:04 am

    do you have any …
    do you have any prediction on where’s gold going in the near term?

  12. matushka78 on March 10th, 2009 9:04 am

    Precious metals …
    Precious metals always retain value, because they’re real and the oldest form of money. So, it’s good to have some gold/silver coins just in case, the dollar hyperinflates. In the next year or so, the dollar will do fine against other currencies (because every central bank is printing money), but it will lose value against real money - gold. Gold is not an investment, it’s just helps you retain purchasing power. If you’re keeping cash, I would tell you to convert some into gld/slv coins

  13. Growby10 on March 10th, 2009 9:04 am

    thank you for that. …
    thank you for that. I hope what you say will never happen. but…it’s looking pretty bad now.

  14. Growby10 on March 10th, 2009 9:04 am

    it’s true NUTS.. …
    it’s true NUTS…70%!?!?!? thanks for the comments!

  15. Growby10 on March 10th, 2009 9:04 am

    your story is being …
    your story is being repeated over and over again all over this country.

  16. Growby10 on March 10th, 2009 9:04 am

    that’s all that …
    that’s all that need to be said.

  17. Growby10 on March 10th, 2009 9:04 am

    so true. a game …
    so true. a game that affects people lives…but too many (on wall st. and elsewhere)…still just a game.

  18. Growby10 on March 10th, 2009 9:04 am

    @matushka. Do you …
    @matushka. Do you feel the same way how everyone (coin dealers and a LOT of people her on Youtube) is now pushing/persuade to buy precious metals? just want to hear your thoughts. thanks!

  19. Growby10 on March 10th, 2009 9:04 am

    thanks for those …
    thanks for those comments. I think more and more people are coming around to that way of thinking.

  20. matushka78 on March 10th, 2009 9:04 am

    A home is just a …
    A home is just a consumer item which lasts 60-100 years. Long Term (30 years) Real Appreciation (Inflation Adjusted) of a home is 1 to 2 %. Just compare the price of silver and a home, you’ll see the flat graph. The Realtor oc. and the brokers etc try to just con people into buying a home with borrowed money. And our dumb population speculates on homes like a herd of sheep without even understanding the fundamentals of the et Class.

  21. matushka78 on March 10th, 2009 9:04 am

    Real Estate never …
    Real Estate never was/is/will be an investment. Home Price = 2.5 to 3.0 times the median income. If it’s going higher and there’s no reason, it’s a speculative bubble! Real estate prices ONLY rise when median income grows, or number of rental properties decrease or number of people hitting the job market increases. Only buy a home if you want to live in it or want to rent it out to others. That’s why I rent, I will buy when the price drops to 2.5 times median income and pay in cash.

  22. majsmoke187 on March 10th, 2009 9:04 am

    lol…..true its a …
    lol…..true its a game, learn how to play and you win.

  23. nmbypmby34 on March 10th, 2009 9:04 am

    No one can buy …
    No one can buy those homes…without jobs…

  24. linnx88 on March 10th, 2009 9:04 am

    Nice video, you …
    Nice video, you should point people to Peter Schiff, Ron Paul, Marc Faber, Roy Rogers and Don Harrold (on youtube). They’ll tell you the economy the MSM does not want you to hear, and things you should be buying (gold, silver).

  25. linnx88 on March 10th, 2009 9:04 am

    Heh looks like the …
    Heh looks like the days of speculation are over. US will have to learn how the rest of the world earns real value, instead of foreign borrowed credit.

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