Originally posted by: alchemize
I don't see a V-shaped recession. We may have hit bottom (I'm still skeptical but I'm seeing some indicators - dead cat bounce?), but the whole housing issues haven't unwound yet. Some of my reasons for continued weakness:Originally posted by: charrison
Originally posted by: miketheidiot
Originally posted by: charrison
Originally posted by: Skoorb
I don't really know anymore. I still don't know if this "bottoming" is real. Things are definitely not as bad as I thought they would be at this point, but not until we're well and truly months past possible catastrophe can we say where the bottom was. I still stand by my overall prediction that if the US avoids great calamity (unemployment well into the double digits), it will see mostly stagnant growth for some years, as it putters along trying to unwind from the mess.
I think this is going to be another V shaped recession(the bounce back is going to be a strong as the dive down). However the amount of gov spending is probably going to cause problems down the road.
We have hit bottom and upswing has started and it has little to do the with stimulus package as it has barely started flowing out.
no
NO to a v shape recession or no to we have hit bottom?
- Foreclosures are back on the upswing after the moratorium, AND we haven't started seeing the unemployment-based foreclosures because most are collecting unemployment/drawing on what limited savings/credit they have.
- The next wave of mortgage resets hasn't hit yet, and it's as big as subprime - Option and Alt-A waves upcoming
- There are still huge supplies of empty houses to be sold. Until that inventory is sold down, the housing market will remain in the toilet.
- EVERYONE is now risk-averse. Banks, businesses, individuals.
Housing has without a doubt hit bottom. Housing affordability is at all time high and housing sales are strong, so that excessive inventory is being worked off. Housing prices have returned to sane levels and so have sane buyers with good credit.