8/25/2017 8:35:28 PM
9/7/2017 1:42:59 AM
I could totally see a string of insurance companies going bankrupt, and leaving homeowners holding the bag, with no collateral, and then defaulting on mortgages on a large scale. I don't know if Irma (even if it tears up every beach house between Key West and the Jersey Shore) could cause enough financial damage to create a market crash like the mid 2000's... but maybe, and when combined with a bad Harvey and some earth quake on the west coast... maybe...
9/7/2017 12:26:08 PM
I'm seeing not a lot of understand of why the last meltdown happened in this thread. I will repeat this. A bubble or two bursting, or a single housing market crashing, does not cause a financial meltdown. If you want to convince me something singular like keeps being discussed is going to cause a meltdown, you've got to show that almost the whole entire financial system is overly invested (massively, to the point of being irresponsible) and unprepared for that particular market to fall.People defaulting on their housing loans caused the housing market to burst. Just about every major bank and insurance company caused the financial meltdown by betting against the former occurring. Are similar bets being made in any of the scenarios being discussed?[Edited on September 7, 2017 at 1:31 PM. Reason : asdf]
9/7/2017 1:30:16 PM
I guess the point of the thread was to point out the *potential* for some unexpected 'perfect storm' that nobody sees coming. And while some people in this thread have stated that what happened in 2007/2008 was some sort of unpredictable exception to what can lead to a financial crisis, that's not really true. Plenty of people saw what was going on and actually ending up profiting- some of them quite handsomely.I'll admit that I live in a bubble in the Bay Area, but things are just crazy right now. I really think something has got to give because I just don't see how anyone making less than 100K a year can actually make ends meet. Incentivizing people who are already strapped for cash to take on additional debt for the promise of a future 'reward' is pretty big red flag to me, especially when you consider the types of people who are now in high powered positions (thanks, 45).But yeah, it could be two devastating hurricanes in highly populated states, along with a massive CA earthquake that actually triggers an economic collapse.Great times we're living in, huh?[Edited on September 7, 2017 at 4:31 PM. Reason : .]
9/7/2017 4:30:23 PM
9/8/2017 2:30:21 PM
I mean it's only tangentially related to this thread, but that Equifax breech is highly disconcerting. I put little to no faith in our banking/credit institutions to put consumer protections ahead of profits. Call me a pessimist if you want, but that's how I see it.
9/8/2017 3:33:54 PM
9/8/2017 7:38:15 PM
^ It won't even take that. We just lost our credit system, we just don't realize it yet. When a third of the country's credit numbers can no longer be considered legitimate, you've got a problem. It's only a matter of time until the lawsuits hit and we realize that we have to start from scratch, unless somebody comes up with a brilliant way to identify people over the phone which will pass Constitutional muster.
9/10/2017 10:18:48 AM
I think you'll find this turns out to not be as bad as you think. And nothing will change because of it.
9/10/2017 11:02:39 AM
^
9/10/2017 12:12:18 PM
9/10/2017 2:09:00 PM
^I tend to agree with you on the rent control thing as well as the "want to live in cities" comment, although keep in mind that you have to go where the jobs are and some of this overflows from the college degree problem right now. That is, there aren't many computer science jobs, for instance, in Boise, Idaho or Sioux Falls. Also, it's pretty hard to get a job out of state without a lot of previous experience. They're focused on providing for the local community to start with.
9/10/2017 5:34:09 PM