I'm in the middle of quite an interesting book on the housing crisis - The Big Short - at the moment, which takes a look at who really seemed to be aware of the extent of the housing bubble before it burst - and it really seems like not that many folks in finance really had an inkling of a suspicion.
And it really isn't that easy. Where I live, the bubble hasn't burst & housing prices are up 300% from 2000. Today in the paper there was an article where experts put forth reasons they thought 'yes we are in a housing bubble' and 'no we are not in a housing bubble'.
The thing that I am trying to say is 'hindsight is always 20/20'
But the fact that they are still pushing HELOC is crazy. One of our friends just took one out here - but they had a tiny mortgage on a house that is probably worth 5x that right now. It still made me cringe a little to watch them buy up TVs, video games, a new car - with their new found wealth. The 'we are not in a housing bubble' side of the news article said this type of lending only happens in the US, but I know quite a few folks over here that have done it as well.
And it really isn't that easy. Where I live, the bubble hasn't burst & housing prices are up 300% from 2000. Today in the paper there was an article where experts put forth reasons they thought 'yes we are in a housing bubble' and 'no we are not in a housing bubble'.
The thing that I am trying to say is 'hindsight is always 20/20'
But the fact that they are still pushing HELOC is crazy. One of our friends just took one out here - but they had a tiny mortgage on a house that is probably worth 5x that right now. It still made me cringe a little to watch them buy up TVs, video games, a new car - with their new found wealth. The 'we are not in a housing bubble' side of the news article said this type of lending only happens in the US, but I know quite a few folks over here that have done it as well.
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