changm55
New member
Well at this point... if chinas economy goes belly up they can emulate us and devalue its currency (oh the lord america will be jumping for joy if they even allowed the rmb to float let alone devalue it) like put their printing press on high gear QEX style... but i doubt that will happen... if they go belly up, they still have a surplus to squander first... i mean, just cause if we go belly up we drag the entire world along with it, doesnt mean we can look at others and be like, hey if THEY go belly up whats gonna happen?... at this point chances are, we will go belly up faster (we are accumulating way more debt faster then we can print money)
if china or europe or whatevers decides to fuck opec and start trading oil without using the USD, we are auto-doomed... we take this threat VERY seriously... just look at the few recent countries that tried to do that... we invaded them all (besides iran and north korea that is) and they werent even significant in the international market... if just ONE significant country does it and we allow it albeit not willingly, just watch how fast our USA stocks will tumble... gauranteed
if china or europe or whatevers decides to fuck opec and start trading oil without using the USD, we are auto-doomed... we take this threat VERY seriously... just look at the few recent countries that tried to do that... we invaded them all (besides iran and north korea that is) and they werent even significant in the international market... if just ONE significant country does it and we allow it albeit not willingly, just watch how fast our USA stocks will tumble... gauranteed
Liar Loan said:zubs said:Liar Loan said:For a $1 million house that rents for $4k, after paying:
Property taxes
Mello Roos
Maintenance
Property Management
Insurance
I'm calculating less than a 1.5% cap rate. Wouldn't it be smarter to park your money in a CD?
Well in Asia, people buy homes for the appreciation, and not the cash flow. ..I like Momos chart. It's a pretty clear indication why Asian FCB's prefer to buy property in the US than their home countries. According to the chart $1,852,000 apartment can only rent for $2,266 in Taipei.
And since Irvine is just an extension of Taipei...Does rental parity matter?
I would argue that appreciation will be limited with such a low cap rate. Other areas of OC crashed harder and have more ground to make up, plus the ability to cover your costs with cashflow. I guess as long as FCB's have money to blow, the greater fool theory still holds true, but what happens when the Chinese economy goes belly up?