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Credit deflation and the reflation cycle to come (part 3)


spunko

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3 hours ago, HousePriceMania said:

Surely that's your dear old mum a racist for not being happy with all this multiculturalism wealth redistribution  ?

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3 hours ago, Bobthebuilder said:

Hello neighbor, I am just up the road from you.

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25 minutes ago, ThoughtCriminal said:

Don't want to panic anyone but Michael Burry just liquidated his entire portfolio. 

war-dogs-war-dogs-movie.gif

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ThoughtCriminal
9 minutes ago, No One said:

source?

 

 

His shorts don't have to be declared and he almost certainly has a shit tonne.

 

We're going to find out if he's early. Again.

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geordie_lurch
47 minutes ago, ThoughtCriminal said:

We're going to find out if he's early. Again.

Given what he was holding I would say he was actually late to sell most "long positions on 11 companies during the second quarter" but seems like he got out of nearly all equities before May like myself and a few others in the thread :Beer:

The current share price rises seems like a classic bear market rally to me and maybe some will be able to time things will enough to get out of the burning building when it all finally comes crashing down but I'm happy keeping my recent profits in cash for a little while longer O.o

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13 hours ago, DoINeedOne said:

some women with a pile clothes over their arm took her bag

Happened to me partner in Paris several decades ago.  Knowing her now, I totally know what she meant by her fighting back!  Politeness wrapped around steel is that lady!  :x

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6 hours ago, DurhamBorn said:

Thats exactly what iv been doing.I want good earnings outside of the UK or things are going to have to go.Iv still a 5 figure holding in BT having sold 2/3ds but im tempted to sell the rest.Asset managers im not so bothered about as most of their assets are outside of sterling i suspect,though i have lightened up on HL luckily with a nice quick profit and gone more Ashmore and Ninety One plc.Im temped by Old Mutual as well but havent got any.M+G im going to look at to see where their assets are held in a deeper dive,im only up a couple of percent on them but do have 8.5% in divis over the year.VOD has big sterling and German exposure,but it also has big Africa and Turkey exposure so thats fine,baccy fine etc.

I didnt see a sterling collapse and my roadmap says it should do well medium term,but the actions of the government are horrific and there is a very real risk there.I think its a coin toss,but we feel very third world.

I bought some Old Mutual, but really also wanted Sanlam, unfortunately none of my platform providers offer Sanlam...   Anyway if I can't buy Sanlam so be it, but just thought I'd post the following in case might be of interest to other (asset manager minded) here.

Sanlam are selling some of their international subsidiaries, and have just sold Sanlam UK to (private!) Oak Tree Capitol management. The thing is I posted few weeks back that Sanlam are partnering with Alliance to create a pan-African giant. So I do wonder if they are building a war chest to reinvest in Africa - in which case is that a clear signal that West is doomed and Em's are the next big thing?! Probably , and in fact in the below article Sanlam kinda confirm that.               

  https://www.moneymarketing.co.uk/analysis/where-does-the-road-lead-for-sanlam/

      https://www.sanlam.co.za/mediacentre/media-category/media-releases/Sanlam and Allianz Join Forces

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3 hours ago, ashestoashes said:

if energy prices go up by four times why not just cut your consumption by four times, easy

'Four times' you say? - But that's almost an armful!?   ...Hope I'm not getting my units muddled up again?

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On 14/08/2022 at 00:14, DurhamBorn said:

When i started work in 86 most factories still produced their own heat with a boiler room and boiler man.My first ever job was doing work experience with the boiler man at a local clothing company when i was 14.He used to cook our sausages on the top of the boiler.He was only little,but strongest man iv ever seen and he was over 60 then,he used to shovel the coal in but also fix everything.He had a small holding as well.He said come here friday before xmas and il give you a turkey tell your mam not to buy one.So i went and he gave me a turkey in a sack with its head sticking out,very much alive,i had a hell of a job getting it home on my BMX it kept trying to bite my hands.My dad chopped its head off with an axe.

If anyone can find a better post on the internet I'm all ears. I've been chuckling away to this since I read it 

👌

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10 hours ago, ThoughtCriminal said:

Don't want to panic anyone but Michael Burry just liquidated his entire portfolio. 

IMG_20220428_140103.jpg

I’m thinking the lid on the Chinese economy might not hold out for much longer.

I’ll be watching intently, but I’m seriously looking to go all in cash and taking the gains from my PM miners.

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11 hours ago, Cosmic said:

NatWest did exactly that to my GF last year. She's pre arranged the 15k but the branch refused. Claimed my GF was "agitated" (she'd left our nipper for the first time) and they couldn't be sure it was legitimate. GF got annoyed and then they threatened to call the police... because she wanted to get the money she'd already pre arranged...

Closed the account.

Another take on this - banks get huge government and media pressure to "compensate" poor victims who send their savings to crypotcurrency scams. There was an example in the BBC recently where the bank employee literally told the greedy fucker it was a scam, but the article still took their side. Some aren't really scams either just super high risk investments that inevitably go bad.

I'm sure the bank's would much rather not give a fuck what you do with any large withdrawals. But until we're responsible enough as a society to bring back personal responsibility this is the consequence unfortunately.

I bet if these people had stuck lucky and made 1000% returns they wouldn't be clamouring to hand the money back to the rest of us!

 

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Looks like they are going to throw everything at it

https://www.ft.com/content/281fbba6-28e2-42d4-b241-0f215995f0d1


A new lender has been granted a licence by UK financial regulators to offer mortgages with fixed rates of up to 50 years in a move aimed at helping borrowers manage soaring inflation.

Perenna, a UK-based specialist lender, is initially planning to provide home loans that lock in rates for 30 years, before rolling out products with even longer terms.

Its approval comes as the Bank of England raises interest rates in an attempt to tackle rapid inflation, which has reached a 40-year high of 9.4 per cent in Britain.

Longer-term mortgages have been mooted as a way to help younger people on to the housing ladder as property prices remain high.

Prime minister Boris Johnson last month explored plans for longer mortgages that could be handed down between generations.

House prices in the UK reached a record high last month, although data from property site Rightmove on Monday showed the average value had dipped 1.3 per cent in August to £365,173.

Banks typically provide mortgages with fixed rates of up to 10 years, with the most popular products lasting two and five years, according to Ray Boulger, senior manager at broker John Charcol.

Perenna could offer rates of 4 to 4.5 per cent on the 30 to 50-year loans, although this would be affected by gilt yields at the time of launch.

Arjan Verbeek, chief executive and founder of Perenna, said longer-term rates should help borrowers during the cost of living crisis and in an environment of rising interest rates.

“Rates are going up and if you have a household budget to manage, you need to know what you’re paying on your mortgage every month,” Verbeek said.

“With inflation running high, this will take a chunk of the stress out.

“Mortgages are broken in the UK because normal people can’t buy a house. This is not the case in other markets, such as the US and Denmark, where stability is being provided by long-term mortgages.”

Gerard Lyons, an economist and former adviser to Johnson, wrote in a paper for think-tank Policy Exchange last week that “one of the critical areas for a new prime minister is to address the challenges in the housing market, and to help turn Generation Rent into Generation Buy”.

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ThoughtCriminal
8 hours ago, Noallegiance said:

I know he's been doing the rounds but this is, for me, the most fascinating interview to date. And she's smokin'.

 

I am once again imploring that finance interviews be conducted by men or fat ugly pigs.

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M S E Refugee
18 minutes ago, afly said:

Looks like they are going to throw everything at it

https://www.ft.com/content/281fbba6-28e2-42d4-b241-0f215995f0d1


A new lender has been granted a licence by UK financial regulators to offer mortgages with fixed rates of up to 50 years in a move aimed at helping borrowers manage soaring inflation.

Perenna, a UK-based specialist lender, is initially planning to provide home loans that lock in rates for 30 years, before rolling out products with even longer terms.

Its approval comes as the Bank of England raises interest rates in an attempt to tackle rapid inflation, which has reached a 40-year high of 9.4 per cent in Britain.

Longer-term mortgages have been mooted as a way to help younger people on to the housing ladder as property prices remain high.

Prime minister Boris Johnson last month explored plans for longer mortgages that could be handed down between generations.

House prices in the UK reached a record high last month, although data from property site Rightmove on Monday showed the average value had dipped 1.3 per cent in August to £365,173.

Banks typically provide mortgages with fixed rates of up to 10 years, with the most popular products lasting two and five years, according to Ray Boulger, senior manager at broker John Charcol.

Perenna could offer rates of 4 to 4.5 per cent on the 30 to 50-year loans, although this would be affected by gilt yields at the time of launch.

Arjan Verbeek, chief executive and founder of Perenna, said longer-term rates should help borrowers during the cost of living crisis and in an environment of rising interest rates.

“Rates are going up and if you have a household budget to manage, you need to know what you’re paying on your mortgage every month,” Verbeek said.

“With inflation running high, this will take a chunk of the stress out.

“Mortgages are broken in the UK because normal people can’t buy a house. This is not the case in other markets, such as the US and Denmark, where stability is being provided by long-term mortgages.”

Gerard Lyons, an economist and former adviser to Johnson, wrote in a paper for think-tank Policy Exchange last week that “one of the critical areas for a new prime minister is to address the challenges in the housing market, and to help turn Generation Rent into Generation Buy”.

A 50 year mortgage of £150,000  would still cost you £684.71 per month plus Council Tax and Utilities.

It looks like Utility Bills and Council Tax will kill off the Property Market in the UK.

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geordie_lurch

Seems like there's going to be a cull of Civil servants and the pay of those that are left - seems bearish to me

Story is from Guardian here: https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2022/aug/15/ministers-planning-to-cut-civil-servant-redundancy-pay-at-same-time-as-91k-jobs

"Ministers are planning to reduce redundancy pay for civil servants while cutting 91,000 Whitehall jobs, setting up a bitter confrontation that unions warned may lead to legal and industrial action.

The proposals could result in average packages being cut by a quarter at a time when the minister for Brexit opportunities and government efficiency, Jacob Rees-Mogg, is aiming to shrink the civil service by a fifth"

Couldn't see any mention of pensions in the story...

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21 minutes ago, M S E Refugee said:

A 50 year mortgage of £150,000  would still cost you £684.71 per month plus Council Tax and Utilities.

It looks like Utility Bills and Council Tax will kill off the Property Market in the UK.

Council tax is going to be very telling,up here we already pay really high rates and any big increases will really hurt.Councils have huge fat to cut.My partners bosses are all working from home,doing nothing much at all,its incredible how they get away with it.Government cap is still in place of 2% so lets see what they do.

The government would like to sign you up to debt servitude in the womb if they could,its the only real weapon they have now to get you to work.

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1 hour ago, afly said:

Looks like they are going to throw everything at it

https://www.ft.com/content/281fbba6-28e2-42d4-b241-0f215995f0d1
A new lender has been granted a licence by UK financial regulators to offer mortgages with fixed rates of up to 50 years in a move aimed at helping borrowers manage soaring inflation.

Perenna, a UK-based specialist lender, is initially planning to provide home loans that lock in rates for 30 years, before rolling out products with even longer terms. - FFS

Its approval comes as the Bank of England raises interest rates in an attempt to tackle rapid inflation, which has reached a 40-year high of 9.4 per cent in Britain. -Yeah Right 1.75%

Longer-term mortgages have been mooted as a way to help younger people on to the housing ladder as property prices remain high. - How how about affordable housing?

Prime minister Boris Johnson last month explored plans for longer mortgages that could be handed down between generations. - You and your cronies got any connection to Perenna then Boris?

House prices in the UK reached a record high last month, although data from property site Rightmove on Monday showed the average value had dipped 1.3 per cent in August to £365,173. - Dipped 1.3% well that can't be allowed can it

“Mortgages are broken in the UK because normal people (LOL) can’t buy a house. This is not the case in other markets, such as the US and Denmark, where stability is being provided by long-term mortgages.” What stability, inter-generational slavery?

Gerard Lyons, an economist and former adviser to Johnson, wrote in a paper for think-tank Policy Exchange last week that “one of the critical areas for a new prime minister is to address the challenges in the housing market, and to help turn Generation Rent into Generation Buy”. - Dr Gerard Lyons Agenda Contributor at the WEF

Unlike banks, which fund much of their mortgage lending through customer deposits, Perenna will issue covered bonds to pension funds and insurers for longer-term financing. - So Banks rely on Customer Deposits to fund large parts of mortgages? xD

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HousePriceMania
26 minutes ago, geordie_lurch said:

Seems like there's going to be a cull of Civil servants and the pay of those that are left - seems bearish to me

Story is from Guardian here: https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2022/aug/15/ministers-planning-to-cut-civil-servant-redundancy-pay-at-same-time-as-91k-jobs

"Ministers are planning to reduce redundancy pay for civil servants while cutting 91,000 Whitehall jobs, setting up a bitter confrontation that unions warned may lead to legal and industrial action.

The proposals could result in average packages being cut by a quarter at a time when the minister for Brexit opportunities and government efficiency, Jacob Rees-Mogg, is aiming to shrink the civil service by a fifth"

Couldn't see any mention of pensions in the story...

Good. ****s the lot of 'em.

Knew a police office worker who thought it hilarious that they weren't getting pay rises during "austerity" but getting moved up pay grades instead.

 

 

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5 minutes ago, DurhamBorn said:

Council tax is going to be very telling,up here we already pay really high rates and any big increases will really hurt.Councils have huge fat to cut.My partners bosses are all working from home,doing nothing much at all,its incredible how they get away with it.Government cap is still in place of 2% so lets see what they do.

The government would like to sign you up to debt servitude in the womb if they could,its the only real weapon they have now to get you to work.

But if your disabled you don’t pay council tax. I’m going long ADHD and Long Covid to the moon! 🌙 

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