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The Real Estate Bust Continues
American Chronicle ^ | 10/26/2006 | Alex S. Gabor

Posted on 11/01/2006 9:15:08 AM PST by ex-Texan

The real estate market continues to go bust as I had predicted in my first major article on the subject in December of 2005.

As it continues to rapidly barrel south, don’t tell the Bush Administration, the Federal Reserve, International Bankers, Mortgage Bankers, Mortgage Brokers, Realtors, home builders or even home sellers. Let’s keep it our little secret.

Still, none of them want to hear anything about it. They are, the majority of them, extremely myopic to the truth and material facts of what is really going on in the American economy.

SEC regulators should take note if they are really doing their jobs, but even they are too busy chasing thousands of back dating stock option executives these days.

The major buzzwords of “soft landing” and “temporary slowdown” fail to take into account numerous factors, which the contrarian indicators reveal to be present in the market. “Housing depression” is more accurate a term.

Some big publicly traded home builders like Lennar, Centex and Pulte have seen their stock prices tumble 30% or more over the past year with no bottom in sight by analysts in the know.

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are acting much like their sponsor, the Federal Government.

While cooking their books, they refinance old debt with new debt, Fannie having just sold $3.5 billion in new debt securities, the classic move in any ponzi scheme.

Both institutions are now required to improve their record-keeping systems under a directive from their regulator, the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight.

The new rule, which took effect today, requires the mortgage finance companies to establish and maintain a record retention program that is easier for OFHEO examiners to access.

A rhetorical rule that really means, “we know what’s wrong but can’t really, nor do we want to officially prove it”.

If we sift through the false data being filed by public companies in the mortgage, banking, building and general real estate services industry, aside from the ongoing false statistics published by the government, we begin to discover that America’s real estate markets are in far deeper trouble than anyone honestly dares to admit.

I continue to predict that the current bust will be the biggest loss in dollar terms in the history of this planet. Billions in coming losses are no longer a realistic estimate but rather we are talking trillions, perhaps by as much as five trillion being wiped out of the rather bloated false $20 trillion in equity in real estate across a broad spectrum of residential and commercial properties in the United States.

That may only appear to be a 25% correction in a market that has been inflated by as much as 500% during the past decade.

The sheer dollar volumes are what will ripple throughout the global economy and impact bond prices, stock prices, and commodities. Nothing and no one will be left untouched from the impact of this bust that is now well underway.

Although the Fed raised interest rates during the past two years and only recently stopped doing so during their last three meetings, in order to continue the previous trend of rising home prices, the Fed would now need to lower rates to less than 0%, much like Japan had to during the 1990’s when its real estate bust collapsed property values by more than 50%.

America is about to experience the same economic impact as Japan. At one point, Japanese banks were actually paying people to borrow money resulting in a negative interest rate. The Fed, three or four years from now may find it in a similar position. Global Net capital flows coming into the United States is shrinking and is being directed more towards Europe, Asia and of all places, the Middle East and Africa.

One can still find the largest mortgage banks in the nation such as Washington Mutual and Countrywide, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac making loans at close to 1% using option ARM programs that carry negative amortization clauses in their notes. These are ticking cluster bombs for the housing market.

Over a trillion dollars worth of mortgage backed securities have been issued to foreign investors which are collateralized by these types of mortgages, whose adjustments are gradually placing huge financial constraints on borrowers who are now trying to get out of them by putting their homes back on the market.

The exit doors are jammed, much like someone yelling fire in a theatre. And there is nothing wrong with yelling fire when there really is one. Because the refinance boom is well over, borrowers who lived off the equity in their homes are faced with only one choice and that is to sell, sell, sell, but many buyers are too nervous. They know.

The herd of thundering bulls rampaging toward the cliffs of real estate moguldom has blocked all the exits. Those who saw the edge of the cliff a year ago know that the time to sell was way back then, and now, if they managed to get out before everyone else, will sit on piles of cash, which was gained through huge amounts of leverage during the past decade, waiting for the end of the correction which may last as long as a decade.

Japan is the prime example of what happens when the people of a nation put their trust in the faulty banking systems currently in place.

Now, ten months after my article, the reports are trickling in. Martin Crutsinger, an Associated Press Economics Writer, wrote today “median prices of new homes plunged in September by the largest amount in more than 35 years”.

The US Commerce Department reported that the median price for a new home sold in September was $217,100, a drop of 9.7 percent from September 2005.

It was the lowest median price for a new home since September 2004 and the sharpest year-over-year decline since December 1970.

The weakness in new home prices was even sharper than a 2.5 percent fall in the price of existing homes last month, which had been the biggest drop on record.

In just two months real estate prices in general have fallen around 13% across the nation and the trend continues, with some markets being hit harder than others.

The final impact and domino effect this has on the American real estate market has not been felt yet at the highest levels of American and global finance. Homebuilder’s inventories are beginning to reach new record high levels, despite slowdowns in new permit applications.

Home buyers don’t want to buy in a falling market and because they cannot sell their old homes may sit on them for a while as the market wrings out the trillions of dollars of loans that are backed by false financial statements from the no income/no asset verification and stated income/stated asset loans originated during the past five years.

It is estimated that 30% of all loans originated over the past five years have been these types of loans and that 90% of them contain false financial or inflated income statements represented by the borrowers with the help of hungry loan officers motivated by high commissions during the refinance boom which is definitely over.

Some borrowers had refinanced two and three times during the past decade, pulling cash out each time, the only thing that was driving the national economy during the Bush administrations war economy. Now its’ all over but the shouting.

The Federal Reserve is well aware of these intrinsic problems in the asset qualities of mortgage-backed securities, as is the Securities and Exchange Commission.

That is another reason I wrote about America’s Fannie Being Spanked, a growing problem that is yet to be resolved by securities regulators. If the SEC were doing its job, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac would go out of business and may yet do so when foreign investors realize the widespread nature of consumer fraud in the American mortgage industry.

The scandals involving those two major government sponsored institutions have been contained by corrupt politicians who head up the financial and banking committees but who may yet be thrown out of office in the coming elections this November. Their approval ratings are lower than the Presidents for just those reasons.

The Fed has issued guidance to all major regional banks and various other regulatory bodies are expected to follow suit which will create more scrutiny for these types of loans and if they abolished them altogether, one could see half the mortgage brokers in the country out of work within the next twelve months.

There are currently about 50,000 mortgage banks and brokers in the country that employ an army of around 3 million people directly or indirectly. All of them have fed the growth of the four largest players in the residential mortgage market, Washington Mutual, Countrywide, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

Countrywide announced that it would lay off 2,500 workers just to save $500 million in overhead as the mortgage market shrivels. Other companies are also expected to start the layoff process.

Washington Mutual already cut 10,000 jobs and may need more in order cut expenses as mortgage originations have plummeted by 75% off their all time highs.

Those who failed to get out of their homes during the past year will be the only one’s feeling the consequences of those who lied on mortgage loan applications.

Those lies impact everyone, but mostly the lenders, who may soon find themselves under greater scrutiny by the FBI and other government investigators searching for scapegoats in the debacle of the American nightmare. Many will wake up from their “American Dream” and wonder what really happened.

Foreclosures in Southern California are up 50% and property prices have already fallen by more than 20% in some asset classes including apartment buildings and condos, a statistic that is not reflected in what the federal government publishes through its financial media machines.

Trying to tell people in the industry that they are now seeing the true beginning of the real estate bust of 2006, come back with defenses to validate their own incorrect perceptions of the market. They are too over sold on their own sales pitches.

Boston Globe writer Alexander von Hoffman says, “the Boston real estate market has been booming and busting since the 1630s, when the Puritans first began divvying up the land around Massachusetts Bay. The city's most famous real estate bust took place in the South End in the 1870s. The Great Depression brought far worse. Unemployment and deflation crippled the finances of thousands of Boston's working families who could not make their mortgages and lost their homes.”

The current bust will probably last a decade or more, just as it did in Japan, and put millions of people out of work. The fall guys in all of this will probably be Greenspan and the Bush Administration, not the millions of people who filled out phony loan applications to get artificially misleading low mortgage rates and bid up housing prices just to make their own quick profits.

The Federal Reserve knew twelve months ago that real estate was getting totally out of hand. They only stopped raising rates long enough to pierce the bubble. The stock market expects them to start lowering rates and if they don’t the ripple effect will be felt as stock prices plummet.

We can probably expect to see a new historical one-day drop in the stock market some time during the next year as a result. This will then jolt the fed back into action, but like the giant tentacle of the Octodragon that it is, it can only move as fast as its’ weakest cell.

In November of 2005, the National Association of Realtors lied to American homebuyers by stating, “the facts simply do not support the possibility of a housing bust -- not for these 135 markets and not for the nation”.

They saw what effects the fallout of the stock market bubble had on the economy and were very worried that the implosion of a real estate bubble would have similar - if not worse - consequences. It was more comfortable to lie than to face the facts and swallow the truth.

Those insiders who realized it was time to sell, and knew the blood letting would begin, got out, all the while telling their clients that there was no chance of a bubble bursting.

In order to keep the markets calm, the Bush administration, through the U.S. Commerce Department is trying to temper the bad news by publishing good news at the same, good news, which may in fact contain false and misleading statements. It is classic doublespeak announced just today.

Joe Bel Bruno, another Associated Press Business Writer said, “Wall Street initially was inspired by data showing capital spending jumped by the most in more than six years, but was then rattled by a report that indicated new home prices plunged at the steepest pace since 1970.”

The current administration thinks in short term cycles and cannot see the long term, it is strictly near sighted, always has been, and always will be unless politics are removed and separated from the economic engines of the military industrial financial media complex, which is highly unlikely even in the long term.

Some multi-national investors have rushed back into blue chips seeking safety, pushing the Dow to new record levels, while shorting the US dollar, which continues to fall, along with major industrial commodities, and have shifted out of REITs and home building stocks, perhaps even taking opportunities to short those as well.

Peter Slatin, a writer for Forbes, misleads the general public when he says that, “the real estate industry continues to become ever more transparent, largely because of the increasing weight of institutional capital in the mix,”.

It is because of institutionalized capital in the market that the industry has become more secretive than ever before.

In fact, institutions have caused the REIT market to balloon from a total REIT market capitalization at just about $10 billion in 1992; to today’s number which is closer to $1 trillion.

Between 1968 until the mid-1970s, there was a land rush of mortgage REIT initial public offerings. Then came the bust. In 1972, there were 46 REITs with a market capitalization of $1.8 billion. By the end of 1974 capitalization was down to $712.4 million. Cut by more than half.

30 years later there are more than 5,000 REITs, both public and private, with assets totaling over $2 trillion and combined public market caps of over $1 trillion, with three international banking organizations now approaching $2 trillion in assets each.

These same banking institutions (Bank of America, Citigroup and Merrill Lynch) are the very organizations that have fueled the boom in REIT’s and pushed commercial and industrial property values to new highs.

Just one example being the 115 apartment buildings in New York City which recently sold as a portfolio for close to $5 billion dollars. The sale was between institutions.

Pretty soon, being a billionaire won’t mean much any more, just like being a millionaire means you are now part of the lower middle class.

The secretiveness of the market prevents government regulators and politicians from seeing the daily billions in dollars of phony loan applications turned into mortgage loans and then sold off as securitized “assets” to unwary foreign institutions such as central banks, and multi-national corporations, pension funds and other institutional investors who are all driven by their own bottom lines – profit in an age of delusionally valued assets.

Deficit spending, and the national debt continue to balloon, forecasted to be $500 billion annually and $10 trillion respectively by the year 2008.

The national debt has already exceeded $8.5 trillion and is now growing at the rate of $2 billion per day. Congress will have to raise the debt limit from $9 billion to $10 trillion next year.

Part of that money may need to go to bailing out and consolidating Washington Mutual, Countrywide, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in an RTC type rescue package, the four biggest losers in the continuing real estate bust. _______

Alex S. Gabor is a freelance writer living in Hollywood. He spent 25 years investigating the mortgage banking industry and is the inventor of zero interest mortgages.


TOPICS:
KEYWORDS: blogpimpin; brokenrecord; bubblebrigade; bubbles; depression; despair; doom; gloomanddoom; grapesofwrath; hoovervilles; housing; mortgages; pimpmyblog; realestate; soupkitchens
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I continue to predict that the current bust will be the biggest loss in dollar terms in the history of this planet. Billions in coming losses are no longer a realistic estimate but rather we are talking trillions, perhaps by as much as five trillion being wiped out of the rather bloated false $20 trillion in equity in real estate across a broad spectrum of residential and commercial properties in the United States."

Funny how this real estate writer sounds familiar. For those in the know, he sounds just like Dave Ramsey. It you are a regular listener to Ramsey's Daily radio broadcast, you know that he preaches careful financial investment. Last week he was getting hoarse telling people not to try to get rich flipping houses.

If you want to learn more about the bursting real estate bubble click here. Or visit my FR Page For all the realtors and mortgage brokers out there, I suggest you just crawl back into bed. The situation will get a lot worse before it gets any better. For "naysayers" out there I reiterate some of your favorite mantras: "Nothing to see here. Not in my neck of the woods. Time to move on."

1 posted on 11/01/2006 9:15:11 AM PST by ex-Texan
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To: ex-Texan

bttt


2 posted on 11/01/2006 9:16:44 AM PST by stainlessbanner
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To: GodGunsGuts; M. Espinola; Hydroshock; Calpernia

*Ping*!


3 posted on 11/01/2006 9:17:52 AM PST by ex-Texan (Matthew 7: 1 - 6)
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To: ex-Texan

Repeat a LIE often enough and it will becomes true...Is that the socialist scheme here!??? hmmm


4 posted on 11/01/2006 9:19:29 AM PST by 100-Fold_Return (In Prisons Tattletales Are the Same as Child-Molesters...hmm)
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To: ex-Texan

Goody, Goody, Goody. A couple of more months, maybe my wife gets the raise she's going for, I'll be able to afford a Palace on The Potomac. Something near Mt. Vernon where all the trees have turned beautiful colors this time of year....


5 posted on 11/01/2006 9:19:54 AM PST by .cnI redruM (Democrats; The Evil of Two Lessors.)
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To: ex-Texan
Some thoughts:

1. All real estate is local. Many markets are overvalued and will decline but many are still increasing

2. Long term - The American population is still growing. We will have another 100 million within 25 years. They will want housing

3. Banks are making loans they never used to due to the packaging and selling of mortgages (including sub-prime) on the market due to Fanny Mae. This has to stop.

6 posted on 11/01/2006 9:20:20 AM PST by 2banana (My common ground with terrorists - they want to die for islam and we want to kill them)
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To: 100-Fold_Return

This is the truth. What is your agenda?


7 posted on 11/01/2006 9:26:02 AM PST by Hydroshock ( (Proverbs 22:7). The rich ruleth over the poor, and the borrower is servant to the lender.)
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To: ex-Texan

It would be nice if this were true, because I am buying soon, but it isn't.


8 posted on 11/01/2006 9:28:07 AM PST by Toby06 (Happy camper.)
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To: Hydroshock

Most of us just wonder why you and your buddy ex-Texan (if that is not just another FR name of yours) keep posting these articles. You seem to take a perverse pleasure in every sign that there is a real estate crash on the way. Why is that?


9 posted on 11/01/2006 9:36:07 AM PST by Fairview
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To: 2banana
1. All real estate is local.

The MBS credit market which created the bubble is global.

2. Long term - The American population is still growing.

Only if you count immigration, much of it illegal.

Banks are making loans they never used to due to the packaging and selling of mortgages (including sub-prime) on the market due to Fanny Mae. This has to stop.

Fannie has been incapable of generating a credible financial statement for over 5 years. They have trillions in highly leveraged debt and derivatives which permeate every major money center bank, most small banks and money market funds. This problem is literally orders of magnitude larger than the S&L crisis.

10 posted on 11/01/2006 9:37:41 AM PST by AdamSelene235 (Truth has become so rare and precious she is always attended to by a bodyguard of lies.)
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To: Toby06

It's not true on my street. Our values are up about 20% in 3 years, which is not exactly rocket acceleration, but beats a hole in the head, for sure.


11 posted on 11/01/2006 9:43:07 AM PST by Tax-chick ("If we have no fear, Pentecost comes again." ~ Bishop William Curlin)
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To: 2banana

"3. Banks are making loans they never used to due to the packaging and selling of mortgages (including sub-prime) on the market due to Fanny Mae. This has to stop."

This has been this way since the early 1980's.
Kind of a fundamantal piece of our financial system. And it's Fannie Mae...


12 posted on 11/01/2006 9:46:08 AM PST by HereInTheHeartland (Never bring a knife to a gun fight, or a Democrat to do serious work...)
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To: Fairview
Most of us just wonder why you and your buddy ex-Texan (if that is not just another FR name of yours) keep posting these articles. You seem to take a perverse pleasure in every sign that there is a real estate crash on the way. Why is that?

They are liberal schmucks. Doom & Gloom types trying to slap the "Bush economy" in the face. Try carrying on an intellignet debate with hydroshock and you'll go running for a fan of the Barney the Purple Dinosaur for some intelligent conversation.

13 posted on 11/01/2006 9:47:52 AM PST by Toby06 (Happy camper.)
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To: ex-Texan
Tech stocks took a similar correction. Not every tech stock suffered. Those that had no value went in the toilet. Those that were overvalued took a slap down.

People still need technology, and people still need a place to live.

Here's something else to consider: if we hadn't aborted 40 million unborn little ones, how would market demand fair today for both stocks and real estate?

Markets never like the hard sell or hustle. People only get hurt from the quick sell.

Luke 12:

15
Then he said to the crowd, "Take care to guard against all greed, for though one may be rich, one's life does not consist of possessions."
16
Then he told them a parable. "There was a rich man whose land produced a bountiful harvest.
17
He asked himself, 'What shall I do, for I do not have space to store my harvest?'
18
And he said, 'This is what I shall do: I shall tear down my barns and build larger ones. There I shall store all my grain and other goods
19
and I shall say to myself, "Now as for you, you have so many good things stored up for many years, rest, eat, drink, be merry!"
20
But God said to him, 'You fool, this night your life will be demanded of you; and the things you have prepared, to whom will they belong?'
21
Thus will it be for the one who stores up treasure for himself but is not rich in what matters to God." 7
22
He said to (his) disciples, "Therefore I tell you, do not worry about your life and what you will eat, or about your body and what you will wear.
23
For life is more than food and the body more than clothing.
24
Notice the ravens: they do not sow or reap; they have neither storehouse nor barn, yet God feeds them. How much more important are you than birds!
25
Can any of you by worrying add a moment to your lifespan?
26
If even the smallest things are beyond your control, why are you anxious about the rest?
27
Notice how the flowers grow. They do not toil or spin. But I tell you, not even Solomon in all his splendor was dressed like one of them.
28
If God so clothes the grass in the field that grows today and is thrown into the oven tomorrow, will he not much more provide for you, O you of little faith?
29
As for you, do not seek what you are to eat and what you are to drink, and do not worry anymore.
30
All the nations of the world seek for these things, and your Father knows that you need them.
31
Instead, seek his kingdom, and these other things will be given you besides.
32
Do not be afraid any longer, little flock, for your Father is pleased to give you the kingdom.
33
Sell your belongings and give alms. Provide money bags for yourselves that do not wear out, an inexhaustible treasure in heaven that no thief can reach nor moth destroy.
34
For where your treasure is, there also will your heart be.
14 posted on 11/01/2006 9:50:17 AM PST by SaltyJoe ("Social Justice" for the Unborn Child)
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To: ex-Texan
"Pretty soon, being a billionaire won’t mean much any more, just like being a millionaire means you are now part of the lower middle class."

Decided the author was pretty a dumass about here.

The real estate market may take a down turn, but with the drop in mortgage rates over the Summer anyone who was staring at an impending ARM reset and didn't take out a fixed rate mortgage pretty much is going to get what they deserve.
15 posted on 11/01/2006 10:07:43 AM PST by thinkthenpost
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To: SaltyJoe

I lived through a major bubble burst in New England in the 80's when home values dropped by as much as 50+ percent. I was actually pretty lucky, I bought my house in December of 1984 and closed on it in february of 1985. by the time we had closed on it the value had already gone up $50 thousand dollars. When we sold it 14 years later it went for that same $50k profit we made in the first 2 months. Some of my coworkers who bought in 1985-86 saw their home values plummet. One buddy paid $135k for a condo and finally declared bankruptcy when it was assessed at $50k. Another paid $280k for a condo and the price dropped to about $170 for the rest of the units but he and his wife rode it out. Cape Cod took a massive hit. But there was a silver lining in the cloud. For each family that lost big time there was another family, one that had been saving up because they were priced out of the market, that now had a home they could afford. So the trillions won't dissapear they will be moved around because unlike stocks which can only be used for toilet paper when they become worthless people can still live in houses, business can still move into office space. It happens and frankly I'm in a position to buy and wouldn't mind cashing in on someone elses misery.


16 posted on 11/01/2006 10:07:50 AM PST by Oshkalaboomboom
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To: Tax-chick
Alex S. Gabor is a freelance writer living in Hollywood. He spent 25 years investigating the mortgage banking industry and is the inventor of zero interest mortgages

He's a genuine real expert, he took a bunch of half truths and DU doom and gloom socialist-onomics to prove some sort of point. These threads are as dumb as the evolution and 100 per barrel oil threads. Facts are.

1. "Prices overall are down". What the writer didn’t say is MOST markets are still appreciating while some seriously overvalued markets like So. Fl, So Ca and some areas of the NE have dropped a bit. What he left out was that sales have actually increased. Let me repeat that. SALES HAVE INCREASED.

2. There has been no systemic, epidemic and widespread foreclosures. The local mullet wrapper the Palm Beach Post takes joy in spreading this lie. Headline PB Post "Foreclosures up 85%". What the local socialists don't tel you is the number of foreclosures went from 1200 to 2400. So going from .03 percent of mortgages held to .035% of mortgages that go into foreclosure is a real crisis. Made those millions yet Carlton Sheets lemmings?

3. Interest rates have not skyrocketed like some of the HOLD GOLD loonies have speculated. In fact rates maybe poised for another drop in the Spring.

4. The S&L crisis was created by changes to the tax laws which instantly created worthless investment portfolios. Look of the facts before some spout some ignorant Democratic clichés.

Someone quoted Dave Ramsey before. I used to like Dave and actually liked some of his common sense principles but Dave's a certified idiot speaking on things he knows little about. Going broke in real estate, being a reformed whore monger and having a down home East Tenn. accent does not make you wise. Waiting around for a 15 year mortgage and 20% down payment and you will living in a rental for 20 years. Any guy who guests on Oprah can't be taken seriously. Cut up your credit cards and use cash but the rest of his Dave-isms ignore them.

17 posted on 11/01/2006 10:08:09 AM PST by lwg8tr
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To: All

Alex S. Gabor is a big fan of George Soros. Perhaps exTexan is also.

http://newswire.indymedia.org/en/2006/02/833140.shtml


18 posted on 11/01/2006 10:16:18 AM PST by SaxxonWoods (..ON 11/7, YOU ARE EITHER WITH US, OR WITH THE TERRORISTS..)
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To: SaxxonWoods

The goldbugs, gloomwhores and leftists badmouthing the economy are all in bed with Soros, either directly or figuratively.

They march under the same banner.


19 posted on 11/01/2006 10:17:53 AM PST by Petronski (I just love that woman.)
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To: ex-Texan; Petronski
The real estate market continues to go bust as I had predicted in my first major article on the subject in December of 2005.

What a slacker. You posted predictions of a bust at least 2 years before this guy.

20 posted on 11/01/2006 10:17:54 AM PST by Toddsterpatriot (Goldbugs, immune to logic and allergic to facts. You know who you are.)
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