Now that the oil bubble has burst, we must hold our breath and hope it doesn't burst the real estate bubble, too.
Watching CNBC tonight, it was said that the price of oil dropping as much as it has in the past month has injected $250 billion into the American economy - and has possibly staved off a catastrophic rise in heating oil prices for the coming winter.
How deep this recession becomes (and how much it affects us Canucks) will depend on what kind of a rehabilitative effect (if any) this rapid drop in energy prices will have on the greater economy.
That, my fellow fear-mongerers
is the wild card.
How can a drop in the price of oil inject $250B into the economy? I guess this means the US economy.
I guess this presumes all those SUV drivers can start slurping through gallons of fuel again.
Ironically, this increased demand will probably drive up the cost of fuel again, thus negating the $250B boost to the economy.
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Here's my prediction for house prices in Toronto: either they stay flat or modestly decline. Oshawa, Oakville and the suburbs might be in a worse situation if GM and Ford continue to lay-off workers.
Rationale for this conclusion: Lower prices for fuel will decrease inflationary pressures, thus allowing the Central Bank to lower interest rates.
Anyone with half a brain and knowledge of basic economics will tell you that the Toronto housing market crashed in 1989 because interest rates soared, thus affecting affordability of houses. Also, thousands of baby boomers in the job market caused unemployment to soar to around 12% or 14%. People were compelled to sell because they couldn't afford higher interest mortgages, especially with one spouse out of work.
Flash forward to today. There is little upward pressure on interest rates. Therefore costs of financing a mortgage will likely stabilize, or even go down a bit. Also, as someone posted earlier, unemployment is unlikely to soar to 12% to 14%, because there are fewer Gen X'ers and Gen Y'ers to replace the retiring baby boomers.
I'd agree with the fearmongers if the facts seem to hold true, but I honestly don't see how this compares apples to apples to 1989 (i.e. today interest rates are lower and unemployment is lower).
The fearmongers on this site seem like the same people who like to drool over deathcounts after the latest tsunami to hit some impoverished lowlying area of the world.
My 2¢