daveirl said:You should go back to the start of this thread the progression to the current state of ultra-bearishness is interesting to watch.
daveirl said:Regardless I'm happy my job is going to be relatively unscathed. The company I work for does pretty much no business in Ireland.
Yeah similar here I'd be in trouble if there is a global drop in consumer spending but if it's localised I'd be fine. Even if it's global hopefully things won't be too bad.ivuernis said:I'm in a similar position but my job is subject to influences from external factors... I'm not discounting a slump there at the same time as it hits here, but I'm hoping it won't happen, at least not at the same time anyway.
walk2dewater said:There will be carnage, this wont be a mild little recession and then back on to 5% GDP growth and 10% property price growth. A generation will come of age over the course of this next recession and they will be defined by it.
walk2dewater said:People with no debt and lots of cash will have opportunities to make investment decisions of a lifetime.
I was chatting to a guy on my break just there and we were discussing the 15 years of growth thing and he mentioned that he knows people in his local who are having a pissing contest with who owns the most houses but as he said it reminds him of the dotcom. He was down in his brokers and people without a clue were coming in looking to buy x or y because they read it in the paper. He decided to get out at that point! The parallels are everywhere between this and the dotcom mania!ivuernis said:I'm hoping to be in the debt-free/cash-in-hand situation within the next 3-6 months. I got burnt in the dot-com boom... nothing major but enough to hurt.
walk2dewater said:equities mainly in canadian tar sands energy
walk2dewater said:I'm thinking of pushing % of gold to 30% or more.
Howitzer said:Err, summary? Financial pages are bit like Centra sandwiches, hard to digest.
ivuernis said:
Do you think it will happen here in Ireland in isolation though? I'm inclined to think external factors will bring it down here in Ireland, rather than it being an isolated event here in Ireland. Of course, our credit/debt mania of recent years will ensure that when it does happen it will be felt particularly hard here.
I'm hoping to be in the debt-free/cash-in-hand situation within the next 3-6 months. I got burnt in the dot-com boom... nothing major but enough to hurt. I was young and not long out of college and got caught up in the mania a little bit and what seemed like a quick buck. Suffice as to say it was an expensive but valuable lesson learnt. If nothing else, it will be a change to go against the herd-mentality and see the reaction of people when I tell them I out of this property nonsense before I get burnt again. I suspect a few will tell me I'm mad but my instinct and reading of the situation tell me I'm making the right decision.
daveirl said:I was chatting to a guy on my break just there and we were discussing the 15 years of growth thing and he mentioned that he knows people in his local who are having a pissing contest with who owns the most houses but as he said it reminds him of the dotcom. He was down in his brokers and people without a clue were coming in looking to buy x or y because they read it in the paper. He decided to get out at that point! The parallels are everywhere between this and the dotcom mania!
ivuernis said:
A winner with current high prices no doubt, but a short-term drop in oil prices could hit their profitability as will the precarious situation with North American gas which is the main requirement to heat the tar sands. Hell, they've even considered building a dedicated nuclear plant to generate the electricity to heat the tar sands when they run out of gas to do it. Canada gets royally screwed by NAFTA agreement.
I'll definitely go into gold, maybe 5% as an insurance policy, my fear would be the gold price could go either way.
Duplex said:Many commentators believe that the Fed is intervening in the stock and money markets in an attempt to micro manage the slowing US economy.
tyoung said:Walkdewater or anybody
What assets would act as a hedge if property implodes? I do not want to short stocks or own any time limited financial asset.
Thanks
TYoung
walk2dewater said:In response to "what to do with your money", heres what I've sent posters who've pm'd me:
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I am 55% in canadian debt (bonds of various durations and types), 25% in equities and about 20% in prec metals. The 25% in equities mainly in canadian tar sands energy, pipelines and utilities, metals, banks, some general exposure to Germany and Japan, and some international healthcare/pharma. Apart from the latter I have virtually nil exposure to the US currency or economy. Despite the run-up, gold might just be THE win-win asset at the moment. Im thinking of pushing % of gold to 30% or more. This time last year I was almost 100% in hard commodities and prec metals, not now.
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The 55% bit in canadian bonds includes a far whack of just plain cash sitting in a money market fund. I am really grasping these days. In 15yrs+ of active investing, I really am not sure at all what is going to happen. I think cdn cash, very-near cdn cash and gold are looking like my preferred assets, even though I admit theres a certain contradiction there.
bearishbull said:.wonder when will international investors start buying the yuan as a reserve currency....
conor_mc said:Been thinking about this one, and I stress that I'm not a learned investor by any stretch of the imagination but....
If the hypothesis is that rising interest rates are a major risk to the Irish propert market, would it not make sense to invest in the market which is driving the interest rate rises, i.e the recovering German economy?
dam099 said:For someone who is so down on the risks of property and a major recession your own portfolio is not exactly low risk itself.
a) Very high concentration in one market (Canadian)
b) FX risk of concentration in CAD (unless you live in Canada?)
c) Prec metals are doing very well right now but gold for example underperformed significantly in the last few decades (I suppose thats also a case for considering it undervalued). Some of the other precious metals derive a significant amount of their demand from tech manufacturing and could be vulnerable in a slowdown.
d) Canada is in large part a commodity based economy and your other investments include equities in commodity companies and precious metal so you are highly exposed to commodities, demand for which could decline in a major recession.
Not saying your strategy is definitely wrong, only time will tell, but its definitely risky.
walk2dewater said:
- Conservative estimates put 333b barrels of oil in the canadian tar sands, vs. say 285b in all of Saudi. The issue is tar sands oil is profitable only at oil prices north of US$35/bbl. And 333b is very conservative, no one has a clue
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