Recesión 2023: Esta vez es especial

lowfour
lowfour
Started 2022-05-09
1977 posts
elarquitecto
elarquitecto
2022-09-29
#421

@lowfour (post #420)

es que entramos ya en el tramo de ipc anual en el que empezó a subir todo el año pasado

fíjate en los datos mensuales de sep oct nov dic de 2021

posiblemente el dato ipc de octubre sea aun más bajo

pero cuando se notará más el enfriamiento de la inflación debería de ser en marzo del año que viene, que habrá pasado un año desde que se puso la inflación en 9%

para entonces, si todo va bien, estaríamos otra vez en torno a 0%

la guerra habrá acabado y todo serán planes de reconstrucción, reconversión y transición energética y tal

2030 es como 2050 visto desde 1990 a este paso, eh?

elarquitecto
elarquitecto
2022-09-29
#422

@elarquitecto (post #408)

va, repito enlace, porque es tronchante

rebajan la tasa de compra de viviendas y a la semana ocurre esto:

https://www.theguardian.com/money/2022/sep/29/our-dream-of-home-ownership-is-slipping-away-because-of-kwartengs-actions

todo un lol al mayor epic fail de todos los tiempos del popularcapitalismo

lowfour
lowfour
2022-09-29
#423

Os lo dijeeeeeeeee, que esto está tomando un color negro guano muy rápidamente. La ostia de Suecia va a ser HISTORICA.

Image

Image

Signos de desesperación, los locales están vacíos

Right now, a record number of shop premises are gaping empty in large parts of the country. At the same time, there is a market change where former stores are rented out to offices and restaurants. "I have never seen anything like this before", says Peter Bergström, CEO of the property and premises rental site Objektvision.

Stockholm, which used to be so hot, is starting to have many empty premises. Shop premises in particular lack new tenants in many places.

In one year, the supply of vacant shop space has increased by 26 percent in Stockholm, and it is especially the larger shops with areas over 300 square meters that, according to an analysis from the property and premises rental site, Objektvision, are no longer so sought after.

A particular shock wave went through the real estate industry when even a so-called "triple A" location on Hamngatan lost its major tenant. The clothing chain H&M has left the corner property opposite the Mall "Galerian" since last spring.

When shop windows are also taped up in new shopping malls, such as Mood in central Stockholm, the property owners find it increasingly difficult to maintain the mix of stores that would previously attract everyone. After a while, new businesses usually appear, but it is no longer the store mix that was seen as optimal.

  • - Typically, there will be more restaurants and service when, for example, the clothing stores move out. An example is Nacka Forum, where the clothing chain Zara has left and the gym chain Sats has moved in instead, says Peter Bergström, CEO of Objektvision.
  • There are signs of desperation to get some retail space leased. Peter Bergström points out that some shopping streets are being legalized when the property owners can no longer find enough paying businessmen in street level.

    At property advisor Colliers, Karin Witalis is head of analysis. She paints a dark situation for retail premises in a new report. According to her, during the pandemic, after all, a certain balance between supply and demand was seen - e-commerce took over more and more, but went reasonably hand in hand with physical trade.

    But now the situation is at risk of completely changing because households are affected by dramatically higher costs for accommodation, food, fuel, electricity and more. Many are forced to change their buying habits in order to afford the basics.

    According to her, the declining consumption means new tests for the real estate companies that own many retail properties.

    The interest in investing in Swedish commercial properties is currently quite low, except in the case of food and discount stores.

    Patrik Wedin, landlord at the agency KWPA with real estate clients in Stockholm's inner city, confirms that the supply is greater than in a long time.

    But we must remember how we have had it. In Stockholm, vacancies on premises were so low that rents rose a lot. Now things have tilted a little in the market, gone in the other direction. It is probably good for rents that Stockholm gets a more normal vacancy rate.

    Just like Objektvision's Peter Bergström, landlord Patrik Wedin sees that the office conversion of former shop premises is taking off in earnest. When specialized retailers shut down or redirect their operations towards more e-commerce, it is often office operations that take over, as well as service establishments and coffee shops.

    The pandemic also saw some short trends that I think are over. Some paddling halls will soon disappear.

    According to the nationwide market analysis from Objektvision, searches for vacant shop premises decreased by 20 percent in August throughout the country.

    The retail space that is advertised has increased by 26 percent in both Stockholm and Malmö, and by 11 percent outside the big cities. However, Gothenburg has had a declining supply, 11 percent less vacant shop space in August this year compared to the same time the year before - something that is possibly explained by the fact that the economy in western Sweden was particularly hot, until recently.

    According to Statistics Norway, it is particularly the non-durable goods trade that has collapsed, down a whopping 9 percent in August this year compared to August 2021. At the same time, the sales volume in the daily goods trade was unchanged.

    elarquitecto
    elarquitecto
    2022-09-29
    #424

    @lowfour (post #423)

    que se pongan a la cola, que los brexiters van cogiendo velocidad guanera

    lowfour
    lowfour
    2022-09-29
    #425
    Edited 2022-09-29

    @elarquitecto (post #424)

    Yo creo que esta vez es lo que decía. Esta vez peta todo de forma sincronizada porque están todas las burbujas en máximos. USA, Berlín, Madrid, Lisboa, Estocolmo, Paris. Todas las ciudades, hasta Riga y tal.

    lowfour
    lowfour
    2022-09-29
    #426
    Edited 2022-09-29

    Y esto qué eh? Deben estar los alemanes temblando. Las historias de la hiperinflación de la República de Weimar están grabadas a fuego en la psyche alemana.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/29/business/germany-inflation-september.html

    Image

    elarquitecto
    elarquitecto
    2022-09-29
    #427

    @lowfour (post #426)

    por esto salieron a todo trapo diciendo de "topar" el gas como hemos hecho nosotros hace unas semanas

    es que fíjate la diferencia en la curva alemana con la nuestra

    la nuestra es mucho más tendida y ahora tiene una tendencia descendente (porque hemos logrado parar con éxito la escalada de precios de electricidad y, bueno, combustibles, aunque estos menos, salvo por los 20cts esos)

    de todos modos os tengo dicho que no os fiéis mucho del dato ipc, porque puede estar inflado (o desinflado) por elementos volátiles y lo suyo es mirar la subyacente o core inflation

    mirad esto del eurostat

    https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/documents/2995521/14698150/2-16092022-AP-EN.pdf/741bf6b2-1643-6ff0-34e7-31522ce1e252?t=1663250111863

    llega hasta agosto, pero ya se ve la movida

    Image

    si no recuerdo mal, la subyacente sería el 4,3% (o el 5,5%, ahora dudo si hay que quitar también el tabaco) porque mirad la hostia que da la energía hasta el 38% de subidita

    los servicios y tal, discretos

    pero bueno, los alemanes están bastante acojonaditos, sí

    no por nada, sino porque habrá que subir tipos y eso les va fatal también a ellos (y sus hipotecas y tal)

    lowfour
    lowfour
    2022-09-30
    #428

    No os preocupéis que si todo se va al garete siempre podemos darle a la impresora de bitcoins. Dinero fantasma con footprint real. Enhorabuena!

    https://reddit.com/r/science/comments/xrd53i/bitcoinminingisjustasbadfortheenvironment/

    elarquitecto
    elarquitecto
    2022-09-30
    #429

    https://twitter.com/LizAnnSonders/status/1575781189427892225

    la inflación rara tiene pinta de tener sus días contadísimos, eh??

    pero esa no es la movida, es que posiblemente lo que estamos viendo es una contracción en la demanda de mil pares

    a las puertas de navidades y tal, cuando hay un subidón en el consumo

    estaremos atentos, pero esto apunta a... efectivamente, guano

    Image

    Cinta_de_Carromero
    Cinta_de_Carromero
    2022-09-30
    #430

    @elarquitecto (post #429) Cómo no se va a contraer la demanda si están ahogando la inflación en la sangre de los remeros.

    Todo muy eco-resiliente, con los sueldos hundidos no hay consumo de masas y lo que los pobres dejan de contaminar, es más contaminación disponible para que lo hagan los ricos. Ya sabeis, como en esas reuniones que los ricos del planeta van en su avión privado hipercontaminante a reunirse en lugares de lujo para decirle a los pobres, que viven a base de panga y mortadela y que van en transporte público, que su estilo de vida es insostenible.

    Cinta_de_Carromero
    Cinta_de_Carromero
    2022-10-02
    #431
    Edited 2022-10-02

    https://markets.businessinsider.com/news/currencies/china-bank-dollar-yuan-currency-markets-economy-beijing-fed-hike-2022-9

    Más implesola 🖨🖨🖨 whatevel it takes 🇨🇳🇨🇳🇨🇳

    ¿Veis cómo todo el puto planeta está imprimiendo sin parar? Es un modelo que funciona, no será eterno pero otros modelos tampoco es que lo fueran, así que se puede considerar como un modelo exitoso.

    Cinta_de_Carromero
    Cinta_de_Carromero
    2022-10-02
    #432

    A ver cuánto tardan en imprimirle los 6000 millones que necesita Credit Suisse para seguir tirando. Me jode que se hagan los interesantes como que no van a imprimir, me recuerda a cuando en el puto culebrón del brexit se pasaron años inventándose plazos catastrofistas que siempre prorrogaban en el último momento.

    Pues no queda impresora ni nada, whatever it takes.

    Cinta_de_Carromero
    Cinta_de_Carromero
    2022-10-03
    #433

    Cómo rabian los ComeMierdas voxcerdos y peperros en Burbuja ante la catástrofe en el RU por haber bajado los impuestos 😆 le están echando la culpa ¡al socialismo!

    Son como una parodia del credo más lisérgico sacado de la Escuela de las Américas de los 80. Y les queda digerir la aparente victoria de Lula en Brasil también, por supuesto todo culpa también del "socialismo".

    Los que de momento no paran son los ComeMierdas del Kremlin, qué pesados por Dios, tienen todo el foro secuestrado con bots cagando mensajes de Twitter y viejos seducidos por la propaganda de RT.

    lowfour
    lowfour
    2022-10-03
    #434
    Edited 2022-10-03

    https://www.reddit.com/r/finance/comments/xup9ha/chinaissufferingamajorfinancialcrisis/

    https://www.forbes.com/sites/miltonezrati/2022/10/03/china-is-suffering-a-major-financial-crisis/?sh=1ec61eb84775

    China Is Suffering A Major Financial Crisis

    China’s financial crises is getting worse. In this latest phase, Chinese banks, anticipating huge loan losses, have taken dramatic steps to enhance their loan loss reserves, tapping China’s bond markets for some 30 percent more funds than they did last year. The banks’ problems are hardly a surprise. They are in fact just another step in the metastasizing crisis that began over a year ago when the huge property developer, Evergrande, announced that it could no longer support some $300 billion in liabilities. Back then, Beijing clearly failed to comprehend what was going to happen and refused to act promptly or completely enough to stop the spreading series of failures that has since characterized Chinese finance. These failures and the crisis generally will continue to spread until Beijing acts more decisively.

    What China is experiencing is a text-book illustration of how a financial crisis unfolds. Failures in one place led to failures elsewhere and the associated fears and lack of confidence make they system unable to function effectively or support economic growth at all.

    The spread of trouble began the moment Evergrande announced its failure. Immediately, any firm or financial institution that counted on Evergrande’s ability to fulfil its obligations became vulnerable to loss. And, in the nature of finance, all those who counted on these others also immediately became vulnerable. It mattered not that the vulnerability was direct to Evergrande or secondary or even tertiary, all lenders and potential business partners had questions about the viability of everyone else, questions that become still more intense as other developers followed Evergrande with similar announcements.

    This suspicion about others spread still further to Chinese mortgage lenders when Chinese borrowers, worried that these developers would never complete the contracted projects, threated to stop paying on their mortgages. Since most banks were involved, this threat made Chinese depositors worry about the security of their funds, a fear that became especially acute when the Bank of China unilaterally limited withdrawals.

    The financial problems have had clear economic effects. Weakness is already evident in China’s economy, which, despite still more government infrastructure spending, threatens to come in well under this year’s already reduced real growth target of 5.5 percent. Many blame the economic shortfall on the severe lockdowns and quarantines imposed by Beijing in response to Covid outbreaks. No doubt these have played a role. But the financial crisis, though underplayed by both Beijing and western media, has had a profound effect. When people fear for the security of their bank deposits, they slow or stop spending. When lenders fear the viability of business and individual borrowers, they stop the provision of capital to otherwise promising projects. When those involved in business arrangements fear the viability of their associates, projects stop. As has become increasingly evident, all this slows the wheels of commerce and development.

    The fate of Chinese steel is a perfect illustration. Because real estate developers have stopped their projects and because of a lack of credit, some 29 percent of the industry has announced that it is near bankruptcy. This is a steep decline from last year when the Chinese steel industry profitably sold billions of tons, about half the world’s output, in fact. According to Li Ganpo, founder and chairman of the Hebei Jingye Steel Group, “The whole sector is losing money, and I can’t see a turning point for now.” And these problems are naturally spreading. Iron ore prices have fallen 36 percent since March. Steel is just one example. China will continue to see these kinds of shortfalls until Beijing acts to stop the spread of failure.

    Beijing could have avoided much of this economic pain if it had acted as soon as Evergrande announced. Authorities might have lent directly to short circuit what has become an inexorable spread, not to the failing developers but to others in the financial system to mitigate their vulnerability to the developers’ failures. That would have helped restore confidence and ensured that lending would continue to spin the wheels of commerce. Alternatively or additionally, the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) might have increased the system’s flow of loanable funds so that private lenders and state-owned banks would have the means to lend more aggressively and also have enough of a financial cushion to reassure customer fears about the security of their deposits. But Beijing failed to act and so financial failures and the fears of them progressed, text-book fashion, across China’s entire financial system. That progression, with its ill effects on the economy promises to become increasingly severe unless Beijing implements such policies.

    Sadly, there is little sign that Beijing has awakened fully to this need. So far, the Politburo, China’s chief policy-making body, insists that local and provincial governments take the lead in dealing with financial strains. Passing responsibility in this way suggests that China’s leadership has studied Washington more thoroughly than previously thought. Cynical joking aside, this buck-passing and lack of action does China’s economy no good. In the best of circumstances, local and provincial governments would have been incapable of dealing with the scale demanded by the financial crisis. But after years in which Beijing has forced local and provincial governments to finance infrastructure projects ordained by central planners, these government entities lack the financial resources to cope with local matters, much less the needs of the nation’s financial system. Beijing is the only actor who can fill that role, and so far, it has refused to act beyond a few marginal interest rate cuts.

    Jag
    Jag
    2022-10-04
    #435

    El hostion económico global va a ser chico. Empiezo a pensar en volver al pueblo..... Menos mal que compre una buena finca la valle e hice un pozo.

    lowfour
    lowfour
    2022-10-04
    #436

    @Jag (post #435)

    Si, parece que se está sincronizando todo. Y todo aderezado con amenaza nuclear por medio. Esto debe ser mano de santo para la confianza de los consumidores.

    lowfour
    lowfour
    2022-10-05
    #437

    Comunijtassss, alemanes rojossss

    Image

    PPCC tenía razón una vez más: Dinero fortísimo (obviamente eso todavía no) y economía con planificación estatal

    Estás apostando a caballo perdedor @CintadeCarromero

    elarquitecto
    elarquitecto
    2022-10-05
    #438

    @lowfour (post #437)

    bueno, un poco comunijta sí que es 🤣

    en fin, que ya solo falta aumentar el nivel de alquitrán y plumas para los rocamboles y la transicioncita estaría cumpliendo el ticket ese de ppcc a todo trapo

    nos dirán que la inflación y nosequé, y lo explicaba ayer, que el escalón del subidón energético se acaba en el cuarto trimestre (yo creo que igual dura un poco más, pero con nosotros, según publicó el ine el otro día, tiene pintaca de eso) y a partir de ahí nos plantamos en zona cerca del 0% y luego posiblemente haya overshooting o sea, deflación

    y con eso, se podría bajar tipos y tal, así que yo creo que el bce va a querer subir algo más de la cuenta para tener "munición" para ese escenario e incluso adelantarlo

    por cierto, me da que es lo que está haciendo la fed, subir tipos con fuerza para tener luego más tramo de bajada

    Cinta_de_Carromero
    Cinta_de_Carromero
    2022-10-05
    #439

    @lowfour (post #437) Es un "bla bla bla" de manual, hay que hacerle el mismo caso que a otros políticos cuando amenazaban al estado español con cortarles la impresora: ninguno.

    Para que haya un modelo de planificación estatal de la economía digno de tal nombre, la vivienda no puede seguir siendo un artículo de lujo dedicado a la especulación financiera.

    elarquitecto
    elarquitecto
    2022-10-05
    #441

    @lowfour (post #440) joder, qué linces, eh?? no se les escapa una

    nos tendrían que dar paguita o algo, que decimos esas cosas y de mucho antes

    lowfour
    lowfour
    2022-10-05
    #442
    Edited 2022-10-05

    @elarquitecto (post #441)

    Ejque tenemos el Guano Predictor TM muy optimizado.

    lowfour
    lowfour
    2022-10-05
    #443
    Edited 2022-10-05

    Espera que el NYT apuesta por el mega guano

    https://www.nytimes.com/2022/10/04/opinion/the-all-too-real-risk-of-a-global-recession.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare

    The First Global Deflation Has Begun, and It’s Unclear Just How Painful It Will Be

    Around the world, rapid economic recovery from the Covid shock unleashed the largest wave of inflation we have seen since the early 1980s. In response, in the summer of 2021, central banks began raising interest rates. Brazil led the way. In early 2022, the Federal Reserve joined in, unleashing a bandwagon effect: Once the Fed moves and the dollar strengthens, other countries either raise their interest rates or face a sharp devaluation, which further stokes inflation.

    The outline of this pattern is familiar. But the breadth is new. We now find ourselves in the midst of the most comprehensive tightening of monetary policy the world has seen. While the interest rate increases are not as steep as those pushed through by Paul Volcker as Fed chair after 1979, today’s involve far more central banks.

    There are moments when history-making creeps up on you. This is one of those moments. As far as the advanced economies have been concerned, the era of globalization since the 1990s has been one of disinflation and monetary expansion by central banks. Now that balance is being reversed, and on a global scale.

    To add to the disinflationary pressure, we are also seeing Covid-era stimulus programs wound up in favor of measures like the Inflation Reduction Act that promise to cut deficits and take demand out of the economy. In the United States in the third quarter, the so-called “fiscal drag” will slow the economy by more than 3.4 percent of gross domestic product, according to an analysis by the Brookings Institution.

    The consequences of this global deflationary cycle are hard to predict. We have never done this before on this scale. Will it get inflation down? Very likely. But we are also courting the risk of a global recession that at its worst could bring down housing markets, bankrupt businesses and states, and throw hundreds of millions of people worldwide into unemployment and distress.

    In light of this worst-case scenario, policymakers have to consider three questions: Are interest rates too blunt an instrument for dealing with our current economic imbalances? Can the central bankers pick the right rate, so as to slow inflation but not strangle the economy? And can a debt-laden global economy survive a serious interest rate rise led by the Federal Reserve?

    Inflation in much of the world has been driven by Covid-related supply-chain bottlenecks and energy price shocks. Raising interest rates is not going to bring more gas or microchips to market, but rather the contrary. Reducing investment will limit future capacity and thus future supply. In Europe, for this reason, modest interest rate increases by the European Central Bank are being flanked by caps on electricity and gas prices imposed by some European Union countries. What the monetary and fiscal squeeze does do is to help ensure that inflation does not become entrenched and widespread. This is the main concern of the Fed right now.

    But containment comes at a price. The primary means by which the Fed’s policy will work is by slowing the economy and increasing labor market slack, which is a euphemistic way of saying more unemployment. Is the global squeeze perhaps going too far?

    It is hard enough to pick the right interest rate for just one economy. How do you pick the right rate if your neighbors are all increasing theirs, too? When a central bank raises its interest rates, one way this curbs inflation is by appreciating the currency. Higher interest rates attract foreign investors, driving the exchange rate up. A stronger currency makes imports cheaper and lowers inflation. This is a classic beggar-thy-neighbor policy.

    The strength of the dollar in 2022 makes U.S. imports cheaper, but, by the same token, it raises prices for every other country that pays for oil, for instance, in dollars. To respond to this imported inflation, other central banks have little option but to raise interest rates even more, which continues a vicious circle. The end result of this bidding war is unpredictable as far as the exchange rate is concerned, but one thing it will do is drive interest rates to levels higher than anyone would have picked in isolation.

    And this is not the only spillover effect we must fear in this first global disinflation. The price of traded goods depends not only on exchange rates but also on the balance of demand and supply, in world markets as well as national markets. During the economic recovery from Covid, inflation in the United States was propelled not only by excess demand at home but also by supply-chain bottlenecks in China.

    Now the reverse is happening. As many central banks raise their rates, they are not just disinflating their own economies; they are shifting the balance of demand and supply for everyone else, too. If these spillover effects are not taken into account, we must fear that we will end up with more disinflation than we need.

    How big this effect of global spillover will be, we can only guess. We have estimates of positive inflationary spillovers. As far as global disinflation is concerned, we are in far less charted territory.

    And there is one other thing we do not know. Even if we can agree on the right interest rates to disinflate the world economy at minimum cost, can a world economy that has grown used to ultralow interest rates take the strain of positive rates? For a decade or more it has made sense to pile on leverage.

    With rising rates, though they remain mostly negative in real terms, some debtors will find themselves in trouble. Pity particularly the companies and countries around the world that have borrowed in dollars, to the tune of more than $22 trillion by 2019, and now face repayments at a steeper exchange rate. Struggling to keep up with debt service, they will most likely first squeeze other spending, compounding the recession, and then seek to restructure their debts. At that point recession will tip into crisis and outright failure of businesses and sovereign borrowers.

    Market purists will insist that this was long overdue: It is high time to cull the zombies — borrowers who live on only because the cost of borrowing is so low. But talk of culling is better on paper than in practice.

    Bankruptcy is rarely a smooth process — bad enough for corporations operating mainly within national boundaries, mind-bogglingly complex in the case of corporate giants like the Chinese property developer Evergrande, with stakeholders around the world. When a national government like Sri Lanka or Argentina runs out of money, it shakes states and societies to their foundations.

    Who exactly will fail is not easy to predict. But we know that raising rates will increase the pressure on those already floundering. And we know that the international architecture for debt restructuring is painfully inadequate. But sidestepping bankruptcy is bad news, too. There are few things worse either for a business or a national economy than an overhang of unpaid and unpayable bad debts. That risks years of stagnation.

    Fighting inflation is what central banks are supposed to do. Interest rates are the obvious tool. But it is time to wake up to the historic significance of the current moment. For the first time in the post-Cold War era of globalization, we are facing significant and widespread inflation.

    Why are we fighting it country by country?

    If we want to keep the pain of deflation to a minimum, we urgently need international cooperation to fully take into account all the spillover effects and to prepare the safety nets. Back in 2015-16 when recession threatened China, one could still hope for cooperation between the Fed and the People’s Bank of China. That is too much to hope for today, when relations between the United States and its allies on one side and China and Russia on the other are at a low point. But coordination in shifts in rates by global groupings like the Group of 7, the Indo-Pacific “Quad” and perhaps the Shangri-La Dialogue in Asia would send a powerful message. Not to attempt it risks increasing uncertainty and pain for hundreds of millions of people around the world.

    If the generation of young people whose educations were blighted by Covid lockdowns finish their training only to find labor markets closed by a global downturn, it will be an inexcusable failure of policy.

    lowfour
    lowfour
    2022-10-05
    #444

    Joder el artículo ese del NYT es PPCC en vena.

    DINERO FORTIIIIIIIIISIMO

    Cinta_de_Carromero
    Cinta_de_Carromero
    2022-10-05
    #445

    @lowfour (post #444) Ese artículo da por hecho que el ladrillo no se toca, es una celebración de que, otra vez, los únicos perjudicados por el hundimiento serán los jóvenes y los trabajadores.

    elarquitecto
    elarquitecto
    2022-10-05
    #446

    @lowfour (post #443)

    Image

    brutal, eh?

    joder, y la prensa económica patria ni media

    están de mierda inmo y populista que asusta... la económica y la demás en general también

    lowfour
    lowfour
    2022-10-05
    #447

    @CintadeCarromero (post #445)

    Como que no se toca, lo pone ahí. Van a petar los mercados inmobiliarios. Si eres un gran tenedor igual te peta también.

    Cinta_de_Carromero
    Cinta_de_Carromero
    2022-10-05
    #448

    @lowfour (post #447) Lo único que veo en el artículo es que para ellos es "worst case scenario" que baje el ladrillo, comparable a quiebras de países y empresas y a cientos de millones de desempleados ...

    Esa perspectiva de que la bajada del ladrillo es el apocalipsis solamente la tienen los ladrilleros, los que tienen el riñón bien cubierto de ladrillo, los que ya están subidos a la "property ladder" como la llaman los socialdemócratas del Reino Unido y solo quieren que el ladrillo siga subiendo de precio.

    Ojo, que en el artículo lo consideran como lo que podría ocurrir en caso de recesión, pero lo que ven más probable es que a quien perjudique sea a los jóvenes que empiezan a trabajar ahora (y a ellos se la suda, porque ya tienen su ladrillo comprado y su puesto bien agarrado).

    lowfour
    lowfour
    2022-10-06
    #449
    Edited 2022-10-06

    El guano llega a pasos agigantados a Suecia. Es un guano pervasivo que sólo está asomando la patita.

  • - Los pisos en caída libre

  • - Locales cada vez más vacíos

  • - La semana que viene reunión en la escuela de mi mujer, se van a la calle nosecuantos, entre ellos casi seguro ella.

  • - También dentro de unos días hay hachazo brutal en uno de mis clientes principales. Entre ellos pierdo un montón de horas con ellos, aunque me mantienen como único consultor. Yo estoy informado pero la plantilla no y se van a llevar un sorpresón los cipotecados de mucho cuidado.
  • Afortunadamente tengo cero deudas, no tengo ni tarjeta de crédito, el lomo bien cubierto de DINERO FORTIIIIISIMO y tengo otros clientes, y estaba deseando tener tiempo para meterme a lanzar empresas que es lo mío.

    Como decían los liberales del foro?

    CRISISTUNIDAD

    Also Known As

    OJETESONFIRETUNIDAD

    lowfour
    lowfour
    2022-10-06
    #450
    Edited 2022-10-06

    Recordáis las extinciones masivas del Cámbrico y tal? Esto va a ser igual. El que sepa adaptarse a las circunstancias, a los nichos que se abran, aguantar la lluvia de ceniza y lava, luego saldrán a una explosión de vida.

    LA TRANSICIÓN ESTRUCTURAL YA ESTÁ AQUÍ

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