-
Website
http://consumerismcommentary.com/ -
Original page
http://www.consumerismcommentary.com/2008/03/17/8-benefits-to-a-recession-or-down-market/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
¢entsiblelife
1 comment · 1 points
-
BDickson114
1 comment · 1 points
-
freeby50
2 comments · 1 points
-
ericabiz
4 comments · 12 points
-
Walt Breuninger
1 comment · 1 points
-
-
Popular Threads
2, 3 and 4 are the real benefits for those looking to accumulate assets.
Why is Costco so successful, because people buy up big because their stuff is ALWAYS ON SALE.
Right now, for perhaps the first time in living history, BOTH real-estate and the money needed to fund it ARE ON SALE!
What should you do?
Stock up NOW (while you are still working and cann afford to fund some mortgages) to enjoy LATER (when the real-estate has appreciated ... more money comes in than the remaining mortgages cost you) when you RETIRE YOUNG!
Read some blogs, get educated ... but, invest while you still can ...
That's because the fed overnight rate has little to do with mortgage rates. If anything, they are inversely related — lower fed rates point toward higher inflation, which equals higher mortgage rates.
Mortgage rates are determined by long-term mortgage bonds. The key words there are "long-term." The fed's overnight rate is the definition of short-term; you can't get much shorter than overnight!
Mortgage rates have actually increased after the most recent Fed actions lowering the overnight rate. Perhaps banks realize that inflation will kill their profits if they are only charging 4-5% interest.
As far as buying stocks, they have a long way to go (down) before I jump back in. Buy silver ... it's heading up, folks.
1. Growing in a declining market costs much less. Growing is horrifically expensive. More stock, more cash, more space, more staff. It eats money. Do it when the market is down and you can grow share with out the spend.
2. The competition became distracted. Some competitors cut back, reducing range and staff. That gave us opportunities.
3. We learnt to focus on the best customers. One of the first things to happen was poorly managed customers going bust. It has really tightened credit control and our views on who are the best people we want to work with.
4. We treat things with more respect. From forklifts in the warehouse, to the chairs and computers, people have started to feel respect for things. Everything is less disposable.
5. We learnt to look for value again. We have re-pitched all main items of expenditure, not necessarily giving the business to the cheapest, but the best.
6. We have slowed down and thought more.