CBC Podcast series on Vancouver real estate: Sold!

Vancouver has magnificent mountains, luscious trails, enviable waterfront views, well-maintained bike paths… and a contentious real estate market.

How did we really get here? What does the future hold? Hold your judgment and listen to the newest CBC Vancouver original podcast. SOLD! digs into the generously-sized debacle that is Metro Vancouver’s real estate scene. Can we ever hold curb appeal again?

Hosted by CBC Radio One’s Stephen Quinn, SOLD! will address how we got here, why foreign investment is only part of the story, and where B.C. goes from here.

SOLD! is available now in 6 Episodes here at CBC Podcasts or Apple Podcasts. Here is a direct audio link to the trailer.

Posted in Main Page | Comments Off on CBC Podcast series on Vancouver real estate: Sold!

Prins on the gravity of higher debt and asset valuations

Nomi Prins, author of “Collusion: How Central Bankers Rigged the World,” discusses how easy monetary policy has affected the global economy.  Here is a direct video link.

There could be a crash bigger than the 2008 crisis, author says from CNBC.

David Rosenberg’s recent corporate debt to GDP cycle chart goes well with this discussion, shown here since 1986.

Posted in Main Page | Comments Off on Prins on the gravity of higher debt and asset valuations

Better Markets: Where are the adults in Finance?

Important article from Better Markets this week, see:  With Red Lights Flashing Danger, Where Are the Adults in Finance?

“It seems almost everyone in finance is cheering on the deregulation frenzy in Washington and the demise of consumer protection and enforcement in the financial markets.  Given that an historic crash happened just ten years ago and the too-frequent predatory conduct in the industry still hasn’t abated, this is an irresponsible, knowing dereliction of duty by bankers and public officials who know better.

Rules and enforcement not only protect consumers, investors and taxpayers, but also financial markets and the financial industry itself.  They not only prevent catastrophic financial crashes, but also direct financial activities toward the real economy while nurturing and maintaining investor and public confidence in our markets.  That trust is the foundation upon which our markets are built and work, becoming the envy of the world.

While rules and enforcement are essential in normal times, they take on heightened importance now when we are nine years in to the boom phase of the business cycle; when leverage is breaking records while interest rates are rising; when the punch bowl was just spiked with $2 trillion in stimulus; and, when the unprecedented Fed actions over the last ten years are going to be unwound by equally unprecedented actions.

Making matters worse, enforcement of the rules has dropped precipitously, which is equally bad news for everyone…”

We have learned the error of these ways, the hard way, repeatedly through time.  As former Morgan Stanley’s CEO, John Mack, admitted after the 2008 crash:

“[w]e cannot control ourselves. You [lawmakers and regulators] have to step in and control the Street.”

Posted in Main Page | Comments Off on Better Markets: Where are the adults in Finance?