Saturday, July 14, 2012

MSM is setting up the Real Estate Ten Pins!!!


Well Folks, another  of our many predictions is now coming true.

For, today we provide absolute proof in the following MSM ‘teaser’ that we should all get ready for the MSM PORE (Psy Ops Reporting & Editorializing) campaign of the 21st Century, when the poor befuddled 'Sheeple' will be stampeded back into, the still vastly over-priced, Real Estate sector. 

For, within just six months from now – exactly when and as we predicted last year - the MSM is going to crank up a MONSTER Psy-Ops campaign to coerce the poor ‘Sheeple’ to believe that the next Big Wave of the fifty-year Real Estate Bubble is imminent and that they better buy the still vastly over-priced Real Estate before it starts running again.

You don’t think the MSM does such things, you say?

Well just take a look at the 1st “Related Article” within the body of the full article below, my friend! 

And, as we predicted last Fall the stupidly blind and congenitally greedy ‘Sheeple’ will jump right back into Real Estate in all of 2013 into late 2014.

Then, they will be utterly slaughtered when the second wave of the Super Tsunami “Kondratieff” Long-Wave bursts the BIGGEST BUBBLE of all recorded history – THE BOND BUBBLE in the Winter of 2014 to 2015, which will horribly ratchet interest rates THROUGH THE EVER-LOVING roof and crash all Real Estate for the next thirty years.

Are you and your company (namely, your multi-year production & inventory levels and Marketing Campaigns) ready for the ‘Roller Coaster’ ride of your life.  Remember, that this upcoming boom in consumerism gone mad will finally exhaust the credit fueled ‘Buying Power’ of the DCBF’s (Debt Crazed Buying Fanatics) for the next twenty to thirty years!

If you have not properly crafted and positioned your company’s inventory and marketing campaigns for the huge UP and then the utter Crash of the DCBF’s, maybe you had better take a look at what the FED’s absolutely insane ZIRP strategy has ordained to happen over the next three years by subscribing to our Market Review and Quarterly Updates!

For, we do confidently predict that, just a couple of years from now, many thousands of companies are going to join those we list at the bottom of our Home page at www.polestarcomm.com that were completely blind-sided by ONLY the first wave of the “Kondratieff” in 2007/08. 

Why three waves?

Stalin had Nicolai Kondratieff shot in the back of the head - before Nicolai could reveal (the OGPU confiscated five other Manuscripts from his wife that were never seen again) what we discovered many years ago.  Namely there are three waves of the “Kondratieff” and there are very specific generational and economic reasons for them.

And, unfortunately for the United States of America and the entire world wide economy, the FED’s ZIRP is evidence that Bernanke is falling right into the trap laid by the psychological vortex dynamics of wave #1, which conditions the precedent economic elements that do firmly set in motion the economic tectonics that precipitate wave #2, of the “Kondratieff Three  Waves."

The lead sub-heading ("The housing market has turned - at last") of the following article confirms all my attestations of what the MSM PORE really is intended to foster in the subconscious of the poor befuddled 'Sheeple!'   

For, only a true 'marketer' would recognize that this one sentence is really so very ingeniously crafted that I was immediately reminded of the inquisitor's endlessly (and horrifyingly accentuated with great pain) repetitive question of Dustin Hoffman in Marathon Man. 


"Is it safe?"  

That is; everyone is now asking in GREAT PAIN AND FEAR, "Is it safe to buy houses -  again????"


"Yes,"  screams this very fine example of MSM PORE at its very, very and ultimate best! 

Housing Passes a Milestone

Wall Street Journal Juluy 11.2012
The housing market has turned—at last.
“The U.S. finally has moved beyond attention-grabbing predictions from housing "experts" that housing is bottoming. The numbers are now convincing.
Nearly seven years after the housing bubble burst, most indexes of house prices are bending up. "We finally saw some rising home prices," S&P's David Blitzer said a few weeks ago as he reported the first monthly increase in the slow-moving S&P/Case-Shiller house-price data after seven months of declines.

Related 

Nearly 10% more existing homes were sold in May than in the same month a year earlier, many purchased by investors who plan to rent them for now and sell them later, an important sign of an inflection point. In something of a surprise, the inventory of existing homes for sale has fallen close to the normal level of six months' worth despite all the foreclosed homes that lenders own. The fraction of homes that are vacant is at its lowest level since 2006.
The reduced inventory of unsold homes is key, says Mark Fleming, chief economist at CoreLogic, a housing data-analysis firm. For the past couple of years, house prices have risen in the spring and then slumped; the declining supply of houses for sale is reason to believe that won't happen again this year, he says.
Builders began work on 26% more single-family homes in May 2012 than the depressed levels of May 2011. The stock of unsold newly built homes is back to 2005 levels. In each of the past four quarters, housing construction has added to economic growth. In the first quarter, it accounted for 0.4 percentage points of the meager 1.9% growth rate.
"Even with the overall economy slowing," Wells Fargo Securities economists said, cautiously, in a note to clients, "the budding recovery in the housing market appears to be gradually gaining momentum."
Economists aren't always right, but on this at least they agree: A new Wall Street Journal survey of forecasters found 44 believe the housing market has reached its bottom; only three don't. (The full results of the Journal's July survey will be released at 2pm ET)
Housing is still far from healthy despite the Federal Reserve's efforts to resuscitate it by helping to push mortgage rates to extraordinary lows: 3.62% for a 30-year loan, according to Freddie Mac's latest survey. Single-family housing starts, though up, remain 60% below the 2002 pre-bubble pace. Americans' equity in homes is $2 trillion, or 25%, less than it was in 2002 and half what it was at the peak. More than one in every four mortgage borrowers still has a loan bigger than the value of the house, though rising home prices are reducing that fraction slowly.
Still, the upturn in housing is a milestone, a particularly welcome one amid a distressing dearth of jobs. For some time, housing has been one of the biggest causes of economic weakness. It has now—barely—moved to the plus side. "A little tail wind is a lot better than a headwind," says economist Chip Case, …”

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