There’s blood on the streets. 2023 shaping up to be another one for the history books

by | Nov 11, 2022 | Resources | 29 comments

There’s blood on the streets. 2023 shaping up to be another one for the history books

https://preview.redd.it/64j95xgr6iy91.jpg?auto=webp&s=d72105239ebe6fbc7bac190be2343f8fee4ec991

There’s blood on the streets. 2023 shaping up to be another one for the history books



View Reddit by mastermuskView Source

There’s blood on the streets. 2023 shaping up to be another one for the history books


LEARN ABOUT: Investing During Inflation

REVEALED: Best Investment During Inflation

HOW TO INVEST IN GOLD: Gold IRA Investing

HOW TO INVEST IN SILVER: Silver IRA Investing


See also  Is the gold price being manipulated to obfuscate real inflation?
Truth about Gold
You May Also Like
There’s blood on the streets. 2023 shaping up to be another one for the history books

Recession Imminent

Chick-Fil-A has been skimping on sauce. This morning I ordered 4 sauces with my two burritos and...

There’s blood on the streets. 2023 shaping up to be another one for the history books

$AMD YOLO FINAL BET

https://preview.redd.it/vfu59hvvne7c1.jpeg?auto=webp&s=8a063d717641ec12bf69ca30b3ccc987a1ffc32c...

29 Comments

  1. squirtloaf

    Well that should bring housing costs down by 1%.

  2. OriginalJayVee

    I’m surprised they haven’t just bought houses and opened mortgages in unsuspecting customers names…

  3. hronikbrent

    I mean, makes sense… I’m not going to leave my house at an interest rate of 2.5 % for an equivalent house at an interest of 6%… (if I had a house at an interest rate of 2.5%)

  4. amanthind13

    Majority of this 90% was refi volume when rates were much lower last year.

  5. hail_my_cereal

    I worked as a mortgage processor for 3 years (worked in ops prior) and was laid off a few months ago. It makes sense, the prices went from obscenely cheap during the pandemic to the opposite extreme after it. I’m not mad, it’s just that I wish I never had gotten into such a brutal and unforgiving industry. Future people, ignore this industry for work.

  6. Interesting-Month-56

    That’s what happens when the cost of your mortgage triples.

    Two years ago home mortgage rates for most buyers were in continuously dropping and bottoming out at around 2.5% for a 30-year fixed mortgage. Now mortgages are around 6%. So on $1M, that $60k a year in interest instead of $25k.

  7. Sworn_to_Ganondorf

    Is it time for our yearly once in a life time event?

  8. Diegobyte

    Everyone and their fucking mom was refinancing. There was probably more refis then mortgages the last couple years

  9. Nyclab

    As a mid thirties dude who’s been fucked since 2009- bring it on bitches

  10. KingRBPII

    Wells Fargo is a terrible company – they opened fake accounts for their customers!

  11. Nuck2407

    Who the fuck is surprised by this…. everyone’s had a year of being able to finance at 2ish % for their loans… there will be no refinancing done for the next 30 years, which is most of the volume. I only wish I could pick up 30 year fixed rates in my country

  12. TaxAdministrative447

    Blood is priced in

  13. OppsForgotAgain

    Wells Fargo is still dealing with the repercussions of their lawsuit. They have a cap on assets for loans and credit lines. They’ve been declining and closing down loan departments since their original agreements to stay within their regulations.

  14. hylozics

    Nah you’ll know theres blood in the streets because there will literally be blood in the streets.

    probably not too far away though.

  15. Umbrella_Viking

    Maybe houses are a little overpriced? We still glamorizing that “flipping” bullshit as a society? Or did we wake up yet?

  16. mazdarx2001

    My buddy is in loan originations profession and just got laid off on the fifth round of layoffs. This will trickle into the economy very soon

  17. tyrantsupreme

    What does this mean?

  18. DaBi5cu1t

    And they’re about to get fined eleventy million dollarydoos

  19. bourbonontherox

    Mortgage underwriter here. We just had another round of layoffs on Thursday that cut DEEP. Word on the street is we’re at pre-pandemic staffing levels again and the CEO is telling us that “this was the last round of layoffs”….

    Nobody is believing it lol

  20. SocialSuicideSquad

    Why the fuck would someone sell a house with a mortgage payment lower than the rent on a smaller apartment?

  21. PBecian

    Wells Fargo also had the strictest lending methods leading up to this mess. WF will be just fine.

  22. Automatic-Post1023

    ![img](emote|t5_2th52|19738)

  23. sendokun

    Surprised?! We went from 2.5% to 7% in a matter of few months. The fed is fighting inflation by trying to undo over a decade of loose monetary policy in a few quarters. The fed is going to wreck the entire economy.

  24. putsandcalls

    Why is there blood on the streets though. It’s not like people are defaulting. It’s normal people don’t want to buy houses during period of high rates and high inflation.

  25. Whole_Chemical2525

    It’s a real knife fight out there!

  26. lmaccaro

    If we are dead-set-hellbent on ONLY addressing supply-demand imbalance through rates (of all things) then we should probably start implementing variable rates depending on what the money is going to be used for.

    You know, the same way we muck with taxes to try to influence behavior.

    1st home 3%, vacation home 6%, corporate-owned home 12%, solar panels 0%, buying a social media company and destroying it 0%.

  27. throwaway827364882

    I’m moving out

  28. EmanEwl

    Well did you think the average home buyer was going to buy and overpriced market at 6%-7%+ ?
    People say, well back in the days people were buying homes at 12%+ . Yeah but the price of the average homes were less than $250k

  29. brucekeller

    Just wait until the home builders just stop building homes though and the inventory stays tight and everyone gets fucked. Took until just this year to finally get up to about the average home starts after being below average from 2007-2019. The US Gov’t needs to take a trillion bucks and start building some fucking homes lol. We STILL had more housing starts in 2000 compared to 2020 and there were way less people 20 years ago.

U.S. National Debt

The current U.S. national debt:
$35,911,107,598,198

Source

ben stein recessions & depressions

Retirement Age Calculator

  Original Size