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January
31
2024

Recession Watch: Did the Everything Bubble Just Pop?
John Rubino

Real estate, being expensive to finance and highly volatile at market peaks, is frequently a catalyst for recessions. And as Wolf Street’s Wolf Richter reports, housing is sending “peak cycle” signals.

The supply of new houses for sale is spiking to previous bubble levels:

 

In some formerly hot markets, it’s even worse:

Houses aren’t selling at today’s price/mortgage rate levels:

Meanwhile, the cost of homeownership (mortgage, insurance, taxes) keeps rising. In other words, there’s no relief in sight:

Or Maybe Tech Will Do It

Sometimes, when you’re in the middle of something, it’s hard to see it clearly. For many investors, that’s the case with US equities, which are now more expensive relative to the rest of the world than ever before — by a wide margin. This is an epic imbalance.

The Pin That Pops the Bubble?

If US stocks are historically overvalued, and AI (led by Nvidia) is what’s elevating this market, did China’s DeepSeek breakthrough just pop the bubble? Nvidia, the dominant AI chipmaker, has shed 17% (or half a trillion dollars of market cap) in the last five days. And it’s still the most richly-priced stock ever:

History teaches that the biggest imbalances are resolved in the most violent ways. If trillions of real estate and AI spending turn out to be “malinvestment,” the ride down to intrinsic value will be epic.

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DollarCollapse.com is managed by John Rubino, co-author, with James Turk, of The Money Bubble(DollarCollapse Press, 2014) andÊThe Collapse of the Dollar and How to Profit From It (Doubleday, 2007), and author of Clean Money: Picking Winners in the Green-Tech Boom (Wiley, 2008), How to Profit from the Coming Real Estate Bust (Rodale, 2003) and Main Street, Not Wall Street (Morrow, 1998). After earning a Finance MBA from New York University, he spent the 1980s on Wall Street, as a Eurodollar trader, equity analyst and junk bond analyst. During the 1990s he was a featured columnist with TheStreet.com and a frequent contributor to Individual Investor, Online Investor, and Consumers Digest, among many other publications. He currently writes for CFA Magazine.

 

 

 

rubino.substack.com

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