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by BoiledCabbage
1310 days ago
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The Fed printed money to prop up the price of derivatives, not the price of house. Huge difference. Houses themselves fundamentally have intrinsic value as an asset. A currency has no intrinsic financial investment value. Especially not an arbitrarily created crypto currency. The only reason it's price would go up is people speculating that someone else will want to speculate on it in the future, and will pay a premium to do so. We all know what it looks like when the future speculators dry up. |
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I'm not sure your point here. Derivatives absolutely are a driver on the price of the underlying assets. Derivatives are what inflated the housing bubble prior to 2008.
I generally agree with you that homes have an intrinsic value, and that currencies do not necessarily have that. But that intrinsic value of homes was probably around the bottom of the 2008 housing market, not the top. On either side of that, home values exceeded the fundamental value due do manipulation or excessive leverage. In my mental model, fundamental value merely establishes a price "floor" of a market, but beyond this price floor every market is subject to mania and bubbles. For housing, the fundamental floor is non zero, for crypto, you could argue that it is zero.
> The only reason it's price would go up is people speculating that someone else will want to speculate on it in the future, and will pay a premium to do so.
This is true for housing also. Having a intrinsic value does not mean that housing prices should be expected to go up forever. As a clear counter example, deflationary goods like computers have a clear intrinsic value, but are not a good investment as they will almost certainly lose value.