newt":1vagkvmr said:
Where has all the money gone, someone must have benefited if it is real money. If it is not real, what are we all excited about.
Take an individual example;
Bloke A buys his house in 1995 for £75k. He decides in 2007 that house prices have gone silly and that he will sell up and rent instead.
Bloke B likes the house and applies for a 125% mortgage with Northern Rock. His application is successful and so offers the full asking price of £275k
Northern Rock inevitably then goes bust and is rescued by the government. They and all other sub-prime lenders stop making silly loans and instead revert to traditional lending criteria.
Because no-one can borrow large sums of money any more house prices crash through the floor. The bubble bursts.
Bloke B can now no longer afford his mortgage as he has been laid off. He can't sell his house as it now worth substantially less than the mortgage he has on it. Northern Rock take possession of the house. They sell it for £120k at auction and write off a loss of over £200k after bloke B goes bankrupt.
Where's the money gone?
Bloke A's got it!
:lol:
The reason for the whole mess is the banks making nonsensical loans in the quest for ever greater profit. This pushed up house prices. They were too stupid to realise that they were inflating a bubble that would inevitably burst. The government stood idly by basking in the glory of a miracle economy and the end of 'boom and bust'
Result - bloke B has his life financially ruined.
Blokes C,D and E lose their jobs in the depression that follows and suffer hardship.
Bloke F, a first time buyer in 2012, can afford to buy a house at a realistic and sustainable price. So long as banks are prevented from repeating the catastrophic errors of the last ten years.
Bloke A is laughing.
It is of course, a lot more complicated than that but in essence that is what has happened.
Nowt to do with oil, DW!
Cheers
Dan