By Jesse Colombo (This article is frequently updated)
After the cataclysmic mid-2000s housing bubbles in the U.S. and European PIIGS nations, one would think that the world would never allow another housing bubble to rear its ugly head
again. Unfortunately, this thinking is completely wrong. Since 2008, the world has openly embraced new housing bubbles with astounding vigor, in complete defiance of all lessons taught by the Global Financial Crisis. A series of new housing bubbles have inflated in practically every country outside of deflation-prone Japan, the U.S. and PIIGS nations – I’ve named this bubble “The Post-2009 Global Housing Bubble” or “Housing Bubble 2.0.” These new housing bubbles are located in China, Canada, Australia, emerging market countries and northern & western Europe.
Here are the world’s latest housing bubbles:
Chart Source: GlobalPropertyGuide.com
China’s housing bubble is just one aspect of the country’s overall bubble economy of the past several years. While China had a housing bubble as early as 2008, it briefly deflated during the Global Financial Crisis until the country launched a massive $586 billion economic stimulus program to help bolster the economy. China’s stimulus plan was successful at staving off an economic crisis– so successful that inflation, overheating and overbuilding quickly
became a concern again as the newly printed stimulus money sloshed around the economy, creating very alarming distortions and speculative activity.
China’s blazingly fast economic growth coupled with an expanding credit bubble and fresh sloshing stimulus money created the perfect conditions for inflation, which has manifested in the form of soaring rents, food prices and wages. High inflation, negative real interest rates and limited investment options encouraged many Chinese to buy real estate to protect their savings from the ravages of inflation, helping to reflate the housing bubble that first reared its ugly head in 2008. Housing prices soared 140% higher nationwide from 2007 to 2011 with Beijing housing up 800% since 2003. Clearly having learned nothing from the disastrous US housing bubble, real estate speculators or “flippers” have taken China by storm, buying “real estate as if they were buying vegetables,” such a housewife who bought 10 properties within 30 minutes and the college student who flipped an astounding 680 flats.
Read more about China’s Bubble Economy & Housing Bubble
Canada is experiencing a classic bubble economy that is driven by a commodities export boom (which is part of the commodities bubble) a massive housing bubble that is larger than the U.S. housing bubble was at its peak, a consumer debt bubble and global “hot-money” investment inflows. Canada’s bubble economy is driving a U.S. export boom that has helped the U.S. economy
recover from the Great Recession – this is just one of the many reasons why the U.S.’ recovery is actually a “bubblecovery.”
Canada’s housing bubble is now nearly 40% larger than America’s bubble at its 2005 peak. Price-to-rent ratios, a common real estate valuation measure, are flashing clear warning signs of a bubble as well. Even the IMF is warning of a Canadian housing bubble (but seems to understate the extent of the bubble and its risks as “official” organizations tend to do). Vancouver homes are now pricier than NYC homes, thanks partly to Chinese investors. $1,050,000 will only buy a tiny house that is merely “livable” in Vancouver, where median real-estate prices are an astounding 9.5 times median household income.
Read more about Canada’s bubble economy & housing bubble
Australia, similar to Canada, has a bubble economy that is driven by the export of commodities to China, a housing bubble that surpasses the U.S. housing bubble in severity, a household debt bubble and global
“hot money” investment inflows.
Australia’s housing bubble, like its cousin Canada’s bubble, has grown larger than America’s housing bubble in its heyday and is driven by a huge boom in mortgage debt as bubble-blind investors, realtors and economists strongly believe that Australian property prices have reached a permanently high plateau (a very typical belief during bubbles). A researcher recently showed how bubble-denying Australian property investors believe in four key myths to convince themselves that the property market boom is “different” from the U.S. and other nations’ 2000s property bubbles that ended disastrously.
Read more about Australia’s bubble economy & housing bubble
The Emerging Markets Housing Bubble:
China’s economic boom and now bubble has caused commodities prices to soar – along with the fortunes of natural resource-rich emerging market nations. Investors have clamored
to invest in emerging markets in recent years (now including nations that are not commodities exporters) and their “hot-money” has inadvertently resulted in overheating economies and property bubbles throughout the entire emerging world. Soaring asset prices and rapid credit growth has created an emerging market luxury goods boom that has bolstered the fortunes of European luxury brands – a main reason why Europe’s economic crisis is not far worse than it is now.
(Note: the charts below are just a small selection of the many emerging market countries that have housing bubbles.)
Read more about the Emerging Markets Bubble
While the world has been laser-focused on the woes of the heavily-indebted PIIGS nations for the last couple of years, property markets in Northern and Western European countries
have been bubbling up to dizzying new heights in a repeat performance of the very property bubbles that caused the global financial crisis in the first place. Nordic and Western European countries such as Norway and Switzerland have attracted strong investment inflows due to their perceived economic safe-haven statuses, serving to further inflate these countries’ preexisting property bubbles that had expanded from the mid-1990s until 2008. With their overheated economies and ballooning property bubbles, today’s safe-haven European countries may very well be tomorrow’s Greeces and Italys.
(Note: the charts below are just a small selection of the many northern and western European countries that have housing bubbles.)
Chart Source: Bulle-Immobiliere.org
Read more about the Post-2009 Northern & Western European Housing Bubble
Read more about the The Nordic Housing Bubble
Your eyes are not deceiving you – the world is experiencing a massive Post-2009 Housing Bubble that will pop and finish where the U.S. and PIIGS housing bubbles left off in 2008. The global economy has “recovered” from the Great Recession on the backs of more housing bubbles – this is why I call the recovery a “bubblecovery.” Believe it or not, the Post-2009 Global Housing Bubble has the potential to grow larger due to global central banks’ incredibly stimulative monetary policies that have been implemented as a response to the Global Financial Crisis. When this epic pan-country housing bubble finally pops, it could conceivably throw the world into a devastating depression.
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Would you recommend any type of investment to keep my money safe in order to prepare for the coming depression?
Hello Tim,
I can’t legally give investment advice, but I can tell you which investments I personally prefer. I’m a big fan of being cash-heavy, with smaller holdings in precious metals. I also like the idea of storing some food and other necessities.
I welcome you to join me on my Twitter blog or on Facebook page, where I engage in active discussion about this topic.
Here’s my Twitter blog: http://www.twitter.com/thebubblebubble and Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/thebubblebubble
I hope this answers your questions,
Jesse
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