LuxuryBlurb

Posts Tagged ‘cash’

MORE GOOD NEWS FOR REAL ESTATE?

Wednesday, January 11th, 2012

Posted by Leonard Steinberg on January 11th, 2012

In a recent Wall Street Journal article a survey of those with investable assets of $ 30m+ revealed that the rich prefer commodities, real-estate, private companies  in 2012 to place their investable dollars. 48% plan to increase their allocation to commodities in 2012, and 45% of respondents are looking to real estate….we see this already with the market starting off with a bang. 

The message is all about the need to invest in tangible assets. Art, collectibles should do well to. Maybe this is the strongest argument that those in the know (and lets face it, the rich usually know first) feel certain that inflation is on the horizon…..we think its here already, quietly hidden by government statistics that omit critical factors when evaluating inflation. And real estate has always been a solid hedge against inflation, which bodes well for the New York luxury cash-driven market. With Metlife getting out of the mortgage business too, obtaining mortgages will be the challenge for the rest of the market.

I suspect pricing records for premium properties could be broken in 2012. We shall soon find out.

CORPORATION + PRIVATE CASH SAVINGS UNLEASHED

Thursday, March 4th, 2010

This morning’s Wall Street Journal reports that one year removed from the trough of the recession, American corporations continue to hoard more cash than ever. There are now tentative signs that they are finally comfortable using the money to do some shopping.

The 382 nonfinancial firms in the Standard & Poor’s 500 that have reported results for the fourth quarter of 2009 are now holding $932 billion in cash and short-term investments, according to a Wall Street Journal analysis of data from Capital IQ. That sum is up 8% from the third quarter and up 31% from a year ago. And why? Cash is very cheap these days. With all this cash around, it is not surprising that the high end real estate market in Manhattan is so very active right now……with lots of all cash or mostly-cash buyers. The savings rates have also climbed dramatically.

An argument could be made that these corporations have hoarded all this cash at the expense of jobs, the one issue all politicians are blaming unanimously for the tepid economic recovery. But all this cash held in both corporations and privately will be let loose into the economy….its happening already as part of the economic cycle. This will affect inventory levels accross the board. And when inventories need to be beefed up. jobs are created. Slow, painful, and mostly it affects the lowest wage earners. I guess the politicians don’t want to say all of this out loud: its the system.