Why don't construction prices go down?

  • Erstellt am 2023-05-15 08:17:32

Buchsbaum

2023-09-26 12:45:48
  • #1
It's nice when you are all satisfied. I really am happy about that. And that I only come up here with cheap populism in the best AfD style is well known everywhere.

Then I wonder where all the problems suddenly come from? But obviously they do not exist at all. Great!

And things are going even better for me. I currently don’t have any electricity provider. Since March, my electricity meter hasn’t turned a single wheel anymore. I’m telling you, everything is going great!

Oh dear consumer. Keep dreaming of falling interest rates and an inverted yield curve. So the average yield has been rising and rising for months. BuFu is falling accordingly. There is nothing inverted about that!
 

KarstenausNRW

2023-09-26 13:02:32
  • #2

Dear , you should have paid better attention in your business administration lecture. But don’t worry, we can help with that
The interest rate for refinancing today is 4.05% (!!!) for 1 year and 3.32% for 10 years. That is what you call inverted. You can read the explanation above.
 

WilderSueden

2023-09-26 13:05:26
  • #3
Vienna is also notorious for demand far exceeding supply. Which should not surprise anyone, because when prices are fixed below market value, exactly that happens. And exactly what is mentioned in #257: no maintenance and no new construction because it is not profitable anyway.
 

Buchsbaum

2023-09-26 13:36:15
  • #4
The interest rate for refinancing as of today is 4.05% for 1 year (!!!) and 3.32% for 10 years. This is called inverted. You can read the explanation for this above.

Without googling, inverse means reversed, opposite according to my non-academic knowledge. Therefore, I assume that the consumer indicated an inverting yield curve, which is associated with an interest rate reversal and expected declining rates.

I would speak of an interest rate spread curve between short- and long-term rates, as you explained.

As I said, I have not studied business administration.
 

KarstenausNRW

2023-09-26 13:44:58
  • #5

The consumer wrote correctly. Normally, interest rates for short terms are lower than for long terms. Inverse = opposite. Short terms more expensive than longer terms. And exactly that is present in our case – an inverse yield curve. And exactly that is an indicator for falling interest rates again.

Now you have learned something from business administration. It never hurts to understand the connections. Then you won’t fall for small-talk nonsense.
 

HeimatBauer

2023-09-26 13:50:48
  • #6
I'm not saying that this should now simply be repeated in one of the notorious ten-point programs - the first article also clearly states that it is only very limitedly transferable. It will not change everything overnight either - those who promise that usually only write in capital letters. But learning from it, would that be something? If the state builds itself, it decides for itself how it is built. Yes, it may then be somewhat less extravagant and it certainly won't be the ultimate solution for everyone and everywhere after a month - but it is a proposal. The demand is clearly higher than the supply - but better that the supply is low than zero.
 

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