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Argentina’s housing market continues to fall - Global Property Guide

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August 02, 2023


By Lalaine C. Delmendo

Argentina’s housing market remains depressed, which is not surprising given the country’s prolonged currency crisis, hyperinflation, and ailing economy.

In 1989, Argentina experienced a period of hyperinflation, with annual inflation reaching almost 5,000%. Combined with power cuts, this led to the downfall of Raul Alfonsín’s presidency. A similar crisis in 2001 forced another president, Fernando de la Rua, to vacate his seat, leading to what is now considered the largest-ever sovereign default, amounting to US$95 billion.

After experiencing robust growth of 6.4% from 2003 to 2011, Argentina suffered another crisis under populist leader Cristina Fernández, forcing it to default again on its debt in 2014. Stubbornly high inflation persisted and the Argentine peso (ARS) lost more than 50% of its value from 2012 to 2015.

After a short-lived recovery, the country saw another economic recession. The economy contracted by 2.6% in 2018 and another 2% in 2019. As a result of the public outrage over the depressed economy, exorbitant inflation, and austerity, center-left Peronish Alberto Fernandez defeated incumbent president Mauricio Macri in the 2019 presidential elections.

The Covid-19 pandemic exacerbated Argentina’s suffering, with the economy plunging by a huge 9.9% in 2020. After growing by 10.3% in 2021 and by another 5.2% in 2022, the economy is projected to slow sharply again this year, with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) expecting a meager growth of 0.2%. Worse, the overall inflation skyrocketed to a staggering 108.8% in April 2023, the highest level seen since 1991.

Since 2019, the Argentine peso (ARS) lost another 72% of its value against the US dollar, reaching an average monthly exchange rate of ARS 216.25 = USD 1 in April 2023.

Clearly, Argentina’s economic and financial turmoil is jinxing the country’s property market. In the first quarter of 2023, the average price of apartments in Buenos Aires fell by 5.41% y-o-y to US$1,731 per square meter (sqm), following annual declines of 6.03% in Q4 2022, 7.11% in Q3, 6.31% in Q2 and 7.01% in Q1, according to data published by Reporte Inmobiliario. When adjusted for inflation, prices actually plunged by a whopping 53.71% y-o-y in Q1 2023.

On a quarterly basis, apartment prices declined by 0.8% (-18.51% inflation-adjusted) during the latest quarter.

This was supported by figures from Zonaprop, which showed that property prices in the capital city fell by 6.1% (and plunged by a huge 54% in real terms) to an average of US$2,174 per sqm in Q1 2023 from a year earlier.

Residential property prices in Argentina have been continuously falling in the past several years.​


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Demand remains weak. During 2022, there were 33,753 property sales transactions in Buenos Aires, up by 17% as compared to the previous year but still far below the annual average of 65,000 sales recorded from 1998 to 2011, based on figures from the Colegio de Escribanos de la Ciudad de Buenos Aires.

The slow recovery in demand reflects the lack of credit in the market. “These numbers also clearly express that it is a market without credit, because of those 33,753 operations – which were registered in all of 2022 – there are only 1,441 mortgages in the year,” said Jorge De Bártolo, the president of the Colegio de Escribanos de la Ciudad de Buenos Aires.
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Things are expected to become worse after the government introduced early this year an executive decree that forces domestic public-sector entities to enter into a series of operations involving their holdings of sovereign debt securities, which would involve unilateral exchanges and forced currency conversion. Moreover, the central bank also issued a decree on April 20, 2023, which tightened foreign exchange regulations in Argentina. These measures are expected to paralyze the housing market, as it makes it more difficult for homebuyers to purchase homes, who are already suffering from skyrocketing inflation and surging interest rates.

Since Argentina’s real estate market has historically been transacted in US dollars, every time the government introduces regulations that make it impossible for people to source dollars´ liquidity, the housing market is adversely affected.

Local house price variations​

High inflation makes it appear that the house price falls are modest. But when adjusted for inflation, the price declines are actually huge, with the capital city’s major neighborhoods being the worst hit.

During the year to Q1 2023:​

In Puerto Madero, the average price increased slightly by 1% y-o-y to US$5,638 per sqm but plunged 50.6% when adjusted for inflation, according to Zonaprop.

In Palermo, nominal prices fell by a modest 3% y-o-y to an average of US$2,918 per sqm but actually dropped by a huge 52.5% in real terms.

In Belgrano, prices declined by 5.5% y-o-y to an average of US$2,711 per sqm, and by a whopping 53.7% in real terms.

In Nuñez, the average price fell by 3.7% y-o-y to US$2,645 per sqm and declined by a much bigger 52.9% when adjusted for inflation.

In Caballito, nominal prices were down by 7.4% y-o-y to an average of US$2,155 per sqm and by a huge -54.7% in real prices.


How capital controls thwarted housing market growth

The lackluster performance of Argentina’s housing market in the past decade can be partly attributed to the imposition of capital controls in the country.

After 2011 capital controls introduced by then-President Cristina Fernandez made it extremely difficult for most Argentines to acquire property. On the one hand, sellers demanded to be paid in dollars, proven safer than the peso. On the other hand, buyers were prevented from acquiring these dollars by strict currency controls. Thirdly, the indexation of peso loans has been forbidden since 2004, at the height of Argentina’s currency crisis.

Coupled with high inflation, these factors caused the country’s real estate market to enter a three-year crisis. In 2014, just 2,800 property sales per month were registered in Buenos Aires, a city of about 3 million people. That compares with 5,200 in 2010, 6,100 in 2007, and a historic average of 5,000, according to the Buenos Aires Notary College.

In addition, Argentina’s very high inflation rates made granting peso-denominated mortgages too risky for banks. In 2015, the number of new mortgages in Argentina slumped to its lowest level in 15 years, accounting for just 1% of the country´s total GDP - the lowest in Latin America, according to a recent report by the Housing Finance Information Network. This was down from 5.4% in 2000 - a drop that would have been considerably larger without the help of the government´s Procrear housing program, according to a report by Ecolatina consultancy.

Immediately after taking office in December 2015, President Mauricio Macri began to reverse the economic legacy of populist former president Fernández, including devaluing the currency and lifting tight capital controls.

Ironically Macri decided to reintroduce currency controls after he was defeated by Peronist candidate Alberto Fernández in the August 11, 2019, primary poll. On September 11, 2019, the central bank unveiled a new round of currency controls to tame speculation and stem a spiraling debt crisis. The new measure requires anyone purchasing foreign currency to present a sworn oath promising to wait at least five days before using it to purchase bonds.

Under previous regulations, a buyer could use foreign currency to purchase a bond and then immediately sell it at a more favorable exchange rate, easily gaining a profit of about 5% to 7%.

In other new measures, individuals seeking to purchase dollars face a monthly limit of US$10,000, and transferring money abroad requires government permission. The government also requires companies and exporters to obtain permission from the central bank to access the foreign exchange market.

In just over a month, the Argentine peso plunged by 20% against the US dollar.

Foreign exchange regulations tightened further

On April 20, 2023, the BCRA issued Communique A 7746 providing several amendments to the country’s foreign exchange regulations, in an effort to stabilize the plummeting domestic currency. The main provisions include:

Payment of interest to related parties: to make payments abroad for the cancellation of interest services on commercial debts for imports of goods and services and/or financial loans, the central bank’s prior approval is required until December 31, 2023.

Payment for services abroad: a period of 60 days from the date of approval of the SIRASE (Import System of the Argentine Republic and Payment of Services Abroad) declaration is established for payment of various services, such as legal, accounting, advertising, engineering, and technical services, among others.

Payments through local agents: a minimum of 90 days is established to access the FX market for the payment of freight services or other transportation services.

Blocking period: the blocking period for accessing the FX market is increased to 180 days for specific transactions, including the domestic sales of securities settled in foreign currency, swaps of securities issued by residents for external assets, and transfer of securities to foreign depository entities, among others.

Special account: companies are permitted to deposit the pesos they had planned to purchase the dollars to be applied to restricted payments into bank accounts whose compensation will be determined based on the official exchange rate.


Interest rates rising sharply, amidst plummeting peso and exorbitant inflation

It is not surprising that interest rates have been rising dramatically in recent months, amidst the country’s staggering inflation, and ongoing economic and financial crisis. On May 15, 2023, Banco Central de la República Argentina (BCRA) raised its key interest rate “Leliq” by 600 basis points to 97%, following a 1,000 basis points rate hike in April 2023, pushing borrowing costs to their highest level ever recorded.

The central bank’s emergency decision was made after the Argentine peso lost about 20% of its value against the US dollar in a single week in mid-April, amidst large outflows of investments held in the peso. In April 2023, nationwide inflation skyrocketed to a staggering 108.8% - the highest level in more than three decades.

“The feeling is that the government is completely losing it against inflation,” said Miguel Kiguel, a financial adviser and former deputy manager at the BCRA. “I fear the government has started to act very late: interest rate hikes are of course the main strategy to combat inflation, but they take time. When a central bank raises the interest rate, the effects are felt some two or three months afterward, and that timescale is not effective in Argentina’s situation.”

In line with the central bank’s move, mortgage rates have been surging. In April 2023, the average mortgage interest rate rose sharply to 63.17%, almost double the previous year’s 32.01%, according to BCRA figures.

By maturity:
Up to 5-year term: 63.48%, sharply up from 32.96% a year earlier and 30.96% two years ago

Over 5 and up to 10-year term: 63.41%, sharply up from 29.26% in April 2022 and 21.35% in April 2021

Over the 10-year term: 45.95%, up from 22.09% in the previous year and 20.51% two years ago

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The mortgage market is dying!​

At the beginning of former president Macri’s term things looked so promising! Elected in December 2015, Macri made a campaign promise to offer one million mortgages during his tenure. Within three months he had devalued the currency and lifted tight exchange controls – and there was an immediate surge in the number of requests for property quotes. “For the first time in years, homeowners want to exchange properties instead of sitting on their assets,” said Alejandra Bugna, a property lawyer at Baker & McKenzie.

In April 2016 an inflation-linked mortgage credit system called Acquisition Value Units or Unidad de Valor Adquisitivo (UVA), similar to the system used in Chile and Uruguay, was introduced.

Under the scheme, real-estate prices either for rent or for purchase will no longer be denominated in US dollars or in pesos but instead will be denominated in UVA. The system guarantees that the transaction represents the same number of consumer price index baskets if, for example, there’s a tighter or looser monetary policy. Rents will be priced at the same amount as UVA if the peso gets stronger or weaker. While the payment would be nominally higher with a devaluation, the payment’s UVA value would remain constant.

In addition to the introduction of UVA, the government launched a subsidized mortgage scheme in March 2017 to grant subsidized mortgages to around 90,000 locals with monthly incomes ranging from ARS 16,000 (US$69) to ARS 32,000 (US$138).

Despite these measures, demand remained depressed. First-time homebuyers either delayed their plans to purchase homes or canceled their loans, mainly due to plummeting pesos. Then in 2020, the Covid-19 pandemic halted property transactions, making the situation even worse. With the continued plunge in the value of the peso against the US dollar, the mortgage market is shrinking rapidly.

During 2022, the size of the mortgage market was equivalent to just about 0.5% of GDP, down from 1.52% of GDP in 2018 and 5.36% of GDP in 2000.

Homes in Argentina are priced in US dollars, even though buyers can only take out mortgages in pesos.

The situation is currently aggravated by soaring interest rates and the government’s new regulations on foreign exchange controls.


Rental yields are poor to moderate in Buenos Aires
Gross rental yields on apartments in Buenos Aires are low to moderate, especially by the standards of the continent (yields in Latin America tend to be high). The typical gross rental yield on an apartment in Buenos Aires - the rental return earned on the purchase price, before taxation, vacancy costs, and other costs – isn’t something that will attract foreigners to invest, even if they could get a mortgage in Argentina, which they won’t be able to.

Yields on apartments in Buenos Aires range from 3.46% to 8.05%, with a city average of 5.45%, according to a Global Property Guide research conducted in November 2022. As usual, rental yields are mostly higher on smaller apartments.

In other major cities:
In Rosario, gross rental yields range from 3.5% to 6.81%, with a city average of 4.96%.
In Córdoba, residential properties yield between 4.26% and 7.51%, with a city average of 6.4%.
In San Miguel de Tucumán, rental yields range from 3.66% to 8.57%, with a city average of 6.02%.
Given that a typical landlord’s expenses are around 2% per annum in maintenance, repairs, empties, etcetera, this means that many landlords will effectively earn nothing. In fact, round-trip transaction costs are quite high in Argentina (i.e., the total costs of buying and selling a property).

Renting has till recently been the only option for many who have no means of saving and buying property, owing to limited mortgage lending. In the past years, rents have been continuously rising by double-digit figures. But despite these rent increases, the rental market remains unattractive to landlords and property owners because of very high inflation and poor rental yields.

A two-bedroom apartment located in a prime location in Buenos Aires is currently offered for a monthly rent of US$825.

Construction activity remains weak, amidst supply overhang

With very limited demand, there is now a growing supply overhang, especially in Buenos Aires. “The total stock of real estate is above 163,000 units and only 1.57% of what is offered is sold. The excess of properties is so great that at the current level of demand, 6 years are required to absorb all the properties for sale in Buenos Aires when the historical average was two years,” said Jose Luis Cieri in an article published by Infobae last year.

As a result, construction activity in Argentina rose by a meager 1.2% in March 2023 from a year earlier, following a 6.3% y-o-y decline in the previous month, according to the data on Synthetic Indicator of Construction Activity (ISAC) released by the National Institute of Statistics and Censuses (INDEC). For the first three months of 2023, construction activity actually went down slightly by 0.8% y-o-y, after a trivial increase of 1.3% over the same period in 2022.

The downturn is more evident when the total covered surface of building permits issued is considered, plunging by 27.2% y-o-y to just 912,198 square meters (sqm) in February 2023, following a cumulative decline of 9.3% for the whole year of 2022, based on figures from INDEC.

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Economy to slow sharply, inflation still soaring​

The hyperinflation-battered Argentina recorded economic growth of 5.2% during 2022, a slowdown from the prior year’s 10.3% expansion but the first time in more than a decade that the country saw two straight years of economic growth. The hotel and restaurant sectors showed significant improvements, while agriculture continued to suffer amidst a prolonged drought.

The economy contracted by 2.6% in 2018, 2% in 2019, and a huge 9.9% in 2020, with the Covid-19 pandemic aggravating the country’s economic crisis.

Recently, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) revised downwards its 2023 real GDP growth forecast for Argentina to a meager 0.2%, from its earlier estimate of a 2% growth.

“The reason for the large downward revision output for 2023 is very, very clear: it’s the drought,” said Pierre-Ouliver Gourinchas, Chief Economist and Director of the IMF’s Research Department. “It’s a massive drought, it’s having a huge impact on the economy, and it’s expected to be transitory,” Gourinchas added.

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Argentina’s stubbornly high inflation is another serious problem. In April 2023, the overall inflation skyrocketed to a staggering 108.8%, up from 104.3% in the previous month and the highest level seen since 1991, based on figures from INDEC. It was among the highest in the world, along with Venezuela, Sudan, Lebanon, Syria, Suriname, and Zimbabwe, among others.

Because of insane inflation, prices in restaurants are often written in pencil since they change so quickly that it makes no sense to print the “price” column in the menu.

But not all are bad news! The labor market is gradually improving. In Q4 2022, the nationwide unemployment rate stood at 6.3%, down from 7.1% in the previous quarter and 7% a year earlier, according to INDEC. From an average of 9% in 2009-2019, the jobless rate surged to 11.6% in 2020 before falling again to 8.8% in 2021 and to 7% in 2022.
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Argentina’s plunging peso, financial woes​

In 2018, Argentina received a whopping US$57 billion loan agreement with the IMF – the organization’s biggest-ever aid package – aimed at shoring up the country’s ailing finances. The loan, in which US$44 billion have already been disbursed, comes with stringent conditions, including a commitment to a zero deficit for 2019. However, this was not achieved, as the value of the peso continued to plunge.

By 2019, the budget deficit was equivalent to 3.8% of GDP, down from 5% in 2018, 6.1% in 2017, and 4.6% in 2016. Yet, government debt ballooned to 85.2% of GDP in 2018 and further to 89.8% of GDP in 2019, sharply up from 56.5% in 2017 and 53.1% in 2016, mostly attributed to the stock of inflation-linked local currency debt.

The value of the Argentine peso (ARS) plummeted by about 74% against the US dollar in three years, from a monthly exchange rate of ARS 15.86 = USD 1 in December 2016 to ARS 59.83 = USD 1 in December 2019.

Argentina immediately imposed currency controls to shore up the peso and protect its depleted foreign exchange reserves. The government postponed payments on some short-term maturities and seek a “voluntary reprofiling” of longer-term debt. This led the Standard & Poor’s and Fitch Ratings to downgrade the country’s credit rating to “selective default” and “restricted default”, respectively.

As a result of the public outrage over the economic recession, high inflation, and austerity, center-left Peronish Alberto Fernandez defeated incumbent president Mauricio Macri in the 2019 presidential elections. Fernandez vowed to increase wages and benefits to counter the country’s economic crisis.

However more than three years have passed since Fernandez assumed office, and there has been little sign that Argentina’s economic suffering has eased. In fact, the Covid-19 pandemic even exacerbated the country’s financial crisis. The budget deficit surged to 8.5% of GDP in 2020, and public debt soared to about 103.9% of GDP over the same period.

Since 2019, the peso lost another 72% of its value against the US dollar, reaching an average monthly exchange rate of ARS 216.25 = USD 1 in April 2023.

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The budget deficit was reduced to 2.8% of GDP in 2022, down from 4.5% in 2021. Despite this, the country’s public debt has grown by US$73 billion in the past three years to reach US$394 billion in 2022, even with the supervision of the IMF. As a percent of GDP, government debt remains high at 85% of GDP last year, up from 80.6% in 2021.

Last year, the government signed an IMF Extended Fund Facility (EFF) agreement after renegotiating the US$44 billion debt acquired by former President Macri in 2018. In March 2023, the IMF Executive Board completed the fourth review of the said arrangement, allowing an immediate disbursement of US$5.4 billion, which brings total disbursements to about US$28.9 billion.

Though economic minister Martin Guzman, who led the IMF negotiations over the restructuring of the national debt, resigned in 2022 amidst disagreements within the government.

After slowly moving out of the most dreaded “selective default” and “restricted default” credit scores, Argentina’s credit rating was slashed again by both Fitch Rating and Standard and Poor’s as the government plans to force state-owned institutions to unload their holdings of dollar bonds.

In March 2023, Fitch Ratings downgraded Argentina’s long-term foreign currency issuer default rating to C, which means that default is thus imminent.

“The downgrade of Argentina´s rating to ´C´ from ´CCC-´ follows an executive decree that forces domestic public-sector entities into operations involving their holdings of sovereign debt securities, which would involve unilateral exchanges and forced currency conversion that constitute default events under Fitch´s criteria,” said Fitch Ratings. Accordingly, the rating would be downgraded again to “restricted default” upon execution of the exchanges.

This followed Standard & Poor’s recent credit rating downgrade for Argentina from CCC- from CCC+ with a negative outlook. “The negative outlook on the long-term ratings reflects risks surrounding pronounced economic imbalances and policy uncertainties before and after the 2023 national elections,” said Standard & Poor’s.

General elections are scheduled to be held in Argentina on October 22, 2023. Incumbent president Fernandez, despite being eligible for a second term, has recently announced that he will not seek reelection.




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what's interesting will be seeing the inversion of record-high housing prices in the USA, a huge national debt and housing bubble, high interest rates, etc. - when Buenos Aires has the unusual aspect of virtually no mortgages/credito. could this mean the housing crash won't really affect Argentina, and instead will cause more people to move to BsAs/etc. and buy houses for cash? SovereignMan dicusses the 2024 crash:

"Breaking down the coming $20 trillion debt Tsunami
Simon Black
January 17, 2024
Tony Fauci should be in a prison cell in Wuhan right now given how much responsibility he bears for destroying US government finances.
This guy was one of the chief architects of the hysteria that took over the US (and much of the world) back in 2020.
Yet he now admits, according to recent Congressional testimony, that his infamous six-foot social distancing edict “sort of just appeared” and was “not based on any data”.

But it was precisely those sorts of claims that prompted politicians to close schools and business across the country, and to pay people to stay home and NOT work.
The financial results of this insanity are clear; the US national debt increased by an unbelievable $6.5 trillion during 2020 and 2021. And while there is a lot of blame to go around– politicians had ample time to find their intellectual courage– Fauci is extremely culpable.
Now, the US fiscal situation was already in bad shape prior to 2020. I remember back in 2019, when the economy was booming and federal tax revenue was at a record high, the US national debt STILL increased by more than $1 trillion that year.

And I wrote to our readers wondering– if the United States government still manages to add $1 trillion to the national debt when everything is awesome, what’s going to happen when there’s a real emergency?
Well, Tony Fauci gave us the answer the following year.
But even now that Covid is over, government overspending is still extreme. And it’s not getting any better.
I’ve been writing about this a lot lately, but today I need to explain where this is headed, and why it’s so inflationary.

Consider that, according to the Congressional Budget Office’s own forecasts, the United States will add another TWENTY TRILLION DOLLARS to the national debt through 2033.

Now, 2033 is a REALLY important date, because it also happens to be the year that Social Security’s primary trust fund completely runs out of money.
Social Security is funded in large part by workers who contribute a portion of their paychecks into the program through the FICA/payroll tax.
Social Security uses that tax revenue to pay monthly benefits to retirees across the country. And any surplus left over is rolled into a special trust fund.
Over time, the accumulated surplus in the trust fund amounted to roughly $3 trillion dollars; and all that money was invested in interest-bearing government bonds.
Between the payroll tax contributions and the trust fund’s interest income, Social Security always ran a healthy surplus.
Until recently.

Starting in 2020, there were so many retirees receiving Social Security benefits that the program barely broke even for the year.
The following year, 2021, was even worse. Social Security ran a deficit for the first time ever and had to dip into its trust fund to make ends meet.
This trend kept up in 2022 and 2023 as well. In fact, the program loses so much money now that its trust fund is shrinking rapidly, and the Social Security Administration projects it will fully be depleted by 2033.

One of the many, many reasons this is so important is because Social Security will no longer be a BUYER of US government bonds. It will be a SELLER. And that’s a big deal.
For the past 90+ years, Social Security always invested its annual surplus into government bonds… which essentially gave politicians an extra pile of cash each year to spend.
But now this cash flow will reverse. Instead of Social Security sending its surplus to the Treasury, the Treasury Department now must repay the debt that it owes to Social Security.

This nearly $3 trillion repayment will happen gradually over the next ten years. And then, of course, in 2033, Social Security will be out of money and require a multi-trillion-dollar bailout.
Unfortunately, the Treasury Department doesn’t have the money to repay this $3 trillion debt, let alone another $5 to $10 trillion to bail out Social Security.
This means that, in addition to the $20 TRILLION in new debt that the CBO is projecting over the next ten years, the Treasury Department will have to borrow an ADDITIONAL $3 trillion to repay Social Security. And then even more to bail out the program
(So, this means that the government will need to find someone to buy $23++ trillion of government bonds over the next ten years… which is just an absurd amount of money.
And it will have to do this at a time when it has lost some of its biggest investors; again, Social Security can no longer afford to buy bonds. And many of America’s biggest foreign bondholders, including China and Japan, are also not buying any more bonds.

So, who is going to buy all this new debt?
The only realistic option is the Federal Reserve. And this is nothing new for the Fed.
During the pandemic, for example, the Fed magically created about $4 trillion in new money, then used that money to buy US government bonds.
Of course, their $4 trillion in new money also helped create the highest inflation in four decades.
So, if buying $4 trillion of government bonds led to 9% inflation, what’s going to happen when the Fed has to create $20+ trillion to buy government bonds?

And by the way, the CBO’s $20 trillion estimate on new government debt is probably a bit too optimistic. It assumes there will be no new war, no pandemic, no national emergency, and no idiotic legislation that causes even crazier spending.
If any of those were to happen over the next decade, the increase to the national debt would be even higher… meaning the Fed would have to create even MORE money.
$20+ trillion is a ton of debt. And with no other realistic option other than the Federal Reserve to buy that debt, it’s easy to make a very strong argument for substantial inflation a few years down the road.

PS: If you can see what is happening, and where this is all going, you understand why it is so important to have a Plan B. That’s why we published our 31-page, fully updated Perfect Plan B Guide, which you can download here."

 
Definitely no correlation of what happens in the USA or other first world countries and Argentina real estate market. Mortgages won't enter picture here any time soon here in Argentina but as turmoil here goes on you see sales volume going back up last few months. Nothing safe to invest in here.
 

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