OMG, you want a Can-am trike, those go for so much money used it's unbelievable.
Hard fathom how much they sold for when brand new
Hard fathom how much they sold for when brand new
To put in perspective..picture in your mind dozens of major industries needing a bailout..all at once..Auto, Transportation (rail etc) Retail, Airlines, Hospitality and Tourism, Oil, Agriculture, etc etc..everything is rosy for the middle class right now (for the short term only) as many of us still have paychecks and the Feds have printed up and handed out over $300 Billion in Cdn monopoly $ in 8 weeks. They could not even begin to give an accurate account of the total amount of spending since March because they would be afraid to publicly announce it. Our federal debt in March 2019 was $789 Billion...By March 2021 it will be close to 1.5 Trillion...like everything else, unprecedented.
The point simply is that all of the short term support that the US and Cdn Feds have been implementing since March is just buying time.
"Of the 125 restaurant or retail companies tracked by S&P Global Ratings, about 30% now have a credit rating that indicates they have at least a 1-in-2 chance of defaulting on their debts, which is often a precursor of bankruptcy or liquidation. "
"Ford issues $8 billion debt securities after virus causes $2 billion loss. ... Ford on Friday said it had to put up additional guarantees for earlier loans - not the notes sold Friday - because it has not maintained an investment-grade status. It has suspended its dividend for the quarter. "
'It's all a mess': Pandemic driving businesses to bankruptcy brink, and complicating restructuring efforts
'You can’t have a going out of business sale when you can’t get your business open'business.financialpost.com
'The flood is coming': Coronavirus could spur unprecedented wave of business bankruptcies
Business bankruptcy filings year-to-date are trending slightly higher compared with the same period last year, though industry experts warn the seemingly moderate escalation obscures the reality of a spike in fillings to come.ca.finance.yahoo.com
Layoffs and corporate bankruptcies spread as US workers face mounting hardship
Job cuts are sweeping the US as major manufacturers join retailers in announcing long-term layoffs.www.wsws.org
the kids are being prep'd in quebec ...for school.Not to hyjack
But I was terrified at the start thinking my renovation business can’t handle this.
I was ready to list all the toys. Now I’m more worried about the work load I’m going to have when I get back to work. My summer is already booked. I have a bathroom reno booked as soon as her kids go back to school and hubby goes back to the office. Some of these clients work in financial services. I would have to think you’d be pretty sure the economy will bounce back before dropping $40,000 on a bathroom that’s only 10 years old and in no “need“ of a renovation. But hey who am I to judge.
This is the key point.
"The people who are careless and not smart with their money were probably already having a hard time keeping up with the Jones' but they kept on trying to be just like them. I don't think a pandemic will stop them."
This is the MAJORITY, not the Minority
Not true at all. Quite a few locations open.Service Ontario is closed. Can't change ownership. Can't get license plate.
Millions to be made in backyard cremation kits ?... There will also be a host of new opportunities and possibilities for businesses coming out of this, from people going more local, appreciating their backyard vs going elsewhere, more work from homes equaling less congestion etc...
Not sure about the models but my buddy just paid 33k all in for one...bought it last year and they gave him 6 months no payments so he hasn't started paying the thing yet. But he's going this week to drop the cash down as he doesn't want to finance it. His house just sold (about 90k less than what he thought he would get pre-COVID-19) but still just over 900k for a bungalow in Etobicoke. But it took a while. Close to 4-6 weeks on the market with no offers until the last week with 2 offers. Both low balls but one jumped up to over asking.OMG, you want a Can-am trike, those go for so much money used it's unbelievable.
Hard fathom how much they sold for when brand new
SARSTOCK was great. We sat 50ft from the stage...thank goodness I didn't have the poops that day. And dehydration really helped not having to go to the bathroom all day.you young kids have it so good, I lived through SARS, 2008 and 9/11
The sky isnt falling, we'll all still be alright (at least those that dont have covid)
I don't think it is, actually. I know it's easy to think it is, and I'll admit that I'm guilty of that myself a lot of the time, but I'd disagree that it's the majority of our population.
Do we all know someone who's living at the bleeding edge of their financial capability, or is living in a deck of cards? Yep. But when I think about all the people I know those sorts are absolutely positively in the minority.
To illustrate: a top Canadian REIT earned $778 million in rental revenue last year. Its operating expenses (including property taxes and utilities) were about $270 million — leaving $508 million in net operating income, or profits. This 65 per cent operating margin is common in the business, and is just one metric firms use to show investors how lucrative rental housing can be.
Street legal or dirt only, makes huge differenceI haven't been watching the street bike market much - however, I have been all over the dirtbike and entry level dirt bike market for year prior and now just recently. I cannot believe the prices that are being paid for used stuff at the moment. I just sold a clean dirtbike of mine for over $1500 more than what I paid for 2 years ago and it was online for about 3 hours, 20 messages later and a bidding war sight unseen.. Never happened to me in the 15 years buying and selling bikes.
I also cannot find a reasonably priced entry level dirtbike for my girlfriend as the good stuff is gone within hours/minutes of being posted and people are paying close to msrp for used machines... I don't get it!
I'm not that pessimistic. There will be some industries that will feel a lot of hurt and some that will bounce back quickly. Lots of weak and poorly managed businesses will fail, others will pick them up cheap and have their go at the dream.This is the key point.
"The people who are careless and not smart with their money were probably already having a hard time keeping up with the Jones' but they kept on trying to be just like them. I don't think a pandemic will stop them."
This is the MAJORITY, not the Minority
lots on kijiji
sellers haven't accepted that there is almost no demand ATM
asking prices still high
Patience, grasshopper...there will be delay of many months for the upcoming DEPRESSION to hit the TOY market...today we are officially in a severe recession with 13% unemployment, a drop in GDP of over 8% (the worst in history) and a sudden annual deficit of 250-400 BILLION...what they don't want to tell you on the news is the fact that many economists are estimating that 1 in 3 small businesses will NOT reopen, 100s of large corporations will be seeking creditor protection (several have already filed) and the resultant unemployment will take some time to improve above 10%....late 2020 into 2021 will make the 08/09 collapse look like a sale at Walmart. The first thing that will go will be the toys...biggest issue will be ratio of units for sale where debt owing far exceeds value of the asset. Next will be more personal bankruptcies in North America than ever seen in history.
Very glad I sold my 2018 Goldwing in Sept and my 2017 Arctic Cat in Feb....now to watch the C8 market into 2021...cash in hand is sweet
Not to hyjack
But I was terrified at the start thinking my renovation business can’t handle this.
I was ready to list all the toys. Now I’m more worried about the work load I’m going to have when I get back to work. My summer is already booked. I have a bathroom reno booked as soon as her kids go back to school and hubby goes back to the office. Some of these clients work in financial services. I would have to think you’d be pretty sure the economy will bounce back before dropping $40,000 on a bathroom that’s only 10 years old and in no “need“ of a renovation. But hey who am I to judge.