From the paper of record for the Israeli/Palestinian conflict:
"The price of single-family homes fell 18 percent in October from a year earlier, according to the closely watched Standard & Poors/Case Shiller Housing Index. All 20 cities reported annual price declines in October; prices in 14 of the 20 metropolitan areas surveyed fell at a record rate.
A glut of unsold houses is weighing down the market, and housing is likely to deteriorate further in 2009 as the jobs picture continues to weaken. Unemployment is now at 6.7 percent, its highest point in a decade, and economists predict it will rise to 8 or 10 percent next year."
What do folks think this means for the wine business? Most of the importers currently doing such fine work today were not around during the last big recession. Do they have the experience to survive this one? I'd love to hear from Eric Salomon on this subject.
I'm pretty worried as I have many friends ITB and a brother who owns restaurants. They are all very frightened and we live in an area that is doing relatively well (large universities, lots of health-care related stuff).
I also worry that it could be self-fulfilling in that folks could get panicky and react as irrationally in a downturn as they did in the bubble.
I know this is a time to be thankful, but I feel like most human endeavor is doomed to failure because of our own weakness and stupidity.
"The price of single-family homes fell 18 percent in October from a year earlier, according to the closely watched Standard & Poors/Case Shiller Housing Index. All 20 cities reported annual price declines in October; prices in 14 of the 20 metropolitan areas surveyed fell at a record rate.
A glut of unsold houses is weighing down the market, and housing is likely to deteriorate further in 2009 as the jobs picture continues to weaken. Unemployment is now at 6.7 percent, its highest point in a decade, and economists predict it will rise to 8 or 10 percent next year."
What do folks think this means for the wine business? Most of the importers currently doing such fine work today were not around during the last big recession. Do they have the experience to survive this one? I'd love to hear from Eric Salomon on this subject.
I'm pretty worried as I have many friends ITB and a brother who owns restaurants. They are all very frightened and we live in an area that is doing relatively well (large universities, lots of health-care related stuff).
I also worry that it could be self-fulfilling in that folks could get panicky and react as irrationally in a downturn as they did in the bubble.
I know this is a time to be thankful, but I feel like most human endeavor is doomed to failure because of our own weakness and stupidity.