Skip to content
×
Pro Members Get
Full Access!
Get off the sidelines and take action in real estate investing with BiggerPockets Pro. Our comprehensive suite of tools and resources minimize mistakes, support informed decisions, and propel you to success.
Advanced networking features
Market and Deal Finder tools
Property analysis calculators
Landlord Command Center
ANNUAL Save 16%
$32.50 /mo
$390 billed annualy
MONTHLY
$39 /mo
billed monthly
7 day free trial. Cancel anytime
×
Try Pro Features for Free
Start your 7 day free trial. Pick markets, find deals, analyze and manage properties.
All Forum Categories
All Forum Categories
Followed Discussions
Followed Categories
Followed People
Followed Locations
Market News & Data
General Info
Real Estate Strategies
Landlording & Rental Properties
Real Estate Professionals
Financial, Tax, & Legal
Real Estate Classifieds
Reviews & Feedback

All Forum Posts by: Eric Bilderback

Eric Bilderback has started 56 posts and replied 957 times.

Post: MY THOUGHTS ON SILICON VALLEY BANK COLLAPSE

Eric BilderbackPosted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Sisters, OR
  • Posts 1,003
  • Votes 1,558

Is this how we get the to the digital Fed coin?  I’d say we’re close to the introduction.  
When the choices are between asset prices dropping and a digital currency BP brass and the investor class will line up and push the digital currency line.  

Post: MY THOUGHTS ON SILICON VALLEY BANK COLLAPSE

Eric BilderbackPosted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Sisters, OR
  • Posts 1,003
  • Votes 1,558
Quote from @J Scott:
Quote from @Eric Bilderback:
Quote from @J Scott:
Quote from @Eric Bilderback:

If you want to get rich off the decline of your nation then you do exactly what Corporate America and Washington DC are doing to their country.  

Give me a country full of family wage career jobs, moms that can afford to stay home with their kids, that is a country worth fighting even dying for.  I don't find bringing new innovation to the world inspiring and I sure don't agree with the mindset that views society as a giant economy.


There are a lot of things about this country that I dislike (including the corporate welfare and the political corruption on both sides), but as someone with kids, I have no choice but to hope that things get better.

Look at those folks in East Palatine or kids growing up in Flint, MI that drink water with Mercury in it.  Wheres their bailout? as the US gets into wars and bailsout the richest folks in the country.  I doubt anyone in those communities cares about Americas standing what the hell does the worlds reserve currency matter to them?  In fact I would argue both those communities would probably like to see the elite (for the lack of a better word) who have been so indifferent to them go bust.

Morally the bailout of SVB was repulsive but also strategically a blunder if your objective is to give more Americans opportunity and make America strengthen our country for the future. 

Obviously many smart, good people disagree with me but for the life of me I don't see how.  


I don't disagree with you at all. A country is wealthy as ours -- especially one that wastes as much money as ours -- has no excuse for anybody going hungry, anybody not having a roof over their head, anybody not having access to good health care, anybody not having access to clean water, etc.

Capitalism and ensuring that people's basic needs are met are not antithetical to one another.  

We have a lot of things in abundance in this country today, but one thing we don't have in abundance is empathy.  😕

 Awwww now I feel good.  

I love this country and I love investing, wealth, all of it.  But this country is not what it once was and I don't think people here on BP understand or can sympathize that some of the very factors that have made their investments successful have had the opposite effect on other communities.

@J Scott your a gentleman have a great weekend,

Post: MY THOUGHTS ON SILICON VALLEY BANK COLLAPSE

Eric BilderbackPosted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Sisters, OR
  • Posts 1,003
  • Votes 1,558
Quote from @J Scott:
Quote from @Eric Bilderback:

If you want to get rich off the decline of your nation then you do exactly what Corporate America and Washington DC are doing to their country.  

Give me a country full of family wage career jobs, moms that can afford to stay home with their kids, that is a country worth fighting even dying for.  I don't find bringing new innovation to the world inspiring and I sure don't agree with the mindset that views society as a giant economy.


There are a lot of things about this country that I dislike (including the corporate welfare and the political corruption on both sides), but as someone with kids, I have no choice but to hope that things get better.

Look at those folks in East Palatine or kids growing up in Flint, MI that drink water with Mercury in it.  Wheres their bailout? as the US gets into wars and bailsout the richest folks in the country.  I doubt anyone in those communities cares about Americas standing what the hell does the worlds reserve currency matter to them?  In fact I would argue both those communities would probably like to see the elite (for the lack of a better word) who have been so indifferent to them go bust.

Morally the bailout of SVB was repulsive but also strategically a blunder if your objective is to give more Americans opportunity and make America strengthen our country for the future. 

Obviously many smart, good people disagree with me but for the life of me I don't see how.  

Post: MY THOUGHTS ON SILICON VALLEY BANK COLLAPSE

Eric BilderbackPosted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Sisters, OR
  • Posts 1,003
  • Votes 1,558
Quote from @Michael Wooldridge:
Quote from @Eric Bilderback:

Same thing would happen to the businesses that held their deposits at SVB that happened to all the communities, businesses, families that worked and depended on a mill when they shut down logging or the same thing that happens when companies outsource production overseas and close whatever production factory.  You go bust and your community becomes depressed.  But hey at least they couldn't tell the folks in Silicon Valley they need to learn to code.  LOL 


It’s about the question of scale and systemic impact. Might not be fair but life rarely is and it is logical.
 

 I get the argument the @J Scott is making.  I just think it is short sided but I am not sure I have articulated mine enough where he understands what I'm saying.  

Post: MY THOUGHTS ON SILICON VALLEY BANK COLLAPSE

Eric BilderbackPosted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Sisters, OR
  • Posts 1,003
  • Votes 1,558
Quote from @J Scott:
Quote from @Michael Wooldridge:

So in other words your saying it doesn’t make sense to give up on services in our “services” economy? 
 

If you want to secure your place as the world superpower short-term, you need to control the reserve currency.

If you want to secure your place as the world superpower mid-term, you need to control innovation.

If you want to secure your place as the world superpower long-term, you need to control education.

The tech industry in the US is the second piece of that equation...


If you want to get rich off the decline of your nation then you do exactly what Corporate America and Washington DC are doing to their country.  

Give me a country full of family wage career jobs, moms that can afford to stay home with their kids, that is a country worth fighting even dying for.  I don't find bringing new innovation to the world inspiring and I sure don't agree with the mindset that views society as a giant economy.

Post: MY THOUGHTS ON SILICON VALLEY BANK COLLAPSE

Eric BilderbackPosted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Sisters, OR
  • Posts 1,003
  • Votes 1,558

Same thing would happen to the businesses that held their deposits at SVB that happened to all the communities, businesses, families that worked and depended on a mill when they shut down logging or the same thing that happens when companies outsource production overseas and close whatever production factory.  You go bust and your community becomes depressed.  But hey at least they couldn't tell the folks in Silicon Valley they need to learn to code.  LOL 

Post: MY THOUGHTS ON SILICON VALLEY BANK COLLAPSE

Eric BilderbackPosted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Sisters, OR
  • Posts 1,003
  • Votes 1,558
Quote from @J Scott:
Quote from @Eric Bilderback:
Quote from @J Scott:
Quote from @Costin I.:

Hey'all, you been all baited by OP with his ChatGPT generated post. Here is a rebuttal to his "deep thoughts on the collapse of SVB", also thanks to ChatGPT in 3 seconds:

Yes, I pretty much completely agree.

Here are my more detailed thoughts from today's BP Podcast:

https://www.biggerpockets.com/...


 I wanted to push on little on your appearance on the podcast.  You seem to be apologizing to extent for the Fed stepping in to "prevent panic."  Am I reading you right?  I know you're an econ guy and want to keep it there but the fact is the Fed has picked winners and losers and SF, Denver these big metros on the coast, folks like myself (to a small extent) who own assets have done well at the expense of the working class.  Do you disagree with that?


I'm not sure exactly what you're asking, but Let me try to answer the question I think you're asking...

While I appreciate the difficult job the Fed has to do and I think it's an important job (I'm not one of those "abolish the Fed" type people), I haven't been overly thrilled with their policy decisions over the last decade.

While the Fed should be impartial, with a focus on protecting the economy, they've become much too political, and way too reactionary.

All that said, I very much agree with their approach to the recent banking issues.  Despite what a lot of people want to argue, they haven't bailed out the banks. SVB is going to go out of business, all employees will lose their jobs, and shareholders will lose their investments.

What the fed and the FDIC have done -- so far -- is bailed out the regular guy. By protecting depositors, they are protecting the tens of thousands of employees of those depositors. Ensuring that the actions of the banks, which have been out of the control of the depositors, don't impact the families of all the people who just happened to be employees of those bank customers.

As far as I'm concerned, bailing out depositors is always the right move.

I'm not particularly thrilled that future fed policy will focus on keeping banks in business, but again, I think this is good for the regular guy.  If everybody we're to start moving their money to the large banks and away from regional and local banks, we'd end up with just a few big banks, which is bad for consumers.

I did tiptoe around the question but you answered it for the most part.  I disagree whole heartily that keeping all these venture capitalists and tech start ups solvent is looking out for the little guy.  And I wish that there was some BP brass that had the same view point as myself.  

I very much appreciate your response and engagement. 

Good Luck on all your future success,

Post: MY THOUGHTS ON SILICON VALLEY BANK COLLAPSE

Eric BilderbackPosted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Sisters, OR
  • Posts 1,003
  • Votes 1,558
Quote from @J Scott:
Quote from @Costin I.:

Hey'all, you been all baited by OP with his ChatGPT generated post. Here is a rebuttal to his "deep thoughts on the collapse of SVB", also thanks to ChatGPT in 3 seconds:

Yes, I pretty much completely agree.

Here are my more detailed thoughts from today's BP Podcast:

https://www.biggerpockets.com/...


 I wanted to push on little on your appearance on the podcast.  You seem to be apologizing to extent for the Fed stepping in to "prevent panic."  Am I reading you right?  I know you're an econ guy and want to keep it there but the fact is the Fed has picked winners and losers and SF, Denver these big metros on the coast, folks like myself (to a small extent) who own assets have done well at the expense of the working class.  Do you disagree with that?

Post: SVB Impacts to Real Estate

Eric BilderbackPosted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Sisters, OR
  • Posts 1,003
  • Votes 1,558
Quote from @Michael Wooldridge:
Quote from @Eric Bilderback:

I would imagine the good folks of East Palestine, OH could only dream of the red carpet being rolled out for Silicon Valley depositors.  

This might be checkmate for Chairman Powell.  It will be very interesting to see how he navigates this especially if this metastasizes into a crisis. 


 Or checkmate for the economy.IF Powell doesn’t care. I’m not sure he doesn’t to be honest. 

But I agree no idea how he can’t back down. I wish - think it was Goldman - didn’t say over the weekend that he won’t be raising rates now in March. No need to goad him. 

 I think Powell is a good guy (certainly not my cup of tea) but he is trying to serve his country honorably in an impossible spot, albeit much of it his own making.  

We may be at the beginning of what the yield curve has been forecasting events will make interest rates hikes improbable. 

Post: SVB Impacts to Real Estate

Eric BilderbackPosted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Sisters, OR
  • Posts 1,003
  • Votes 1,558

I would imagine the good folks of East Palestine, OH could only dream of the red carpet being rolled out for Silicon Valley depositors.  

This might be checkmate for Chairman Powell.  It will be very interesting to see how he navigates this especially if this metastasizes into a crisis.