Not exact matches
In early 2004, as American house prices roared higher and there came dire
warnings from some quarters about the existence of a bubble — accompanied, of course, by strident denials from banks, most
economists and the mortgage and real
estate industries — Ben Bernanke (then still a governor before he became Fed chairman) addressed the problem of what to tell the American people.
The Paris - based OECD
warned that «there is a risk that a prolonged period of easy finance could result in a price bubble,» which may endanger French banks [5], while Hervé Boulhol, the OECD's France
economist,
warned against treating French real
estate as a safe - haven and that the property market's powerful rise without a corresponding rise in income «may signal a bubble phenomenon, as a bubble is a disconnection with fundamentals.»
Economists and real
estate experts are
warning retail landlords to prepare for buffeting winds.