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Catherine Cashmore
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Catherine Cashmore
@CC_CASHMORE
Land Cycle Investor - https://t.co/rJvzPRJdSG Director of Cashmore & Co - https://t.co/zNgdn8ewGN Former President of Prosper Australia - https://t.co/yuz2tCheqQ
Melbourne 가입일 Haziran 2010
371 팔로잉4.3K 팔로워
Catherine Cashmore 리트윗함

***WARNING – BEFORE THE HEADLINES CATCH UP, THE INDICATORS AND TIMING WINDOW FOR A SIGNIFICANT ECONOMIC RECESSION..***
(Note that this week's interview on war cycles, is presented as seperate a report from the main LCI Report instead of combined - link below)
There are a few things happening right now that indicate a severe recession is forthcoming.
Firstly, the squeeze on interest rates.
In Australia, financial markets are now pricing in the likelihood of four rate hikes for 2026. It was always the forecast at LCI that we’d see rising rates into the peak. Until a few months ago, it was theoretical that we’d get there. Economists were still pricing in falls.
But now the cycle forecast is in.
We’ve already had two hikes - February and March – the next is likely to be in May, and if we get a fourth after that, it’s going to add around $470 to the average monthly cost of an average $736,000 new mortgage.
There can be long periods in the cycle where prices rise despite interest rates edging higher. We saw it in the lead up to the land price peaks in previous cycles – 1973, 1989, 2008.
That’s because the economy is typically perceived as going well due to the tidal wave of credit created and lent for speculation in preceding years.
However, at the end of the cycle – where we are now - when interest rates finally bite – and the debt burden becomes too great, the timing is ripe for the downturn to commence.
This always occurs in the final two years of expansion phase of the land cycle. It’s an easy count – the expansion phase is (on average) 14 years after the initial turn in prices following the last economic downturn.
In the UK and USA, that started in 2012.
In Australia, however, the timeline was slightly distorted.
Unprecedented government intervention – including $30,000+ first home buyer grants, large-scale infrastructure spending, and relaxed foreign investment rules – prevented the typical post-peak correction from fully playing out.
The market was artificially supported leading to a higher peak from 2007, in 2010.
Albeit, land values did not begin a genuine, non-stimulus-driven recovery until around mid-2012, effectively aligning Australia’s cycle with the UK and US from that point forward.
Therefore, that date (2012) also marks the Australian low for the purposes of cycle timing.
Counting forward from 2012 gives us the familiar 14-year upward phase identified by Fred Harrison, placing the peak in Australian land values around late 2026.
We know from all the historical studies of the land cycle, that eventually, when credit tightens - whether through rising interest rates, stricter lending standards, liquidity shortages, or external shocks – the cracks in the system (mortgage fraud, loose lending practices etc) are exposed, and the downturn typically follows rapidly.
In this week's LCI Report you'll discover
– We look at the latest Cotality data to show how the market is already shifting from peak to decline – the trends the headlines miss
– I drill into housing turnover – the signal that consistently points to a forthcoming recession
– What’s happening with the yield curve? It’s a classic late-cycle indicator – but will it invert this time?
– US banks are already writing down loans – and it’s pointing to a much larger wave building beneath the surface
– How bad could this downturn get? I dig into vacancy data from prior cycles, along with the hidden stock mainstream indexes miss – the implications are confronting
– What unfolding oil shortages mean for Australia specifically – and why the impact could arrive in weeks, not months
– And finally – the timing window I’m now watching for the downturn to take hold
PLUS!!
***FORECASTING WAR CYCLES*** - WITH ANDREW PANCHOLI (DIRECTOR FOR THE FOUNDATION FOR THE STUDY OF CYCLES..)
(NOTE: I've separated this week's interview out from the main LCI report to make it easier to assess and watch. - links below.)
This week’s interview with Andrew Pancholi goes well beyond a market update. It’s a deeper look at where we are in the war cycle, grain prices, solar storms, and how those patterns are already feeding into commodities and inflation, and we tie it into an explanation of why it matters for the final phase of the land cycle.
– A breakdown of the major war cycles Andrew tracks – and how they align with key historical turning points
– Why Iran has been central to his work – and the timing windows that pointed to rising tension
– The role of solar and geosolar activity – and why it’s part of his broader timing framework
– What’s already happening in commodities – particularly grains and why this isn’t a one-off move
– The link between supply disruption, food prices and sustained inflation pressure
– Why escalating tensions in Asia could place Australia in a far more exposed position
– A look at how Andrew actually works – from stacking cycles to tracking smart money
– And how all of this ties back to economic stress, market turning points and the end stage of the cycle
This week's interview
landcycleinvestor.com/post/forecasti…
This week's report
landcycleinvestor.com/post/warning-b…
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Domain Auction Results..
@Domaincomau
National
CR 58% (62% this time last year)
Scheduled 3099
Reported 2148
Sold at Auction 1246
Sold Prior 565
Withdrawn 442
Passed In 429
Private Treaty Sales 8628
Median House $1,267,500
Median Unit $890,000
Total Value $1.17bn
Sydney
CR 58% (66% this time last year)
Scheduled 1326
Reported 828
Sold at Auction 479
Sold Prior 297
Withdrawn 237
Passed In 100
Private Treaty Sales 2688
Median House $1,940,000
Median Unit $1,040,617
Total Value $557m
Melbourne
CR 59% (65% this time last year)
Scheduled 1347
Reported 1020
Sold at Auction 604
Sold Prior 212
Withdrawn 160
Passed In 248
Private Treaty Sales 2497
Median House $1,020,000
Median Unit $700,000
Total Value $457m
Brisbane
CR 51% (47% this time last year)
Scheduled 168
Reported 113
Sold at Auction 58
Sold Prior 14
Withdrawn 22
Passed In 33
Private Treaty Sales 1263
Median House $1,380,000
Median Unit N/A
Total Value $56m
Adelaide
CR 59% (36% this time last year)
Scheduled 151
Reported 99
Sold at Auction 58
Sold Prior 16
Withdrawn 7
Passed In 25
Private Treaty Sales 571
Median House $1,102,500
Median Unit N/A
Total Value $59m
Canberra
CR 53% (55% this time last year)
Scheduled 107
Reported 88
Sold at Auction 47
Sold Prior 26
Withdrawn 16
Passed In 23
Private Treaty Sales 386
Median House $1,222,000
Median Unit N/A
Total Value $40m
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Catherine Cashmore 리트윗함
Catherine Cashmore 리트윗함

Catherine Cashmore 리트윗함

@AlboMP @Tony_Burke @PaulineHansonOz Tony Burke threatened and a scuffle breaks out amid cries of "Allahu Akhbar".
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Catherine Cashmore 리트윗함

"Australia spent 35 years borrowing foreign savings to inflate land prices."
Fact Check: Accurate ✅✅✅
Mark 🇦🇺@Mark_Graph
Australia spent 35 years borrowing foreign savings to inflate land prices. Land: 120% to 320% of GDP. Dwellings: barely moved. The asset is a valuation gain. The debt is real. The interest payments leave the country. This is what slow capital misallocation looks like from the inside. #auspol #ausbiz #ausecon
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Catherine Cashmore 리트윗함

Ladies and gentlemens, brace yourselves history is repeating with a vengeance, and the sequel looks even more explosive.
I present to you the new and improved synthetic mortgage-backed CDOs that detonated the 2008 financial crisis… rebranded for 2026 as private credit funds.
BlackRock has just made history
For the first time ever, they’ve slammed the gates shut on their high risk $26 billion private credit flagship (HLEND), capping redemptions at a brutal 5% after investors tried to yank out 9.3% ($1.2 billion) in a single quarter. Only $620 million gets paid out good luck to the rest still trapped inside.
And that’s just the appetizer.
Blackstone’s monster BCRED the largest non-traded private credit vehicle on the planet at $82 billion….faced a record 7.9% redemption tsunami ($3.8 billion sought).
They flexed to meet it all (upsizing the limit and injecting firm/employee cash), but net outflows still hit $1.7 billion after inflows.
These two titans alone represent over $108 billion in combined outflow pressure right now.
The entire $2 trillion global private credit empire is teetering on the edge and we haven’t even seen a real equities bloodbath yet.
Imagine what happens when panic truly sets in, when the baby gets thrown out with the bathwater, and forced sales of illiquid loans start cascading through the system.
This isn’t just a liquidity hiccup. It’s the echoes of 2008 on steroids: opaque lending, retail investors piling in for yield, liquidity mismatches waiting to explode, and now the first real gates slamming shut.
The contagion could make the subprime meltdown look bullish in comparison.
Buckle up…..this shadow banking giant is waking up, and when it stumbles, the fallout won’t be contained to a few funds.
Stay vigilant and remain diligent.
Yours truly,
The Great Martis✨
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Auction results - @Domaincomau - the table was far better for analysis... change it back.
Melb and Syd markets are weakening. Although the Melb auction I attended today had 4 bidders.
4 bidders and 2 fig trees.
National
Preliminary clearance rate: 59% (63% this time last year)
Scheduled: 3,100
Reported: 2,095
Sold at auction: 1,239
Sold prior: 586
Withdrawn: 397
Passed in: 422
Private treaty sales: 8,005
Median house price: $1,260,500
Median unit price: $877,500
Total value sold: $1.079bn
Sydney
Clearance rate: 60% (65% last year)
Scheduled: 1,307
Reported: 804
Sold at auction: 485
Sold prior: 306
Withdrawn: 226
Passed in: 81
Private treaty sales: 2,686
Median house price: $1,875,000
Median unit price: $1,110,800
Total value sold: $493m
Melbourne
Clearance rate: 61% (65% last year)
Scheduled: 1,324
Reported: 964
Sold at auction: 583
Sold prior: 214
Withdrawn: 123
Passed in: 244
Private treaty sales: 2,022
Median house price: $1,020,000
Median unit price: $715,000
Total value sold: $435m
Brisbane
Clearance rate: 40% (52% last year)
Scheduled: 166
Reported: 115
Sold at auction: 46
Sold prior: 13
Withdrawn: 17
Passed in: 50
Private treaty sales: 1,260
Median house price: $1,567,500
Total value sold: $56m
Adelaide
Clearance rate: 66% (47% last year)
Scheduled: 164
Reported: 99
Sold at auction: 65
Sold prior: 18
Withdrawn: 7
Passed in: 21
Private treaty sales: 442
Median house price: $1,100,000
Total value sold: $53m
Canberra
Clearance rate: 53% (46% last year)
Scheduled: 139
Reported: 113
Sold at auction: 60
Sold prior: 35
Withdrawn: 24
Passed in: 26
Private treaty sales: 251
Median house price: $1,135,000
Total value sold: $40m
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Catherine Cashmore 리트윗함

THIS WEEK'S LAND CYCLE INVESTOR REPORT!
***HOW WAR REWRITES THE LAND CYCLE IN BOTH TIMING AND PRICES... BE PREPARED.. ***.
A few days ago, I caught up for a brief chat with global forecaster David Murrin.
Those who have followed my work for some time will likely be familiar with David’s analysis. I’ve been corresponding with him since 2022, when I first came across his work, which in part draws on the 54-year Kondratieff cycle (K-wave – 3 x 18).
Major conflict tends to emerge at the end of these long cycles.
However, David’s depth of knowledge when it comes to geopolitics, military strategy and weapons systems places him in a far stronger position than myself to assess what events may occur next – particularly in an environment that is already moving into the early stages of what is now assessed to be a third world war.
I referenced one of his charts illustrating the commodity cycle in last week’s Land Cycle Investor report.
Kondratieff’s data evidenced that prices bottomed in the 1770s and peaked in 1819 after the Napoleonic wars.
They bottomed again in the 1840s and peaked in the early 1860s with the US Civil War.
They bottomed again in the late 1890s and peaked in the 1920s — just following the First World War.
This analysis allowed Kondratieff to forecast the early 1930s depression (which occurred after his death), with the subsequent recovery swinging upwards into the 1970s (1974).
2000 was the low point that started the next long wave.
In other words, we are now firmly on the upswing of the commodity price wave due to peak at the end of this decade (likely around 2027 - 2030) – which also forecasts war (as we’re already seeing globally in both Europe and the Middle East.)
Hence! This week’s LCI Report looks at a question very few analysts ever ask – what actually happens to the land cycle when the world moves into a period of major conflict?
Using historical analysis from the First and Second World Wars, the 1970s commodity shock, and the work of Homer Hoyt, Samuel Benner, Fred Harrison and the Kondratieff Wave, we examine how war has distorts the timing of the land cycle – and what that could mean for the current cycle as we approach the anticipated 2026 peak.
You'll discover
• The little-known way World War One shifted the timing of the 18-year land cycle
• Why the “Lost Depression” of the early 1920s didn’t crash real estate as it should have
• The farmland boom that preceded the last major commodity peaks
• What the 1970s oil shock reveals about property markets today
• The 150-year-old forecasting chart that still maps market turning points and demonstrates the WW1 disruption to the Land Cycle's timing
• Why commodity booms often precede major real estate downturns
• The historical relationship between war, migration and land values
• The four global crises Fred Harrison believes will collide at this cycle peak
PLUS MUCH MORE!!
landcycleinvestor.com/post/how-war-r…
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Auction results.. Domain.. Don't much like the new format - which doesn't include last week's revised. The results in a table were far clearer to assess (@Domaincomau )..
But here goes..
CRs are falling.. median prices will follow
SYDNEY!! 64%
Scheduled1278
Reported783
Sold at Auction500
Sold Prior324
Withdrawn198
Passed In78
Private Treaty Sales2592
Median sale price (houses)$1,975,000
MELBOURNE!! 59%
Scheduled596
Reported415
Sold at Auction244
Sold Prior81
Withdrawn61
Passed In105
Private Treaty Sales2189
Median sale price (houses)$940,000
Median sale price (units)$677,000
Total value sold (million)$181
BRISBANE!!! 49%
Scheduled114
Reported75
Sold at Auction37
Sold Prior10
Withdrawn11
Passed In26
Private Treaty Sales1237
Median sale price (houses)$1,370,000
Median sale price (units)N/A
Total value sold (million)$41
ADELAIDE!! 70%
Scheduled130
Reported82
Sold at Auction57
Sold Prior13
Withdrawn5
Passed In15
Private Treaty Sales514
Median sale price (houses)$1,100,000
Median sale price (units)N/A
Total value sold (million)$52
CANBERRA!! 59%
Scheduled75
Reported63
Sold at Auction37
Sold Prior13
Withdrawn9
Passed In17
Private Treaty Sales358
Median sale price (houses)$1,320,000
Median sale price (units)N/A
Total value sold (million)$32
And.....
NATIONAL!! 62%
Scheduled2193
Reported1418
Sold at Auction875
Sold Prior441
Withdrawn284
Passed In241
Private Treaty Sales8097
Median sale price (houses)$1,411,000
Median sale price (units)$922,500
Total value sold (million)$848
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@grousecobba @Domaincomau @grok Prior to auction results are included in the CR - the falling CR in Melb/Syd is just due to market conditions

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@CC_CASHMORE @Domaincomau @grok am i silly or does not give enough info on the reason why its falling? I.e. prior auction results
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Catherine Cashmore 리트윗함

In this week’s Land Cycle Investor report, I outline how the current conflict is accelerating the move into the final downturn of the land cycle.
- How today’s setup mirrors the land cycle and Kondratieff Wave peak
- How war in the Middle East will impact Australia
- How Perth behaved in the last Kondratieff Wave peak – and whether we could see a similar pattern.
- How the land cycle’s final stage is unfolding – and the path toward a sharp reversal
ALSO!
***On the Ground in America - Melody Wright on the Hidden Housing Stress***
To examine where things are now in the U.S., I had the pleasure of connecting once again with with Melody Wright to discuss what she’s seeing on the ground.
Melody Wright is a US housing and credit analyst with deep experience inside the mortgage and financial system. She worked through the Global Financial Crisis managing default portfolios and now tracks housing, credit and liquidity conditions across more than 80 US markets in real time.
Her focus is not headlines or median price series, but the structural plumbing of the system – lending flows, shadow credit, vacancy, transaction activity and investor behaviour.
Her assessment is blunt: the US property cycle has already peaked, but the stress is being obscured by distorted data and policy intervention.
Melody is one of my favourite guests to interview – possibly my favourite. We think along very similar lines and often find surprising synchronicities in our research, which makes for an easy, natural exchange.
The conversation is wide-ranging: we cover a lot of ground, compare research, test ideas and talk through how each of us is interpreting the signals in this stage of the cycle.
In this interview – you’ll discover..
- Why US housing stress is far worse than headline data suggests
- Where oversupply is building fast – and why it’s being ignored
- The hidden credit risks sitting outside the banking system
- Why private credit could be this cycle’s subprime moment
- What vacancy and transaction data are really signalling
- How government programs are distorting price measures
- Why new-home markets are flashing early warning signs
- Where liquidity is quietly draining from the system
- The parallels between today and the lead-up to past downturns
- What this means for the timing of the current land cycle peak
How bad is the collapse going to be? We get to that as well..
landcycleinvestor.com/.../war-credit...
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Catherine Cashmore 리트윗함
Catherine Cashmore 리트윗함

$3.00 a litre for 98. It’s getting serious.
7NEWS Sydney@7NewsSydney
Petrol prices in Sydney are tonight hitting $3 a litre as concerns deepen over oil supplies from the Middle East.
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Catherine Cashmore 리트윗함

This week’s LCI report is the full replay of the LCI live ZOOM event with finance guru Pete Wargent. We covered a lot of ground – far more than “where are prices going next?”
Firstly – a huge thank you to everyone who jumped on the live session. It honestly meant a lot to see so many of you there. I never take your time or support for granted.
We had so many questions this round – far more than we could get through. It’s been a little while since I’ve done a live Zoom (our first for the year), so they’d clearly been building up. If I didn’t get to yours, please don’t think it was overlooked.
I’ll be doing another session with Pete in a couple of months’ and we’ll dive back into all of it again – including pinning timing for the anticipated peak in property and equity markets.
I’m also hoping to do a live Webinar with Global Forecaster David Murrin and Director for the Foundation for the Study of Cycles, Andrew Pancholi in the not-too-distant future.
***Talks about potential changes to CGT - the final nail in the coffin for further price increases.. ?***
As for this week’s live – it started with the big political risk now creeping into the housing market – capital gains tax.
It’s not just about the mechanics of whether changes would be grandfathered, but the real issue is how it would impact sentiment and therefore prices.
***Could High Immigration - Pressure on Supply/Demand - Prevent a Large Downturn.. ? ***
From there we moved into the one factor that has propped markets up through the second half of this cycle – immigration.
We unpacked why Australia isn’t necessarily Canada or New Zealand (skills shortages, infrastructure, the Olympics, the NDIS), but also why it’s dangerous to assume today’s population surge is a permanent “new normal”. In past downturns, migration patterns can flip hard and fast – and when that happens, vacancy rates and prices don’t stay where they were.
***Leading Indicators For the Land Cycle Peak... ***
We also dug into a classic land cycle tell – building permits as a leading indicator. I walked through why the old researchers (Hoyt, Wenzlick, Riddleman and others) watched permits so closely – and why the US homebuilder peak is flashing late-cycle signals again.
***The Future of Australian Interest Rates.. ? ***
Then we went straight into Australian rates and the psychology shift that comes when people realise the “rate cutting cycle” was temporary.
Pete broke down what the inflation prints imply and why markets are watching May so closely - and why this was all part of the land cycle forecast.
***How the Market can Change from Under-Supply to Over-Supply... ***
The discussion then turned to the supply story – and why “undersupply” can be a misleading comfort blanket at cycle peaks.
***Property Indicators to Watch to Warn of the Potential Downturn.. ***
We also covered the practical indicators subscribers should watch if they want early warning signals before the downturn.
***City-by-City Breakdowns..***
There were strong city-by-city takeaways too.
We talked about why Perth is still running hot, why that doesn’t mean “forever”, and why commodity-cycle tailwinds can change the speed of recovery after a wobble.
***Where to Stash Your Capital Ahead of the 2026 Peak..... ***
We finished with a very real question people are asking quietly right now – and a question that comes up in every live event - how do you think about capital preservation heading into a potential 2027 downturn if you’re not a trader?
Pete walked through simple portfolio logic (and why “cash” matters.), and we touched on what tends to happen to gold in crisis periods – and why different commodities behave differently as you approach the peak.
All this and more.. we had plenty of questions!
***Coming Up! ***
Next week I hope to get U.S. analyst Melody Wright from M3_Melody Substack back on for an update on the U.S. markets. I interviewed Melody last year in a terrific discussion on the market. You can watch it on the LCI YouTube channel.
***Bonus Podcast! ***
As a bonus, I also sat down with Leith Van Onselen Chief Economists at MacroBusiness this week to dig deeper into the impact of CGT on property markets, along with the latest population data and what it really means for prices.
Log into your Land Cycle Investor account now to read this week's report and watch the LIVE replay.
landcycleinvestor.com/post/lci-live-…
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Here they are in total - Domain's Auction results..
Sydney
Scheduled 1489
Reported 939
Sold at Auction 611Sold
Prior376
Withdrawn 231
Passed In87
Private Treaty Sales 2703
Median sale price (houses) $1,910,000
Median sale price (units)$1,105,000
Total value sold (million)$662
Melbourne
Scheduled 1634
Reported 1228
Sold at Auction 811
Sold Prior 269
Withdrawn1 45
Passed In 266
Private Treaty Sales 2456
Median sale price (houses)$1,130,000
Median sale price (units)$760,000
Total value sold (million)$622
Brisbane
Scheduled170
Reported108
Sold at Auction52
Sold Prior13
Withdrawn17
Passed In36
Private Treaty Sales1291
Median sale price (houses)$1,275,000
Median sale price (units)N/A
Total value sold (million)$49
Canberra
Scheduled141
Reported108
Sold at Auction63
Sold Prior28
Withdrawn13
Passed In29
Private Treaty Sales360
Median sale price (houses)$1,173,500
Median sale price (units)N/A
Total value sold (million)$50
Adelaide
Scheduled156
Reported105
Sold at Auction71
Sold Prior14
Withdrawn7
Passed In22
Private Treaty Sales530
Median sale price (houses)$982,500
Median sale price (units)N/A
Total value sold (million)$56
National
Scheduled3590
Reported2488
Sold at Auction1608
Sold Prior700
Withdrawn413
Passed In440
Private Treaty Sales8434
Median sale price (houses)$1,300,000
Median sale price (units)$870,000
Total value sold (million)$1,442
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