π£ Are They Crashing the Market on Purpose?
Why High Rates Might Be About Buying Your House — Not Fighting Inflation
Let’s talk about something no one wants to say out loud:
What if the cost-of-living crisis, sky-high interest rates, and mortgage pressure isn’t just bad luck…
What if it’s deliberate?
Sound extreme? Maybe.
But it’s worth asking: Who stands to gain when you lose your home?
π¦ They Say It’s About Inflation
The official story goes:
“Interest rates are high to bring down inflation.”
But inflation has already fallen, and ordinary people are still drowning in repayments.
Mortgage rates are stuck at 5–7%, repossessions are rising, and many households are one interest hike away from default.
So… why keep rates this high?
𧨠What If It’s an Engineered Collapse?
Here’s a theory you’re not supposed to think about:
Step 1: Keep Interest Rates High
Force pain. Make homeownership unsustainable for average people.
Step 2: Trigger Mass Defaults
People can’t pay. Homes go into forced sale or repossession. Banks want their money back — fast.
Step 3: Flood the Market with Cheap Properties
Distressed sellers = desperate prices.
Banks offload properties for less than they’re worth.
Step 4: Let the Big Boys Buy Everything
- Government bodies
- Housing associations
- Banks (Lloyds is buying up homes)
- Investment funds like Blackstone (yep — they’re watching)
The people with cash scoop up homes. Not to help… but to own and rent out. Forever.
π§² Who Really Benefits?
|
Group |
What They Gain |
|
Government |
Can say theyΓ’€™re expanding housing supply |
|
Banks |
Recover some cash, avoid total collapse |
|
Big Investors |
Buy assets cheap, rent them back to you |
|
You |
Γ’€¦ lose your home and become a tenant again |
π‘ And Then What?
After all the homes are bought up, guess what happens?
Interest rates magically come down again.
So the economy can “recover” — and the newly poor population can start consuming again (while renting back the house they used to own).
It’s not a conspiracy.
It’s a business model.
⚠️ Wake-Up Call: This Isn’t New
- After 2008, big funds bought thousands of US homes from repossession lists.
- In the UK, local councils and banks like Lloyds are buying back homes they once sold off.
- BlackRock, Blackstone, and similar megafunds have billions ready for a crash.
They’re not scared of a crash. They’re waiting for one.
π¬ Final Word
If you’re feeling gaslit by the news, the government, or anyone saying “it’ll be fine” while your mortgage goes up by £600 a month… trust your gut.
The pain might be part of the plan.
They want your house.
They want it cheap.
And they want to rent it back to you — at a profit.
So protect yourself.
Stay alert.
And don’t let them pretend this is just “economics.”
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