http://www.doctorhousingbubble.com/exporting-the-us-housing-bubble-japan-and-china-real-estate-bubbles-currency-intervention/One of the arguments made about quantitative easing is that it will somehow cause strong inflation and thus cause home prices to move up. Why? The argument follows the logic that the roundabout way the Federal Reserve is printing money will somehow result in consumer inflation and thus push home values up as well. To that, we can point to quantitative easing part one (QEI) and see that U.S. property values clearly did not appreciate with $1.75 trillion of Fed intervention. Why are we to believe another $600 billion will do anything different from the first round? People will say that all this money had to go somewhere and that is true. Much of it went to repair the balance sheet of insolvent banks but has also become hot money around the world. Just because the housing bubble has popped here doesn’t mean it isn’t raging elsewhere in the world. The housing bubbles of Japan in the 1980s and the current China housing bubble give us an interesting look at the aftermath of bursting bubbles, currency intervention, and quantitative easing.