Housing Market
The Housing Bubble Is Biggest In These Cities
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/29/2015 16:41 -0500"House prices have decoupled most from local incomes in Hong Kong, London, Paris, Singapore, New York and Tokyo. Buying a 60-square-meter apartment exceeds the budget of most people who work even in the highly-skilled service sector. Loose monetary policy has prevented a normalization of housing markets and encouraged local bubble risks to grow"
7 Astounding Charts Show How Badly The Fed Failed The Housing Market
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/29/2015 11:46 -0500For generations, single family housing development was a driver of US economic growth. Today, there is no single family housing industry to speak of. These 7 charts derived from this week’s release of new house sales data from the Census Bureau illustrates just how bad things are.
London Property Bubble Set To Burst - UBS and Deutsche Warn
Submitted by GoldCore on 10/29/2015 09:32 -0500A bursting of property bubbles in London and New York would be expected to have an impact on national economies and indeed on national property markets. Sentiment would be badly impacted. Caution should be the order of the day.
Sweden Launches MOAR QE, As Krugman Paradise Quadruples Down After Dovish Draghi
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/28/2015 06:15 -0500
Fearing the size of Mario Draghi's bazooka (so to speak), Sweden's Riksbank has just expanded QE by SEK65 billion, marking the fourth expansion in nine months and serving notice that the beggar-thy-neighbor, monetary madness gripping DM central banks isn't likely to dissipate anytime soon.
Why Are Half Of All 25-Year-Olds Living With Their Parents? The Federal Reserve Answers
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/27/2015 21:55 -0500Back in 1999, a quarter of all 25-year-olds lived with their parents. By 2013 this number has doubled, and currently half of young adults live in their parents home. Here, according to the St. Louis Fed, is the answer why.
The Worse Things Get For You, The Better They Get For Wall Street
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/27/2015 11:20 -0500"Investors are now facing the second most extreme episode of equity market overvaluation in U.S. history (current valuations on similar measures already exceed those of 1929). The belief that zero interest rates offer no alternative but to accept risk in stocks is valid only if one believes that stocks cannot experience profoundly negative returns. We know precisely how similar valuation extremes have worked out for investors over the completion of the market cycle, and those outcomes have never been deferred indefinitely. The only question at present is how many grains are left in the hourglass."
6 Months Later, The Australian Crack Shack Sells For $60,000 More
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/25/2015 09:17 -0500Yesterday Doi and Gina were back at 7 Little Bloomfield Street, Surry Hills. Their fingers crossed for greater fools because Doi was keen to offload his March purchase. The reason? Like most of us who've bought $800k crack shacks, Doi had a healthy dose of buyers' regret and came to his senses "after realising just how small the property was he decided to sell." How lucky was Doi? This is Australia! Doi found a plumber willing to go 60k higher than he'd paid six months earlier
Slumping Crude Will Send Norway To ZIRP As Economy Careens Toward Recession
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/23/2015 11:40 -0500With crude prices still stuck in the doldrums, economists at Handelsbanken say the Norges Bank will soon be forced to cut rates to zero in order to stave off a looming recession. What we want to know is this: if the housing bubble that the Norges Bank has helped to inflate bursts, how does the central bank plan to deal with the fallout (which will be amplified by the economic drag from low oil prices) when it has exhausted its counter-cyclical capacity by cutting rates to zero?
This Is What Happens After Three Years Of Negative Interest Rates
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/22/2015 19:51 -0500Property prices in Copenhagen have risen 40-60 percent since the middle of 2012, when the central bank first resorted to negative interest rates to defend the krone’s peg to the euro.
Auto Loan Market "Reminds Me Of What Happened Right Before The Crisis", Top Regulator Warns
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/22/2015 14:00 -0500"Some activity in auto loans reminds me of what happened in mortgage-backed securities in the run-up to the crisis. We will be looking at those institutions that have a significant auto-lending operation."
Housing - There's No Way Out
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/22/2015 13:40 -0500The Fed has created permanent housing crisis from which there is no escape.
Existing Home Sales Surge In September (Thanks To Massive Seasonal Adjustment)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/22/2015 09:23 -0500September Existing Home Sales fell 6.5% from August, but you will not see that in the headlines as after adjustments for seasonals, existing home sales actually rose in September by 4.7%, bouncing back from a 5.0% revised lower drop in August (and beating expectatations of a mere 1.5% rise). 2015 has seen unprecedented volatility in the NAR's reported data, but a they note, "Unfortunately, first–time buyers are still failing to generate any meaningful traction this year."
Draghi "MOAR QE Please" Press Conference - Live Feed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/22/2015 07:25 -0500Update: DRAGHI SAYS ECB DISCUSSED A FURTHER LOWERING OF DEPOSIT RATE
Draghi hints at December QE expansion, noting that "the degree of monetary policy accommodation will need to be re-examined at our December monetary policy meeting."
QE vs Negative Rates: A Cost-Benefit Analysis Of The Monetary Twilight Zone
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/21/2015 16:32 -0500Since either NIRP, or QE, or most likely both, are about to cross the Atlantic and make landfall in the US before the Fed is forced to launch the monetary helicopter, those who want to know what is really coming - no, not rate hikes - are urged to read this.
Futures Halt Three-Day Rally, Drop On Energy Weakness, IBM Earnings
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/20/2015 05:55 -0500- 200 DMA
- Apple
- Bank Lending Survey
- Bank of New York
- BOE
- Canadian Dollar
- Capital Markets
- China
- Copper
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- default
- Equity Markets
- fixed
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Housing Market
- Housing Starts
- Iran
- Jim Reid
- Monetary Policy
- Morgan Stanley
- NAHB
- Nikkei
- NYMEX
- Porsche
- Price Action
- Private Equity
- RANSquawk
- recovery
- San Francisco Fed
- Saudi Arabia
- Shenzhen
- Stuyvesant Town
- Verizon
- Volatility
- Yuan
After yesterday's closing ramp "prudently" just ahead of an abysmal IBM earnings report with the lowest revenues since 2002, and the latest rally in capital markets which sent European stocks to their highest level since August on the back of a barrage of global bad data which has unleashed the Pavlovian liquidity dogs screaming for moar central bank bailouts, this morning has seen a modest decline in the Stoxx 600 driven by energy names, while S&P500 futures are set to open lower on IBM's disappointment at least until the latest massive BOJ USDJPY buying spree sends the pair to 120 and the S&P solidly in the green. The biggest political event overnight was the Canadian election, where Trudeau's liberals swept PM Harper from power, capping the biggest political comeback in the country's history; the Canadian dollar is largely unchanged after initially weakening then rising.



