New Home Sales
What Bubble: Average New Home Sale Price Rises To All Time High
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/24/2013 10:35 -0500Where things get outright bizarre, is when one looks at the series showing the average sales price for New Homes. Keep in mind that an hour ago we showed that mortgage applications have tumbled to a fresh 13 year low, while refi apps slid to the lowest in 5 years. So what happened to the average new home sales price in the month of November? Well, it just hit a new all time high! Why, because why it can.
Christmas Eve Market Recap
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/24/2013 07:08 -0500While shortened Christmas Eve trading is traditionally the lowest volume day of the year, based on recent trends it may be difficult for today's action to stand out from the landscape thanks to an ongoing volume collapse, which however should make the even more traditional low-volume melt up that much easier. Sure enough, futures are modestly higher driven by their favorite signal, the EURJPY. Not surprisingly there has been particularly light newsflow with market closures in Germany, Italy and Switzerland in addition to early market closures for UK, France, Netherlands and Spain. Those markets that are open are trading in positive territory with the FTSE 100 being supported by BSkyB following an upbeat pre-market report for the company and their customer base, whilst the IBEX 35 is being supported by the financial sector. Overnight in China there was news of an injection of CNY 29bln via a 7-day reverse repo, although market commentators have said that this is more of a gesture than any meaningful intervention given the size of the country's banking market. Fixed income markets are particularly light with there being no trade in the bund future given the Eurex closure, with other trading products relatively flat given the lack of newsflow. However, the short-sterling curve has bear-steepened and thus continuing the trend seen since the end of last week as a result of both UK unemployment and UK GDP coming in better than expected.
Why The Fed Won’t Taper In December
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/08/2013 10:20 -0500Thinking like the Fed
To know your enemy, you must become your enemy -Sun Tzu
In war, poker, chess and many other endeavors, wise old hands will advise you to think like your opponent. We’ll try a related idea here by seeing if we can think like the members of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC). Specifically, we’ll pretend to write part of the statement for the FOMC’s December 17/18 meeting.
Quiet Overnight Trading Expected To Make Way For Volatile Session
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/05/2013 07:05 -0500It has been a relatively quiet overnight session, if with a downward bias in the EURJPY which means futures are just modestly in the red. The action however is merely deferred, with a slew of macroeconomic reports on the horizon, chief of which is the ECB rate decision, which consensus has as unchanged at 0.25%, although Draghi's subsequent conference is expected to lead to EUR weakness, even if briefly, since the central bank is widely expected to downgrade both growth and inflation forecasts. DB adds that the recent rise in eonia — which may reflect concerns about the treatment of LTROs in the end-December AQR and be encouraging the accelerated 3Y LTRO repayments — may warrant a temporary liquidity easing: a special short-term tender; temporarily easing minimum reserve requirements; or — technically possible, if politically controversial — temporarily suspending the SMP sterilization process. Concurrent with the draghi conference, we also get the second revision of Q3 GDP, which consensus now expects to rise to 3.1%, as well as this week's initial jobless claims random number generator. Later in the day the Factory Orders update is expected to show a -1.0% decline, while Fed speakers Lockhart and Fisher round off the day.
October New Home Sales Surge By Most Since 1980 As Median Price Drops To One Year Low
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/04/2013 10:21 -0500
With the government shutdown which apparently had zero impact on the economy, moments ago the Census Bureau released not one but two New Home Sales reports together due to the delay in data reporting. The data showed that while in September new home sales declined from 379K to 354K annualized, or the lowest since early 2012, the subsequent rebound sent New Home Sales to 444K, or a 90K increase, +25.4%, in one month was the biggest month over month jump since May 1980! What was less noted is the prior revisions, with June revised 0.9% lower, July down 4.4%, and August revised by a whopping 10% lower. So what caused the October surge? Possibly it was pent up demand, because as the first chart below shows, an unbroken trendline suggests a modest decline in sales data net of the prior downward revisions. However, what was most likely the reason for the increase is that the Median new home sales price tumbled to $245,800, down from $257,400 and well below the recent highs of $279,300. In fact, this was the lost median new price in one year. Supply - meet demand, and equilibrium price.
Futures Fail To Ramp On Lack Of Yen Carry Excitement
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/04/2013 07:08 -0500- ABC News
- Australia
- B+
- Barclays
- Beige Book
- Bond
- CDS
- China
- Copper
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Deutsche Bank
- Eurozone
- Fail
- fixed
- Germany
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- headlines
- Iran
- Iraq
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- LIBOR
- New Home Sales
- Nikkei
- Non-manufacturing ISM
- Obamacare
- OPEC
- POMO
- POMO
- RANSquawk
- RBS
- Saudi Arabia
- SocGen
- Standard Chartered
- Ukraine
- Unemployment
- Yen

While there was a plethora of macro data (starting with some ugly numbers out of Australia which clobbered AUD pairs overnight), China HSBC Services PMI dipping slighlty from 52.6 to 52.5, Final Eurozone PMI Services (printing at 51.2 up from 50.9 and beating expectations of the same on an increase in German PMI numbers from 54.5 to 55.7 and a decline in French PMI from 48.8 to 48.0), Eurozone retail sales declining by 0.2%, on expectations of an unchanged print, and much more (see below), perhaps the most important news of the day came from Japan which many expect will be the source of much more easing in the coming months and thus serve as marginal lever to push global fungible markets higher. However, not only did various BOJ officials for the first time in a while talk down expectations of a QE boost, but the head of the Japan GPIF said that it doesn't need to sell JGBs right now as it would "rock markets" and that instead can achieve its targeted 52% weighing as bonds mature, that it may buy foreign bonds instead to raise weighting to core target (as the Fed buys Japan bonds?), and that it will be very difficult for Japan to hit the BOJ's inflation target in 2 years. Is Japan already getting cold feet on rumors of more QE and did it realize there are only so many assets it can monetize. If so, watch out below on the EURJPY which has now priced in about 700 pips of expected BOJ QE boosting in early 2014.
Key Events And Issues In The Coming Week
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/02/2013 07:58 -0500- Australia
- BOE
- Brazil
- Budget Deficit
- Central Banks
- China
- Consumer Credit
- Consumer Sentiment
- CPI
- Fisher
- Housing Market
- Hungary
- Initial Jobless Claims
- LTRO
- Mexico
- Michigan
- Monetary Policy
- New Home Sales
- Non-manufacturing ISM
- Norges Bank
- Norway
- Personal Consumption
- Personal Income
- Poland
- recovery
- Romania
- SocGen
- Trade Balance
- Turkey
- Ukraine
- Unemployment
Previewing the rest of this week’s events, we have a bumper week of US data over the next five days, in part making up for two days of blackout last week for Thanksgiving. Aside from Friday’s nonfarm payroll report, the key releases to look for are manufacturing ISM and construction spending (today), unit motor vehicle sales (tomorrow), non-manufacturing ISM (Wednesday), preliminary Q3 real GDP and initial jobless claims (Thursday), as well as personal income/consumption and consumer sentiment (Friday). Wednesday’s ADP employment report will, as usual, provide a preamble for Friday’s payrolls.
The Financial Times Follows Up On Reggie Middleton's Admonitions Of A Canadian Housing Bubble
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 11/18/2013 11:43 -0500It it walks like a duck, quacks like a duck and looks like a duck... Is it really a platypus? After all, this time is different... Right?
The "Oh Crap" Moment For Housing Is Now In The Can
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/02/2013 16:17 -0500
Real estate guru Mark Hanson updates his housing view following this week's dismal housing industry data:
Sept. Pending Sales... the largest MoM drop since Sept 2001... not 2011... yes, 2001.
Don't let them tell you 'this is normal for Sept'. The 'oh-crap' moment is now in the can. Going forward, "Existing Sales" volume will disappoint on a YoY basis for several quarters. There is no way around it...
Key Events And Issues In The Coming Week
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/21/2013 08:05 -0500Last week, the main area of focus was the political situation in the US where Democrats and Republicans finally agreed upon a short term fix to reopen the government and extend the debt ceiling. The conclusion of this saw equity markets rally to all time highs in Europe and the US, with the USD continuing to slide as markets turn their attention to the Fed’s QE programme and push back expectations of when the central bank will begin to pull back on asset purchases. With the government now reopen, attention will turn to the numerous data releases that were delayed but will now take place over the next two weeks, including the jobs report which is due on Tuesday. The release of this report will once again be used to help predict when the Fed will begin to taper QE however, recent comments from Fed members have suggested that October is likely to be too soon trim bond buying due to the lack of key macroeconomic data and the unknown economic impact as a result of the government closing for 16 days.
Another BTFD Week Begins
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/21/2013 05:40 -0500- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bank of England
- BLS
- BOE
- China
- Consumer Confidence
- Copper
- Crude
- default
- Deutsche Bank
- European Union
- Eurozone
- Fannie Mae
- France
- Freddie Mac
- Germany
- headlines
- Housing Starts
- Japan
- Monetization
- New Home Sales
- Nikkei
- Obama Administration
- Quantitative Easing
- RANSquawk
- Reality
- recovery
- Richmond Fed
- Silvio Berlusconi
- Tax Fraud
- Trade Balance
- Trade Deficit
- Unemployment
Following last week's last two day panic buying driven not by data (since in the US it has been delayed until late October and November, and elsewhere in the world it is just getting worse) but by the catalyst that the US isn't going to default (yes, that's all that is needed to push the S&P to all time highs) and just hopes that the tapering - that horrifying prospect of the Fed reducing its monthly monetization by $15 billion from $85 to $70 billion in line with the decline in the US deficit - will be delayed until March or June 2014 because, you see, the Fed isn't sure how the economy is doing, it makes no sense to even comment on the market. Squeezes, momentum ignitions, rumors about what Messers Bernanke and Yellen had for breakfast, Goldman's 2015 S&P forecast of 2100: that's the lunacy that passes for market moving factors. News, and reality, have long since been put in the dust. Just keep an eye on flashing read headlines, and try to buy (remember: anyone caught selling by the NSA is guaranteed a lifetime of annual IRS audits) ahead of the algos. That's what Bernanke's centrally-planned "market" has devolved to.
Double Whammy Of Debt Talk Breakdown And Chinese Economic Crunch Means Buying Euphoria Halted
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/14/2013 06:02 -0500- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- China
- Copper
- CPI
- Debt Ceiling
- Equity Markets
- EuroDollar
- Eurozone
- fixed
- France
- Germany
- headlines
- Hong Kong
- Housing Market
- Housing Starts
- Ireland
- Italy
- Japan
- LTRO
- M2
- Morgan Stanley
- NAHB
- NASDAQ
- Nasdaq 100
- New Home Sales
- Obamacare
- Philly Fed
- Reuters
- Trade Balance
- Unemployment
- White House
- Yuan
In a world devoid for the past two weeks and certainly for foreseeable future of most US economic data (this week we get no CPI, Industrial Production and New Home Sales among others), markets are now reliant on China for an indication of how the economy is doing, which is why this weekend's weaker than expected Chinese exports (ignoring the fact that China trade data is largely made up) and higher than expected consumer price inflation (driven by higher vegetable prices), even as new yuan loans soared to CNY787 billion, well above the CNY675 billion estimate despite broader M2 slowing from 14.7% in August to 14.2% in September, means the Chinese economy is once again in a vice and following the summer's liquidity driven boost, is set to roll over. Which in turn means that once again the PBOC is flying blind: unable to inject more liquidity without risking broader inflation, while most indicators are already rolling over. In short, ugly and certainly rolling over Chinese economic indicators for the market to mull over on Columbus day, even though all this will be promptly forgotten once the Washington debt ceiling song and dance resumes and the now traditional 10:30 am surge grips the algotrons as the latest set of "imminent deal" rumors is unleashed.
Median New Home Price Drops To Lowest Since January 2013
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/25/2013 09:14 -0500
New home sales meet expectations at 421k after downward revisions in the last month - which was already the biggest miss of expectations in over 3 years. This looks like the last hurrah rush for purchases as we got a dip lower in rates in July before the most recent surge higher. Bear in mind that the actual unadjusted number of homes sold was a mere 35k (the 3rd lowest in 2013) and 11k have yet to be started. In the meantime, median home prices continue to slide - now at 2013's lows and supply is rising at 5.1 months (unadjusted) this is the highest in 2013. It seems that as rates rise, just as we warned, speculative capital will exit (on uneconomic yields) and home prices ae forced lower on a stagant income vs higher rates affordability basis. Sure enough, median home prices have slumped to their lowest level since January 2013.
Volumeless Drift Lower Continues For Fourth Day
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/25/2013 06:05 -0500- B+
- Barclays
- Bond
- China
- Consumer Confidence
- Copper
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Debt Ceiling
- Deutsche Bank
- Equity Markets
- Exxon
- Fitch
- France
- General Motors
- Germany
- Gilts
- headlines
- Investment Grade
- Iran
- Israel
- Italy
- Jim Reid
- Lennar
- New Home Sales
- Nikkei
- Obamacare
- President Obama
- RANSquawk
- Rating Agency
- recovery
- Reuters
- Richmond Fed
- SocGen
- White House
Early weakness in Asia driven by US-follow thru selling and ongoing concerns about the us fiscal showdowns as well as the debt ceiling, if not by actual news, resulted in a red close in both the Nikkei and SHCOMP, as well as other regional indices such as the Sensex. This then shifted to Europe, where however stocks reversed the initial move lower and are seen broadly flat, with Bunds remaining bid on the back of month-end, as well as coupon and redemption related flows. However the move higher in stocks was led by telecommunications and health care sectors, which indicates that further upside will require another positive catalyst. There was little in terms of fresh EU related macroeconomic commentary, but according to a report published by the European Banking Authority, the EU’s biggest 42 banks cut their aggregate capital shortfall with respect to the “fully loaded” 2019 Basel III requirements to €70.4bln as of December 2012. This is amusing since not one European bank has actually raised capital, but merely redefined what constitutes capital courtesy of a liberal expansion of RWA, Tier 1 and various other meaningless definition which works until such time as the perilous European balance kept together by the non-existent OMT, is tipped over.
Key Events And Issues In The Coming Week
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/23/2013 07:03 -0500- Brazil
- Central Banks
- China
- Consumer Confidence
- Consumer Sentiment
- CPI
- Czech
- Debt Ceiling
- Eurozone
- Fisher
- France
- Funding Gap
- Germany
- Hungary
- Initial Jobless Claims
- Israel
- Italy
- Mexico
- Michigan
- Monetary Policy
- New Home Sales
- New Zealand
- Personal Consumption
- Personal Income
- Poland
- Portugal
- Richmond Fed
- SocGen
- Trade Balance
- University Of Michigan
- Volatility
Following the FOMC surprise, no less than twelve Fed speeches will provide some "clarifications" on where the Fed now stands. It is very likely that this subject will continue to dominate the discussions of market participants. At the same time, US data will get scrutinized after the recent weakening and to see how warranted the Fed's concerns were. Two US consumer sentiment surveys, durable goods orders, and the third reading of Q2 GDP are important. In addition, monthly consumption and income data for August provide more information on the third quarter and of course there will be interest in the latest weekly claims numbers after some distortions in recent readings.




