Pages

Thursday, July 8, 2021

Fast And Furious -- Ten-Year Treasury Drops Below 1.3% -- July 8, 2021

Frack spread primer over at twitter. I found it fairly useless but then I didn't spend much time on it. Link here.

Bridge: no one likes bridges and no one likes pipelines. The Billings County commission will not pursue plans to build a bridge over the Little Missouri River across the property of landowners who objected to the project -- The Bismarck Tribune

Amtrak: $7.3 billion investment in new trains from Siemens. Amtrak contracts with Siemens Moblity Inc to manufacture 83 new trains. Contract awarded to Siemens Mobility, Inc. in California, a subsidiary of German conglomerate Siemens AG. Infrastructure and rolling stock were mentioned  but I don't know if it includes locomotives. I'm in the minority on this one but I consider Amtrak and the USPS essential services.

Chick-fil-A: a reader writes that Bismarck, ND, will finally get its own Chick-fil-A. 

Covid-19: they beat me to it. I was going to post something similar but OFB beat me to it over at twitter:

If you paint unvaccinated blood over your doorway, the angel of the governmental vaccine task force will pass by your house.

**********************
The Market

COP: not to be outdone, COP touts its "Triple Mandate" to oudo EOG's "Double Premium" locations!! LOL. Link here. It looks like I wasn't the only one that noted "zippering zippers."

AAPL: hit an all-time closing record yesterday, though it fell a dollar short of an all-time high. Today, in early trading, AAPL gave it all back. LOL. Easy come, easy go. But it was nice for awhile. 

Ten-year treasury: 1.301%. And literally as I was typing that, the number changed, and the ten-year treasury dropped below 1.3%. Now at 1.299%. One can do better throwing darts at the Dow. Blindfolded.

*************************
Breitbart Business News
Housing Prices

The heat emanating from the U.S. housing market has the attention of at least some of the folks at the Federal Reserve. The minutes of the June meeting revealed that "several" Fed officials think there would be benefits to begin the eventual taper of bond purchasers by reducing the mortgage-backed securities buying faster than Treasuries. The reason for this, in the gentle language of the minutes, is to ease "valuation pressures in housing markets.”

At the end of June we got the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller National Home Price Index for April showing a gain of 14.6 percent compared with a year prior, the fastest pace on record and acceleration from the 13.3 percent annual gain in March
 
By all accounts, home prices have continued to accelerate. 
 
Indeed, Fed staffers reported to officials that "Housing demand continued to be robust, with construction of single-family homes and home sales remaining well above their pre-pandemic levels and house prices rising appreciably further. The incoming data for this sector indicated that residential investment spending was being temporarily held back in the second quarter by materials shortages and limited stocks of homes for sale."

Residential investment spending is Fed-speak for construction spending. In the jargon of the Fed, building new homes counts as investment but buying an existing home does not. So what the Fed staff is saying is that home prices will likely keep rising because home building has been held back because of shortages and inflation. And even though this week's mortgage applications numbers suggested that the high prices of homes are slowing down sales, Ed Pinto of the AEI Housing Center points out that we're still far above pre-pandemic levels. 
 
Indeed, purchase volume was 36 percent above the same week in 2019 and at about the same level as in 2020.

All of this has some people beginning to worry that we may be in a new housing bubble. Won't the panic buying of the pandemic retreat with the virus? Certainly, home prices cannot continue to rise nearly 15 percent a year for very long. But many of the fundamentals that are driving what we've been calling the "flight to the suburbs" for over a year are not going to go away soon. 
 
The cities are likely to see further deterioration as schools slump, the shrinking tax base erodes funding for services, and crime escalates. Remote working, even if only part-time, makes longer commutes more tolerable. And people have discovered, once again, that it's nice to live in a house with a yard. [Some, including me, heartily disagree.]

Pinto estimates that we will continue to see double digit levels of home price appreciation through the end of this year and into next year. That sounds about right to us. After that, however, we wouldn't expect a crash or even a modest decline in prices—save perhaps in the hottest markets—but a slowdown in gains. 
 
We're likely seeing a good deal of the gains for the future realized now.

– Alex Marlow & John Carney
Breitbart News Network

2 comments:

  1. The house with a yard scenario is truly an "American Dream" one. With that yard comes all the responsibilities as well. When one is young, or has kids, its easier. Not as young now and kids are more than a days drive away so...
    Last week paid someone to mow my yard for first time ever...

    ReplyDelete

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.