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Friday, July 29, 2011

CNNMoney: Foreclosures fall in most U.S. cities

Foreclosures fall in most U.S. cities
By Les Christie July 28, 2011: 8:46 AM ET


NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- Foreclosures declined in more than 84% of U.S. metro areas during the first half of the year, according to the latest report from RealtyTrac, an online marketer of foreclosed properties.

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Bloomberg: Existing Home Sales in U.S. Rose 2.4% in June

Related News: Bloomberg, Real Estate, US, Economy
Existing Home Sales in U.S. Rose 2.4% in June
By Bob Willis - Jul 28, 2011 11:28 PM GMT+0900

The number of contracts to purchase previously owned U.S. homes unexpectedly rose in June as buyers tried to take advantage of lower prices and borrowing costs.

CNNMoney: This isn't 2008 again. Or is it?

This isn't 2008 again. Or is it?
By Paul R. La Monica July 28, 2011: 2:00 PM ET

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- Call it stubbornness, willful ignorance or what have you. But many market experts still don't think that the current debt ceiling crisis is anything remotely as scary as the summer and fall of 2008.

WSJ: Warnings Feed Europe Debt Fears

MARKETS JULY 28, 2011
Warnings Feed Europe Debt Fears
Germany's Finance Minister Says Crisis Isn't Over; Credit Ratings on Cyprus and Greece Downgraded
By GEOFFREY T. SMITH And TERENCE ROTH

LONDON—Sober warnings that the European debt crisis didn't end with last week's summit of European Union leaders reignited concerns of contagion risks on Wednesday, boosting borrowing costs for high-debt governments and pressuring the euro.

CNNMoney: Economy still stuck in the mud

RECOVERY AT RISK
Economy still stuck in the mud
By Annalyn Censky @CNNMoney July 28, 2011: 5:25 AM ET


NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- Despite a pick-up in growth at the end of last year, the economy has taken a hard turn for the worse in the last few months.

German Consumer Prices: Unexpectedly strong inflation pressures

German Consumer Prices: Unexpectedly strong inflation pressures

A higher than expected reading on German consumer price inflation is another indication that underlying price pressures in Germany are rising.

BNP: Impact of US Downgrade

A one-notch downgrade would not cause forced selling of USTs. Still, there could be a re-pricing, with UST rates rising by 25bp or more in long maturities

Office Market Frankfurt - Q2 2011

Office Market Frankfurt - Q2 2011

With an office space turnover of 230,200 sq m, the first half of 2011 was just under the result of the previous year (-0.4%). In contrast to the previous year when the proportion of owner-occupied transactions was at a high level, the first half result of the current year was characterised by a relatively low proportion of 10%.

Author(s): several
Source: CB Richard Ellis
Published: 27.07.2011

http://www.immopro24.com/market-report/office-market-frankfurt-q2-2011_1020.html

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Japan: V-shaped recovery is now more than complete for Japanese consumers (T. Okubo)

V-shaped recovery is now more than complete for Japanese consumers

Retail sales in Japan jumped by 2.9% month on month (mom) in June, sizably stronger than the prior market expectation (E 1.5%).

CNBC: What Happens if the U.S. is downgraded?

What Happens if the U.S. is downgraded?
John Carney, CNBC, 2011-07-27


Implications of a US Downgrade

Just a few days more of this debt ceiling (R. Narvas)

Just a few days more of this debt ceiling

The clock continues to tick towards the Treasury's August 2 deadline and we continue to see little progress towards an agreement to raise the debt ceiling. The parties continue to be firmly dug into partisan lines, although the Republicans are looking more fractured. If no deal is done, there is the option of adopting the Reid-McConnell plan proposed last week, but also the atomic bomb of the President invoking the 14th amendment. In the case of a downgrade or default, it seems that the majority of Treasury holders may not be forced sellers. That said, repo markets are already dislocated due to the debt crisis, as players build up cash reserves, preparing for the worst.

WSJ: What's Wrong With America's Job Engine?

ECONOMY JULY 27, 2011
What's Wrong With America's Job Engine?
Wary Companies Rely on Temps, Part-Timers, Hire Overseas
By DAVID WESSEL

Over the past 10 years:

• The U.S. economy's output of goods and services has expanded 19%.
• Nonfinancial corporate profits have risen 85%.
• The labor force has grown by 10.1 million.
• But the number of private-sector jobs has fallen by nearly two million.
• And the percentage of American adults at work has dropped to 58.2%, a low not seen since 1983.

WSJ: Obama Warns of Default Risk

POLITICS JULY 26, 2011
Obama Warns of Default Risk
President and Boehner Spar Over Competing Debt Plans as Deadline Approaches

With Congress deadlocked a week before the government runs out of cash to pay its bills, President Barack Obama warned Monday in his starkest terms yet that the U.S. is on the brink of a default that could trigger an economic upheaval.

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

NYT: U.S. Housing Prices Remain Weak

U.S. Housing Prices Remain Weak
By CHRISTINE HAUSER
Published: July 26, 2011

Home prices in the United States rose slightly for the second consecutive month in May, but the real estate market still has a long way to go before a recovery, analysts said on Tuesday.

CNNMoney: Home prices dip 4.5%

Home prices dip 4.5%
By Les Christie July 26, 2011: 11:39 AM ET


NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- May home prices in 20 major cities dipped 4.5% from one year ago, marking a continued decline in the already battered housing market.

Bloomberg: U.S. June New-Home Sales Fall More Than Estimated to 312,000 Annual Pace

Related News: Bloomberg, US, Real Estate, Economy
U.S. June New-Home Sales Fall More Than Estimated to 312,000 Annual Pace

Sales of new U.S. homes unexpectedly fell for a second month and a gauge of property values also dropped, showing the industry that sparked the recession is stagnating.

Monday, July 25, 2011

Greece: Improved Debt Sustainability

Greece: Improved Debt Sustainability

The EU Summit agreed a maturity extension and a reduction in the interest rates on both existing and new loans provided by the EFSF.

European Summit: A Yorktown Moment?

European Summit: A Yorktown Moment?

The EU summit may be a significant turning point in the eurozone crisis.

Bloomberg: Societe Generale Undermined by Greek Debt Crisis in Recovery from Kerviel

Related News: Finance, Europe, France, Executive, Markets Magazine
Societe Generale Undermined by Greek Debt Crisis in Recovery from Kerviel
By Richard Tomlinson and Fabio Benedetti-Valentini - Jul 26, 2011 6:15 AM GMT+0900
Bloomberg Markets Magazine

In a locked room on the 33rd floor of Societe Generale (GLE) SA’s 36-story headquarters in western Paris, members of the bank’s fraud control team peer at their computers, scrutinizing the trades being executed by dealers in eight trading rooms on the floors below.

Sunday, July 24, 2011

WSJ: Forget About Black Swans, the One Floating Ahead is Neon

THE INTELLIGENT INVESTOR JULY 23, 2011
Forget About Black Swans, the One Floating Ahead is Neon
By JASON ZWEIG

You've heard of black swans—events that are unthinkably rare, immensely important, and as unpredictable in advance as they are inevitable in hindsight. Now, with no one ruling out a default or downgrade of U.S. Treasury debt, investors face a new kind of threat: what we will call the neon swan, an event that is unthinkably rare, immensely important and blindingly obvious.

Friday, July 22, 2011

For Blackstone, Real Estate Now Giveth

http://online.wsj.com/

EARNINGS
July 22, 2011

For Blackstone, Real Estate Now Giveth

By GREGORY ZUCKERMAN And AMY OR

Blackstone Group LP, (BX) like many of its private-equity peers, suffered paper losses from the collapse of the property market. Now, surging real-estate profits are helping to drive gains for the private-equity powerhouse.

Colliers: German office leasing market sees vacancies decline (DE)

Colliers: German office leasing market sees vacancies decline (DE)
Thursday 21 July 2011

The German office leasing market showed its most positive side in the first half of 2011 in terms of take-up of space.

Just under 1.42 million m² of space was taken up in the six most important centers of office activity, an increase of almost 19% from the previous year. At the same time, this is the second best half-year result since 2005,” emphasizes Andreas Trumpp, Head of Research at Colliers International in Germany.

http://www.europe-re.com/system/main.php?pageid=2616&articleid=18515

WSJ: Europe Launches a Massive Greek Bailout

MARKETS JULY 22, 2011
Europe Launches a Massive Greek Bailout
Plan to Contain Crisis Likely Means First Euro-Zone Default

By CHARLES FORELLE, PATRICIA KOWSMANN and COSTAS PARIS

BRUSSELS—Euro-zone leaders agreed Thursday on a new €109 billion ($157 billion) bailout for Greece and new steps to prevent its debt crisis from metastasizing across the Continent—in a plan expected to trigger the first debt default by a nation using the common currency.

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

US Existing Home Sales: A minor disappointment (B. Jones)

Dip in June resales likely will prove temporary.

The National Association of Realtors reported that sales of existing dwellings retreated by 0.8% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.77 million in June the slowest selling pace since last November.

CNNMoney: Existing home sales dip in June

Existing home sales dip in June
Ben Rooney July 20, 2011: 11:20 AM ET

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- Sales of existing homes dipped in June as buyers unexpectedly backed out of contracts, according to an industry group.

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Bloomberg: Bank Delays May Push 1 Million U.S. Foreclosure Filings to 2012

Related News: Bloomberg, Finance, Real Estate, US, Personal Finance

Bank Delays May Push 1 Million U.S. Foreclosure Filings to 2012
By Dan Levy - Jul 14, 2011 1:00 PM GMT+0900

Lender delays in processing home- loan defaults will push as many as 1 million U.S. foreclosure filings from this year to 2012 or beyond, casting an “ominous shadow” on the housing market, according to RealtyTrac Inc.

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Brazil: May growth was lower than expectations.

Early signs of moderation. The central bank's monthly proxy for real GDP growth (IBC-Br) increased 0.2% m/m s.a. in May (consensus: 0.4% m/m), after an increase of 0.5% m/m in April. As a reference, the average monthly pace during Q1 2011 was 0.5% m/m. The annualized 3-month moving average is now running at 4.2% m/m s.a.a.r. (seasonally adjusted annual rate). That is significantly lower than the 6.0% pace in March, and good news given the need to cool the economy below potential in order to curb underlying inflation pressures. Most estimates of “potential” growth fall in the 4.0%-5.0% range. The year-on-year comparison actually accelerated to 4.3% y/y from 2.5% y/y a month before.

Bloomberg: U.K. Unemployment Claims Climbed Last Month at Fastest Pace Since May 2009

U.K. Unemployment Claims Climbed Last Month at Fastest Pace Since May 2009
Q By Scott Hamilton - Jul 13, 2011 5:35 PM GMT+0900

U.K. jobless claims rose at their fastest pace since May 2009 last month, a sign the recovery is struggling to generate enough jobs to offset the deepest government budget cuts since World War II.

Bloomberg:French Banks Face Greatest Italian Risk

French Banks Face Greatest Italian Risk
Q By Fabio Benedetti-Valentini - Jul 13, 2011 7:01 AM GMT+0900

French banks, including BNP Paribas SA and Credit Agricole SA (ACA), have the most at risk from the euro- region’s debt crisis infecting Europe’s largest borrower: Italy.

NYT: E.U. Vows to Back Banks That Fail Stress Tests

E.U. Vows to Back Banks That Fail Stress Tests
By STEPHEN CASTLE
Published: July 12, 2011

BRUSSELS — European officials vowed on Tuesday to support banks that fail stress tests but left unresolved deep disputes that have held up a second rescue package for Greece.

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

NYT: How We All Suffer

How We All Suffer

July 11, 2011
Kim Luu is the editor of Money and Risk and a principal at an independent brokerage firm specializing in retirement and 401(k)s.

The federal Home Affordable Modification Program was badly designed, overly complicated and poorly communicated. Borrowers suffered through horrendous paperwork for months and years. People ran through their retirement savings during the process, and then lost their homes anyway. Meanwhile, banks are saddled with billions of dollars in losses and inventory that still need to be auctioned.

Reuters: Analysis: Euro zone crisis enters dangerous new phase with Italy

Analysis: Euro zone crisis enters dangerous new phase with Italy

By Paul Taylor
ATHENS | Tue Jul 12, 2011 11:30am EDT

(Reuters) - The euro zone's debt crisis has taken a dangerous turn. Contagion is singeing the currency bloc's third biggest economy Italy, which would be too big to save with existing EU financial fire-fighting tools.

NYT: The Unemployment Factor

The Unemployment Factor

July 11, 2011

Morris A. Davis is the academic director of the James A. Graaskamp Center for Real Estate at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

NYT: Out of a Job, Out of a House

Updated July 12, 2011 10:07 AM
Hanging On to Houses

Introduction

In his column on Monday, Paul Krugman said that the Obama administration has done almost nothing to help troubled homeowners. Of $46 billion set aside for mortgage relief, less than $2 billion has been spent.

China: Money Supply (June 2011)

China: Money Supply (June 2011)

Money and credit growth rebounded in June, suggesting that selective easing is already showing initial effect. Some temporary factors also boosted money growth. New loans were greater than last June, after January-May loans were smaller than year ago. Large deposit growth implies more lending capacity for credit conditions to ease. Meanwhile, a retreat from risk had curbed capital inflows in May-June.

Brazil: Inflation and rates expectations move higher

Brazil: Inflation and rates expectations move higher

Inflation expectations pick-up. The latest weekly survey of market consensus forecasts brought upward revisions to inflation expectations across all horizons.

Italy

The spread widening in the case of Italy is unprecedented since the start of the sovereign debt crisis.

Monday, July 11, 2011

WSJ: U.S. Tackles Housing Slump

POLITICS JULY 11, 2011, 4:47 P.M. ET
U.S. Tackles Housing Slump

By NICK TIMIRAOS

The Obama administration is ramping up talks on how to revive the housing market, which is weighing on the economic recovery—and possibly the President's re-election in 2012.

WSJ: New Fears on Italy Jolt Europe

EUROPE NEWS JULY 11, 2011, 7:13 P.M. ET
New Fears on Italy Jolt Europe

By ALESSANDRA GALLONI and MARCUS WALKER

ROME—Italy, long a bystander to the euro-zone's debt woes, was thrust into the eye of the storm on Monday, as investors fled the country's bonds and Europe's leaders struggled to keep the crisis from infecting the Continent's third-largest economy.

CNNMoney: Arrivederci, rally! Why Italy is latest worry

Arrivederci, rally! Why Italy is latest worry
By Paul R. La Monica July 11, 2011: 1:03 PM ET


NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- This whole euro debt crisis is starting to remind me of the tagline of "Jaws." Just when you thought it was safe to go back into stocks ... cue the ominous cello music.

Bloomberg: Fed Data Cruncher Finding No New Normal Unemployment Nationwide

Fed Data Cruncher Finding No New Normal Unemployment Nationwide
By Vivien Lou Chen - Jul 11, 2011 8:01 AM GMT+0900

Mary Daly holds up two charts containing 33 bars that all point down. They show eight industries getting hit equally hard after the 18-month recession ended in June 2009, suggesting that much of the past two years’ high unemployment is broad-based and should dissipate as the economy improves.

Sunday, July 10, 2011

EU Bank Stress Tests on Sovereigns

EU Bank Stress Tests on Sovereigns

The 2011 European bank stress test results, due Friday July 15, will be closely scrutinised, and most notably on sovereign risk. This year, the EBA hope that tougher guidance and capital criteria, and substantial transparency will go a long way to winning market credibility. We estimate that under the new guidance, sovereign losses in the adverse scenario could amount to €50bn, compared to €28.2bn in 2010. And, adding the tougher capital criteria, the capital shortfall in the 2011 tests is likely to far exceed the very modest €3.5bn identified last year. The real issue is how easily banks, if needed, can raise new capital and whether governments have the necessary strength to offer “backstop measures”. The risk is to see the already frail periphery suffer yet more market aversion.

Exclusive: EU calls emergency meeting as crisis stalks Italy

Exclusive: EU calls emergency meeting as crisis stalks Italy

By Luke Baker
BRUSSELS | Sun Jul 10, 2011 2:45pm EDT

(Reuters) - European Council President Herman Van Rompuy has called an emergency meeting of top officials dealing with the euro zone debt crisis for Monday morning, reflecting concern that the crisis could spread to Italy, the region's third largest economy.

NYT: No, We Can’t? Or Won’t?

OP-ED COLUMNIST
No, We Can’t? Or Won’t?
By PAUL KRUGMAN
Published: July 10, 2011

If you were shocked by Friday’s job report, if you thought we were doing well and were taken aback by the bad news, you haven’t been paying attention. The fact is, the United States economy has been stuck in a rut for a year and a half.

WSJ: Mortgage Rates Are Great, If You Qualify

HOMES JULY 10, 2011
Mortgage Rates Are Great, If You Qualify

By TOM LAURICELLA

With interest rates near rock bottom and home prices down, this ought to be a great time to buy a home. But for most people, it's a lousy time to get a mortgage.

Saturday, July 9, 2011

NYT: Somehow, the Unemployed Became Invisible

Somehow, the Unemployed Became Invisible
By CATHERINE RAMPELL
Published: July 9, 2011

GRIM number of the week: 14,087,000.

Fourteen million, in round numbers — that is how many Americans are now officially out of work.

Thursday, July 7, 2011

German Industrial Production: Japan effect conspicuously absent

Industrial output in Germany expanded strongly in May, rising by 1.2% mom, which more than made up for April's 0.8% decline. The trend in manufacturing is stronger still, with a 1.2% gain in May after a contraction of just 0.3% in April. Hence, in the first two months of Q2 industrial output was up 1.1% from the Q1 average, and manufacturing up 1.7%. Clearly this points to upward risks to predictions that the economy suffered a soft spot in Q2, and our 0.2% qoq forecast for GDP is looking a bit low.

Brazil: Monthly inflation slows less than expected, annual reading picks up

Monthly IPCA inflation slowed in June, to 0.15% m/m (consensus was 0.07%), down from 0.47% m/m a month earlier (or from 0.23% m/m in mid-month IPCA-15 inflation), helped by seasonal factors. Transport and food prices were the main driver for the deceleration, as food price inflation fell into negative terrain, while transport price deflation got deeper. Transport price deflation intensified to -0.61% in June from -0.24% a month before, mainly on a decline of 4.25% on fuel prices (mostly ethanol, but also gasoline), despite a jump in airfares (from -11.57% to 12.85%). Food price inflation swung to -0.26% from 0.63% a month before.

ECB Watch: The Gentleman is not for turning

ECB Watch: The Gentleman is not for turning

Two down, more to come: as expected and officially signalled one month ago, the ECB raised all its interest rates by 25bp, bringing the key refinancing rate to 1.5%. But markets were clearly expecting signs that the ECB now believes that it is coming close to an appropriate level of interest rates which were conspicuously absent. In fact, we read the Introductory Statement as suggesting quite clearly that further rate hikes in the near future are the most likely scenario.

CNNMoney: Housing prices: No rebound in sight

RECOVERY AT RISK
Housing prices: No rebound in sight
By Chris Isidore @CNNMoney July 7, 2011: 8:33 AM ET

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- Housing prices are likely to keep falling the rest of this year, and probably won't show much improvement next year either, according to a survey of economists.
A CNNMoney exclusive survey of 27 economists showed the battered housing market is facing myriad problems and won't turn around anytime soon.

WSJ: Rents Rise, Vacancies Go Down

REAL ESTATE JULY 7, 2011
Rents Rise, Vacancies Go Down
By WESLEY LOWERY

Apartment landlords are enjoying rising rents and falling vacancies.

The average effective rent, the amount paid after discounting, was $997 in the second quarter of the year, up from $974 a year earlier, according to a report scheduled for release Thursday by Reis Inc., which tracks leasing data for 82 markets. Second-quarter rents rose in all but two markets.

BNP: GLOBAL DAILY SPOTLIGHT

ECB: Bias to Tighten
Ken Wattret

The ECB delivered the expected rate hike and left the door wide open for more of the same. The ECB played down the slowdown in growth and reiterated the upside risks to price stability, signalling a bias to tighten. We continue to expect a rate hike in October, teed up in September in tandem with higher inflation projections though this could be blown off course by market turmoil. The Q & A was dominated by issues related to the debt crisis with the ECB and some governments still at loggerheads over private sector involvement in the programme for Greece.

SG: FI Weekly: EU stress and US redress

We see US data turning up in the coming weeks and hope the holiday period will lead to an easing in EU sovereign tensions. That will support our tactical defensive views. In Europe, however, cash flow is positive and the uncertainties around the Eurogroup meeting and the EBA stress tests suggest prudence on sovereign risk.

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

SG: A new world order - When demand overtakes supply

The last long cycle (from 1980 to 2000-05) was shaped by exceptional growth in supply on a global level. The next will be dominated by demand dynamics.

China hikes the interest rates

China hikes the interest rates

China raises benchmark deposit and lending interest rates of all duration by 25bp. We have long anticipated this badly- needed rate hike. Although it is far from enough given China's inflation level, Chinese policymakers are probably going to pay more attention to structural issues for some time.

BRAZIL

BRAZIL

The manufacturing PMI survey continued to decline, sliding to 49.0 in June from 50.8 in May, after a recent peak of 54.6 in February, and falling below the 50.0 mark for the first time since late last year.

CNNMoney: Lagarde: IMF should focus on employment

Lagarde: IMF should focus on employment
By Aaron Smith @CNNMoney July 6, 2011: 11:34 AM ET

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- Christine Lagarde, recently chosen as the new managing director of the International Monetary Fund, said that employment will be her key focus, even more than the fiscal deficits that have swamped the world economy.

Bloomberg: Service Industries in U.S. Expand at Slower Pace in Sign Economy Cooling

Related News: US, Currencies, Municipal Bonds, Economy
Service Industries in U.S. Expand at Slower Pace in Sign Economy Cooling
By Alex Kowalski - Jul 7, 2011 5:40 AM GMT+0900

Service industries in the U.S. expanded at a slower pace in June, a sign the economy cooled at the end of the first half of 2011.

CNBC: 'Perfect Storm' Coming for Global Economy in 2013: Roubini

'Perfect Storm' Coming for Global Economy in 2013: Roubini
Published: Wednesday, 6 Jul 2011 | 4:07 PM ET
By: Jeff Cox
CNBC.com Staff Writer

Weakening economic conditions will come together in 2013 and create a "perfect storm" of global weakness, economist Nouriel Roubini told CNBC.

SG: Germany New Manufacturing Orders surge as German companies boost investment

SG: Germany New Manufacturing Orders surge as German companies boost investment

New orders to German manufacturing companies in May were much stronger than expected, rising 1.8% mom, when a decline was expected. This came on top of a 2.9% gain in April.

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

WSJ: Moody's Gives Banks Greek Debt Warning

BUSINESS JULY 5, 2011, 1:01 P.M. ET
Moody's Gives Banks Greek Debt Warning

By MARGOT PATRICK

LONDON—Banks rolling over some of their Greek debt into new instruments may have to take impairment charges, Moody's Investors Service said Tuesday, in another setback for efforts to involve private bondholders in a new international bailout.

Bloomberg: Greece Needs Long-Term Plan, Not Gimmicks, Economist Sachs Says: Tom Keene

Related News: Bloomberg, Currencies, Europe, US
Greece Needs Long-Term Plan, Not Gimmicks, Economist Sachs Says: Tom Keene
By Joe Ragazzo and Tom Keene - Jul 6, 2011 4:04 AM GMT+0900

The Greek debt crisis will persist if euro-zone policy makers don’t “get realistic” and focus on a long-term approach instead of short-term gimmicks, according to Columbia University’s Jeffrey Sachs.

WSJ: Markets Hub: It's All in the (Jobs) Numbers

Markets Hub: It's All in the (Jobs) Numbers 7/5/2011 11:52:01 AM
Ahead of earnings season, the end of the second quarter may show weakness. 'Ahead of the Tape' columnist Kelly Evans explains why the jobs report is the important indicator to watch.

Monday, July 4, 2011

Bloomberg: U.S. Home Prices Set to Climb, Donovan Says

Related News: US, Economy, Real Estate, Finance
U.S. Home Prices Set to Climb, Donovan Says
By Kim Chipman - Jul 4, 2011 1:00 PM GMT+0900

Prices for U.S. homes may climb as soon as the third quarter, ending declines as foreclosures decline make more home available for sale, Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan said.

Sunday, July 3, 2011

Bloomberg: U.S. Home Prices ‘Unlikely’ to Fall Further

Related News: U.S. · Economy · Real Estate
U.S. Home Prices ‘Unlikely’ to Fall Further
By Kim Chipman - Jul 4, 2011 1:13 AM GMT+0900

Homes in the U.S. are the most affordable they’ve been in decades and prices may start to climb as soon as the third quarter, Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan said today.

Saturday, July 2, 2011

School Daze Good Old Golden Rule Days

School Daze Good Old Golden Rule Days
Bill Gross, PIMCO
2011-07-01

- The past several decades have witnessed an erosion of our manufacturing base in exchange for a reliance on wealth creation via financial assets.
- Fiscal balance alone will not likely produce 20 million jobs over the next decade. Government must take a leading role in job creation.
- A growing number of skeptics wonder whether college is worth the time or the cost.