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Strategies & Market Trends : The Residential Real Estate Crash Index -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mick Mørmøny who wrote (60934)8/27/2006 10:28:13 PM
From: Dan3Respond to of 306849
 
Wall street vacations should be wrapping up, next week.

While everyone stays in touch through pda's and internet connections, there still seems to be a tendency to leave things pretty much on remote control during August. If something rises a lot, sell it. If something falls a lot, buy it.

The next few weeks will see all the fund managers back full time, and they may start driving some seriuos direction into the market.

If the managers of a couple of the big funds get back, take a hard look at how things have turned in the past few weeks and react with "Oh My God!", we could be in for a major Fall fall.

Wall Street awaits a wave of reports
The last week of summer will be a busy one for bulls and bears not on the beach: numbers are due on GDP, consumer spending and monthly employment.
By Alexandra Twin, CNNMoney.com senior writer
August 27 2006: 10:41 AM EDT

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Investors worried about whether the economy is headed for a soft landing or a flat-out recession will get plenty of clues in the week ahead - assuming those investors are checking in from the beach.

"There are a lot of interesting things going on next week," said Barry Ritholtz, fund manager and CEO at Ritholtz Capital Partners. "It's a shame no one will be here to pay attention to them."
Ritholtz was joking, but there's no question that the last week of August is typically among the most thinly traded of the summer, with many bulls and bears on the beach.

What could make next week deviate a bit from the norm is that the closely watched monthly employment report is due Friday, said Michael Sheldon, chief market strategist at Spencer Clarke. As a result, more people will be sticking around, he said.

Those that aren't vacationing through Labor Day can look forward to what has become a notoriously bearish week on Wall Street, according to the Stock Trader's Almanac.

For six of the last nine years, the Dow industrials have lost an average of 2.9 percent in the last week of August, according to the Almanac, while the broader S&P 500 index has lost 2.7 percent. The tech-fueled Nasdaq composite has lost an average of 2.4 percent in the week.

The weakness is largely seasonal - late summer is typically brutal for the bulls. Why? Less people trading less shares makes the market more volatile and more susceptible to news that is perceived as negative.

Add in this year's increased worries about an economic slowdown and you have a tough week on tap.

Such fears weighed on stocks last week, following weaker-than-expected reports on existing and new home sales.

Jobs, inflation reads due
Although the week ahead may be light on volume, it brings no shortage of reports on the economy, particularly later in the week. (see chart for details)

The August Consumer Confidence index from the Conference Board is due Monday, while Tuesday brings the minutes from the last Federal Reserve policy meeting.

Wednesday brings a revision on gross domestic product growth in the second quarter, which is expected to show an improvement from the initial disappointing reading.

If the report should come in even better than expected, that could be a comfort to investors, as it "could indicate that the economy is slowing, but not all that dramatically," said Sheldon.

But a GDP report that merely meets estimates may not be much comfort, said Ritholtz, amid ongoing fears that the housing market's slump is going to drag on consumer spending and send the economy into a recession.

Thursday and Friday bring a number of reports on the manufacturing sector as well as a pair of reports closely watched by the Fed.

Earlier this month, the Fed paused its more than two-year-old interest-rate hike campaign and investors are hoping that it will not have to start raising rates again in the fall.

In its statement, the central bank basically forecast that slowing economic growth should take the edge off rising inflation. Should that prove not to be true, the fear is that the Fed will have to start raising short-term interest rates again to counteract that, even as the economy is slowing.

Thursday's reads on personal income and spending in July will be key, and in particular, the report's inflation component, the so-called core PCE index, which strips out volatile food and energy.

"The PCE report will get a lot of eyeballs," said Art Hogan, chief market analyst at Jefferies. "We're as concerned about inflation-friendly data as much as anything."

The PCE index is expected to have risen at a 2.5 percent annual rate, further moving above the Fed's presumed target of a 1 percent to 2 percent rise.

While the PCE report could jolt the markets, "I think people will be more focused on the jobs report," said Ron Kiddoo, chief investment officer at Cozad Asset Management.

Friday's August employment report is expected to show that employers added around 125,000 jobs to their payrolls, up slightly from the 113,000 added last month.

If the payrolls number comes in a lot weaker or a lot stronger than forecast, the stock reaction could be big, Ritholtz said. Short of that, the market may have to "wait until after Labor Day for the fireworks to really begin."
money.cnn.com



To: Mick Mørmøny who wrote (60934)9/1/2006 1:26:23 AM
From: Mick MørmønyRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 306849
 
The strongest, weakest U.S. housing markets
Forget golf courses and sunsets, real estate value is tied to local economies

BusinessWeek Online
Updated: 4:24 p.m. PT Aug 31, 2006

Over the next year or so, as the real estate market begins to soften, where will home prices remain highest? Potential buyers should look for more than beachfront location, nearby golf courses, or even good schools to determine whether their investment will be a smart one. The best thing to find? A strong local economy.

A quick glance at housing data from the U.S. census shows that the metro areas that are home to healthy technology, manufacturing, entertainment, or financial-services companies, as well as big employers like top universities, enjoy equally healthy property values.

Areas such as San Jose, San Francisco, and Anaheim have buyers paying nine times their median incomes on new homes. At $744,500, the San Jose/Sunnyvale/Santa Clara (Calif.) metropolitan statistical area has the highest median home sales price in the country, according to the National Association of Realtors. The reason, says Mark Zandi, chief economist for Moody's Economy.com, is that "these local economies are among the nation's most productive. Housing values are driven by the activity on the land."

Dirt: not cheap

The median home price in the U.S., according to the National Association of Realtors, is $231,000. While San Jose is at the top, the least expensive area is Danville, Ill., where the median is an anemic $67,000.

Slide show: The 10 Most Expensive and Least Expensive Metro Areas
images.businessweek.com

Recently, San Jose's Coldwell Real Estate branch tried to buy three acres of dirt in the country's priciest metro area for $10 million—and was denied. "Dirt—just dirt," says area broker Jack Dent, laughing. After 30 years of representing the high-tech hub, Dent says with so many headquarters for the likes of Intel, Apple, Hewlett-Packard, and new biotech companies in place, and high earnings potential, the demand will always be there.

In some areas, such as Silicon Valley, space is already at a premium. Surrounded by mountains and the San Francisco Bay, the Valley has no room to grow, unlike Dallas' sprawling metro area. The thing to watch here is how offshore manufacturing of high-tech products may affect economic activity. With manufacturing leaving, what's fueling demand in the nation's hot spot is more research and innovation, and headquarters presence.

Prices expected to fall

While that indicates the real estate market should hold its value in the near term in areas like Silicon Valley, other, less economically fortunate places will be especially hard hit. As struggling corporate giants such as Corning and General Motors lay off workers, local housing prices in areas such as Elmira, N.Y., or Youngstown, Ohio — GM maintains a large factory in nearby Lordstown — which are already depressed, will fall even further.

While Zandi expects housing prices to fall over the next year or two, he says home buyers looking for a bargain in the strongest areas will be, for the most part, disappointed. It takes a long time for local economies to absorb high home prices, he says. Studies have shown that the time it takes for real income to catch up with median housing prices is around 12.5 years in top market areas—at which point the housing cycle may again be in an upswing.

The result is that the number of people able to purchase homes in these areas will remain smaller for a number of years, which is bad news for homeowners who are looking to sell. The percentage of first-time buyers in California able to afford a median-priced home stood at 23% in the second quarter of 2006, compared with 30% for the same period a year ago, according to the California Association of Realtors.

Squeezed in the middle

The upside — for buyers, at least — is that even in strong areas like San Mateo, prices will begin to level out, especially as interest rates continue to inch up and real wages fail to increase. What does that mean? Well, it's pretty simple. At the extreme ends of the real estate scale, areas with high employment and high median incomes will do better than places with low employment and low median incomes. There's nothing surprising about it, and it's pretty much always been like that.

So who should be nervous? Not the people who have high-paying jobs at Google or Yahoo!, that's for sure. It's the people in the middle who should be concerned. In places with only moderate growth and where the local economy is steady if unexciting, there are people who have been taking advantage of low interest rates to finance lifestyles beyond their real spending power, buying houses, cars, boats, and vacations on easy credit. As rates increase, they will find it increasingly difficult to refinance their spending habits, and many will be forced to sell their houses, cars, and boats. It's at times like those when buying a home for only $77,000 in Elmira begins to look pretty good.

Copyright © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. All rights reserved.
msnbc.msn.com