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


To: Les H who wrote (28551)7/11/2011 10:32:46 AM
From: Jim McMannis  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 119362
 
John also refers to the early 90's RE bust. That was mainly commercial, not residential and really a mere blip compared to the one we are enduring now.



To: Les H who wrote (28551)7/11/2011 11:10:04 AM
From: Jim McMannis  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 119362
 
Fed on Hold Longest Since 1940s

bloomberg.com

Ben S. Bernanke, chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve, said June 7 that policy makers “cannot consider” the recovery to be established until they see a “sustained period” of strong job creation.

July 5 (Bloomberg) -- Eric Pellicciaro, head of global rates investments at BlackRock Inc., discusses investment strategy, the prospects of a double-dip recession in the U.S. and Federal Reserve monetary policy. Pellicciaro speaks with Julie Hyman on Bloomberg Television's "Fast Forward." (Source: Bloomberg)
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The Federal Reserve may keep interest rates at record lows for the longest period since World War II as the economic slowdown that sparked a four-month bond rally worsens, according to Treasury market signals.

The 3-percentage-point gap between yields for three-month and 10-year Treasuries indicates the economy may grow 1.1 percent in the 12 months ending June 2012, a study by the Fed Bank of Cleveland says. That’s less than half the central bank’s current forecast, and may delay any rate increase from the zero- to-25 basis point range held since December 2008.

Slower expansion means the Fed is unlikely to tighten credit until June 2012, the longest static period since the government forced the central bank to buy Treasuries during the 1940s. Any spending cuts agreed by President Barack Obama and Congress before the Aug. 2 deadline to raise the $14.3 trillion debt limit may restrain the economy.

“No one is looking for very spectacular growth,” said Krishna Memani, director of fixed income at OppenheimerFunds Inc. in New York, who helps manage $70 billion. The chance of the Fed lifting borrowing costs “is significantly lower today than it was six months ago,” Memani said. “Growth expectations in the U.S. and global growth expectations are probably lower and more realistic.”

Waning Confidence

Confidence in the economy has waned since February, when 10-year Treasury yields reached a high for the year of 3.77 percent, and federal fund futures showed a 51 percent chance of a central bank rate increase by December. That percentage dipped to 39 percent in April and stands at 10 percent.

The yield on the benchmark 10-year note fell to 3.03 percent on July 8, a drop of 16 basis points, or 0.16 percentage point, for the week. The 3.125 percent note due May 2021 rose 1 10/32, or $14.06 per $1,000 face amount to 100 26/32, Bloomberg Bond Trader prices show. Three-month bill rates are 0.02 percent.



To: Les H who wrote (28551)7/11/2011 2:11:15 PM
From: Les H  Respond to of 119362
 
As Income Gap Balloons, Is It Holding Back Growth?
by NPR Staff

Members of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors tend to speak cautiously: Their words can move markets. Yet last month, Fed governor Sarah Bloom Raskin was remarkably candid about the growing gap between America's rich and poor.

"This inequality is destabilizing and undermines the ability of the economy to grow sustainably and efficiently," she said. Income inequality, she continued, "is "anathema to the social progress that is part and parcel of such growth."

The income gap in the United States has ballooned: It's wider than any time since 1928, in the days before the stock market crash triggered the Great Depression.

The numbers are startling: Top CEO salaries were up 23 percent last year, according to the New York Times; the average worker's pay was up only .5 percent. Meanwhile, the top 0.1 percent of American earners now take in more than 10 percent of the nation's collective income. That puts the U.S. in the same inequality ballpark as developing countries like Cameroon and Ivory Coast.

This degree of income inequality has produced plenty of outrage — most of it about the moral implications of the gap.

But is income inequality putting the brakes on the stalling economy? And how did the gap between the wealthy and the middle class get so big?

npr.org



To: Les H who wrote (28551)7/13/2011 10:26:32 AM
From: John Vosilla  Respond to of 119362
 
'The Clinton telecom bubble was bailed out by the Bush housing bubble and military spending'

So true and the banking crisis, commercial RE and regional housing crashes of the early 90's were bailed out by fiscal responsibility and the teleco bubble.. Well now they are trying to stir things up with zero rates and continued gov't spending on steroids hoping a match gets lit somewhere..