Housing Appreciation and Inflation: Future Outlook?

My socialist/ communist older brother has spent most of his life living at home. My parents didn't do him any favors. One summer, my folks decided to tour the USA in their 5th wheel. My brother thought it would be okay to revert the yard back to a native prairie while they were away, ie not mow the lawn. Parents were pissed when they pulled in the driveway! 😁
One of you had to be adopted! :D
 
Good article.

People lie on housing application all the time. The author makes a claim and doesn’t back it up with anything other than “fraud is rampant”. Below is the chart. We are not in the same area as 2005-06. Also, defaults happen and the are accounted for by the loan being adequately cushioned by the house value. Again, we are no where near 2005-06 levels. Claims of “bubbles” are getting old along with complaining about the government role. The GSEs were private entities in the last housing bubble and the FHA number in the chart is obviously the most stable. Prices today may be inflated, but this isn’t like 2006. IMG_2232.jpeg
 
Hard to not be skeptical about all of the numbers…….
 
My socialist/ communist older brother has spent most of his life living at home. My parents didn't do him any favors. One summer, my folks decided to tour the USA in their 5th wheel. My brother thought it would be okay to revert the yard back to a native prairie while they were away, ie not mow the lawn. Parents were pissed when they pulled in the driveway! 😁
Wow, you must have great Thanksgiving dinners ;)
 
Hard to not be skeptical about all of the numbers…….
I was reading that article as you posted it. I agree these numbers will come down, probably by a lot. When they printed I said there was no way we were creating that many jobs. The household survey employment data has sucked for years. I just ask myself if the downward revision matters to the market? The number I focus on is the weekly new unemployment claims. It’s hard data, not a survey. It certainly doesn’t show recession. Softening maybe. We will see tomorrow. I think the market will be focused on Jackson Hole.
 

If everything is A-OK, why is it time to cut these historically low rates?
This.

Or maybe this?
 

If everything is A-OK, why is it time to cut these historically low rates?
It's all about jobs now. I wouldn't call the Fed Funds at 5.25% "historically low". It is high enough to be tight in this environment. It will be interesting to watch how they realign the interest rate curve, or how the market does, as they cut. 10yr yield sub-4% might be considered historically low and may not look as attractive to buyers. It should go up little, but we will see.
 
A pool of cash might look for a better return…
Money is always looking for a better return, but the question is what? Equities are near all-time highs and trading at 21-22x forward earnings. Tough call if we are in a softening labor market. If it all goes well, we get lower GDP growth. Only thing for sure is that social media will point out people complaining about whatever happens.
 

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