Econ70
The Friday File: By square miles (mi2) Vatican City is the smallest country on Earth at 0.19 mi2. Coming in a distant second at roughly four times the size is Monaco at 0.78 mi2. Next comes the southwestern Pacific Ocean…
Read MoreSince 1/1/2021, the Conference Board’s monthly survey of consumer confidence has been steadily rising, while the University of Michigan’s monthly survey of consumer sentiment has been softening. The Conference Board essentially looks at labor market conditions and they’ve been improving.…
Read MoreThere are currently 16 House members that have announced they will retire. While evenly divided between Democrats and Republicans, the Republican retirements are all in heavily Republican districts. Conversely, half the retiring Democrats are in Republican leaning districts, three others…
Read MoreWith most, if not all forbearance programs soon to end, I expect three foreclosure waves. First, a foreclosure spike when the moratorium lifts, resulting from households in trouble before Covid-19. Second, a steady monthly stream between now and when the…
Read MoreWhile July’s retail sales numbers (which include almost exclusively purchases of goods) were not stellar, some perspective please. First, the Delta variant necessarily had some impact, and may well have more in August. Second, the fact that online spending and…
Read MoreThe Friday File: At the 100th Saratoga Sale earlier this month, 135 yearlings sold for $55,155,000. The average price, $408,556, just shy of the 2019 record of $411,459. The median price was $350,000, equaling the record set in 2019. The…
Read MoreWhile the current inflationary surge is largely economy reopening related and thus temporary, there’s a caveat. Strong job growth, improving household formation, higher wages, and house prices that are booming, may stimulate rent inflation. After averaging 3.5%/year in the years…
Read MoreWith an increase in the debt ceiling still awaiting congressional attention, the bond market is pricing in default risk. 1-month T-Bills are yielding 0.0203% while 3-month T-Bills are 0.0583%, over twice as high, a yawning gap given that they are…
Read MoreGimpy Gold On 8/15/71 President Nixon ended convertibility of the US dollar into gold. Since, gold has appreciated from $35/oz to $1,800/oz, an 8.2% annualized rate of return. Had you instead invested in the S&P 500 and reinvested dividends, your…
Read MoreReliable Rates With tapering of the Fed’s monthly purchases of $80 billion in Treasuries and $40 billion in mortgage-backed securities fast approaching, will this raise interest rates? Unlikely, and the primary reason is the federal budget deficit, which was $3.1…
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