To begin with, America’s paychecks are bigger than 40 years ago, but purchasing power of those larger paychecks is about the sames as it was 40 years ago. Great job Washington DC!!! … NOT!!!!
Meanwhile, credit card delinquencies are at the highest level since 1991.
The GDPNow model estimate for real GDP growth (seasonally adjusted annual rate) in the second quarter of 2024 is 1.8 percent on June 3, down from 2.7 percent on May 31. After recent releases from the US Census Bureau and the Institute for Supply Management, the nowcasts for annualized second-quarter real personal consumption expenditures growth and real private fixed investment growth declined from 2.6 percent and 3.1 percent, respectively, to 1.8 percent and 1.5 percent.
fff
Since I used The Animal’s version of the John Lee Hooker great tune “Boom Boom,” I will use another Animals tune for Joe Biden’s penchant for sniffing little girls. “Baby Let Me Take You Home.”
The Animals band. Not to be confused with the animals in the Biden Administration and Congress.
Job openings in April 2024 dipped to 8,059. Notice the trend (orange line) is below the trend set prior to Covid (red line).
Back in 2023, Socialist Paul Krugman declared that “the war on inflation is over!!! “We” won, at very little cost.” I love when elitists claim “We won!” since clearly 99% of Americans lost since food, housing and car prices up are double digits under Biden.
The problem is that food, energy, shelter, and used cars/trucks are a huge part of Americans consumption basket.
Under Biden, food CPI is up 23%. Home prices are up 34% and used cars/truck prices are up 17.7%.
A note to Paul Krugman, YOU may have won, but the rest of Americans lost. Consumer purchasing power of the US Dollar is DOWN 16.5% Under Biden.
After an unexpected jump in March, pending home sales were expected to drop 1.0% MoM in April as mortgage rates pushed back above 7.00% and stayed there.
Well, the analysts had the direction right but magnitude was way off as pending home sales plunged 7.7% MoM – the biggest drop since Feb 2021 (and below the lowest estimate), leaving sales down 0.7% YoY…
Source: Bloomberg
This is the 29th straight month of YoY declines for non-seasonally-adjusted pending home sales.
This MoM decline pushed the Pending Home Sales Index back to record lows…
Source: Bloomberg
The Midwest saw the biggest drop in pending sales, down 9.5% in April, followed by declines of 8.5% and 7.6% in the West and South, respectively. Contract signings in the Northeast fell 3.5%.
“The impact of escalating interest rates throughout April dampened home buying, even with more inventory in the market,” NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun said in a statement.
“But the Federal Reserve’s anticipated rate cut later this year should lead to better conditions, with improved affordability and more supply.”
All driven by affordability crisis as mortgage rates surged back above 7.00%…
Source: Bloomberg
“The prospect of measurable home price declines appears minimal,” Yun said.
“The few markets experiencing price declines will be viewed as second-chance opportunities for buyers to enter the market if those regions continue to add jobs.”
As a reminder, the pending-sales report tends to be a leading indicator of sales of previously owned homes, because houses typically go under contract a month or two before they’re sold.
What I like about Biden’s economy … nothing. Most of Biden’s economic growth came from Trump’s spending and Fed monetary policy from the Covid shutdown of 2020.
The sharp downward revision primarily reflected a downward revision to consumer spending, which rose 2.0% annualized, down from 2.5% in the first GDP report and below the 2.2% estimate.
Drilling down into the number, the 1.3% increase reflected increases in consumer spending (below previous forecasts) and housing investment that were partly offset by a decrease in inventory investment. Imports, which are a subtraction in the calculation of GDP, increased.
The increase in consumer spending reflected an increase in services that was partly offset by a decrease in goods. Within services, the leading contributors to the increase were health care as well as financial services and insurance. Within goods, the leading contributors to the decrease were motor vehicles and parts as well as gasoline and other energy goods.
The increase in housing investment was led by brokers’ commissions and other ownership transfer costs as well as new single-family housing construction.
The decrease in inventory investment was led by decreases in wholesale trade and manufacturing
In terms of bottom-line contributions, we find the following:
Personal consumption accounted for 1.34% (down from 1.68%), or more than the entire GDP print.
Fixed Investment added 1.02%, up from 0.91% in the first estimate.
The change in private inventories subtracted -0.45%, a deterioration from the -0.35% estimated previously.
Net trade (exports less imports), subtracted -0.89% from the bottom line print, comparable to the -0.86% detraction in the first estimate.
Finally, government added just 0.23%, up from 0.21% initially estimated, yet still the lowest contribution since Q2 2022.
The Market Composite Index, a measure of mortgage loan application volume, decreased 5.7 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis from one week earlier. On an unadjusted basis, the Index decreased 6.3 percent compared with the previous week. The seasonally adjusted Purchase Index decreased 1 percent from one week earlier. The unadjusted Purchase Index decreased 3 percent compared with the previous week and was 10 percent lower than the same week one year ago. And -40% under Biden.
The Refinance Index decreased 14 percent from the previous week and was 12 percent higher than the same week one year ago.
It is still an unfavorable time to buy a home!
From the film “Ronin” that sums up actor Robert DeNiro in one sentence.
Spence (Sean Bean): “You know, you think too hard.” Sam (Robert DeNiro): “Nobody ever told me that before.”
How would DeNiro consider the 40% drop in mortgage purchase demand under Biden?
This pushed the price up 7.38% YoY – the fastest rise since October 2022…
“We’ve witnessed records repeatedly break in both stock and housing markets over the past year. Our National Index has reached new highs in six of the last 12 months.” says Brian D. Luke, Head of Commodities, Real & Digital Assets at S&P Dow Jones Indices.
Overall, US home prices reached a new record high in March (as median new home prices began to fall)…
Source: Bloomberg
San Diego continued to report the highest year-over-year gain among the 20 cities this month with an 11.1% increase in March, followed by New York and Cleveland, with increases of 9.2% and 8.8%, respectively.
Portland, which still holds the lowest rank after reporting three consecutive months of the smallest year-over-year growth, posted the same 2.2% annual increase in March as the previous month.
Luke suggested this implies “a strong demand for urban markets.”
No city has seen a MoM decline in price in 2024.
Home prices continue to track Fed Reserves closely, but a turning point may come soon…
Source: Bloomberg
Given the smoothing and heavy lag in the Case-Shiller data, it’s hard to find a causal relationship between prices and mortgage rates…
Source: Bloomberg
…but with rates remaining above 7%, it seems hard to believe prices can continue their advance.
Who the heck is HUD Secretary? It was Cleveland’s Marcia Fudge (a typical Biden political appointment). Now it is Adrianne Todman, from the US Virgin Islands and former executive director of the District of Columbia Housing Authority. Not exactly a high-powered resume for a cabinet post, Joe!
I saw former President Obama criticizing former President Trump for not passing “transformative” changes. That is, Trump didn’t sign any Obama-like transformative changes (like Obamacare). Truimp did try to slow down the damage done by Obama and his transformative agenda (e.g., open borders, wealth redistritution, green energy) that Biden has attempted to continue.
As we approach the party conventions and Presidential election of 2024, we saw the Economic Surprise Index (ESI) in May decline to -0.126.
Coupled with Biden’s negative buying conditions for housing (higher mortgage rates and soaring house prices), Obama’s Jacobian transformative economic fantasty is on thin ice.
Speaking of higher interest rates, US debt servicing costs currently make up 12% of government spending. Jacobin revolution = Cloward-Piven.
Let’s hope the Obama/Biden Jacobin revolution doesn’t get to this point!
After (unexpectedly) tumbling in March, existing home sales were expected to rise modestly (+0.8% MoM) in April. Analysts were wrong as March’s data was revised marginally up from -4.3% MoM to -3.7% MoM and April printed -1.9% MoM (a big miss). That left existing home sales down 1.9% YoY…
Source: Bloomberg
That pushed the existing home sales SAAR back near COVID lockdown lows…
Source: Bloomberg
This really should not come as a surprise because, while homeBUILDERS remain optimistic that things will pick up, homeBUYERS are the least enthusiastic they have ever been about buying a home… going back almost 50 years…
Source: Bloomberg
And with mortgage rates still above 7%, we don’t see things picking up meaningfully anytime soon…
Source: Bloomberg
…and then there’s this…
Source: Bloomberg
Sales declined in all four regions, including a 2.6% decrease in the West and a 1.6% drop in the South
The median selling price increased 5.7% from a year ago to $407,600 – the highest for any April in data back to 1999.
Unlike in the new-home market, where rising inventories and the prevalence of incentives by builders have pushed prices down on an annual basis, the home-resale market is experiencing rising year-over-year price growth.
“Home prices reaching a record high for the month of April is very good news for homeowners,” NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun said in a statement.
“However, the pace of price increases should taper off since more housing inventory is becoming available.”
About 68% of the homes sold were on the market for less than a month, up from 60% in March, while more than a quarter sold above the list price.
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