Yields on ten-year U.S. government bonds rose to 1.344 percent on 19 February from 1.286 percent the week before, the largest weekly increase since 8 January, lifting yields from the 1- to 1.2-percent range where they have traded for much of the last month. Thirty-year bond yields edged up to 2.140 percent from 2.076 percent...
Tag: feb 23 2021
INVESTORS SWAP BONDS FOR STOCKS
Last week, investors traded the safety and low yields of government bonds for the promise of gains from stocks that will rise with the economy, particularly those of companies in the energy and financial industries. The Russell 2000 small-company index gained 48.3 points, about 2.2 percent, to close the week at 2,266.69. In contrast, U.S....
RISKY COMPANIES SNAPPING UP CHEAP LOANS
As investors seek ever-higher yields, risky companies are finding ready buyers for bonds carrying higher interest rates than U.S. treasury securities or blue-chip corporate debt can offer. Community Health Systems, the Gannett newspaper chain, and other companies whose credit is rated below investment grade have sold $139 billion in bonds from 1 January through 10...
NYC HOME PRICES PLUNGE, SPURRING BUYERS
The Big Apple’s home prices soured in January at the fastest annual rate on record, falling 5.4 percent in Brooklyn and 6.2 percent in Manhattan, according to data firm StreetEasy. The price plunge drove sales higher compared with a year earlier. Brooklyn closed 17.3 percent more deals than a year earlier; Manhattan sales jumped 30.8...
HOME SALES MIXED IN JANUARY
Despite surging demand among buyers for new homes, housing starts slumped 12 percent in January from December due, in part, to the scarcity of lumber, rising costs of building materials, and disruptions in supply due in part to wildfires and heavy weather, industry analysts said. Partly as a result, the number of new homes permitted...
FED WARNS OF BANKRUPTCIES, COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE CRASH
The U.S. Federal Reserve warned of the growing risk of business bankruptcies and plunges in commercial real estate values in its semi-annual Monetary Policy Report, delivered to the U.S. Congress on 19 February. “Business leverage now stands near historic highs,” the report noted. “Insolvency risks at small and medium-size firms, as well as at some...
PRICES OF BUILDING MATERIALS REACH RECORD HIGHS
As we have been forecasting, and with the data we have been providing, get ready for higher inflation. Prices for lumber and building materials are setting new records as low-interest rates and a dearth of homes for sale surge consumer demand for new houses. However, 2020’s manufacturing slowdown and wildfires in the western U.S. have...
GAMESTOP “CHAOS” LEADS TO CALLS FOR “DIGITAL ID”
Orwellian language is buttressing calls for a Digital ID system that would go further in tracking users and how they’re spending their money in the stock market and elsewhere. “The regulator’s job is to create safe environments and to ensure that there are satisfactory controls in place such that individuals can participate of their own...
U.S. GOVERNMENT CROSSING THE CONSTITUTIONAL LINE
Journalist Glenn Greenwald is sounding the alarm about the growing willingness of lawmakers to ignore constitutional bars prohibiting the Federal government from suppressing free speech. House Democrats have called CEOs of Google, Facebook, and Twitter to a 25 March hearing to pressure them to further censor speech on their platforms. Frank Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ) said...