Posts Tagged ‘inflation’

The housing market hasn’t hit bottom yet

March 31st, 2011
By: Eric Lundin

A headline at CNN’s money page caught my eye recently: “Why house prices will keep falling.”

The article cited the Case-Shiller U.S. House Price Index, which showed a 3.1 percent decline from January 2010 to January 2011. The gist of the index, developed by Karl Case and Robert Shiller, is that home prices tend to follow inflation.

On the surface, that seems obvious. Inflation, which probably should be called price inflation, is just that—increases in prices relative to the value of the dollar. Most prices, including prices paid for homes, increase steadily over time, and economists use these increases to calculate inflation. Economists often separate food and fuel because they are volatile, leaving core inflation, which tends to be steady. Case and Shiller did something different. Instead of pulling out fuel and food, they separated house prices. According to their research, home prices generally follow inflation. The key is that they generally follow inflation; when home prices diverge from core inflation, Case and Shiller expect them to later realign. If home prices rise faster than other prices, home prices later fall. (more...)

Credit, cash, and the manufacturing recovery

February 3rd, 2011
By: Tim Heston

I still remember his tropical-print shirt, which stood out among thousands of people walking the FABTECH® show floor at the Las Vegas Convention Center. He worked at a major wind tower production facility in California, which perhaps could explain the tropical print he was wearing. But it didn’t fully explain what he told me: The company was busy as ever and had a backlog through 2011. Yes, 2011, and this was in October 2008, weeks after the Lehman Brothers collapse.

He wasn’t the first to tell me things were humming along nicely in late 2008. Many small companies in metal fabrication already had good cash positions, and they weren’t particularly worried about credit. The real concern, they told me, was their customers and other large companies down the supply chain.

Their worries were not unfounded. As credit markets froze, many in metal fabrication had the rug pulled out from under them. By January 2009, it was a different ballgame altogether, and that wind tower backlog went the way of the credit markets.

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Temps dropping, prices rising

January 6th, 2010
By: Eric Lundin

If you're like me, you don't get too excited about day-to-day changes in atmospheric conditions, also known as the weather. Most of us have daily activities-going to work, attending classes, and so on-that are indoors anyway, so the weather usually doesn't have much effect on many people.

Usually and many are the key words. The current cold spell is pretty severe and has been with us for quite some time, and it's already had a small effect on all of us.

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The end of TARP as we know it

December 10th, 2009
By: Eric Lundin

Two years ago the U.S. economy had many symptoms of a bubble ready to burst-runaway stock prices, rapidly inflating real estate prices, and interest rates that encouraged many homeowners to refinance (that's a synonym for "take unnecessary risks with") their most valuable assets. One symptom, however, wasn't revealed until it was too late: a troubling practice among banks to bundle assets-including mortgages, many of which were shakyand sell them to investors who weren't fully aware of the bundles' contents.

So the bubble burst. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell from 14,000 to 6,500 in 18 months; new-home construction, which was a healthy 1,192,000 (the annual rate) in October 2007 was less than half that at 551,000 in October 2009; the unemployment rate doubled from 4.8 percent to 10.2 percent in the same time frame; and the economy tanked.

The crisis began to emerge early in 2008, and in October that year the U.S. government passed Public Law 110-343 (based on H.R. 1424), the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act (EESA) which included the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP). Intended to purchase assets and equity from financial institutions, TARP enabled the Treasury Department to use $700 billion to rescue and strengthen the financial sector. Although TARP was to expire on Dec. 31, 2009, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner recently used his authority to extend TARP until October 2010.

Was this really necessary?
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