Monday, November 23rd, 2009

Weekend Edition: House Prices Falling

May 3rd, 2008 | By Rob Mackrill | Category: International Investing

It’s not only the clouds outside that seem to be lifting. Optimism broke out in various quarters, reflected in global equities. The Dow closed above 13,000 on Thursday. The Nikkei closed above 14,000. The FTSE 100 was over 6,100 by mid-day Friday.

But then stock markets don’t deal in the present. They are “the great expectation machine” as one author had it. They look as far ahead as they can and try to picture how it will look. Evidently, they see an improving picture later in the year. Sounds encouraging, though as with all forecasts it could prove dead wrong. Much as the Met Office produces long-range weather forecasts using the latest technology which also can go hopelessly awry. Even their short term forecasting can be a disaster for those of us who remember Michael Fish dismissing the wild notion of a hurricane one fateful evening in October ’87.

What financial markets spy in the distance and what the rest of us experience day to day are two different things, of course. Warren Buffett thinks the US recession will be longer and deeper than most expect as consumers struggle with a wealth squeeze from falling house prices coupled with higher expenses from fuel and food prices. The Fed lopped another 25 basis points off the Fed funds rate as new data reveals the US grew in the fourth quarter of last year, but not by much. US interest rates now sit at 2%, about half the rate of inflation.


Recommended

Grab an easy £550 – £1,100 every single week.

Become a part-time Forex profit raider – in no time: in fact within 30 days you’ll be trading an average weekly income of £550 – £1,100, depending on what you stake. That’s between £28,600 and £57,200 per year tax free!

Terry Hodgkinson piled up £1,455 in his first week using stakes no higher than £5…

How much will you make?

Click here to find out more

_______________________________________________________________________________________

Recession is not the central forecast for most analysts of the UK economy but the signs of deterioration continue apace. Most visibly in the housing market, a powerful symbol in our home owning culture, which continues to weaken. British bank HBOS is the latest to report house prices are falling – by 3.7% over the year to April.

Easing commodity prices if sustained will be welcomed by the world’s central bankers. It takes some of the “push” out of “cost-push” inflation – where higher input costs force higher prices – and opens up more wiggle room for further easing in interest rates. The impact of relentless price increases showed up once again in the latest UK factory gate prices this week.

Manufacturers have been paying more for raw materials and charging higher prices on finished goods.Given a slowing global economy, commodity prices should ease up as aggregate demand turns down. But then there’s the elephant in the room in the shape of China. As such a sustained easing of commodity is probably a big ask, at the very least until after the closing ceremony at the Beijing Olympics this summer.

The dollar has rallied from its recent low against the euro. A euro now buys $1.54 against a recent low of $1.60. As for the pound, it buys you a satisfactory $1.98 if you’re flying west and a miserly €1.28 if you’re flying east.

Our currency of choice, gold, has had a tough week down around $90 since its mid-April high. Is it over for gold? Not in our book. The inflation-adjusted high is more than twice its current level and when central banks are done reflating the global economy, we suspect it could go a lot higher yet.

Enjoy your week-end.

Regards,

Rob Mackrill
The Daily Reckoning

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

By Rob Mackrill

Related Articles



About the Author

Rob Mackrill is Editor of The Daily Reckoning U.K. giving his daily introduction to the e-letter and his view of the world of investment. Rob is a former Independent Financial Advisor with a superlative track record and over 10 years investment experience. He is an accomplished expert on value investing, tax, pensions and asset allocation. In the past he has contributed and been managing editor of the highly respected financial publications The Zurich Club and Finance Confidential.

See All Posts by This Author

The Daily Reckoning UK

The Daily Reckoning UK is an irreverent and entertaining investment e-letter. Each day it's packed full of powerful insights and no-nonsense analysis on the true state of the stock market, gold, oil, inflation, China, the future of UK house prices and much more.

See All Posts from This Publication

Leave Comment