Greg’s Market Report, The Fed, Earnings, & Housing. What is the Market Telling Us?
Greg’s Market Report week of July 19th, 2010. It was a pretty good week this week on Wall St. The market saw lots of economic news this week in the housing market and the Fed was on Capitol Hill giving their semi-annual report on the US Economy. June Existing Home Sales were down 5.1% last month which was an increase of 9.8% year over year. The big story was that inventories were up 2.5% to 3.99 Million units for sale which represents a 8.9 month supply!
What is a bit concerning is that these are numbers when the Home Buyer Tax Credit Program was still going on in April and they were still weak. 1st time buyers still represent 43% of the market and all cash buyers are a staggering 27%! This is the breakdown of Existing Home across the region. Northeast was up 7.9%, Midwest was down 7.5%, South was down 6.5%, and the West was down 9.3%. Distressed sales are still 1/3 of all market transactions 32%. Foreclosure sales are falling as short sales are rising. 30 Year Fixed Rate National Average was down to 4.59% and the 15 Year was down 4.05%. June Building Permits were up 2.1% as June Housing Starts were down 5.0%. One step forward and two steps back.
1st Time Initial Jobless Claims rose more than expected up 37,000 to 464,000 week ended July 17. This number was alittle out of line from expected but continuing claims week ending July 10th were better than expected at 4.487 Million vs the prior week 4.710 Million.
The Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke was on Capitol Hill to give his testimony on the condition of the US Economy on its Semi Annual Address. I felt most of the 2 day address was pretty positive. The fact is that most of this information is old and we already know most of these facts. Even though, the market sold off on Wednesday but rebounded on Thursday. Most of the concern of the testimony was about the exist strategy plan when the Fed eventually has to start raising rates. This isn’t necessarily a bad thing cause it means the worst is behind us and the economy is getting better. Some of the highlights was the following.
*Fed expects inflation to be subdued
*Unemployment is improving
*Expansion is proceeding at a moderate pace
*The Fed still has tools in its tool box if the economy does slow
*Financial Regulation Bill will enforce stronger standards which will minimize risk of another crisis
The one statement the markets didn’t like was that the Fed feels that the economic outlook remains unusually uncertain!
The way I see it is that the real problem is the Federal Government and their unwillingness to understand that it is small business that will help the economy with job growth. If you easy the burden on small businesses with lower tax rates it will help expansion and further growth. The Federal Government has only gotten bigger and they are now taking a bigger role in the private sector which is only going to create bigger problems, more regulation, and higher taxes. This is clearly not the way to prosperity. The good news is that even with this negative environment companies area coming out with big earnings and things look a recovery is coming!
