The National Association of Realtors (NAR) reported a disappointing 0.3 percent gain in its Pending Home Sales Index (PHSI) in April.
Read More »First-Quarter GDP Growth Dips as Corporate Profits Fall
The nation's economy grew at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 2.4 percent in the first quarter, slightly slower than originally reported, the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) said Thursday. At the same time, BEA said corporate profits in the first quarter were $1.97 trillion, down almost $44 billion from the fourth quarter. The last time corporate profits showed a quarter-over-quarter decline was in the first quarter of 2012. Corporate profits are considered a key indicator of employment trends.
Read More »First-Time Jobless Claims Post Surprise Increase
First-time claims for unemployment insurance rose for the third time in the last four weeks, increasing 10,000 to 354,000 for the week ending May 25, the Labor Department reported Thursday.
Read More »Case-Shiller Indices Post Yearly Gains in All Cities
Home prices posted their strongest yearly gain in almost seven years in March, with both the 10- and 20-city indices seeing double-digit gains, according to the Case-Shiller Home Price Indices released Tuesday. The national index, reported quarterly, was up 10.2 percent. The three cities that showed no growth (and one of the cities in which prices fell for the month) were in the Midwest, indicating continuing struggles in the region. Nonetheless, March was an improvement over February.
Read More »Commentary: Housing Recovery? Hold the Champagne
The last time both prices and sales of new homes increased in the same month was last September. What of course is missing from the two data sets is any indication of demand.
Read More »New Home Price Hits Record High in April as Sales Inch Up
The price of a new single-family home soared to a record high in April as sales jumped 2.3 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 454,000, the Census Bureau and HUD reported Thursday. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg expected April sales to increase to 425,000 from March's originally reported 417,000. March sales were revised to 444,000. The median price of a new home, according to the Census/HUD report, soared $20,900 (8.3 percent) in April to $271,600, the highest price on record.
Read More »Initial Jobless Claims Fall, Sequester Cuts Ongoing Claims
First-time claims for unemployment insurance for the week ended May 18 dropped 23,000 to, 340,000 from the highest level since the end of March the Labor Department reported Thursday.
Read More »Existing-Home Sales, Prices Up in April, Activity Constrained
Existing-home sales rose a 0.6 percent in April to an annual sales rate of 4.97 million, the highest level since November 2009, the National Association of Realtors (NAR) reported Wednesday. Economists had expected a 1.6 percent increase to 5.0 million from March's original report of 4.92 million sales. The median price of an existing single-family home jumped $8,900 in the month to $192,800, the highest since August 2008.
Read More »Commentary: Real-World Experiments
Economists usually do it with models, so it's rare in economics to be able to conduct a laboratory experiment.
Read More »Housing Starts Drop Despite Improved Builder Confidence
In sharp contrast to reports of improving builder confidence, housing starts plunged at the steepest rate in more than two years in April.
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