Good Luck With That: The Day In Review

DOW + 225 = 17,416
SPX + 19 = 2021
NAS + 45 = 4683
10 YR YLD + .02 = 1.75%
OIL + .09 = 44.54
GOLD – 25.20 = 1259.10
SILV – 1.04 = 17.02

Yesterday, the Federal Reserve said it would remain “patient” on raising rates, but indicated it saw the U.S. economy getting stronger. The Fed also said it has seen inflation decline, and it may decline further, but that low oil prices are probably temporary. The FOMC statement said that economic activity has expanded “at a solid pace” and that labor market conditions have improved.

That was certainly the case last week. The fewest Americans in almost 15 years filed applications for unemployment benefits during a holiday-shortened week that typically makes the data more volatile. Jobless claims dropped by 43,000 to 265,000 in the week ended Jan. 24, the lowest since April 2000. No state reported an increase of more than 1,000 in claims for the week ended Jan. 17.

The National Association of Realtors reports its index of pending home sales fell 3.7% in December, though the year-on-year gain was 11.7%, the highest since June 2013. Pending sales measures contracts signed but not yet closed.

The Census Bureau reports the number of owner-occupied households fell by 354,000 from a year earlier as the homeownership rate dropped to its lowest level since 1994. The ownership rate for people under age 35 fell to 35.3%, down 1.5 percentage points from a year earlier and the lowest level in Census data going back to 1982. The number of renter-occupied residences grew by 2 million last year. Vacancy rates for rentals fell to 7% in the fourth quarter, the lowest since 1993. Total households increased 1.66 million. This means that younger people are finally entering the housing market, even if it is as renters rather than owners. That’s good news for landlords, better news for parents.

Denmark’s central bank cut interest rates today to negative 0.5%. Denmark’s rates were already negative, now more so. Denmark operates a currency peg with the euro, which has come under increasing pressure as the single currency has weakened with the recently announce quantitative easing plan.

The German economy has slipped into deflation for the first time in more than five years, and may not see inflation again before the year is out. Prices dropped by 0.3% in the year to January. Eurostat is due to publish inflation figures for the euro area as a whole on Friday. Economists expect these will show prices have fallen faster still, at 0.5% in the year to January.

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