#230785
#230786
Re: Pulso de Mercado: Intradía
Ale, empezar a meter ya los cortitos al SP que dentro de un ratito viene Thor a saludar
#230787
Re: Pulso de Mercado: Intradía
Definición de "bullshit jobs": los trabajos de Christine Lagarde y Jay Powell.
https://www.ft.com/content/efdf1845-6138-4af7-8d2b-c20df9fed218
Esta parte es la leche, Powell no sabe ni qué coño está diciendo ---->>>> During a pair of congressional hearings last week, Jay Powell, the Fed chair, was repeatedly quizzed by lawmakers on the affordability of housing, in a sign that rising costs were becoming increasingly sensitive politically, for Democrats and Republicans alike.
“I don’t know what housing prices will do in the future. But there is just a lot of demand,” Powell said. “Even if mortgage rates go up as they ultimately will, I think we will be looking at a lot of demand. Then the question will be how much supply can be brought to the market? And that’s really out of our control.”
A Powell le preguntan, para que explique las absurdas políticas de la FED: qué pasará con los precios de la vivienda?
Y él dice "no tengo ni idea", jajaa y se queda tan pancho. Es decir, Powell y la FED no saben hacer su trabajo.
https://www.ft.com/content/efdf1845-6138-4af7-8d2b-c20df9fed218
Esta parte es la leche, Powell no sabe ni qué coño está diciendo ---->>>> During a pair of congressional hearings last week, Jay Powell, the Fed chair, was repeatedly quizzed by lawmakers on the affordability of housing, in a sign that rising costs were becoming increasingly sensitive politically, for Democrats and Republicans alike.
“I don’t know what housing prices will do in the future. But there is just a lot of demand,” Powell said. “Even if mortgage rates go up as they ultimately will, I think we will be looking at a lot of demand. Then the question will be how much supply can be brought to the market? And that’s really out of our control.”
A Powell le preguntan, para que explique las absurdas políticas de la FED: qué pasará con los precios de la vivienda?
Y él dice "no tengo ni idea", jajaa y se queda tan pancho. Es decir, Powell y la FED no saben hacer su trabajo.
US housing inflation: the sleeping giant that might tip the Fed’s hand
Higher rents and mortgage costs are quickly emerging as a pivotal indicator for the central bank
Todd David, the executive director of the Housing Action Coalition, a charity that works on housing policy in San Francisco, says all signs are pointing to a resurgence in rental costs in the Bay area after the pandemic-driven slump.
“A year from now, if we are not adding significant supply, which there’s no indication that we will . . . prices in San Francisco for rents are [going to be] at all-time high again,” he said. “The trend is up.”
Housing expenses are the sleeping giant that could tip the scales of the increasingly heated debate on US inflation. They are quickly emerging as a pivotal indicator for officials at the Federal Reserve, within the Biden administration, and among private economists.
So far this year, the shelter component of the consumer price index has shown smaller increases compared to the soaring expense of items such as used cars, airfares and energy.
But housing costs have nonetheless been edging up, showing a year-on-year increase of 2.6 per cent in June compared to a 1.5 per cent annual rise in February.
Line chart of Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers: Shelter in US City Average (annual % change) showing US housing costs have been edging up
If shelter prices remains relatively contained, they are likely to help ensure that inflation can be controlled, validating expectations at the Fed and the White House that price pressures will subside.
But if they keep increasing at even a small but steady pace on the back of booming house values in many cities, it could signal that high inflation will be sustained for longer than expected.
Shelter costs account for about a third of the overall CPI, and comprise rental prices as well as what is known as “owner-equivalent rent”, the estimated cost of a house occupied by an owner if it were rented out.
“We calculate the market won’t be fully in balance until 2023 or 2024. So I’m not sure that the uptick in rents is particularly shortlived,” said Ali Wolf, chief economist at Zonda, a property market advisory group.
She added: “Assuming the economy continues to improve, and we continue to see the job growth numbers get better, I do think there will continue to be some upward pressure on rents.”
So far, the rise in rental costs in the economy has not been particularly large and has not even bounced back to pre-pandemic rates that were comfortably above 3 per cent.
But if it continues, or even accelerates, it might pose a significant problem for the Fed because the cost increases would be embedded in rental contracts, making them hard to reverse. Higher rents could also affect inflation expectations, which are a crucial factor in monetary policymaking.
The Fed’s preferred measure of inflation, the personal consumption expenditure index, does not weight housing costs as much as the CPI, but the central bank may find any rising expenses in shelter increasingly hard to ignore.
“People don’t buy a used car every month whereas many pay rent every month,” Tim Duy, a professor at the University of Oregon and chief economist at SGH Macro Advisors wrote in a note this week.
Esta parte es la leche ---->>>> During a pair of congressional hearings last week, Jay Powell, the Fed chair, was repeatedly quizzed by lawmakers on the affordability of housing, in a sign that rising costs were becoming increasingly sensitive politically, for Democrats and Republicans alike.
“I don’t know what housing prices will do in the future. But there is just a lot of demand,” Powell said. “Even if mortgage rates go up as they ultimately will, I think we will be looking at a lot of demand. Then the question will be how much supply can be brought to the market? And that’s really out of our control.”
Housing experts say that supply constraints remain significant as homebuilders try to catch up with demand after pausing during the early stage of the pandemic. Changing zoning restrictions to allow for more housing to be built is an often contentious process that can take a long time to achieve.
At the moment, Wolf says the biggest rent increases are mainly occurring across the Sunbelt states like Arizona and Texas, with big coastal cities including San Francisco seeing much more tepid jumps.
One worry among some economists is that when pandemic-era moratoriums on evictions are lifted later this year, landlords might increase rents to make up for lost income, based on higher property values and the expectation that tenants are flush with income.
But other economists do not believe that housing inflation will become problematic, pointing to the fact that the shifts are slow and cyclical. “We’re just not all that concerned or convinced that we’ve seen a regime change in inflation yet,” said Julia Coronado, co-founder of MacroPolicy Perspectives.
Even so, Janet Yellen, the Treasury secretary, last week expressed some concern about excessive heat in the housing market, particularly to the extent that it is affecting low and middle-income families.
“I do worry about affordability and the pressures that higher housing prices will create for families that are first-time homebuyers or have less income,” she told CNBC.
At the Fed, the debate around housing inflation is occurring as the central bank is preparing to start slowing the rate of its monetary support for the economy, which has resulted in low interest and mortgage rates that have helped fuel the boom in house prices.
Some Fed officials are arguing for the central bank to more rapidly curtail its $40bn in monthly purchases of mortgage-backed securities in order to take some heat out of the housing market, but others argue the effect would be modest.
#230788
Re: Pulso de Mercado: Intradía
El BCE mantiene el rumbo y los bonos vuelven a las andadas. Mal asunto para los bancos.
#230789
Re: Pulso de Mercado: Intradía
A ver carlos que llevas años quejandote. No es por hacer leña del arbol caido. Pero el ibex tiene un gran suelo en 6.000 y un techo en 12.000. la media en 9.000
La cuestion no es tanto si el ibex es lo que es... Que tambien. Sino ¿En que punto compraste tu?
La cuestion no es tanto si el ibex es lo que es... Que tambien. Sino ¿En que punto compraste tu?
#230790
Re: Pulso de Mercado: Intradía
Hola
Otra vez los algoritmos del SP500 nos han dado una clase de cómo se abre una sesión en el SP500, en el mismo nivel que el cierre de las 22:00 del día anterior. Impresionante, lo han clavado al punto y al minuto. ( Con datos macro importantes de por medio, inclusive ) Bonito para seguir aprendiendo.
Futuro Sp500 en 1 min
#230791
Re: Pulso de Mercado: Intradía
lo digo con la voz bajita, pero huele a cortos
#230792
Re: Pulso de Mercado: Intradía
No operes los primeros 30 minutos, tu cardiólogo te lo agradecerá.
Yo ya los habría abierto en 4352 aprovechando este pull con stop en máximos. Pero mejor esperar por recomendación médica, como digo. Buscaría el tapón en 4340 como mucho.
un saludo.
Yo ya los habría abierto en 4352 aprovechando este pull con stop en máximos. Pero mejor esperar por recomendación médica, como digo. Buscaría el tapón en 4340 como mucho.
un saludo.
Si me lee, verifique que yo no diga estupideces. Tenga criterio propio.