A place where economics, financial markets, and real estate intersect.

Monday, March 25, 2013

Morning Report - Blackstone vs the first time home buyer

Vital Statistics:

Last Change Percent
S&P Futures  1557.4 5.4 0.35%
Eurostoxx Index 2711.9 30.2 1.13%
Oil (WTI) 94.42 0.7 0.76%
LIBOR 0.283 -0.002 -0.53%
US Dollar Index (DXY) 82.52 0.147 0.18%
10 Year Govt Bond Yield 1.96% 0.04%
RPX Composite Real Estate Index 190.7 -0.5

Markets are higher after Cyprus agreed to shut its second-largest bank in exchange for a 10 billion euro bailout. Of course Russian money will flee the country, and Russian banking was the only thing keeping that economy afloat. So, I am sure we will be revisiting this issue in the near future. Bonds and MBS are down on the "risk-on" trade.

This is a short week, so expect activity to wind down as traders square their books for quarter end, and many take Thursday off.  In economic data, we have durable goods, new home sales, and Case-Schiller tomorrow. We will get the final revision to 4Q GDP on Thursday.

The Chicago Fed National Activity Index came in at +44 in February from -.49 in January.  This is a broad-based index that focuses on 85 different indicators of economic activity. Since the individual monthly indices can be volatile, you want to focus on the 3 month moving average, which has been above zero (absolute historical trend) for the past 4 months. The main takeaway from the index is that we are performing slightly above trend, and that inflation is well-contained.


The Wall Street Journal has an article this morning talking about how professional investors are impacting the real estate market. In hot markets like Orange County, professional investors make up about 22% of all sales. During the bubble years, they were about 10%.  They are having the effect of taking affordable housing off the market. This has had the added effect of improving the quality of neighborhoods as they have taken the abandoned homes off the market and maintaining them. Blackstone has bought $3.5 billion worth of homes so far and is buying more than $100 million a week. Of course the loser in all of this is the first time homebuyer, who already has to deal with a lousy job market and a tight credit market, and now faces bidding wars for a starter home from firms like Colony and Blackstone. These investors may find that being in the rental business is a lot harder than it looks and could turn net sellers are rental yields fall and home prices increase. 

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