Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Looking to move $ where? When? How Long?

"THE IMPORTANT THING IN THIS WORLD IS NOT SO MUCH WHERE WE STAND, AS IN WHAT DIRECTION WE ARE MOVING." Oliver Wendell Holmes.

And what direction is our economy moving?

After years of being concerned about inflation, the Fed is now concerned about deflation. So what exactly is deflation? Deflation is when prices drop, which generally is due to lack of demand, and therefore lack of pricing power. With the economy slowing down, we are hearing economists forecast that we may be in for a deflationary recession. In a deflationary environment, investors flee into fixed instruments like Bonds, because the fixed payment received would actually buy them more goods and services over time as prices decline.

So what does this mean for home loan rates? Remember, home loan rates improve as Bond pricing moves higher - and more demand for Bonds would mean higher prices for Bonds. In the spring of 2003, when Alan Greenspan uttered the "D" word, deflation, Bonds rallied 400bp in just a few weeks, bringing a significant drop in home loan rates. Of course, the economy is different right now, but as more money may be headed towards Bonds in a deflationary environment, we could again see a significant improvement in home loan rates down the road.

On the inflation front, last week's Producer Price Index indicated that wholesale inflation plummeted last month - by the most since records began in 1947 - largely due to declines in energy prices. In addition, the Consumer Price Index showed that inflation at the consumer level fell by a record 1.0%, thanks again to lower costs of energy.

When it comes to the direction the economy is heading, the week did end with some hopeful news. Federal Reserve President Jeffrey Lacker said that an economic recovery could begin in 2009 as low interest rates, low energy prices, and less drag from the housing sector may shore up spending. In the meantime, Bonds and home loan rates spent much of last week trading near a key level of technical support called the 200-Day Moving Average, finally moving and staying above this level on Friday. As a result, Bonds and home loan rates ended the week unchanged to slightly better than where they began.

Secure Rents make investing in Apartment buildings, in the best areas of Los Angeles, a great option if you have the cash. If you do not want to just keep it in cash and want to get in on the Buyers Market we are in. And definitely if you are thinking to hold longer then 5 years, you really will do well in this market.

IMHO Keith L.
310-391-0821
Keith @ LambertInc. com

(remove spaces to use above email)

1 comment:

Jodi Summers said...

From: CNN Breaking News
Sent: Monday, December 01, 2008 9:26 AM

-- The U.S. entered a recession in December 2007, according to the National Bureau of Economic Research.

--

Surprise + happy holidays.

Jodi Summers
The SoCal Investment Real Estate Group
Sotheby’s International Realty
jodi@jodisummers.com
www.SantaMonicaLandmarks.com
www.SoCalMultiUnitRealEstateBlog.com
**
If you cannot find the truth right where you are, where else do you expect to find it? - Dogen

www.107and117WChannelRd.jodisummers.com