Hi everyone, this is Jeff
Rutt. Since the election there has been increasing talk of a fiscal cliff and
how the country will deal with the looming debt crisis. For professionals in any industry, the
economy is a central concern. This year, the housing market began to rebound as
interest rates lowered and more people were able to afford homes. Although
there is still a long way to go, the fed has promised to help push the recovery
forward. It is difficult to say whether or not the fed’s actions will be
beneficial. As American’s let’s continued
to pray that our government makes wise decisions in regards to our economy as
they seek to tackle our fiscal problems.
Many Blessings,
Jeff Rutt
Jeff Rutt
Bernanke Says Fed Will Do What It Can to Support
Housing
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S.
Bernanke said the Fed will take action to speed growth and a rebound in a
housing market facing obstacles ranging from too-tight lending rules to racial
discrimination.
“We will continue to use the policy
tools that we have to help support economic recovery,” Bernanke said today in a
speech in Atlanta, Georgia.
Bernanke is pressing on with record
easing including a plan to buy $40 billion a month of mortgage-backed
securities, aiming to spur growth and reduce a 7.9 percent unemployment rate.
He has resorted to unorthodox policies six years after home prices started a
plunge that knocked the economy into the longest recession since the Great
Depression.
Bernanke said while tighter credit
standards after a collapse in the subprime mortgage market were appropriate,
“it seems likely at this point that the pendulum has swung too far the other
way, and that overly tight lending standards may now be preventing creditworthy
borrowers from buying homes, thereby slowing the revival in housing and
impeding the economic recovery.”
Some members of the Federal Open
Market Committee said monthly mortgage bond purchases by the Fed are “likely to
reinforce the nascent recovery in the housing market,”according to minutes of
their Oct. 23-24 meeting released yesterday. FOMC members “generally agreed”
that a housing recovery is at last under way.
Bernanke endorsed that view in
today’s remarks at the Operation Hope Global Financial Dignity Summit, saying
an industry that was holding the economy back has turned a corner.
Housing
Weakness
“Continued weakness in housing --
reflected in falling prices, low rates of new construction, and historic levels
of foreclosure -- has proved a powerful headwind to recovery,”Bernanke said.
“It is encouraging, therefore, that we are seeing signs of improvement in the
housing market in most parts of the country.”
Bernanke said housing-finance
authorities have taken steps to “remove barriers to the flow of mortgage
credit” and referred to efforts by the Federal Housing Finance Agency and by
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to clarify rules surrounding mortgages that go into
default.
These steps, the 58-year-old Fed
chief said, should“increase the willingness of lenders to make new loans.”
Economic
Recovery
While regulatory policy “will be
important for restoring a fully functioning housing and mortgage market, the
strength of the overall economic recovery is crucial as well,” Bernanke said.
The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index
declined 0.2 percent to 1,352.52 at 3:01 p.m. in New York, after falling as
much as 0.6 percent. The index closed yesterday at the lowest level since July.
A number of FOMC officials believe
the central bank may need to expand its monthly purchases of bonds next year
after the expiration of a program to extend the maturities of assets on its balance
sheet known as Operation Twist, according to the minutes released yesterday.
The Fed’s actions have helped push
mortgage rates to historic lows. The average fixed rate on a 30-year mortgage
fell to 3.34 percent today, according to a Freddie Mac index, the lowest on
record.
Those rates have increased
affordability and helped bolster home price. The S&P/Case-Shiller index of
property values in 20 cities rose 2 percent in the year beginning in August
2011, the biggest annual gain since July 2010.
Supporting
Gains
Increasing home prices are rippling
through the economy, supporting gains in consumer confidence and spending and
benefitting companies such as Home Depot Inc. and Whirlpool Corp.
Home Depot, the largest U.S.
home-improvement retailer, posted third-quarter profit this week that topped
analysts’estimates as the recovering housing market prompted customers to spend
more on home repairs.
“Homebuilder sentiment has improved
considerably over the past year, and real estate agents report a substantial
rise in homebuyer traffic,” Bernanke said.
The S&P Supercomposite
Homebuilding Index, which consists of 11 home building companies, climbed 65
percent this year as of yesterday, compared to 7.7 percent for the S&P 500
Index.
Americans bought new homes in
September at the fastest pace in two years, the Commerce Department reported
last month, with demand up 27.1 percent from a year earlier.
Economy
Grew
The economy grew 2 percent in the
third quarter, propelled by gains in consumer spending, defense outlays and
homebuilding. That was a quickening from the 1.3 percent pace the Commerce
Department reported for the second quarter.
Equities reached a high for the year
on Sept. 14 and have since tumbled 7.5 percent as lawmakers have yet to resolve
the so-called fiscal cliff, a combined $607 billion in automatic spending cuts
and tax increases. The Congressional Budget Office said that failure to address
the cliff could nudge the economy into a recession.
President Barack Obama said in a
press conference yesterday that voters sent a “very clear message” on election
day this month that they want both parties to work together to cut the budget
deficit with a mix of tax increases for the wealthy and cuts in spending.
Article posted on http://www.businessweek.com/news/2012-11-15/bernanke-says-fed-will-do-what-it-can-to-support-housing
Thanks again for reading, stay tuned for more
articles and comments-Jeff Rutt
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