Archive for the ‘Wall Street Journal’ tag
Translating The Federal Reserve’s Announcement Into English (August 5, 2008)

For the second consecutive meeting, the Federal Open Market Committee left the Fed Funds Rate unchanged at 2.000 percent.
The key comment — which also appeared in its June statement — is below:
Over time, the substantial easing of monetary policy, combined with ongoing measures to foster market liquidity, should help to promote moderate economic growth.
Translated, it reads:
Rate and policy changes we made until this point have yet to work their way through the economy, but when they do, we expect them to right the economic ship.
In other words, the Fed will likely stay on pause through its September 16 meeting unless something freaky happens. The Fool in the Shower, by the way, is one such freak.
Source
Parsing the Fed Statement
The Wall Street Journal Online
August 5, 2008
http://online.wsj.com/internal/mdc/info-fedparse0808.html
Ignore Annual Housing Data — It’s The MONTHLY Data That Matters To Home Buyers

For the third straight month, at least 15 of the nation’s 20 largest real estate markets showed relative monthly improvement in May 2008, according to the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index.
I use "relative monthly improvement" as another way of saying that markets are "less worse than they were" and that’s good for the housing market (although you wouldn’t know it by looking at the headlines).
Instead of pulling the positives out from the data, newspapers are highlighting the year-over-year, cliff-diving-like decline in prices.
Now, it’s not wrong to look at annual trends in home prices, it’s just a little bit misleading. Remember: Active home buyers are probably seeing something completely different from what the papers are saying they should be seeoing.
See, year-over-year comparisons are fine for identifying long-term trends, but as it relates to an active home buyer, annual data don’t mean diddly. It’s the short-term trend that matters.
The obvious example: If you’ve been shopping for a home over the last 3 months, you’ve probably noticed the market slowly slipping away from you, and moving into the sellers’ favor.
When you see "all the good homes" go under contract, or sellers regaining their negotiation power, it’s your sign that the market is shifting.
In other words, if you’re buying a home now, the real estate market of 12 months ago is irrevelant. What you’re going to pay for a home is based on market activity today, not activity from 2007.
(Images courtesy: Standard & Poor’s, The Wall Street Journal)
Could FDIC also be a "Predatory lender?"
The Wall Street Journal reported Monday morning that the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC,) rather than being
part of the solution to the subprime mortgage crisis, was actually
among those institutions that caused it.
Superior Bank was, in the early 2000s, a leading subprime lender and
that operation continued, under FDIC supervision, for months. During this
time, according to the Journal, Superior funded more than…