Renters to thank for healthier housing market

"Shares of the biggest U.S. builders including Lennar Homes (LEN) and Toll Brothers (TOL) have soared during the past year, but investors appear more excited about renters than a return of homeowners. To date, construction of multi-family units destined for the rental market rose by 150% over the two years ending in the third quarter of 2012. That's by far higher than the 50% rise of newly constructed multi-family homes for sale, and a 30% increase of single-family starts also for sale, according to Capital Economics." Continue reading

Continue ReadingRenters to thank for healthier housing market

U.S. gold bars and coins find new home overseas on Asian demand

"Booming demand for gold as a store of wealth among Asian investors is driving physical gold bars and coins out of the United States and into Asia. A growing number of gold vaults for affluent Asians and new precious metals investment products, particularly exchange-traded funds, have led to an exodus of gold owned privately from the United States into emerging economic powers such as China. On Friday, Commerce Department data showed U.S. exports of nonmonetary gold, which excludes central bank transactions, soared by 43 percent to $4 billion in December from the previous month." Continue reading

Continue ReadingU.S. gold bars and coins find new home overseas on Asian demand

Greeks strip country for scrap cash

"Train lines, bridges, cables and even cemeteries have all been targeted for scrap to feed a market driven by China and India. Police now arrest an average of four metal thieves every day, compared to a few cases every month before the crisis started in late 2009. The profile of the metal thief is also changing, authorities say, from gypsies and immigrants living on the margins of society to mainstream Greeks who have fallen on hard times. Athens' nine-year-old light rail system has been a prime magnet for metal robbers, with at least five major disruptions reported in the past six months due to cable theft." Continue reading

Continue ReadingGreeks strip country for scrap cash

Venezuelan devaluation sparks panic buying

"Panic buyers thronged Venezuelan shops over the carnival weekend after the government of Hugo Chavez announced a surprise devaluation. Domestic appliances such as fridges and cookers were in particularly high demand as Venezuelans snapped up goods imported at the now-defunct exchange rate of 4.3 bolívars per dollar. From now on they will be imported at 6.3 bolívars per dollar. Opposition politicians seized on what is Venezuela's fifth devaluation since strict currency controls were introduced in 2003, criticising the socialist government for quietly announcing it on Friday while people headed for the beach over the holiday." Continue reading

Continue ReadingVenezuelan devaluation sparks panic buying

The Social Deterioration of Funny, Floating Money

"Most of our important relationships with other humans are monetary in nature. We have employment contracts, lending contracts, pension agreements, annuities, welfare, taxes, and, more broadly speaking, the prices paid for goods and services. The basis for all of these relationships is money. When the money becomes 'immoral,' all of these relationships also lose their moral character. Instead of investors, builders and producers, we become traders: trading assets; trading jobs; trading money for favors; trading spouses; trading our supposed 'beliefs,' for short-term gain in a zero-sum, and in fact negative-sum society." Continue reading

Continue ReadingThe Social Deterioration of Funny, Floating Money

The Social Deterioration of Funny, Floating Money

"Most of our important relationships with other humans are monetary in nature. We have employment contracts, lending contracts, pension agreements, annuities, welfare, taxes, and, more broadly speaking, the prices paid for goods and services. The basis for all of these relationships is money. When the money becomes 'immoral,' all of these relationships also lose their moral character. Instead of investors, builders and producers, we become traders: trading assets; trading jobs; trading money for favors; trading spouses; trading our supposed 'beliefs,' for short-term gain in a zero-sum, and in fact negative-sum society." Continue reading

Continue ReadingThe Social Deterioration of Funny, Floating Money

Fannie To Allow Mortgage Walkaways by On-Time Borrowers

"Fannie Mae (FNMA) and Freddie Mac will let some borrowers who kept up payments as their homes lost value erase their debts by giving up the properties, helping Americans escape underwater loans while adding to losses at the mortgage giants bailed out with $190 billion of taxpayer money. Non-delinquent borrowers with illness, job changes or other reasons they need to move will become eligible in March to apply for a so-called deed-in-lieu transaction that erases the shortfall between a property’s value and the size of its mortgage." Continue reading

Continue ReadingFannie To Allow Mortgage Walkaways by On-Time Borrowers

Fannie To Allow Mortgage Walkaways by On-Time Borrowers

"Fannie Mae (FNMA) and Freddie Mac will let some borrowers who kept up payments as their homes lost value erase their debts by giving up the properties, helping Americans escape underwater loans while adding to losses at the mortgage giants bailed out with $190 billion of taxpayer money. Non-delinquent borrowers with illness, job changes or other reasons they need to move will become eligible in March to apply for a so-called deed-in-lieu transaction that erases the shortfall between a property’s value and the size of its mortgage." Continue reading

Continue ReadingFannie To Allow Mortgage Walkaways by On-Time Borrowers

Ireland votes to liquidate Anglo Irish Bank

"Anglo Irish Bank will be liquidated under the plan and its outstanding debt will be converted into a new long-term bond intended to spread the repayment over a longer period of time cutting the cost to the state. At present, the Irish government must pay €3.1bn (£2.7bn) every year to service the debt it took on to rescue the bank, equivalent to about 2pc of the country's GDP. The lender's collapse in 2008 forced the government to provide a guarantee for the debts of the country's entire banking system. Ireland was eventually forced to request an €67.5bn bailout from the EU and IMF as the costs of the banking rescue proved too much." Continue reading

Continue ReadingIreland votes to liquidate Anglo Irish Bank

Man trampled as hundreds of desperate Greeks scuffle for food

"A fruit and vegetable handout in Greece led to one man being trampled on Wednesday, calling attention to desperate conditions. Some 55 tons of produce was given away by farmers who were protesting high production costs. The chaos was sparked when food stalls ran out of fruits and vegetables, prompting dozens of people to rush to a nearby truck. It was an 'every man for himself' situation as the Greeks shoved their way to the front of the truck, competing for the food that was left. The 55 tons of food was completely gone in under two hours. A Reuters employee at the scene was hit on the head with cauliflower heads as he attempted to photograph the situation." Continue reading

Continue ReadingMan trampled as hundreds of desperate Greeks scuffle for food