Listen to my super boring investment life history, if you like. From the dot com bubble and financial crisis, to the everything bubble crash we are in right now. Where I made huge mistakes, and where I dodged a bullet or two.
Real estate during a stock market crash. What is going on. Are they related? Is it a good time to buy a house. I'm considering selling, should I wait. Well, let's take a look.
I was focused a lot in yen performance throughout the starting day of the week when it posted out weak GDP after then some gloomy industrial reports I got hooked with the yen so far. Us had some report good some bad but till now it hadn't posted any top tier reports which could change the bullish sentiment flow of greenback but now I assume it's too much for this...
The Commerce Department ruled recently that tariffs imposed on most Canadian lumber sold south of the border could be reduced, after conducting an administrative review of anti-dumping and countervailing duties applicable for 2017 and 2018. This will mean a boost to cash flow and profits for the Canadian lumber companies. Also, lumber prices have been rising.
Believe it or not, housing is one of the strongest parts of the market in 2019 -- rivaling only semiconductors. Low interest rates and a lack of inventories are helping fuel the move. The next week is big for the industry, with NAHB's sentiment index, housing starts and existing-home sales all due. Home Depot also reports earnings on Tuesday, followed one day...
Hopefully the title isn't a shock to you, given Brexit uncertainty for the past couple of year. Rising wedge is usually a bearish indicator but you might notice that higher volume days are accumulative - big boys taking bullish position? I'm staying away but have alerts set to look at possible shorts in the longer term.
From everything I’ve read over the years commonwealth bank has been a widow maker for many traders looking to short. I almost bought some $65 put options earlier this year which would have expired in October. Lucky me! Any way, looks like this may finally be it. To me it looks like a big tripple top has been out in here. With the real estate market in Australia...
We anticipate a right shoulder completion no later than end of q3 2019, followed by a move down to the solid black trendline illustrated in our previous post (1985 to present). Eventual weekly chart target: ~$138.
Both Fannie Mae ( FNMA ) and Freddie Mac ( FMCC ) are rocking and rolling. Mnuchin's interview paired with the court of appeals' move against the Gov't have sparked more interest here. This is great and another potential catalyst today could add fuel to the fire. HOWEVER, is there a motion likely before the election? I think the jury is still out on that front. ...
Real UK residential property retail price index (RPI), e.g. UK housing index minus inflation. Market in a down channel and at resistance, supported by 200 month moving average. The CPI I used here is updated annually so only gives a rough idea. In fact inflation has been climbing in the UK since last year. According to ONS, the consumer price index has...
Too Funny -Today’s Exec Order drops Real Estate Prices - Timing!
NYSE:LEN keep it on your watch list for a shorting opportunity
Could reject and if does that would be peak in housing
It's early days, but an island reversal could happen. I think politics will drive the price more than mergers and acquisitions.
Winter is coming. Testing strong weekly resistance, noreasoning for such a blast off considering rates are low still. Noticed the weekly closed below the 10ma. Sell signal to me...
Patterns observed in various homebuilder stocks, not limited to Home Depot, run concurrent with anticipated cyclical moves in US and International housing markets. A move down to the solid black trendline, within 2 years, would validate our overall macro view.
housing cant just keep going up.
"Never forget, rallies are for selling/shorting. You're welcome, overleveraged gamblers with too much optimism." Been bear-ish on the S&P500 and DJI + overall macro economy since Sept/October, anyone I've discussed trading/markets/economy around this time will know that I've been saying that the next "pop" is less than 12 months away, and have recently become...