It has been a rough and
tumble week in the markets. Although
there were only a few economic reports released during the week, corporate
earnings and projections seemed to play the most on the emotions of investors.
The Dow Industrial Average
started the week at 16,424. With a decline
to as low as 16,254 and with a peak as high as 16,500, by the end of the
trading day on Thursday the market closed almost exactly where it started at
16,417.
The roller coaster started
the early part of the week on the upswing with the retail sales report coming
stronger than expected. In December the
index rose .2% which was better than expected.
When you factor out gasoline and auto sales the index rose .6%. The surprise comes in two places. The holiday shopping season was slower than
hoped by most retailers. Combine that
with the poor unemployment report from last week, the surprise was that retail
increased at all.
The poor unemployment report
had investors thinking mid week that the Fed may slow down the planned tapering
of the government stimulus plan. The
irony of the whole stimulus focus is that mid last year the markets tanked when
the Fed discussed starting the tapering.
In today’s market mindset investors want the Fed to taper the
program. The belief is that the tapering
means the economy is healthy and growing which is good news for investors.
To prove once again just how
sensitive home owners and home purchasers are to interest rates, the recent
drop in mortgage rates created a surge in loan applications according to the
Mortgage Bankers Association. Rates have
been declining slightly over the last 2 weeks which created a 12% surge in
mortgage applications for home purchases.
Home owners who have still yet to refinance elected to jump on the rate
drop as well with refinance applications surging 11.0% for the week of January
10th.
On Friday on the report on
housing starts will be released at 8:30AM.
The expectations for the report is a decline in starts after a 22.7 jump
in November. The reason for the expected
decline is that in November the number of permits filed to begin construction
declined 3.1%. Typically when there is a
decline in permits in the prior month, the following month housing starts
declines.
The privacy of the American
consumer is fast becoming the hot topic.
After the latest security breach at target in which data from over 110
million consumers was stolen, privacy fears are growing like wildfire. So much so that there was an article on
CNNMoney.com that discussed growing fears of lack of privacy inside our motor
vehicles. Seriously, between GPS
devices, smart phones, internet service providers, traffic light cameras,
security cameras, store cameras…. Do you think the word “privacy” even exists? (Latest
estimates are that our pictures are taken a minimum of 300 times a day)
JJ Mack
916-517-1800 x 300
JJ.Mack@apmortgage.com
www.apmcroseville.com
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