Gerald Celente ~ Detroit Has Gone From 'Motown' To 'Notown'
Risk markets are up -- congratulations Bernanke! While the Bank of
England said they'd put QE on hold this morning, the S&P 500 edged
over 1700 today -- with the help of a key manufacturing report.
According to Barron's, one of our key sources, they say -- quote "It's
hard to understate the gains in this report." Unfortunately,
construction spending collapsed by the largest amount in a year, missing
expectations dramatically.
And mortgage rates, the cost of
buying a home -- hint: think construction -- are up again -- now just
shy of four and a half percent. Just three months ago they were a full
percentage point lower. That was about the time Chairman Bernanke
threatened to taper off his QE bond buying.
Then there are all
the funds that swooped in to buy cheap foreclosed houses and turn them
into rental properties. Well, they are selling vis-a-vis IPO's -- in
other words, dumping inventory on the middle class. Can't have a bubble
without that. As Zero Hedge notes, American Homes 4 Rent just priced
at a 44% discount versus its June prospectus offering. Meaning, rats --
both small and New York-sized alike -- are leaving the ship.
New
developments with the controversial Durbin Amendment, which we've
coined as the swipe fight. A US District Judge kicked back the Federal
Reserve's rule capping debit card swipe fees saying they are still to
high. The Durbin Amendment has saved merchants billions to date -- which
they are not passing onto consumers, and retailers are asking for even
more. Meanwhile, banks are loosing revenue and passing those cost onto
debit card customers. More than likely the Fed will appeal the courts
decision. Perianne breaks down interchange fees in detail. And Bob
discusses recent global economic trends with Gerald Celente. Detroit,
the Fed, Summers versus Yellen.
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