Why Interest Rates Are Headed Higher
Interest rates are headed higher. Says Who? Says Lou Barnes, who makes a convincing case here, and is officially now one of LA Land's favorite Fed-Watchers.
Highlights of his weekly column at Inman.com:
--"Rates are rising because the global economy is taking off."
--"Housing is neither at bottom nor causing a recession."
--This week's spike in new home sales? "A sign of panicked builders trying to stay in business, building and dumping homes at or below cost, undercutting resales."
--"Why isn't housing knocking over the economy? The traditional reasons are lost on Wall St.: if you don't have to sell, don't sell. Live in it. If your value doubled since 2001, and you've lost 5 percent, you still have a 95 percent gain."
--"How can mortgage rates rise when demand is falling? Get a grip: annual American mortgage demand is a minor element in global markets for IOUs. They are just electrons, after all, traded 24/7 in competition with every other borrower on the planet."
--After laying out a convincing case for global growth, he warns, "As glorious as all this growth is, at this pace it is accident-prone. I have no clue if this phase will end by central-bank catch-up, tripping stock markets as they go by, and shoving property markets from behind; or by central-bank failure, markets running to cliffs. Whichever: rates are going up."
Have a favorite Fed-Watcher you think LA Land should link to? Let me know. Faithful readers know I also like to showcase Pimco's Bill Gross here.
Photo Credit: Reuters

you make a really good point except you forgot one thing in your analysis. hmmm lets see what did you forget oh yeah Rational expectation look it up
Posted by: mike | March 21, 2008 at 07:04 AM