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The one-year Treasury closed today at 4%.
One year ago, it was at 0.07%.
Wild.
— Eddy Elfenbein (@EddyElfenbein) September 15, 2022
U.S. investment-grade bond yields are the highest since 2009, at an average 5.14%. pic.twitter.com/XIuQELONAY
— Lisa Abramowicz (@lisaabramowicz1) September 19, 2022
Q: What will happen if China stops buying US Treasuries?
A: It already did–a decade ago.China has been a net seller of US Treasuries for over a decade and now holds only 4% of all outstanding US Treasuries–down from 14% 10 years ago, per data from the US Treasury. pic.twitter.com/1OcFdMvIyj
— Jeffrey Kleintop (@JeffreyKleintop) September 18, 2022
Food at home CPI increased up to 13.5% in August, compared to 13.1% in July, the highest since February 1979.
— unusual_whales (@unusual_whales) September 16, 2022
The rent inflation reported in the CPI (including the M/M number) is ~90% a story about what happened last year, not current conditions.
— Matthew C. Klein (@M_C_Klein) September 13, 2022
Since 2019-end, owner’s equivalent rent (the biggest component of CPI) is up a cumulative 10.8% and Apartment List’s national median rent is up a cumulative 24.2%, implying CPI shelter has a lot of catching up to do.
— Samuel Lee (@svrnco) September 13, 2022
University of Michigan: The median expected year-ahead inflation rate declined to 4.6%, the lowest reading since last September.
At 2.8%, median long run inflation expectations fell below the 2.9-3.1% range for the first time since July 2021. https://t.co/vozt57nkTN
— Nick Timiraos (@NickTimiraos) September 16, 2022
The housing shortage went national during the pandemic. Not a single state added more units than new households. pic.twitter.com/AE0Y3hPk2s
— Josh Lehner (@lehnerjw) September 16, 2022
Let’s dig into OpenDoor properties in Las Vegas.🎲
— Lance Lambert (@NewsLambert) September 16, 2022
About half of US income is earned by households making more than $100,000 per year, with most owning their own homes. So the largest expense for these households isn’t rising even w/tighter Fed policy, but wages are going up, perhaps explaining why core inflation is so sticky: MS
— Lisa Abramowicz (@lisaabramowicz1) September 19, 2022
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