Is the global housing slump over?
Why rising interest rates have not yet triggered property pandemonium
In Australia house prices have risen for the past three months. In America a widely watched index of housing values has risen by 1.6% from its low in January, and housebuilders’ share prices have done twice as well as the overall stockmarket. In the euro area the property market looks steady. “[M]ost of the drag from housing on gdp growth from now on should be marginal,” wrote analysts at JPMorgan Chase, a bank, in a recent report about America. “[W]e believe the peak negative drag from the recent housing-market slump to private consumption is likely behind us,” wrote wonks at Goldman Sachs, another bank, about South Korea.
This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “The great escape”
Finance & economics June 17th 2023
- Is the global housing slump over?
- A new super-regulator takes aim at rampant corruption in Chinese finance
- Sooner or later, America’s financial system could seize up
- AI is not yet killing jobs
- America is losing ground in Asian trade
- Wage-price spirals are far scarier in theory than in practice
- South Korea has had enough of being called an emerging market
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