October home prices tick up nationally

From Housingwire:

Corelogic: Home prices continue upward climb in October

Home prices continued their upward trend in October, and are forecasted to continue rising into next month and next year, according to the Home Price Index and HPI Forecast by CoreLogic, a property information, analytics and data-enabled solutions provider.

Home prices, including distressed sales, increased annually by 6.7% in October 2016, and increased 1.1% from September, according to the index.

“While national home prices increased 6.7%, only nine states had home price growth at the same rate of growth or higher than the national average because the largest states, such as Texas, Florida and California, are experiencing high rates of home price appreciation,” CoreLogic Chief Economist Frank Nothaft said.

CoreLogic forecasts that home prices will increase by 4.6% year-over-year, and by 0.2% by next month.

This entry was posted in Economics, National Real Estate. Bookmark the permalink.

167 Responses to October home prices tick up nationally

  1. Fabius Maximus says:

    Friskies by Trump

  2. grim says:

    NJ with an anemic 1.2% YOY in October

    The New York – Jersey City – White Plains MSA comes in at a stronger 4.0% yoy

  3. Ben says:

    Don’t count NJ out…we only have a transportation fund with 0$ in it, failing bridges, and the worst pension system in the country.

  4. Juice Box says:

    Prestige has its price, my property tax card came in and my home is up $67,000 in 2 years,at that rate of increase only the rich will be able to afford New Jersey.

  5. soutwin says:

    Juice …home price value is meaningless until you sell ….except to extract higher tax out of u

  6. walking bye says:

    Anyone looking to play landlord can invest in Blackstones 50,000 unit rental homes which it plans to take public in the 1st half 2017. Invitation Homes LLC. The units were snapped up in the foreclosure crisis and the group plans on taking it public with the recent run up in rental REITs. Now you too can play the part of old man potter.

  7. walking bye says:

    grim, Barron’s recently had the Westchester/Stamford region as one of its top 10 values in real estate.

  8. Comrade Nom Deplorable, just waiting on the Zombie Apocalypse. says:

    Gluteus,

    Every day is great when you’ve stopped the slide into eurosclerosis

  9. Comrade Nom Deplorable, just waiting on the Zombie Apocalypse. says:

    Did the twitiot move back into his parents basement yet? He will soon enough.

    http://nypost.com/2016/12/05/amazon-introduces-next-major-job-killer-to-face-americans/

  10. Juice Box says:

    Appeal process seems very slanted.

    According to the published guide anyway. It says the 123 TEST of Comp Sales and Common Level Range 15% does not apply because they do an annual assessment in our town, I need to submit 3-5 comps, a $100 fee and I must show up to hearing and wait for them to decide if they want to give me a break or not.

    What a scam, they said they are doing an annual assessment in our town, and they never re-assessed my property only some sampling of the neighborhood.

    Chapter 123 DOES NOT apply for towns that have undergone Revaluations or Reassessments.

    https://secure.njappealonline.com/prodappeals/help/InstructionsHandbook_Mon.pdf

    Only way to properly appeal seems like I need to hire a lawyer, it isn’t worth that much.

  11. Juice Box says:

    Interesting.

    The Distribution of Users’ Computer Skills: Worse Than You Think

    Summary: Across 33 rich countries, only 5% of the population has high computer-related abilities, and only a third of people can complete medium-complexity tasks.

    https://www.nngroup.com/articles/computer-skill-levels/

  12. Fast Eddie says:

    Fabius,

    The guy has done more in a month than the big-eared, narcissistic, clueless dolt has done in eight years and he’s not even sworn in yet. Don’t fight the tide nor swallow your pride for some fringe lunacy. The democrats in your dreams haven’t existed in a half century. They don’t have the acumen, drive, energy, moxie to succeed in business nor the stomach to defeat an enemy.

    http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2016/12/06/im-democrat-but-ive-gotta-admit-its-now-trump-2-dems-0.html

  13. Essex says:

    Eddie…Eddie….Eddie….Let’s not get ahead of ourselves bro.

    I know Trump is your man. He seems cool. He also seems capable of igniting WW3 with a tweet. So we got that….

  14. Fast Eddie says:

    Essex,

    And you say I post things that are inane? Please. We’re long overdue for someone who doesn’t simply mouth carefully planned rhetoric along with a hand wave so they can go back to jerking off their celebrity friends. He’s got a “f.uck you” attitude. We needed somebody with a “f.uck you” attitude. I’m tired of you posers and losers that need to cling to an ideology just to make yourself feel better.

  15. Tywin says:

    http://www.kiplinger.com/slideshow/retirement/T006-S001-worst-states-for-retirement-2016/index.html?cid=32

    Worst States for Retirement 2016

    #2. New Jersey

    Cost of living: 22% above the U.S. average

    Average income for 65+ households: $66,409

    Average health care costs for a retired couple: Above average at $403,420

    New Jersey’s tax rating for retirees: Least Tax Friendly

    Retirees planning to plant themselves in the Garden State might want to reconsider. Both living costs and taxes in New Jersey take a big bite out of retirement nest eggs. The combined state and local tax burden is the second-highest in the nation. And it doesn’t ease up after you die—the money you leave behind is subject to both an estate tax and inheritance tax (though there are exemptions for spouses and some others). Plus, with the second-worst ranking for fiscal soundness, behind only Illinois, the tax picture is unlikely to improve soon.

    More bad news: New Jersey’s living costs are the fourth-highest in the country, with retiree health care costs ranking third-highest in the nation. Still, residents seem to bear the burden well. The average income for 65-and-up residents is the third-highest in the U.S., and the poverty rate for the age group is a low 7.9%.

  16. Tywin says:

    Great article, citing lots of examples.

    http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2016/12/06/im-democrat-but-ive-gotta-admit-its-now-trump-2-dems-0.html

    I’ll add that not all goods made in China cost less, if you walk into an Ethan Allen furniture store, some tables are made in China, others are made in the USA. The price tag posted on these equivalent tables made in two different countries is exactly the same.

  17. Tywin says:

    Looks like Disney’s decision to replace Americans with H-1B workers is going well:

    https://www.sitejabber.com/reviews/www.disneystore.com

  18. Steamturd, Part Time Orientalist and Full Time Mysoginist says:
  19. Essex says:

    “…cling to an idealogy…”

    i was with you til that….

  20. Fast Eddie says:

    snippet…

    By Wednesday morning, Trump had widened his victory margin over Clinton in Wisconsin by 146 votes, with 23 of the state’s 72 counties having finished their recounts as of Tuesday. In those counties, Trump gained 105 votes and Clinton dropped 41 votes.

    Lol!

  21. Juice Box says:

    re: recount

    Can we have a concession speech this time?

  22. chicagofinance says:

    Does anyone have advice about StubHub-ing the Jets-Fins game on Saturday 12/17?

    I just don’t know the little nuances of the stadium…..I also haven’t attended enough NFL games to know whether there is a point where you are TOO close to the action and it is a negative.

  23. Fast Eddie says:

    ChiFi,

    Mezzanine seats are the best view!

  24. Call JJ?

    Does anyone have advice about StubHub-ing the Jets-Fins game on Saturday 12/17?

    I just don’t know the little nuances of the stadium…..I also haven’t attended enough NFL games to know whether there is a point where you are TOO close to the action and it is a negative.

  25. VIX hit a high of 23.01 on the Friday before election day. It was as low as 11.33 today. Also, how is it that Trump has created more inflation without taking office than all the Fed’s horses and all the Fed’s men could in 8 years?

  26. Anon E. Moose, saying 'Come back, JJ' says:

    Juice [yesterday];

    Don’t know if it’s been said here, Pumpkin is nothing but a Dunning-Kruger case study.

  27. Anon E. Moose, saying 'Come back, JJ' says:

    Someone was looking for a housekeeping recommendation in Morris Plains?

  28. Lost says:

    Look who’s talking. You lack EMPATHY, which is one of the biggest signals of higher intelligence. Only highly intelligent individuals are capable of looking at an issue with an empathetic perspective.

    Anon E. Moose, saying ‘Come back, JJ’ says:
    December 7, 2016 at 12:35 pm
    Juice [yesterday];

    Don’t know if it’s been said here, Pumpkin is nothing but a Dunning-Kruger case study.

  29. walking bye says:

    CH Fi: Always followed the rule of: Make sure you sit on the North side as you will sun in your face. The south side is in the shade. If it was a 1pm game even better but your game is 4pm start. .

  30. Lost says:

    I’m for Trump, but let’s admit one thing. The inflation was coming with trump, or without trump. I have predicted this for a long long time and trump had nothing to do with the analysis. When are you going to realize how spot on I have been with my predictions? Your negative bias towards me causes you to refuse to acknowledge anything I post. If grim or lib had made my same predictions 3 years ago, you would right now be patting them on the back for doing a great job of predicting this. Unfortunately, pumpkin said it, so you automatically take a huge sh!t on it.

    The Original NJ ExPat says:
    December 7, 2016 at 12:27 pm
    VIX hit a high of 23.01 on the Friday before election day. It was as low as 11.33 today. Also, how is it that Trump has created more inflation without taking office than all the Fed’s horses and all the Fed’s men could in 8 years?

  31. walking bye says:

    I’ve gone to some games in December where a sweater/open jacket is fine on the north side while the opposite side was bundled up in hats and gloves.

  32. walking bye says:

    Expat- I noticed the vix as well. Just need one spooky tweet and it could shot for the moon.

  33. chicagofinance says:

    thx but 8:25PM start…..

    eddie: was thinking hard about taking row 1; 50-yard line; upper tank…..my son is 10 and it will be his first game…..not sure if we do that or just go as close to the field as possible……

    walking bye says:
    December 7, 2016 at 1:31 pm
    I’ve gone to some games in December where a sweater/open jacket is fine on the north side while the opposite side was bundled up in hats and gloves.

  34. Comrade Nom Deplorable, just waiting on the Zombie Apocalypse. says:

    This Trump Bump is defying logic. I did not see that coming.

    But then I haven’t seen much of anything coming recently.

    I’m probably gonna take some $$$ off the table. Would suck to be wrong but would suck worse to be right

  35. Comrade Nom Deplorable, just waiting on the Zombie Apocalypse. says:

    chi fi

    Just don’t sit near Fireman Ed. One of my buds had season tix near his and I saw him at a few games. My bud described him a a major league a-hole and he didn’t disappoint.

  36. Fast Eddie says:

    ChiFi,

    Your son is going to be awestruck no matter where you sit. Row 1, upper deck, 50 yard line is superb! I can’t imagine what the cost of those tix is going to be unless everyone is bailing on the Jets, which I suppose.

  37. Moose – I’m not sure how many people get that, but it is Perfect !

    Don’t know if it’s been said here, Pumpkin is nothing but a Dunning-Kruger case study.

  38. Wah-wah-wah-wah-wah! When is someone going to notice me? Hey stupid cunt – did you predict that you would be $700K in debt and praying for a greater fool to relieve you of your highway house?

    When are you going to realize how spot on I have been with my predictions?

  39. I only know one move when it come to this kind of rally. Sell.

    This Trump Bump is defying logic. I did not see that coming.

  40. Lost says:

    Go take “day-trading” type risks with your house. What a genius.

    The Original NJ ExPat says:
    December 7, 2016 at 2:21 pm
    Moose – I’m not sure how many people get that, but it is Perfect !

  41. Lost says:

    You have me so confused with someone else. I don’t live on a highway and I’m not 700k in debt. Get a life. Stop counting other people’s money.

    The Original NJ ExPat says:
    December 7, 2016 at 2:26 pm
    Wah-wah-wah-wah-wah! When is someone going to notice me? Hey stupid cunt – did you predict that you would be $700K in debt and praying for a greater fool to relieve you of your highway house?

    When are you going to realize how spot on I have been with my predictions?

  42. homeboken says:

    Anon E. Moose, saying ‘Come back, JJ’ says:
    December 7, 2016 at 12:38 pm
    Someone was looking for a housekeeping recommendation in Morris Plains?

    Yes – Moose, I am. Got anything?

  43. Uhhhh….you do live on a highway and debt isn’t money. BTW, your wife hasn’t updated her FB page in a long time and doesn’t seem to claim any connection with you. Maybe all is not well in beautiful Passaic County, where everyone wants to live?

    You have me so confused with someone else. I don’t live on a highway and I’m not 700k in debt. Get a life. Stop counting other people’s money.

  44. homeboken says:

    Grim – can you send my email to Moose? Or send me his if he’s OK with it?

    I don’t think typing it into comments is a good idea right?

  45. Thinking back, didn’t the Pumpkin attack someone else who was divorced/divorcing?

  46. chicagofinance says:

    $85 per, or $57 third row

    Fast Eddie says:
    December 7, 2016 at 2:11 pm
    ChiFi,

    Your son is going to be awestruck no matter where you sit. Row 1, upper deck, 50 yard line is superb! I can’t imagine what the cost of those tix is going to be unless everyone is bailing on the Jets, which I suppose.

  47. Lost says:

    You clearly don’t know who I am. Not only am I 700,000 in debt living on a highway, but now my marriage is broken. Anything else?

    Lmao….I’m sorry, I just have to laugh. You are one of a kind.

    The Original NJ ExPat says:
    December 7, 2016 at 3:48 pm
    Uhhhh….you do live on a highway and debt isn’t money. BTW, your wife hasn’t updated her FB page in a long time and doesn’t seem to claim any connection with you. Maybe all is not well in beautiful Passaic County, where everyone wants to live?

  48. I used to date a Mafia Princess (btw, she lives in Wayne as do her parents) who had Giants and Jets season tickets, same seats. They were in the end zone but just back enough under the next deck that you never got rained on. I remember being at a Giants game where there were sheet of rain coming down 4 rows in front of us. I think it was the game when Phil Simms messed up his finger on a defender’s helmet.

  49. Essex says:

    Comical.

  50. Essex says:

    3:36 — On Tuesday, the president-elect met with Japanese billionaire Masayoshi Son, the founder and C.E.O. of SoftBank, at Trump Tower in New York to announce a major new investment. “Masa (SoftBank) of Japan has agreed to invest $50 billion in the U.S. toward businesses and 50,000 new jobs,” Trump tweeted. “Masa said he would never do this had we (Trump) not won the election!”
    As usual, Trump glossed over a few key details. The $50 billion that Son has agreed to invest will actually come from a previously announced $100 billion investment fund set up with cooperation from Saudi Arabia, half of which was likely to be invested in the U.S. anyway. Son, himself something of a celebrity showman in Japan, also has his own financial interests in buttering up Trump. SoftBank, which owns Sprint, has long sought a merger deal in the U.S. between Sprint and T-Mobile, but was stymied by the Obama administration. Son is presumably hoping the Trump administration will be more amenable. (Shares of Sprint and T-Mobile both jumped on the news.)
    Trump’s announcement that the deal will create 50,000 U.S. jobs is also suspect, and neither he nor Son divulged any details. As Quartz points out, the SoftBank Vision Fund is actually interested in initiatives that will ultimately quicken technological advancements, like automation, that eliminate human jobs. In its most recent earnings report, SoftBank talks about wanting to improve artificial intelligence over the next five years, envisioning a world where “all industries will be redefined,” and the “future becomes predictable” and “without accidents

  51. Raymond Reddington says:

    What I posted yesterday. What kind of jobs and how much they pay..

  52. Anon E. Moose, saying 'Come back, JJ' says:

    Homeboken:

    Email to john (underscore) doebinski (at) yahoo (dot) com. I’ll have a number and a rec for you.

  53. Raymond Reddington says:

    Tywin, only reason retirees can stay in N.J. is Medicare. Once that turns into a voucher all hell breaks loose…

  54. leftwing says:

    Anyone with actual knowledge of the current commuter parking situation in Hoboken?

    Going to city tomorrow, usually drive, don’t want to fight holiday and matinee.

    What are chances of getting parking around 10am walkable to the NJT terminal? Suggestions where?

    TY

  55. Steamturd thinking about the remains of Hillary's umbilical stump says:

    ChiFi…

    Don’ get within 15 rows of the field. It’s extremely difficult to follow the game from there. There’s snow/rain in the forecast, so ideally, mezzanine or anyplace in shelter. With the bad weather predicted and the krapshow that the Jets currently are, you can easily wait for the day of the game and get whatever you need for way less than face. If I was younger, I’d just go to a game like this and would probably be able to get a pair for free. Also, parking can be a cluster if you don’t have a parking pass. I haven’t been to a game this year, but last year I had to park in a Moonachie warehouse and get schoolbused over to the stadium without a reseverd parking pass. BTW, I’ve been offered free tickets for the past three weeks. Just keep in mind. Besides Eagles fans, Jets fans can be way lewder than you can imagine. The higher up you guy in the stadium, the less behaved they become. As you get to the upper tiers, the fights and language become more interesting than the game. Have fun. The Jets are as bad now as they were in the Rich Kotite years. Finally, get to the game at least 45 minutes before kickoff. It can take that long to get through security.

  56. Steamturd thinking about the remains of Hillary's umbilical stump says:

    Leftwing. If coming from the West, park at Clifton Park & Ride and bus in. It’s quick and cheap.

  57. Anon E. Moose, saying 'Come back, JJ' says:

    Lost his Gourd [13:23];

    You lack EMPATHY, which is one of the biggest signals of higher intelligence. Only highly intelligent individuals are capable of looking at an issue with an empathetic perspective.

    And if you were half as intelligent as you claim to be, you’d have backed up that statement with some shred of evidence, rather than pulling it our of your arse with both hands. Like I said, Dunning-Kruger.

  58. Anon E. Moose, saying 'Come back, JJ' says:

    For Homeboken;

    Grim – can you send my email to Moose? Or send me his if he’s OK with it?

    I don’t think typing it into comments is a good idea right?

    I have a phone number for you, but I don’t want to air that publicly. I haven’t heard from you yet at the above address (which is a throwaway spam catcher I check maybe once a month; more frequently since I’m expecting you).

    Grim, can you send an email to me (at any address you have) and ‘Boken to get us together? Thanks.

  59. Lost says:

    “And if you were half as intelligent as you claim to be, you’d have backed up that statement with some shred of evidence, rather than pulling it our of your arse with both hands. Like I said, Dunning-Kruger.”

    Belittling someone and closed mindedness are not signs of high level intelligence which you seem to do on a regular basis. Anything team blue, you are automatically against. Need I say more?

  60. Lost says:

    “Here are some of the telltale signs that you need to work on your emotional intelligence:

    You often feel like others don’t get the point and it makes you impatient and frustrated.
    You’re surprised when others are sensitive to your comments or jokes and you think they’re overreacting.
    You think being liked at work is overrated.
    You weigh in early with your assertions and defend them with rigor.
    You hold others to the same high expectations you hold for yourself.
    You find others are to blame for most of the issues on your team.
    You find it annoying when others expect you to know how they feel.”

  61. Lost says:

    “In conclusion, the results of this project reveal that the stock market does help predict the future economy. Although it may not be surprising to find that fluctuations in economic activity may be preceded by changes in stock prices, our finding that changes in GDP are “Granger-caused” by changes in stock prices is important in that it provides additional support for the leading economic role of the stock market.”

    http://www2.econ.iastate.edu/classes/econ302/vandewetering/grangercausality.htm

  62. Ben says:

    The market should go up when good things happen. Instead, we’ve transitioned to an economy where good things happen if the market goes up. It’s the phony low interest rate credit expansion type booms that we are addicted to.

  63. Fabius Maximus says:

    Gary, claiming credit for something that was going to happen anyway. What a fraud.

    http://www.cnbc.com/2016/12/07/softbank-was-going-big-in-us-long-before-trump.html

  64. Fabius Maximus says:

    G0d damm Jets messing up my number 2 draft slot. I was hoping to get at least that out of this season.

    http://www.ninersnation.com/2016/12/7/13869356/49ers-jets-line-spread-odds-effectively-home-field-advantage-favorite

  65. Anon E. Moose, saying 'Come back, JJ' says:

    Belittling someone and closed mindedness are not signs of high level intelligence

    Neither is conflating or being unable to distinguish between intelligence and emotional intelligence.

  66. Steamturd thinking about the remains of Hillary's umbilical stump says:

    FabMax…Oh how the positions have flipflopped. The left sounds exactly like the right did about a month prior.

  67. Lost says:

    “Yes, it is.

    It takes intelligence to identify someone’s beliefs, emotions and situation and to connect emotionally with them on those levels.

    It also takes sensitivity and insight to even know when this is appropriate and how it will be helpful. Sometimes empathising is the only way to get someone to talk about what is worrying them.

    It is a cornerstone of the helping professions.

    Anyone can be insensitive, rude and/or aggressive, but the ability to empathise requires a whole host of others skills that are greatly to be admired.”

    https://www.quora.com/Is-empathy-a-sign-of-intelligence

  68. Fabius Maximus says:

    Wow, I’m actually posting from Zero Hedge.

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-12-07/cisco-ceo-chuck-robbins-idiot-or-liar-you-decide

    The big point here, companies defer paying tax on this income waiting for a big tax break to come. The tax break won’t create jobs. We are about to see 4 years of asset stripping. Many in here will make money. The America who wanted to be made great again will get shafted.

    “Cash for chaos”, the swindle is in!

  69. Fabius Maximus says:

    Lib,

    Like you say both sides are the same. Welfare for the poor, vs welfare for the rich.

  70. Fabius Maximus says:

    Gary, can you break this down for me. It doesn’t see were great yet!

    http://money.cnn.com/2016/12/07/news/companies/trump-carrier-plant-mexico-union/index.html

  71. An improvement. Down to only 12% pumpscum posts.

  72. Popcaan says:

    It as very straightforward to find out any topic on net as compared to textbooks, as I found this piece of writing at this web site.

  73. Lost says:

    This is actually an interesting article that hits the nail on the head. I said this how many times on this blog, but was called an idiot. I was told by joyce that there is no such thing as hoarding, that all money is put into useful efficient investments by the wealthy. Yes, sure.

    “Clearly we see a pattern of forsaking economically stimulative investments for cash payouts of which 85% get reinvested into secondary financial markets that have zero economic stimulative effect i.e. never hit a corporate balance sheet or income statement.”

    “I challenge any and all economists to attack my assertion that this secular trend of reallocating capex and labor income to profit (which is the most economically inefficient use of capital) is destroying the long term US economy. I’m sincerely looking to receive the strongest arguments as this only helps us at the Institute for Sensible Economics refine our research.”

    Fabius Maximus says:
    December 7, 2016 at 10:32 pm
    Wow, I’m actually posting from Zero Hedge.

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-12-07/cisco-ceo-chuck-robbins-idiot-or-liar-you-decide

    The big point here, companies defer paying tax on this income waiting for a big tax break to come. The tax break won’t create jobs. We are about to see 4 years of asset stripping. Many in here will make money. The America who wanted to be made great again will get shafted.

    “Cash for chaos”, the swindle is in!

  74. Lost says:

    This paragraph sums up the basis of my prediction that wage inflation would return. That people at the controls would eventually realize that you have to put money back into the consumers hands or the economy will crash from lack of demand. It can’t all go to the profit side of the equation, it doesn’t work like that.

    “I mean where does one even begin picking apart this absurdity of logic?? It probably is not even worthy of a detailed response. But I wanted to note, on record, that these are the type of moronic and asinine thought processes coming out of corporate America that are killing the American middle class and will destroy even most on top unless the bottom 80% are handed a stipend to go out and buy products produced by corporations. If Chuck truly believes what he says, well he is an idiot. If he has even a shred of economic acumen then he is a liar. I’ll leave it to you to decide.”

  75. homeboken says:

    Moose – You have mail, didn’t check out the site last night, a wife and a kid with strep throat made my house a bit of war zone.

  76. chicagofinance says:

    You need to be hit on the head……

    Lost says:
    December 8, 2016 at 8:13 am
    This is actually an interesting article that hits the nail on the head. I said this how many times on this blog, but was called an idiot.

  77. No One says:

    I work in an office full of high IQ people who don’t give too many f*cks for how you feel. That’s because we pretty much only hire big boys and girls who are smart and are supposed to know what they are doing. If it turns out they don’t know what they are doing, or don’t know how to convert their high IQs into results for clients, they are gone.
    And yes Moose, lost/punkin/Michael’s Dunning-Kruger posterboy status has been repeatedly noted in the past. Without a shred of empathy for his mental disability.
    Let’s make a t-shirt for him that says “I’m too dumb to recognize I’m an idiot”

  78. Fast Eddie says:

    Again, Lost is posting under multiple handles and is attempting satire. All of you are responding as if (s)he is attempting to engage in debate.

  79. Fast Eddie says:

    Fabius,

    Every day you’re going to try to make excuses and every day you’re going to see examples of the burning dump once known as the democrat party.

    http://www.cnbc.com/2016/12/07/us-steel-wants-to-accelerate-investments-bring-back-jobs-ceo-says.html

  80. I really liked your blog post.Thanks Again. Cool.

  81. Lost says:

    Click on the link, and read the example about “Craig.” So I take it that you work with a bunch of people that fit the example of “Craig?”

    “The data showing that emotional intelligence is a key differentiator between star performers and the rest of the pack is irrefutable. Nevertheless, there are some who never embrace the skill for themselves — or who wait until it’s too late.

    https://hbr.org/2014/12/signs-that-you-lack-emotional-intelligence

    No One says:
    December 8, 2016 at 9:43 am
    I work in an office full of high IQ people who don’t give too many f*cks for how you feel. That’s because we pretty much only hire big boys and girls who are smart and are supposed to know what they are doing. If it turns out they don’t know what they are doing, or don’t know how to convert their high IQs into results for clients, they are gone.”

  82. abeiz says:

    I’d rather ^ this than more of Lost & Co.

  83. chicagofinance says:

    lost: what is “lost” on you is that without intelligence, all you are is emotional…..

  84. Anon E. Moose, saying 'Come back, JJ' says:

    ‘Boken;

    Rec’d and replied.

  85. Lost says:

    “In a world of this sort of crony capitalism, profits are de-linked from a connection with consumers and we cannot say with confidence that any given firm’s profits reflect value creation.

    Notice though that such firms might still be profitable! In a world of cronyism, many firms will do very well, especially to the extent that they have connections with those in power, or are willing to do what they are told in order to curry such favor. To the extent that cronyism will make many firms profitable, that would be reflected in rising stock prices and stock indexes.

    That, I would argue, is precisely what we’re seeing today as Trump takes power.

    The Trump Effect

    Trump’s economic nationalism and cronyism will surely enrich a number of American firms. Tariffs on imported cars, for example, might well improve the profitability of US car manufacturers. The same would go for steel or agricultural products. Firms like Carrier that are willing to exercise political clout, or roll over in the face of demands or threats from various levels of government, could see their profits rise as a result of new government-granted privileges. The record-setting Dow Jones sure could be right that the profit stream for many US firms will increase under Trump.

    But don’t confuse that profitability with improved economic well-being. Trump’s policies may well enrich many firms, but they will impoverish the average American. We are not better off having to pay more for domestically produced goods thanks to a 35% tariff on imports. We are not better off when firms are given tax breaks or direct subsidies to keep their production in the US where labor or other inputs are more expensive, raising the costs of those goods and increasing our $20 trillion dollar national debt.

    We are not better off when firms have to meet the conditions set by a strongman before he will “allow” them to operate in the US, which only serves to reorient the economy away from pleasing consumers to pleasing Trump.

    This sort of cronyism and discretionary use of power turns the positive sum social cooperation of the market into a negative sum battle among firms to curry favoritism and power from the state. Entrepreneurial energy that could have brought forth innovative technologies and cheaper, better goods and services is diverted to seeking profits through what Ayn Rand so memorably called the “aristocracy of pull.”

    This diversion of entrepreneurship will have profound long-term effects, as it severs the link between profit-seeking and satisfying consumer wants. Profits will be seen as the reward for knowing the right people and how best to curry favor from them, not from innovation and efficiency.

    And when profits become about favoritism not value-creation, the moral case for the market, or what’s left of it anyway, disappears as well. Profits can at least in principle be justified in terms of their link with consumer want satisfaction and the creation of value. As profits become increasingly arbitrary, even those firms who continue to create value will have a harder time justifying their profits. This loss of confidence in the ethical basis of the market will erode support for truly competitive markets even more, even as profits for many might increase.”

    https://fee.org/articles/a-rising-stock-market-does-not-signal-economic-health/

  86. Steamturd thinking about the remains of Hillary's umbilical stump says:

    “You need to be hit on the head……”

    Coffee from nose moment of the morning.

    Trump might be terrible for the world, but he is sure great for my 401K! He might, through little more than the use of Twitter, save NJ pensions. And he’s not even in power yet!

  87. Juice Box says:

    Who needs a house out in hackensack?

    “Exodus of the wealthy from Bergen County”

    “The towns with the most valuable homes–Alpine, Saddle River, Rockleigh, Englewood Cliffs and Franklin Lakes–also experienced the biggest population drops, pointing to an exodus of the wealthy from Bergen County. The decreases in these towns are especially stark considering almost every other Bergen County town added people after the recession.

    Alpine, home to comedians, rappers, pro baseball players and presidential campaign managers, saw nearly a quarter of its residents leave.

    The population data for Alpine, however, comes with a large margin of error because of the relatively small size of the town’s population.

    Sean Combs, aka Diddy, aka P. Diddy, aka Puff Daddy, was one of them. The rapper and music producer sold his alpine Mansion this year for $5.5 million. That’s $8 million less than what he asked for in 2011.

    Yankees pitcher C.C. Sabathia is also on his way out of Bergen County. He listed his Alpine home for $7 million in 2015, after reportedly buying it for $14.9 million in 2009.

    Alpine Mayor Paul Tomasko said residents are likely leaving for more affordable places. The affordability of New Jersey may have become more significant for Alpine residents after the recession, he said.

    “I think the reason people leave is to go to states that are less costly and [have] lower taxes,” he said.”

    http://www.nj.com/bergen/index.ssf/2016/12/recession_tanked_home_values_in_bergen_county_data_shows.html#incart_river_home

  88. Juice Box says:

    Trump might be terrible for globalism?

  89. Lost says:

    That’s a fact, but like Lib said, in the short term, you are def going to need a bigger wallet with all the money going in.

    Juice Box says:
    December 8, 2016 at 11:42 am
    Trump might be terrible for globalism?

  90. 3b says:

    Juice wealthy people leaving Bergen co/ north jersey because of high taxes!! That’s impossible some told me that people want to pay high taxes to live here because of all it has to offer!! I call bs!! Stop posting these anti no stories!!

  91. D-FENS says:

    The blue state depression
    http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2016/dec/4/the-blue-state-depression/

    People are leaving the Hillary-supporting states in droves
    When I say the blue states are in a depression, I don’t mean the collective funk they are in because they lost the election to Donald Trump.
    I’m talking about an economic depression in the blue states that went for Hillary. Here is an amazing statistic. Of the 10 blue states that Hillary Clinton won by the largest percentage margins — California, Massachusetts, Vermont, Hawaii, Maryland, New York, Illinois, Rhode Island, New Jersey, and Connecticut — every single one of them lost domestic migration (excluding immigration) over the last 10 years (2004-14). Nearly 2.75 million more Americans left California and New York than entered these states.
    They are the loser states. They are all progressive. High taxes rates. High welfare benefits. Heavy regulation. Environmental extremism. Super minimum wages. Most outlaw energy drilling. The whole left-wing playbook is on display in the Hillary states. And people are leaving in droves. Day after day, they are being bled to death. So much for liberalism creating a worker’s paradise.

  92. Lost says:

    Wow, this guy is lost. People buying 14 million dollar homes, losing 7 million on the sale, are worried about taxes? Guy is full of it. He just doesn’t get that it’s no longer cool to have a 14 million dollar pad. That need for 20 million dollar estates will return in time, but for now it’s dead. You have to wait for the next economic boom and the all the excesses that come with it, but for now that market is DEAD.

    “Alpine Mayor Paul Tomasko said residents are likely leaving for more affordable places. The affordability of New Jersey may have become more significant for Alpine residents after the recession, he said.

    “I think the reason people leave is to go to states that are less costly and [have] lower taxes,” he said.””

  93. Juice Box says:

    Chi – Ignorance can be rational. What we are living today online is the golden age of rational thought as well as the golden age of rationalized  ignorance.

  94. Lost says:

    What did a 10 year old write this? What is this guy talking about? He basically knocking down the most productive areas of our country. Maybe these “loser states” should adopt the red state plan…..you know the plan of taking the bread off the plate of blue states to feed their sh!t hole states. This author is doing a great job of spreading ignorant trash.

    “They are the loser states. They are all progressive. High taxes rates. High welfare benefits. Heavy regulation. Environmental extremism. Super minimum wages. Most outlaw energy drilling. The whole left-wing playbook is on display in the Hillary states. And people are leaving in droves. Day after day, they are being bled to death. So much for liberalism creating a worker’s paradise.”

  95. 3b says:

    everyone that disagrees is wrong because someone says so. All based on nothing.

  96. Lost says:

    You really think sabathia and Diddy are selling because of taxes? You think they even care about the cost of their property taxes? Better yet, you think they would live in a low cost location?

    3b says:
    December 8, 2016 at 12:30 pm
    everyone that disagrees is wrong because someone says so. All based on nothing.

  97. Lost says:

    Prove to me that a person living in a 14 million dollar estate would move on the basis of property taxes. If you prove it to me, I will agree with you. Please don’t use evidence of millionaires moving as basis that they are avoiding high property taxes when they are just moving to other high property tax locations.

  98. D-FENS says:

    Yeah…nobody ever moves because taxes are high…PROVE IT!

  99. Steamturd, Part Time Orientalist and Full Time Mysoginist says:

    “You really think sabathia and Diddy are selling because of taxes?”

    Yes plus their income ain’t what it used to be. Time to downsize to where the government is less oppressive.

    Want to puke? There’s a very interesting case in Glen Ridge. Our tiny town really has no more space to build. Due to this, we are short the number of Affordable Housing (AH) units as COAH came into existence long after the town was fully built out. A developer has found 4 aging owners living in well kept Victorians who are willing to take the huge payday to get out of dodge. All four homes, when knocked down and developed into another stucko and wood masterpiece would house a proposed 125 units, of which 11 would be AH. Of course, our schools are already overcrowded (Gator Jr. usually has 26-28 kids in his classes) and there is little to no room to expand them. Though a 125 unit condo would be completely inappropriate in our burg of 1880-1930 Victorians and Tudors, the developer cares little. He only cares about his own greed. As do the owners of those 4 Victorians. The town is completely powerless to stop this as all NJ politicians have been bought by NJ developers. Here is what happens if our town tries to fight it.

    Glen Ridge’s involvement with this over the last 2 years and Glen Ridge’s research on the issues have shown that municipalities (both in Essex County and elsewhere) who fight, and refuse to reach a negotiated settlement , run the risk of the following adverse consequences (which have in fact happened to other municipalities):
    (1) Fee-shifting could be imposed upon Glen Ridge, resulting in Glen Ridge’s bearing all costs of the litigation, regardless whether such costs were incurred by the developer or by Glen Ridge.
    (2) The court could impose a high affordable housing obligation on Glen Ridge resulting in a project larger than what the developer may be willing to settle and without having the quality controls that Glen Ridge could extract from a negotiated settlement.
    (3) With unmet need, Glen Ridge could be exposed to building remedy lawsuits brought by other developers who “create” land in Glen Ridge by the buying and consolidation of lots and property.
    Conversely, a negotiated settlement would result in Glen Ridge’s being afforded a 10-year moratorium on builder’s remedy litigation.

    So that fancy home on your yellow lined road Lost? All of the homes around it can easily be purchased and replaced by condos. And your street could handle the traffic. Be careful where you buy folks. The Dems in the state don’t got your back.

  100. I can’t wait until they build affordable housing next door to Pumpkin and put a bus stop out front, since it is a main thoroughfare.

  101. That way he can watch Turkeys and minorities as a benefit of his high taxes, which is the cost of society, after all. Hahahahahahahahahaha

  102. Do we need to come to your house with a radar gun to prove to you that cars drive 50 mph on your street too?

    Prove to me that a person living in a 14 million dollar estate would move on the basis of property taxes.

  103. Lost says:

    I want my apology. People are clearly wrong on this issue, and spreading conservative propaganda. Keep beating me up for your wrong thoughts on issues like taxes.

    “Liberals and conservatives have been arguing for years over whether high taxes drive away people with high-incomes. Do millionaires flee from high-tax states to low-tax jurisdictions, as tax-cutting lawmakers claim? Now, in the most extensive look at the question to date, a group of researchers from Stanford University and the U.S. Treasury Department have the answer: Millionaires hardly ever move from one state to another for any reason, and when they do there is little evidence that their choice is driven by taxes.

    There is one exception, Florida. For reasons the researchers cannot explain, rich people do move from high-tax states to the Sunshine State. But they also move from low-tax states to Florida. And few seem interested in decamping from high-tax states to other low-tax states, such as Texas, Tennessee, or New Hampshire. People just…want to live in Florida.

    Excluding what the authors call the “Florida effect,” tax rates seem to have no effect at all on state-to-state migration by the rich. In their words: “The most striking finding of this research is how little elites seem willing to move to exploit tax advantages across state lines … Millionaire tax flight is occurring, but only at the margins of statistical and socioeconomic significance.”

    This paper, by Christobal Young and Charles Varner of Stanford and Ithai Z. Lurie and Richard Prisinzano of Treasury, is important in part because it relies on a very large sample of high-income taxpayers. The authors reviewed tax returns for all million-dollar earners in all 50 states and D.C. over 13 years. They looked only at income tax rates.”

    http://www.forbes.com/sites/beltway/2016/05/26/do-high-state-taxes-drive-away-millionaires-not-really/#4777382f68f6

    D-FENS says:
    December 8, 2016 at 12:56 pm
    Yeah…nobody ever moves because taxes are high…PROVE IT!

  104. Lost says:

    Will you be a man and admit that you are wrong on this issue and I am right?

    The Original NJ ExPat says:
    December 8, 2016 at 1:31 pm
    Do we need to come to your house with a radar gun to prove to you that cars drive 50 mph on your street too?

    Prove to me that a person living in a 14 million dollar estate would move on the basis of property taxes.

  105. Fast Eddie says:

    Where’s Otto, puzzy and flee?

  106. Objectionable as they were, they hated Pumpkin too.

    Where’s Otto, puzzy and flee?

  107. (scratching head)…so you don’t believe people drive 50mph on Pumpkin X. Bouldevard?

    Will you be a man and admit that you are wrong on this issue and I am right?

    The Original NJ ExPat says:
    December 8, 2016 at 1:31 pm
    Do we need to come to your house with a radar gun to prove to you that cars drive 50 mph on your street too?

    Prove to me that a person living in a 14 million dollar estate would move on the basis of property taxes.

  108. flee flew, puzzy pussied out, and Otto has bloody stools.

    Where’s Otto, puzzy and flee?

  109. Juice Box says:

    It’s deeply disturbing that Great-grandfather Mick Jagger (aka mick the shagger) has had a baby number 8 with Melanie Hamrick who is 29 years old. How can this possibly work? She’s far too old for him.

  110. Anon E. Moose, saying 'Come back, JJ' says:

    I want my apology.

    I want my pony.

  111. Pumpkin’s parents must have really treated him like a turd, that’s why he is so comfortable with the abuse he signs up for on a daily basis here. He must be an optimist, because he hopes and prays someone will validate him here but he doesn’t seem to ever realize it is his childhood all over again. Pumpkin seeks our approval and we consistently tell him we don’t approve of turds.

    I want my apology.

    I want my pony.

  112. The times are a-changing. A lot of (white) 17 year olds don’t want to have babies yet.

    It’s deeply disturbing that Great-grandfather Mick Jagger (aka mick the shagger) has had a baby number 8 with Melanie Hamrick who is 29 years old. How can this possibly work? She’s far too old for him.

  113. Fabius Maximus says:

    Alpine taxes are a bargain. Average assessed is 2 mil with 20k taxes. CC is paying 77k for his place. I have friends in Montclair paying 40k for 1.2mil assessed.

  114. I just heard on Bloomberg Radio that condos in Boston are rising in value 4 times faster than SFHs. As flea and poopkin like to say, time to do some RE day-trading. Meanwhile we’ll be comfortably living in our nice big rental SFH come January 1st. I think the Poopkin will be crying soon, 30 mortgages now 4.1%. Who is going to buy a house on busy highway with sky-high taxes when mortgage rates get to 5% (even though it is the cost you pay for pretending that high taxes are a good thing).

  115. jcer says:

    bingo FAB, alpine property taxes are low for NJ/NYC metro. Most of the towns they’ve mentioned have relatively low property taxes. The issue is more likely NJ income tax which at 8.97% vs. 0% in florida is a nice enticement to move if you don’t have to live here. Even with regards to the tri-state NJ has the highest income tax on multi-million dollar earners. The florida effect is due to the fact that no one works down there they are all retired, most high earners have to do something for their money which means a need to pay taxes where the business is(likely a high tax state).

    The affordable housing argument is absurd to me and one thing I really strongly disagree with the dems about it. I’m all about providing affordable housing but to force ritzy towns where many of the people living there have worked hard for 10-20 years to to afford the down payment and are still working hard to pay the oppressive property taxes and someone poor gets to move in without struggle or hard work and then contributes to the property taxes spiraling out of control, it is patently unfair and a violation of the rights of the people who bought their homes on the open market. Affordable housing shouldn’t mean you get live in glen ridge, millburn, alpine, saddle river, et al without earning your place and paying your dues. Also the state should not be able to impact your towns zoning, to me it sounds like the town should be able to make the determination of how they are going to be developed and based on the existing zoning a plan to take four single families and make 125 units should require a zoning change and the input of surrounding property owners.

  116. Steamturd thinking about the remains of Hillary's umbilical stump says:

    jcer. It should. But it doesn’t. Someone’s lining somebodies pockets.

  117. 3b says:

    Not alpine of cost. But I know quite a few people in my blue ribbony town who are or will be moving because of the high taxes. Of course they voted yes for every spending referendum that increased the taxes. And of course they still want the big bucks for their houses with the high property taxes and they expect the young people who might buy to pay those prices with the taxes. When I ask well if you can’t afford them how are these young people supposed to afford them and pay you big bucks and most of them having to pay child care too. That’s when I get the perplexed look the silence and the eye blink. I do so love the eye blink!

  118. Fabius Maximus says:

    Heres one for you Grim. Burn through the VC cash, run out of market. The big firms will swipe up your high end market, with quality and the cheap knock offs will cover the rest.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2016/12/07/technology/personaltech/the-gadget-apocalypse-is-upon-us.html

  119. Lost says:

    For once, you are dead right about me. My mother was great, father not so much. Not proud of it. Maybe that’s why I’m positive and strive to be a great dad; promised myself I will never be like my father. I still love my father and respect him for instilling values in me, but he wasn’t a good father or husband.

    For some strange reason, I rabidly seek the acceptance of the members of this blog. Why I look up to you guys even though you abuse me on a daily basis is beyond me. Maybe I’m out to prove something, I really don’t know. I think there are some really intelligent individuals on this board, and even though they put me down, I learn a lot from them. Since I started participating on this blog, I’ve increased my general knowledge by 10 times and significantly improved my writing ability. So maybe that keeps me coming back for more. Again, I really don’t know.

    The Original NJ ExPat says:
    December 8, 2016 at 3:39 pm
    Pumpkin’s parents must have really treated him like a turd, that’s why he is so comfortable with the abuse he signs up for on a daily basis here. He must be an optimist, because he hopes and prays someone will validate him here but he doesn’t seem to ever realize it is his childhood all over again. Pumpkin seeks our approval and we consistently tell him we don’t approve of turds.

  120. Lost says:

    Couldn’t agree more. How this law is defendable is beyond me. And the bottom line, why would you want to live in an affordable housing dwelling in an elite town? I would never feel comfortable living amongst people I don’t belong with. The same could be said of a wealthy individual living amongst the poor, why in the world would you do that? Either scenario, it just doesn’t work.

    “The affordable housing argument is absurd to me and one thing I really strongly disagree with the dems about it. I’m all about providing affordable housing but to force ritzy towns where many of the people living there have worked hard for 10-20 years to to afford the down payment and are still working hard to pay the oppressive property taxes and someone poor gets to move in without struggle or hard work and then contributes to the property taxes spiraling out of control, it is patently unfair and a violation of the rights of the people who bought their homes on the open market. Affordable housing shouldn’t mean you get live in glen ridge, millburn, alpine, saddle river, et al without earning your place and paying your dues. Also the state should not be able to impact your towns zoning, to me it sounds like the town should be able to make the determination of how they are going to be developed and based on the existing zoning a plan to take four single families and make 125 units should require a zoning change and the input of surrounding property owners.”

  121. Fabius Maximus says:

    Trumps other wall.

    https://www.yahoo.com/news/trump-scraps-sea-wall-proposal-in-ireland-160949641.html

    Love the irony “Trump argued then that the wall would protect his land from the damaging effects of climate change.”

  122. Fabius Maximus says:

    Hey Gary,

    For the same reason you cant critize O for what he inherited from GWB, you cant credit Trump for what he gets from O.

    http://www.politico.com/story/2016/12/trump-obama-economic-success-232120

    Trump can’t win here. O inherited a train wreck and gets credit for what the have today.
    Dow was 7,949.09 when he took office and 18,332.74 on election day close.
    So put on 10,000 points. Remember the discussion in her on the Dow 10K hats.

    The 1200 point post election bounce is nice, but he has some big numbers to follow.

    Interesting times. Are we great yet!

  123. 3b says:

    Fab Obama had nothing to do with the stock markets rise. It was fed induced period. Trump on the hand is fueling the rise because the market perceives he may be good for business and growers the economy. Whether that’s true or not remains to be seen. You fancy yourself an open minded educated refined liberal like so many other liberals. You need to at least accept that trump may actually accomplish something that will actually benefit all everyday Americans including the group’s liberals say they care about.

  124. Steamturd thinking about the remains of Hillary's umbilical stump says:

    Trump = Welfare for the rich (their voters).
    Hillary = Welfare for the rich (their fundraisers) and for the poor (their voters).

  125. Fabius Maximus says:

    Steam,

    At least the poor had a seat at the Hillary table.
    http://www.cbsnews.com/news/half-of-americans-are-shut-off-from-economic-growth/
    Roll on the mid term Shellacking.

  126. 3b says:

    Fab did they really? They are still poor.

  127. Fabius Maximus says:

    3b yes they are and its about to get a lot worse for them. We are back to the Reagan model, cuts to welfare to try and put a band aid on deficit spending.

    Trumps big plan seems to be all about the offshore income repatriation. That seems to be his drive for Jobs growth. ITS NOT GOING TO HAPPEN.
    Cash comes back, it goes to one-off dividends, stock buy backs, and corporate bonuses. It doesn’t go to jobs.

  128. chicagofinance says:

    Hopefully they offshore you….

  129. Lost says:

    Seriously, Obama was a hell of a president. Anyone stating otherwise is severely biased.

    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2013-09-12/obamas-wall-street-bank-rescue-stabilized-economy-at-a-political-cost

  130. Lost says:

    And if “Ragner” still lurks, come out of hiding, and explain why the Keynesian strategies you wailed against, worked. You stated over and over that this would happen and that would happen, but what really happen? Get out your Dow 20,000 hats, this economic boom is going to be the best of our life. Bring on the roaring 20’s part deuce. What a great time to be alive. To live through this coming boom. Going to be the first real growth in my adulthood. Can’t wait.

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