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Well... We made it! Happy Friday! I'm still Elisabeth Buchwald and here are the headlines you need to know as you get ready to power down for the weekend. |
Home prices are plunging at rates seen almost a decade ago as high mortgage rates continue to hurt homebuyers. |
In August, existing homes sales fell 0.4%, marking the seventh straight month of declines and sliding 20% from the same month a year ago. Year-over-year sales dropped from $5.99 million in August 2021 to $4.8 million in 2022. |
Meanwhile, the median home price, while still rising 7.7% in August on a year-over-year basis, fell 6% in the past two months. After reaching a record all-time high of $413,800 in June, it dropped to $389,000 in August. |
But at the same time, housing inventory is below where it was a year ago. |
The name is bond(s), fixed income bond(s) |
There's James Bond and then there are Treasury bonds. Just like James Bond fights evil forces, bonds are helping investors stave off stock market losses. |
The S&P 500 stock dividend yield is around 1.5%, but the guaranteed one-year Treasury pays just more than 4.1%. (The S&P dividend yield is the weighted average of each listed company's most recent annual dividend divided by the current share price). |
That's not always the case. Bonds prices usually rise when stocks fall since they're often used as a counterbalance to stocks in a portfolio. When bond prices rise yields fall. But as the stock market fell this year, bond prices did as well which pulled yields higher. This happened as a result of uncertainty over interest rates and the economy. |
📰 More stories you shouldn't miss 📰 |
College sports sponsorships and taxes: As college athletes cash in on NIL, tax experts and schools remind them to pay Uncle Sam |
4-day work week?: UK companies are testing out a 4-day workweek. Most have seen no loss in productivity |
Housing market correction?: Here's what experts think is ahead for the real estate market |
About The Daily Money |
Each weekday, The Daily Money delivers the best consumer news from USA TODAY. We break down financial news and provide the TLDR version: how decisions by the Federal Reserve, government and companies impact you. |
Elisabeth Buchwald is a personal finance and markets correspondent for USA TODAY. You can follow her on Twitter @BuchElisabeth. |
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