Related Blog Posts
Do Rising Interest Rates Lead to Falling Home Prices?
6 hours ago ago from Seattle Bubble
Yesterday a reader asked : I was wondering if you could write a post sometime on the relationship between interest rates and home prices (or direct me to a previous post if you've already done this). My husband is feeling pressured to buy a home within the next couple of months b/c he thinks interest rates will go up soon and we will have to spend more money for a house. I feel that an increase in interest rates will cause home prices to ...
Related contentGerman inflation 0.8 percent in January (AP)
11 hours ago ago from Economic Stimulus Act
Germany's annual inflation rate was more or less steady at 0.8 percent in January, powered by year-on-year rises in oil prices, official data showed Tuesday.
Related contentStart preparing for oil at $200 a barrel
17 hours ago ago from Macor Shipping
The Kirit Parikh Committee is the third such committee to suggest decontrolling petroleum product prices. Probably politicians will again refuse to do so, and instead decree a modest increase in petrol and diesel prices. Yet the key issue is not whether petrol and diesel prices should reflect today’s oil price of $75/barrel. It is that booming Asia will in a decade push oil to $200/barrel and maybe $300/barrel. India must prepare for a world ...
Related contentIndia can't afford to be lax on inflation:Central Bank
21 hours ago ago from ::News4u::
News4u-Business Desk-India can't afford to be lax about fighting inflation as the nation seeks to slow price gains to 5 per cent or less, central bank Deputy Governor K C Chakrabarty said today. You cannot afford to be in any way lax in monitoring inflation and controlling it, Chakrabarty said in an interview in Sydney. We would not like to have more than 4 or 5 per cent inflation. That's the challenge. Central Bank Governor ...
Related contentIncrease of Inflation in Canada
6 hours ago ago from Financial Planning » Start Your Financial Planning Today
The longest period of deflation in Canadian history since 1953 happened this year, but last month saw this deflation come to a finish. A positive leap to 0.1% happened in the year-to-year inflation rates which was up from the -0.9% Canadians had in September. Questions are still going to be asked even with the minute jump in inflation. Is this elevated or reduced and what does it all convey? Giving no facts can sometimes be an ...
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