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Page 3 - வீட்டுவசதி ப்ரைஸ் குறியீட்டு News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Inflation is a non-event – Capisce?

5/25/2021 11:09:19 AM GMT Inflation remains transitory – investors take the markets higher. Lonnie Musk Tweets about renewable energy sources for cyrptos causing them to surge in the afternoon.. Oil – rallies another 3.5% taking it up and thru $66/barrel – an 8% move in 3 days. US futures edge higher as the S&P is just 1% below all time highs. Try the Pasta Limone (Lemon Sauce – delish). Good morning – US stocks rallied yesterday, while the 10 yr. treasury yield fell to 1.58%...….Tech +1.8%, communications +1.85%  and the ‘disruptor growth’ names +2.7%,  leading us higher as investors appear to be putting the whole inflation conversation on the back burner again……At 4 pm the charts revealed that the Dow added 186 pts or 0.5%, the S&P’s up 41 pts or 1%, the Nasdaq gained 191 pts or 1.4% while the Russell added 12 pts or 0.5%.

See how home prices have changed in Pennsylvania over the past decade

See how home prices have changed in Pennsylvania over the past decade Today 5:00 AM But while much attention has focused on the real estate boom of the past year, home prices throughout the state have gone up as a whole over the past decade. We compared the Housing Price Index from 2010 with the same data from 2020, both issued by the Federal Housing Financing Agency, to see how much the values of single-family homes have increased in Pennsylvania. Say you bought a home in the 17103 ZIP code in Dauphin County in 2010 for $200,000. If you bought that home today, it is most likely to cost $236,000, as the HPI determined that the cost of a single-family home in that ZIP code rose by 18 percent in the past decade. The areas that experienced the biggest leaps in home value were in the Pittsburgh and Philadelphia areas.

See how home prices changed in every N J ZIP code over the past 10 years on this map

See how home prices changed in every N.J. ZIP code over the past 10 years on this map Updated May 04, 2021; Twitter Share Home values rose an average of about 10% each year between 2000 and 2006. Between 2007 and 2012, home values fell an average of 5% annually. They increased an average of 3% each year between 2013 and 2019 and last year they jumped about 12%, according to data from Jeffrey Otteau, a real estate economist and president of the Otteau Group. What did all the up and down movement mean for homeowners in New Jersey? Big gains for some, even without accounting for the wild market changes in the past four months. (The average New Jersey home price for the first quarter of 2021 was $500,628, or 24% more than the $403,785 for the first quarter of 2020, according to data from New Jersey Realtors.)

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