This Is the “Final Collapse” of the Dollar’s Buying Power

By Teeka Tiwari

I remember years ago when my daughter – my middle child – got accepted to a private school. She worked hard to pass that entrance exam.

At the time, some things went askew in my business. And I couldn’t spare the capital needed to send her to a private school.

So I had to sit down with my then-preteen daughter and tell her the hard truth. I said, “Honey, I can’t afford these school fees.”

That conversation haunts me to this day.

Friends, you never get over a wound like that. I’m a far wealthier man now than I was back then, but I still carry the guilt of not being able to provide for my daughter.

I couldn’t give her the opportunity she needed at the time she needed it because I didn’t have the money. I don’t think I’ll ever get over it.

If you’re a parent, you know exactly what I’m talking about.

Here’s why I’m telling you about this painful moment in my life…

The Most Splendid Housing Bubbles in Canada: Prices Drop Further as Sales Slow and New Listings Jump Further

By Wolf Richter for WOLF STREET.

The Canada Home Price Benchmark Index for single family houses in fell for the third month in a row, in September by 1.3% from August, after having dropped by 1.1% and by 0.5% in the prior two months, to $815,300 (all prices in Canadian dollars).

The three months in a row of declines came after a wild and woolly sucker rally in the spring, fueled by the spring buying season and fake hopes about rate cuts. But the Bank of Canada instead went on to hike rates further to 5.0%, and at the last meeting added a further tightening bias, while inflation has begun to resurge across the board, topped off with Canada’s worst rent inflation since 1983.

The breathtaking price plunge last year forms the base for this year’s year-over-year comparison; and after the wild and woolly sucker rally this spring, the benchmark price is up 1.6% year-over-year. Since the peak in March 2022, the benchmark price has now dropped by 14.2%, or by $135,300, according to data from the Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA) on Friday.

The Pullback in Stocks May Not Last Much Longer

By Matt Call

The benchmark S&P 500 Index sank to a fresh four-month low last week...

Concerns about the rapid rise in interest rates weighed on the index. It's now down about 4% from its July high.

The weakness has been tough on nearly every sector in the market. And now, broad investor fear is spiking as a result.

But believe it or not, this is actually a bullish sign for stocks in the long term...

You see, as I'll explain today, activity in the options market indicates the market pullback may not last for long.

Traders and investors alike have been loading up on put options...

That makes sense. Put options are a leveraged way to bet on falling stock prices. And falling prices are exactly what most investors expect today.