
'Not clear' ending capital gains tax on homes would help housing market, says Redfin's Fairweather
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'Not clear' ending capital gains tax on homes would help housing market, says Redfin's Fairweather
Daryl Fairweather, Redfin chief economist, joins 'Fast Money' to talk how Pres. Trump's proposal to end capital gains tax on homes.

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Politico
an hour ago
- Politico
Tariff man's moment
Presented by Send tips | Subscribe here | Email Canada Playbook | Follow Politico Canada Thanks for reading Canada Playbook. TGIF. In today's edition: → Trump dropped the hammer. What happens next? → The deal-or-no-deal moment for Canada. → Canada Playbook will not publish Monday. We'll see you on Tuesday. Trade war THE BIG DAY — Today marks the two-year anniversary of Meta's landscape-altering decision to block Canadian news links on Facebook and Instagram. Why, what else is on the agenda? Oh, right, that. — Tariff man strikes back: Trade watchers around the world — which is just about everybody these days, one way or another — are absorbing DONALD TRUMP's latest trade gambits. The president slapped a 35 percent tariff, effective today, on Canadian imports not covered by the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement. (Most imports are covered by the USMCA.) An executive order posted late Thursday, ostensibly to 'address the flow of illicit drugs across our northern border' — aka fentanyl — made it official. — The word from 1600: A senior White House official told POLITICO last night that Canadians 'haven't shown the same level of constructiveness that we've seen from the Mexican side.' In other words: No new security and trade deal with the northern neighbor. Not yet. — The PM responds: Twenty-three minutes after midnight, Prime Minister MARK CARNEY posted a page-long statement on X. He indicated that the USMCA shield means the average U.S. tariff on a Canadian import 'remains one of its lowest for all of its trading partners.' Carney repeated his government's insistence that fentanyl isn't flowing over the border in large quantities. He reiterated efforts to cut interprovincial trade barriers and build 'nationbuilding' projects in Canada's interest. No drama. No punches thrown. PLUS ÇA CHANGE — The president repeated his grievances about Canada from behind a White House lectern after an unrelated announcement on Thursday afternoon. Trump focused his ire on the ag sector and his northern neighbor's lackluster defense spending. No mention of fentanyl, but plenty of claims that Canadians are unfair: 'They want a lot of things from our country. And for years, we did it.' Trump said a call came in from Carney on Thursday, but the two didn't speak. Carney's office didn't reply to Playbook's request for confirmation of that outreach. — Second opinion: Earlier in the day, Commerce Secretary HOWARD LUTNICK told Fox's LARRY KUDLOW that Canada's plan to recognize a Palestinian state was 'tone deaf.' He reminded Kudlow with a smirk that only Canada and China retaliated against American tariffs earlier this year. 'I just don't see the president stepping off the gas now,' Lutnick said, unless Carney changes tack. 'If he starts turning on the charm, and if he takes off his retaliation … and stops the silliness, maybe the president will let it down a bit.' Otherwise, Lutnick concluded, the levying of 35 percent tariffs 'is surely in the cards.' Fact-check: True. — Captain Canada: Ontario Premier DOUG FORD was undeterred by the straight line the commerce secretary drew from retaliation to new tariffs. 'Now is not the time to roll over. We need to stand our ground,' Ford posted on X, pushing for countertariffs on steel and aluminum. THE BIG QUESTION — Can DOMINIC LEBLANC and KIRSTEN HILLMAN still eke out a deal with the American side? POLITICO's DANIEL DESROCHERS, BEN LEFEBVRE and DOUG PALMER point out that Trump's dealmaking has left behind a trail of ambiguity — scant specifics, few written agreements and even fewer lasting outcomes. — Maybe the biggest question: What's a 'deal' even worth? PROZONE For POLITICO Pro subscribers, here's our latest trade news: — White House indicates Trump may not extend deadline for China talks. — Tariff panic in Canada inspires USMCA paperwork rush. — Trump's tariffs get frosty reception at federal appeals court. — EU expects US tariff commitments by Friday. — Trump extends Mexico tariff deadline for 90 days. And our latest policy newsletter: Up against a deadline. THE ROOMS THAT MATTER — The PM has not released his schedule. WHO'S UP, WHO'S DOWN Up: Google searches for 'katy perry justin trudeau' after, well, you probably heard. Down: The square footage of the ballot in the upcoming Battle River-Crowfoot federal by-election, following Elections Canada's decision to make it a write-in contest. Want more POLITICO? Download our mobile app to save stories, get notifications on U.S.-Canada relations, and more. In iOS or Android . For your radar MORNING MONEY: CAPITAL RISK — POLITICO's flagship financial newsletter has a new Friday edition built for the economic era we're living in: one shaped by political volatility, disruption and a wave of policy decisions with sector-wide consequences. Each week, Morning Money: Capital Risk brings sharp reporting and analysis on how political risk is moving markets and how investors are adapting. Want to know how health care regulation, tariffs, or court rulings could ripple through the economy? Start here. MORNING MUST-CLICKS — LEAH BORTS-KUPERMAN of The Narwhal reports that Canada's Department of National Defence plans to build new Armed Forces housing units in locations listed on the federal government's inventory of contaminated properties. — 'We just couldn't stand on the sidelines,' Artificial Intelligence and Digital Innovation Minister EVAN SOLOMON tells Toronto Life of his decision to enter politics. — 'Bad bill meets good and necessary debate. Things will get spicy,' national security expert WESLEY WARK tells CARMINE STARNINO of The Walrus in a Q&A on Bill C-2. — POLITICO's ADAM WREN writes on JOE BIDEN's life after the White House: 'He's staffed by only one or two aides and a small Secret Service detail. He holes up for hours at a time in Delaware working on his memoir with a new ghostwriter, while undergoing treatment for an aggressive form of prostate cancer.' — The Macdonald-Laurier Institute published an ANDREW MACDOUGALL longread: 'Dismantling the attention economy: How the battle for attention is killing the traditional news media and eroding the foundations of Western democracies.' PLAYBOOKERS Birthdays: HBD to Sen. WANDA THOMAS BERNARD, Crestview partner ROB MOORE and McMillan Vantage managing director RICHARD MAHONEY. Saturday: Transport and Internal Trade Minister CHRYSTIA FREELAND, U.N. Ambassador BOB RAE, Ontario Transport Minister PRABMEET SARKARIA. Sunday: ALEXANDRA VALCOUR of Proof Strategies, former NDP MP DAN HARRIS and ex-Quebec MNA SYLVAIN ROY. Monday: Former Newfoundland and Labrador Premier DANNY WILLIAMS. Noted: The Public Policy Forum published a new report on bolstering local coverage of national elections. First recommendation: creating a nonpartisan election coverage fund, a philanthropically funded endowment to be distributed among smaller outlets. From the ethics files: Energy and Natural Resources Minister TIM HODGSON declared two free tickets to the Calgary Stampede Rodeo gifted to him by former interim Conservative Leader RONA AMBROSE and partner J.P. VEITCH. Movers and shakers: ÉTIENNE-ALEXANDRE BEAUREGARD, a former speechwriter and strategic planning adviser for Quebec's Cabinet, has joined the research team at Cardus. Media mentions: This is the first day of post-CBC life for longtime broadcaster MARK CONNOLLY. Send Playbookers tips to canadaplaybook@ LOBBY WATCH Our daily check-in on federal lobbyist registrations and notable meetings around town: — North Atlantic Refining Ltd., which operates the Braya Renewable Fuels refinery in Come By Chance, Newfoundland and Labrador, logged recent meetings with senior political staff at the Department of Finance, Intergovernmental Affairs, Environment and Climate Change, Natural Resources and Industry. TRIVIA Thursday's answer: Canada's first Department of External Affairs office opened on June 1, 1909, in downtown Ottawa above a barber shop. Props to ROBERT MCDOUGALL, ELIZABETH BURN, RAY DEL BIANCO, PATRICK JUNEAU, GORDON RANDALL, RODDY MCFALL, SHAUGHN MCARTHUR, JOHN PEPPER, KEVIN DEN HEIJER, JOHN MERRIMAN, MARCEL MARCOTTE, MALCOLM MCKAY, JENN KEAY and MARC SHAW. Friday's question: In 2023, the Government of Manitoba passed legislation officially declaring LOUIS RIEL to be the province's first premier. What happened to the Métis leader on this date in history? Send your answer to canadaplaybook@ Writing Tuesday's Playbook: SUE ALLAN. Canada Playbook would not happen without: Canada Editor Sue Allan, editor Willa Plank and POLITICO's Grace Maalouf.


Newsweek
2 hours ago
- Newsweek
Number of Home Sellers Taking Their House Off the Market Skyrockets
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Facing reluctant buyers and increasing pressure to lower their asking prices, a growing number of American sellers are taking their homes off the market entirely, according to a new report by Nationwide, delistings were up by 48 percent in July compared to a year earlier, the report found, as sellers refuse to adjust their price expectations to a market that is slowly shifting in favor of buyers. For every 100 newly listed homes added to the U.S. market in the same month, 21 were delisted. "This points to sellers anchored to peak-era price expectations and willing to wait rather than negotiate," Danielle Hale, the chief economist at said in the report. How Did We Get Here? The U.S. housing market has recently reached a breaking point as aspiring buyers struggling with sky-high home prices, historically elevated mortgage rates and other rising costs did not show up for this year's homeselling season. While spring usually marks the busiest time of the year for home sales and purchases, this year was a sluggish one. Sellers who were locked into their homes by lower monthly payments stopped waiting for mortgage rates to go down and listed their homes, but these listings began piling up on the market unsold. As a result, sellers are increasingly being forced to offer price discounts, and the market is slowly shifting toward buyers. Some parts of the country, including many Florida metropolitan areas where prices have dropped as inventory surged, are already buyers' markets. A general view of a home advertised for sale in a residential neighborhood in San Jose, California, on August 15, 2024. A general view of a home advertised for sale in a residential neighborhood in San Jose, California, on August 15, Do Delistings Do to the Market? Already in the spring, experts were warning that sellers, despite the recent headwinds, still had the upper hand on the market. Chen Zhao, the head of economics research at Redfin, told Newsweek that while she expected inventory to continue rising in the near future, it might not do so at the same pace seen in the past few months. "The rise in new listings may slow down a bit though as some sellers do decide to hold back because prices are getting soft. Very few people will be forced to sell because they're underwater or facing foreclosure," Zhao said. "Many will be waiting for rates to come down a bit and others may wait for price growth to improve again," she added. "It really depends on each seller's personal circumstances whether waiting makes sense." However, "many sellers will be forced by circumstances to sell, and a lot of them will have been waiting for three years for rates to come down. Additionally, there are a lot of people sitting on home equity that they use to help with the sticker shock of going to 7 percent mortgage rates," Zhao continued. This means that while buyers will continue to see more options on the market and will acquire more negotiating power as inventory increases, they are unlikely to see dramatic price changes at the national level as sellers push the brakes on this supply growth. The highest share of delistings compared to new listings in the entire nation was seen in Miami, Florida, at 59—more than double compared to May. It was followed by Phoenix, Arizona, with 37 delistings and Riverside, California, with 30 delistings. These numbers, Redfin experts said, suggested that sellers in these metros were confident in the strength of their city's markets and their future.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Meta Platforms Issues Upbeat Revenue Outlook as Second-Quarter Results Beat Estimates
Meta Platforms (META) shares jumped early Thursday as the Facebook parent issued a third-quarter rev Sign in to access your portfolio