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Crypto Trading explained for Beginners ✅ How does a long position work? How does a short position work? What is a liquidation price or stop loss? In this video I explain how Bitcoin trading with leverage works.

⏱️Timestamps⏱️
00:00 Difference between Spot & Futures Market
01:22 How does Leverage Trading work?
02:27 Long Position explained
03:33 Short Position explained
05:04 Risks involved in leverage trading
05:50 Can you lose more than you have invested?
07:03 How to get started…

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A Reassessment of Hedge Fund Returns Using Daily Return Data


Christos Antoniadis and Spyros Skouras

Daily hedge fund return data uncovers more factors, lower alpha, and greater time-varying exposures than monthly data suggests — revealing that investors gain far better insights and improved portfolio decisions with higher-frequency information.

The dirty secret behind Big Tech’s AI arms race: hardware investments that are obsolete in 3 years



There’s a wild paradox in the middle of the biggest story in tech right now. The GPUs and other essential hardware that the hyperscalers are spending so lavishly to pack into their data centers with, it turns out, go obsolete in a hurry. That’s the view detailed in an excellent new report from Research Affiliates, a firm that oversees around $200 billion in investment strategies for the RAFI index funds and ETFs. Author Chris Brightman—he’s RA’s CEO—contends that the AI arms race has effectively created a new industrial era. In this transformed ecosystem, companies aren’t “investing” in the traditional sense. Rather, they’re churning equipment at such an incredibly rapid tempo to generate sales that it’s changing what is even meant by capex.

“They’re more like supermarkets than traditional tech or industrial enterprises, but their turnover isn’t in the likes of grocery items. It’s the stuff that generate their large language models, vector search and other products,” Brightman told me in a phone interview. “They’re in an arms race where they need to replace their hardware very rapidly, in other words, restock their shelves in a hurry.” The problem, Brightman asserts, is that hyperscalers are taking losses on the large language models, vector databases and other products they’re selling to companies and consumers, so the more hardware they buy, the more money they lose. “Right now, each is using AI to maintain crucial dominance in their field, and that makes sense.” Brightman observes. But, he adds, the immense spending needed to maintain those “moats” and keep rivals at bay could generate puny returns going forward, and harm their overall profitability.

In the article, Brightman spotlights the historic surge in AI capex that’s mushroomed from $250 billion in 2024 to $650 billion this year by Bloomberg’s estimate, equal to 2% of GDP. That industry’s historic appetite for capital spawned the view that AI’s becoming the new steel or railroads. But as Brightman points out, the equipment and infrastructure that supported those businesses is far different from the gear that drives AI. “Steel mills and rail tracks depreciated over 40 to 45 years,” he writes. He then contrasts those multi-decade useful lives to the scenario in AI. Hyperscalers such as Microsoft, Amazon, Alphabet and Meta are depreciating their GPUs and other hardware over roughly 5 or 6 years on their income statements. Although those spans appear short, he says, their real “lives” are much shorter.

In an economic sense, assets become fully depreciated, or turn obsolete, when the revenues they generate no longer cover their cost of acquisition (reflected in yearly depreciation), operating expense, and cost of capital. According to Brightman, the industry numbers show that AI hardware loses its value over about three years. As proof, he cites data on the profitability of Nvidia’s industry-standard H100 GPUs. In their second year, a H100 spawned $36,000 in annual profit for a 137% return on investment. But by year four, the product was losing over $4,400 for a negative ROI of 34%, and the results sank fast from there. Writes Brightman, “The economic life of AI hardware is [a lot] shorter than its accounting life.”

It’s not that the equipment wears out. Physically, it can actually run a lot longer. The reason AI hardware lose potency so fast: Nvidia, AMD and the other producers are crafting fresh offerings that each year provide enormous increases in computing power per watt deployed. Since the hyperscalers face tough energy constraints, they’re constantly seeking gobs of new “compute” using dollops of extra electricity. Normally, if typical manufacturers were adding capital at the pace the hyperscalers are setting in AI, they’d already have built a gigantic base of equipment and infrastructure they could deploy for years, without the need to keep buying more. Not so in this brave new business. AI equipment is evolving so fast that each year, the hyperscalers need to replace an immense part of their capital base just to maintain the same capacity for forging AI wonders. “Most of their spending isn’t growth capex, it’s ‘maintenance’ capex,” says Brightman. Nevertheless, the overall numbers are so huge that although only about one-third goes to expansion, that’s still good enough to hugely grow the volume of products and services they can deliver each year.

The hyperscalers are using AI, and taking big losses, chiefly to protect their turf

In our phone calls, Brightman nailed the conundrum for the giants of AI. “As they ramp the compute, they lose more and more money,” he says. “But they have plenty of rationale to do so for now.” All of the Big Four aim to provide the best AI features to enhance their signature offerings, and recognize that they’ll lose their leadership in those staples if the AI component isn’t top notch. Amazon makes most of its money providing computations and storage in the cloud. It’s unable to recoup nearly the cost of the AI additions from its customers, says Brightman. “But it’s sensible because if Amazon doesn’t stay in the arms race, they’ll lose the cloud business. They need the AI services as part of the cloud component.”

As for Microsoft, its staple is office software that generates subscription revenues, notably on its 360 platform. That franchise now faces stiff competition from Google’s docs and sheets products. “To protect its existing business and keep its customers, Microsoft has to offer AI model services, even if it’s losing money on its AI capex,” declares Brightman. Alphabet is pre-eminent in “search,” and cleans up as the world’s biggest seller of online ads. Microsoft has mounted a challenge by launching its own search engine. “To continue its profitable line of business and keep its edge, Alphabet needs the AI element, and that requires big investments in data centers,” says Brightman.

Meta’s got to worry about the other three invading its highly-lucrative, social media advertising business. “People come to their platform to see the pictures and the video, and it costs Meta a lot of money to produce that content that supports the ads,” notes Brightman. Meta uses AI to personalize feeds for users, rank content on instagram and Facebook, and check postings for safety, and needs those uses to maintain its lead. Yet once again, says Brightman, it can’t yet charge enough for its ads to pay for its gigantic new spending needed to provide those fantastic features.

Brightman concludes that the gusher in AI investment doesn’t mean that this revolutionary advance will prove a big profit spinner for the Big Four. It’s more a weapon for each titan to defend its domain. “When capital turns over rapidly, and competition forces continuous reinvestment, extraordinary spending can sustain competitive position without creating value for shareholders,” he states in the article. Once again, the shelf life of this what’s filling our data centers is so brief that buying GPUs, say, is more like replenishing supermarket stocks than building a factories that endure for decades.

On the other hand, Brightman told me that stuff that’s costing these champions big time helped him greatly in preparing his analysis. “A year ago, this project would have taken me nine months to do the research and modeling. But I used the best of Claude, ChatGPT, and Gemini, and synthesized their feedback, and did it start to finish in three weeks,” he recounts. Brightman’s vignette tells the story. This new industrial era may be a lot more beneficial to the folks and businesses that use the AI-enhanced products than the enterprises that furnish them.

Over Half of Americans Now Need a Side Hustle Just to Survive in 2026


antoniodiaz / Shutterstock.com

Side hustles are no longer optional for many of us. In fact, 53% of Americans with side hustles say they’d struggle to cover essential expenses without the extra income. In The Penny Hoarder’s 2026 survey, we dove into the side hustle culture and discovered most are just trying to keep up with creeping inflation. Three in four survey respondents said rising costs have increased their reliance on…

Asian shares scale six-week peak on hopes for US-Iran peace talks




Asian shares scale six-week peak on hopes for US-Iran peace talks

Wawa: Free Any Size Coffee (4/16 Only)


The Offer

  • Wawa is offering rewards members (free to join) a free coffee (any size) on 4/16. 

Our Verdict

Free is free. This is for Wawa day, they are also giving $250,000 away to charity partners. 

As global recession odds surge, here’s what’s at stake for the US housing market


“If the conflict is actually resolved on the other hand and not just paused, then I do believe that would be much more meaningful. A real resolution will reduce uncertainty further, help keep oil prices under control, and create a better environment for rates to come down more – assuming the rest of the economic data cooperates.”

Buyers might be concerned – but economist says war impact will be ‘short-lived’

For now, many US homebuyers will likely stay on pause as they wait for more certainty on the economic outlook – particularly with a potential recession likely to put a large number of jobs at risk.

Despite the growing doom and gloom, though, Oxford Economics sounded a positive note on the long-term outlook by suggesting the Iran conflict would wrap up this year with US economic growth improving after 2026.

“We expect growth to pick up in 2027 as we think the disruption related to the US/Israel war with Iran will prove short-lived,” Michael Pearce, the company’s chief US economist, said in a note.

Over the next decade, Oxford expects the economy to expand at an annual average rate of 2.4%, mainly due to anticipated strong productivity growth “with job growth likely to be weak.”

These High-Inventory Markets Could “Swing Up” in the Next Cycle


Dave:
Inventory, the all important metric that we are always tracking and always watching isn’t anymore moving in just one direction nationwide. In some markets, listings are rebuilding and buyers are having more leverage. While in other markets, inventory is still tight and in some, it’s actually going down. And that regional split is shaping everything, affordability, negotiating power, and where investors can still find opportunity. I’m Dave Meyer, and today I am joined by Lance Lambert to break down the latest regional inventory trends, why they’re happening, what outcomes they tend to produce, and what it means for the national housing market as we look ahead. We’ll talk about the drivers, the markets to watch, how this shows up in prices and sales, and Lance’s predictions for the next phase of this cycle. This is On The Market. Let’s get into it. Lance, welcome back to On the Market. Thanks for joining us again.

Lance:
Housing, housing, housing, always so much going on, and thank you for having me again.

Dave:
Of course. Man, you’ve been on a lot of times, but I think maybe just for anyone who’s new here, maybe just give us a little background, who you are and what you do.

Lance:
Yeah. Longtime financial and data journalist had worked at places like Bloombergrealtor.com. And then I was the real estate editor for four years over at Fortune Magazine before leaving to start Resi Club. And Resi Club is a news and research outlet that is focused on the US housing market. So a lot of our audience and clients are home builders, developers, single family investors and operators, and then a lot of mortgage and lenders who lend to single family or to lend to home building. And really just trying to figure out at any given time what is going on in a macro level throughout the different elements of housing, and then also distilling that down to a local level. Because you know better than probably anybody, just how much nuance is out in the market. And so trying to figure out what that nuance is at any given time and then why.

Dave:
Well, that’s what we’re going to do today. We’re going to hopefully try and get into some of that nuance. So we have this affordability issue, Lance. It’s been going on for a while. It does seem like the market’s slowing down more though, right? Even the last couple years, we’ve had modest appreciation. I think we’re probably heading for national price declines this year. Are we in a relatively slow, declining, flat, but stable market, or is there risk that it could change direction quickly here?

Lance:
Well, the thing that I would say is already where we are, we are in the bottom 25th percentile, historically speaking, for weakest housing markets. So we are already in a weak soft housing market, just not the GFC level period. We’re more in a period that’s similar to 1990 to 92, that early 90s window. But I think with housing, one of the things that’s interesting is just its effect to the overall economy. We had a blowoff of economic activity from the housing market that’s been gone since really middle of 2022. And it all happened very suddenly when you lost just that chunk of the resale transactions. But what’s interesting is that the builders in this period, they’ve had to do so much margin compression to maintain volume that if the housing market were to weak substantially more than it already has, in particular in those softest markets right now, which are down in the Sunbelt, those core home building markets, if we were to go further beyond what we’ve already seen and then builders were to really pull back activity levels, that’s going to hit the whole economy.
We’ve lost a part of the cyclical element of housing. We’ve gone down to the historically low levels of resale transactions, but home building and residential construction employment has really stayed resilient. Now, obviously you’ve seen the rollover and completions for multifamily, but overall home building has not seen a really big pullback in overall employment and activity so far. But if we were to push any further than the point we’ve already gotten to, we’re going to start to take away that economic impact and activity from residential construction to a level that could potentially be where you would historically think of as a recession.

Dave:
And Lance, what could cause that? You’re saying we’re okay right now, but we see any further leg down in terms of activity, it could expel problems. What could be the catalyst for that further decline?

Lance:
At any given time, you can always have downside risk in an economy from one area or another. And so I think that home prices in general were their most vulnerable right in 2022 when they were the most overvalued. Now actually four years out, we’ve seen a lot of the overvaluation actually come out of housing. So Austin was overvalued at that time by around 50 something percent. Now it’s around like 10%-ish, right? It’s kind of in a normalish area.

Dave:
How are you comparing that? 10%, what do you mean? Just compared to historical averages or incomes? What are you comparing it to?

Lance:
Yeah. So I like to use Moody’s Analytics overevaluation study. It’s something that Mark’s been sending me for about five years. Mark Zandy, their chief economy. And if you look at the Q2 2022 reading that Mark’s team put out, the most overvalued markets at the time were Austin, Puna Gorda, Cape Coral. And then if you fast forward to today, the three markets a cycle that have seen the most give up and price are Austin, Puna Gordon. The analysis was pretty good. And now there are outliers like San Francisco didn’t really have the overvaluation problem and they’ve seen give up in price and neither is New Orleans. But essentially what a valuation study is doing is saying that home prices relative to incomes in your market would historically be X amount today. And then it takes whatever home prices are actually, and the delta between the two is either the overvaluation or the undervaluation.
Got it. So Austin, during the pandemic housing boom, still home prices rip up 70% in just 18 months. And so very quickly, relative to incomes historically in Austin, they got overvalued by about 55% ish. And then nationally we were about 25%. Austin now, I’d have to look at the data. It’s much closer to like, maybe it’s 20, 15, 10, something in there. And then nationally we’ve gone from around 25% overvalued to actually it’s a single digit amount. It’s much, much closer historically line. So home prices themselves had the most downside risk, in my opinion, back in Q2, 2022. And now that we’re four years through this recalibration period, the risk is actually lower in my opinion. There are still markets of risk, right? And actually some of the Midwestern markets and Northeastern that have been more resilient the past few years have diverged a little more from their historic fundamentals lately.
Although the thing that they don’t have is supply elasticity, right? So when you have an affordability shock, a market like an Austin, Tampa, they have that multifamily supply, the new construction supply. Builders are essentially for sellers in a way, right? They’re going to move their volume. And so they’ll do the affordability adjustments that then pulls buyers over from the resale and existing market to new construction, pushes up resale existing market inventory a little more. Okay. Now I’m going to answer your question. I’m coming back. And so your question is, what today could be the risk or catalyst, right? Yeah. I think really you just have to … And it could be shortsighted where in six, 12 months, we’re not even talking about this thing, but you just have to … There is some risk to it, which is energy, right? Energy is a very elastic cost to an economy.
And so if you did have a scenario where things got out of control in the Middle East and we saw the price of oil per barrel spike well beyond what we’re currently expecting, that’s going to create an economic shock, right? Yeah. And so it’s going to create an economic shock. Already, when you look at housing, the weakest component of housing is the bottom of the market right now. Initially, when the rate shock occurred, actually the bottom of the market was kind of resilient, right? A lot of them were trying to get in first time buyers. You had some of the investors still, not as much today because what’s occurred is the longer we’ve stayed in this higher interest rate environment, the bottom of the market has really felt the squeeze of higher credit card interest rates and that credit card debt delinquencies have went up a lot.
They’re having to pay student loans again, and that’s put distress into a little corner of a market, although more of them are renters when you aggregate where the distress actually is and autos as well in these higher interest rates. And the other factor is that the single family supply that the builders have pushed into the market and also into the multifamily supply, a lot of that has affected the bottom of the market. So there’s a lot of deals on rentals in terms of like, if you want to go rent in Austin or Nashville, some of these cities with more supply. And so what it’s done is it’s pulled some of the entry level buyers away from buying into renting because they’re like, wow, my rent would be X versus my monthly payment to buy would be this. And so some of them have pulled more there.
And as the builders have done more of that entry level supply and the Lennars of the world have done that bigger discounting, that’s kind of created additional softening there. And so if you had oil prices spike up in a scenario where they really get out of hand, that’s going to squeeze the economy. It’s going to create some job losses and it’s probably going to really affect that bottom consumer. And so I think that that would have an impact on housing. And the other factor there is that if it came with an inflationary shock with it, not necessarily going to have the easing to rates that we would think of from a normal recession, that’s some risk to housing.

Dave:
All right. This is great stuff, Lance. Thank you. We do have to take a quick break though. We’ll be right back. Welcome back to On the Market. I’m here with Lance Lambert talking about inventory and migration trends. Let’s get back into it. Well, you’re saying energy. It’s kind of like a ripple effect, right? That oil prices go up, that could create a general economic slowdown, and that translates into higher unemployment, less demand for housing. Maybe there is forced selling or just more motivated selling, and that could push down home prices. I mean, I buy that. That makes sense to me. I’ve said on the show before, I think the big risk to the market comes if we see a significant increase to unemployment. And I don’t mean going from 4.3.4 to five. I don’t think that’s what does it. I think if we get to seven, eight, then you start to get a little bit worried.
Or as you alluded to, some sort of stagflation event where we do see both a slowdown in the labor market and general economic activity at the same time that we see inflation. And we’re recording this April 10th. Today’s not a good day for that. If you’re going to worry about it, today’s been one of the more worriesome days about that. We saw inflation shoot up from 2.4 to 3.3% today. And so I don’t think this is the most likely scenario that there’s a market crash, but I think it’s something personally I recommend keeping an eye on because that to me is where the risk is and it’s not trending in a great direction, at least right now.

Lance:
And one thing I should throw out there too, and that’s kind of why I did the zoomed back out to Q2, 2022, is that anything through this window where you’ve had some more frothiness on housing because of the pandemic housing boom, you had more risk of some type of job loss recession creating downward pressure on home prices. But the further we get away from Q2, 2022, and we go through this recalibration period, the less likely I actually think that a job loss recession would push down national home prices. Really? And if you go through the history of housing, there are many recessions that we’ve had where home prices kept going up. And so I think that the longer you go through this period and you have some of that overvaluation continue to kind of pull back from the market, you have the fundamentals recalibrating and you’ve also had a really long period of existing home sales below normal levels of turnover.
What you could have happen is you could have a recession, not now, but further out that could create a positive momentum for housing because it pushes down the long-term yields and material amount, they shift and that we’ve already seen that overvaluation kind of pulled back from the market. And so at that point, housing could react very different in a job loss recession. And I think the other reason that I kind of called out the oil shock type scenario is that particular type of scenario, that type of job loss recession might not get the relief in the long-term rates because in that scenario, in inflationary shock, the Fed’s kind of concerned about inflation and they are kind of figuring out which side of their mandate to attack.

Dave:
A hundred percent. Yeah. I actually just did a whole show on this. Anyone wants to listen. I released it in early April, basically talking about different types of inflation and why if you have … People often associate with home prices going up during inflationary periods, but if you’re in a supply shock or a supply push inflationary environment, that does not necessarily mean home prices are going to go up. That is different from the demand pull kind of environment that we saw in 2021, printing all this money, that kind of stuff. So that’s a super important thing, but that actually makes sense to me, Lance, that we’re not at the peak of housing anymore is kind of what you’re saying, right? Even though home prices on a nominal basis, non-inflation adjusted, have still gone up a little bit, a lot of the markets that were the worst in terms of overvaluation have adjusted.
And so they’re just less sensitive. They’re not at that peak and there’s probably less risk of panic going on because people are seeing that a little bit.

Lance:
And the longer that we stay in this period where the more cyclical type of housing markets have kind of go through this recalibration, that also creates potentially the upside for those markets. So if you look at net domestic migration, a market like Florida, they saw net domestic migration of 300,000 Americans between summer of 21 and summer of 22. This most recent 12 month period, it was like around 20,000. Now, the thing is, historically, where we are right now for net domestic migration to Florida is on the very low end of the bounds. Same with Texas. Over time, that’s going to swing up. If you wanted me to take bets that I’m certain of, in particular for Texas, we are at a low period for net domestic migration to Texas, and there will be a period when that swings up.

Dave:
Is that like a pull forward, just like pricing? You think we just got a lot of migration and then now it’s sort of the hangover, but we’ll go back to normal.

Lance:
Yes. And that’s also, in some ways, some of my views of international migration as well. Now, there are the political elements of some of the things that Biden administration has done and some of the things the Trump administration has done, but I think that we are in a period of very low levels of international migration. And some of that is because international immigration, some of it that occurred in 21, 22, 23, and into 24, some of that was pulled ahead from 25, 26, 27, 20. And so I think that over time, the international side will swing back up potentially from where it is currently at at its current levels. And the thing with the international migration is actually you haven’t fully seen what has already happened in the real world. So the data lags significantly. So like this March, we got data for 25, but the 25 data is summer of 24 to summer of 25, and we just got it March 26th.
And so that means from the summer of 2020 to summer of 21, we did not get that data till March 2022, which was the end of the pandemic housing boom. So by the time the pandemic housing boom ended, we started to get the official migration data. So migration data, yeah, there’s a significant lag there.

Dave:
You’ve actually done a lot of work recently, Lance, about migration trends. I’m curious if you could shed some light on it for our audience in terms of markets that might still be seeing strong internal migration or markets where there’s risk of declining demand because migration has either slowed or stopped.

Lance:
Yeah. So I will pull up an analysis for you. So in housing with net domestic migration, often when somebody moves from one market to another and they’re an adult, very often there is a housing transaction that comes. Unlike a birth where somebody’s born, they’re not going out immediately and buying a house, right? So when you look at this population change, normally the level of population change is very steady usually. But when you look at international migration and you look at net domestic migration, those are fairly cyclical, in particular, net domestic migration. And so in 03, 04, 05, the country saw a big jump up in net domestic migration into these markets like Arizona, Nevada, Florida, right? And then it pulled way back. And then we had very low levels of state to state migration during the GFC. Then it slowly rebounded through a lot of the 2010s, kind of got to where you would think of as normal levels.
And then we had the pandemic housing boom that had this really large unlock for net domestic migration. And so I’m going to show you here net domestic migration during the pandemic and you can see that dark, dark blue into Idaho, into Utah, into Arizona, Nevada, Florida, into parts of Arkansas, Tennessee, the Carolinas, Florida, and even up into like Maine and New Hampshire and Vermont.

Dave:
Lance, let me just stop you for a second, just so everyone knows if you’re watching this on YouTube, you’ll see it. But Lance is pulling up a map for us and showing us literally county by county migration. He just was talking about 2022 and as he was saying, the blue is where there was very strong net migration. That was all the states you just mentioned, Southeast, a lot of the Sunbelt, Idaho, some parts of New England, and then carry on netland. Sorry to interrupt.

Lance:
And then now you fast forward to the most recent 12 month period, you can see that in places like Idaho, Utah, Arizona, Texas, Florida, a lot of these areas are still positive for net domestic migration, but it’s not like it was before.

Dave:
It’s way less.

Lance:
Yeah. Yeah. And if you go through them, you can actually find some of these like Hillsborough County, Florida, where it’s actually seen net domestic migration that’s outward, negative net domestic migration. And so you’ve seen that shift there in the market. And a lot of this is tied to the lock in effect. And so one of the interesting things about the lock in effect is anybody who is affordability locked in where they don’t want to lose their payment to take on a higher payment, that is one lost seller and it’s one lost buyer, but where that lost seller could be and where that lost buyer could be, could be two totally different places. So if you live in Illinois and you were going to sell your house and go move to Florida, but now interest rates are around 6% and you have a 3% rate. A lot of that math that was attracting you to go to Florida, right, seeking some affordability, in particular with state income tax, maybe property tax for you, if you’re going from Illinois, a lot of it’s diluted now because their monthly payment would go up so much more for that higher interest rate.
And so if they aren’t selling their house, that’s one lost seller in Illinois, but it’s one lost buyer in Florida. And we’ve seen that in the market as well. And that’s also played a role in some of the regional bifurcation where you look through some of these Midwestern, Northeastern markets that are at the very low levels of their normal levels of out domestic migration. They were the people going to Florida, Texas, right, Alabama. And now they’re at their lower levels and then you look at the Floridas and the Texas and they’re not gaining as many at the moment because that state to state migration is just affordability constrained at the moment. And so that’s one element of the regional bifurcation. Another element is what we’ve already described, which is some of the overvaluation and the fact that prices overheated in some of these Sunbelt markets.
So they saw a bigger run up in price, which then detached themselves from local fundamentals further and created a greater demand shock once the market and the boom really fizzled out. And then local incomes, they had to rely more on them because there’s less of that domestic migration. And the other factor there, of course, is the fact that they are the supply elastic markets, right? When home prices rip up a lot, investor capital, they’re going to want to deploy. They’re going to want to deploy into multifamily construction, single family construction. They’re going to take on projects and those markets have the entitled land and the ability to push out and build more. And so supply, it takes a little bit to get into the market. And by the time it got into the market, a lot of it, the market had shifted into a more affordability constrained market.
They then had to do the affordability adjustments to meet the market, and then that creates an additional cooling effect onto the resale market. But at the moment, some of those cyclical factors, we’re not seeing as much of it at the moment. We are seeing the bifurcation very much so, but we’re not seeing inventory burst upward as fast in those Sunbelt markets versus everyone else. And actually inventory nationally, we’ve seen a deceleration. We’re only up around 7%. We were up 30% a year ago for inventory. And some markets now, Florida’s one of the very few states in Alaska where inventory is down year over year. And so some of the forward indicators suggest that the intensity of that cyclical cooling period has tampered off a bit. And my clients, I’m not going to name them, but a really big builder in the Jacksonville market, they’ve seen an improvement to their sales this year.
I’m hearing a little bit of stories in Orlando where things are getting a little better there as well. Now, I am still hearing in like some of these Southwest Florida markets in Tampa, still their pockets, still dealing with more of the choppiness, but you’re not seeing what you saw in 2024 into early 2025 when you had that really big burst of softening that was pushing into the market. And since around the middle of 2025, I would say that the burst of softening has led up and we’ve stabilized into what I would call a soft nationally aggregated housing market. And then some of those markets in the Sunbelt, still seeing some pricing give up and weakness.

Dave:
All right, everyone. Lance is dropping some really good knowledge here, but we got to take one more quick break. Stick with us. We’ll be right back. Welcome back to On the Market. Let’s jump back in with Lance Lambert. Well, I feel like this is normal. This is what you would expect, right? The housing market is correcting. Inventory is lower. Sellers are reacting to the lack of buyers, right? So we’re adjusting and reaching some sort of equilibrium instead of the imbalance between buyers and sellers accelerating, right? Because when people say that there’s going to be a crash, usually what they’re saying is there’s going to continuously be more inventory and buyer demand is either going to stay stable or decline, and that’s how you get a crash. But what’s happening in Florida is a perfect example of what happens during a normal correction, which is that buyer demand goes down for all the reasons Lance just mentioned.
But instead of people panicking and selling more and more, fewer people are selling. He just said inventory is down in Florida. I don’t know if you know the new listing data off the top of your head, Lance, but I would imagine it’s either flat or somewhat down if we’re going to have lower inventory.

Lance:
Ish and some of these, yeah. And so a part of it is you’re not seeing a big jump there. You’ve also seen some of the de- listings where some of the sellers are like, “You know what? Markets come down too much on price. I’m going to wait this out a little bit.” You have also seen an increase in accidental landlords though too, in particular more in the weaker markets like a Florida where they’re not getting their price they would want and they don’t necessarily have the distress. And so they are trying out the rental market. Now, if you’re an investor, that’s a data point to watch and important because, and I’m not talking about like at a macro level, I’m talking down to the actual property. If you see a home come on the market for sale and it stays on and it’s not getting bytes and they’ve had several price cuts and then you see it go away and it didn’t sell and then you look at the rental market and you find it over in the rental market and that stays on there well.

Dave:
That’s a target.

Lance:
Yeah.

Dave:
That’s a

Lance:
Target. Someone who

Dave:
Might want to sell.

Lance:
Yes. So you start seeing those go from unsuccessful listing, they jump on the rental market, and then if they jump back on the for sale market, oh, you really have probably a seller who’s ready to throw it in.

Dave:
Well, Lance, this has been fascinating. Thank you so much for educating us on what’s going on here. Any other thing you’re covering that you think our audience of investors should know as we head into what might be a slow spring season here?

Lance:
So one of the positives that housing has had is that the spread between the 10-year treasury yield and the 30-year fixed mortgage rate, very quickly after the Fed started hiking rates and they stopped buying mortgage-backed securities, we saw that spread really widen, right? And so mortgage rates back in 2022 into early 23, they went up a lot more than other yields in the economy. And so that spread really widened, right? And the Fed wasn’t out there buying mortgage-backed securities, there wasn’t an immediate buyer who stepped in to replace them. Banks also pulled back on their mortgage-backed securities. And so you were waiting for another buyer to kind of come into the market to replace them. Well, over the past year and a half, we have seen considerable improvement in the spread between the 30-year fixed mortgage rate and the 10-year treasury yield. And earlier this year, after also Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac said they were going to increase their retained holdings and mortgage-backed securities by 200 billion additional, we saw the spread get closer to normal levels, actually into the historically normal bounds.
Now, since then, we’ve kind of went back up a little bit. So that’s the positive that the spread has come down and that’s helped mortgage rates fall more than other yields in the economy. But here’s the bad news. That lever has gone for us. So the easiest gains down on mortgage rates have occurred. Now the ones from here are going to be the tougher ones. These are almost like the ones that you might need the economy to actually weaken more.

Dave:
Yeah. Or inflation to go down significantly.

Lance:
Yes. So I wish I had better news on mortgage rates, but-

Dave:
Me

Lance:
Too.

Dave:
But we got to be realistic. That’s the whole point of the show is to help people identify what’s really happening. But like you said, this situation comes with more motivated sellers. It comes with some opportunities. You just got to figure out where to find it.

Lance:
Well, thank you for having me. Housing, housing, housing. Anybody who wants to follow my work, you could go to resiClubanalytics.com, put it in your email, get into my free email list. I send out a few articles per week, and then also follow me on Twitter @newslandbert or LinkedIn, Lance Lambert.

Dave:
Awesome. Thanks, Lance. We appreciate it. And thank you all so much for listening to this episode of On The Market. We’ll see you all next time.

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Twelve Points Dumps 144K ASA Shares Worth $9.7 Million


What happened

According to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission dated April 14, 2026, Twelve Points Wealth Management sold 143,737 shares of ASA Gold and Precious Metals Limited (ASA +1.84%) during the first quarter. The estimated value of the shares sold was $9.71 million, based on the average closing price for the quarter. The position’s value at quarter end fell by $8.84 million, reflecting both the reduction in shares held and the effect of share price changes.

What else to know

  • The fund’s ASA holding now represents 4.33% of 13F reportable AUM, following a sale that trimmed it from 6.4% the previous quarter.
  • Top holdings as of March 31, 2026, include:
    • NYSEMKT: BIL: $40.43 million (8.9% of AUM)
    • NYSEMKT: FLTR: $25.54 million (5.6% of AUM)
    • NYSEMKT: IOO: $24.34 million (5.4% of AUM)
    • NYSEMKT: SRLN: $15.22 million (3.3% of AUM)
  • As of April 13, 2026, ASA shares were priced at $68.07, up 128.9% over the past year, outperforming the S&P 500 by 100 percentage points.

Company overview

Metric Value
Price (as of market close April 13, 2026) $68.07
Market Capitalization $1.30 billion

Company snapshot

  • ASA Gold and Precious Metals Limited invests primarily in equities of companies involved in the exploration, mining, or processing of gold, silver, platinum, diamonds, and other precious minerals, as well as in select exchange-traded funds.
  • ASA Gold and Precious Metals Limited uses fundamental analysis and a bottom-up approach to create its portfolio of precious metals-related securities.
  • The company was founded in 1958 and is based in Portland, Maine, operating as a global investment manager in the precious metals sector.

ASA Gold and Precious Metals Limited is a global investment manager specializing in the precious metals sector, with a focus on equity investments in mining and exploration companies. The firm’s disciplined, research-driven strategy leverages both in-house and external analysis to identify value opportunities across global markets. Its long-standing presence and sector expertise provide investors with targeted access to precious metals equities and related assets.

What this transaction means for investors

Twelve Points Wealth Management has positions in hundreds of companies and funds, and ASA Gold and Precious Metals Limited ranks as its fourth-largest holding. The recent sale of 143,737 brought it down from its previous position of No. 2. But aside from a bit of reshuffling, the institution’s core holdings remain relatively unchanged.

ASA is a closed-end fund that focuses on, as the name suggests, gold and precious metals. It recently issued a $0.04 dividend distribution, an $0.01 increase from the previous quarter. This may signal a shift in the fund’s priorities from growth toward cash distribution. With the help of Cantor Fitzgerald, the fund is undergoing a strategic review that may result in structural or mandate changes, and the dividend increase may be a means of responding to shareholder pressure.

That said, the share price of ASA is up 128.9% over the past year, though it’s down approximately 16% from its March 27 high. It’s possible growth could continue at that exceptional pace, though not likely — and, as always, past performance is no guarantee of future returns. Investors may wish to wait and see what happens within the fund’s governance before choosing to change their position.

Pamela Kock has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends iShares Trust – iShares 0-3 Month Treasury Bond ETF. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.