Home prices soared during the pandemic housing boom, fueled by frantic demand and historically low interest rates, but as the dust settles, the market now seems poised for a calmer, more predictable ...
Marcel Thieliant, head of Asia-Pacific for Capital Economics, discusses Japan's incoming Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba and the country's economic outlook. Got a confidential news tip? We want to hear ...
The growing ranks of boomers age 65-plus could spark a boom in the senior-housing market. Capital Economics expects demand for senior housing to surge 50% by 2040. The sector is set to offer average ...
We’ve gradually seen more people return to the office since the remote-work norm of the pandemic, and now the winning and losing cities are becoming clearer. Capital Economics tackled the issue of ...
Treasury yields tumbled on Aug. 1 following a dismal July jobs report. But since then, they have mostly held their ground, despite a non-stop barrage of potentially market-moving news. Economists at ...
After a torrid rally in metals prices last year, Wall Street is seemingly bullish on copper. Many expect the ongoing AI data-center buildout to keep pushing prices of the red metal higher as demand ...
Trump's second term won't be the rocket fuel for stocks some expect, Capital Economics said on Friday. However, AI enthusiasm will drive the S&P 500 to reach 7,000 at the end of 2025, the firm said.
Julian Evans-Pritchard, head of China economics at Capital Economics, says the People's Bank of China could let the Chinese yuan go to that level in order to offset the impact of tariffs. Got a ...
Capital Economics is warning that the powerful shift underway in U.S. equities could signal that a long‑running stock market bubble will burst in 2027, ushering in years of upheaval in leadership ...
A sharp correction in equity markets would weigh on global activity, but by itself is unlikely to push the world into recession, according to fresh research from Capital Economics. In a note published ...
The S&P 500 will rally for the next year before facing a double-digit correction, Capital Economics says. The research firm said it saw the index rising as high as 8,000 before falling back to 7,000.
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