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This is what a good economy looks like

Shane Ferro   

This is what a good economy looks like
Stock Market3 min read

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Following the 'Star Wars' Hall H presentation at Comic-Con International 2015 at the San Diego Convention Center in San Diego, Calif., the audience of more than 6000 fans enjoyed a surprise 'Star Wars' Fan Concert performed by the San Diego Symphony, featuring the classic ?Star Wars? music of composer John Williams, at the Embarcadero Marina Park South on July 10, 2015 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Jesse Grant/Getty Images for Disney)

There's a lot of good news for the economy in the Fed's July Beige Book economic update, particularly when it comes to real estate.

The bottom line is that many regions across the country are seeing a building boom in either residential or commercial real estate or both. In addition, housing prices are increasing in a lot of places.

This is what a good economy looks like.

Beige book reports tend to be anecdotal, and there weren't booming reports from every district, but there was a definite positive outlook to both residential and commercial real estate to this report, particularly in urban areas.

Here a few excerpts from the places where real estate is looking good:

From Boston: "Contacts report that office rent growth is accelerating in greater Boston, especially in urban submarkets. One contact describes Boston's office leasing market as the strongest in 50 years."

From New York: "A local real estate contact notes that new development, which has been predominantly rentals in recent years, is shifting back towards condos. New construction starts, as well as the amount of space under construction-for both office and apartment buildings-reached their highest levels in more than a decade."

From Chicago: "Construction and real estate activity increased modestly over the reporting period. Most builders reported steady demand for residential units, and noted that new construction was primarily concentrated in urban areas... Business loan demand and pricing were flat. The commercial real estate market was an exception, with multiple contacts reporting growth and some expressing concern that the market was overheating."

From Minneapolis: "In Minnesota, May home sales increased 13 percent, the median sales price increased 8 percent, and inventory decreased 8 percent, compared with a year ago. ... In northwestern Wisconsin, real estate agents reported 'the busiest spring in 10 years.'"

From San Francisco: "Contacts reported continued growth for residential and nonresidential construction and sales, with particularly rapid growth in metropolitan areas with large technology sectors. A few contacts noted a rising influx of foreign investment in commercial real estate, which drove up property prices in some metropolitan areas."

In addition, Deutsche Bank's Joe LaVorgna had good things to say about the housing market in his morning note Wednesday:

We expect the July NAHB housing market index to reach a new post-recession high. The NAHB index is highly correlated with the trend in housing starts-the June data are reported tomorrow. The former leads the latter by two quarters. A simple linear regression of housing starts on the NAHB index points to starts in the vicinity of 1.5 million, roughly a 50% improvement from their May level. This is especially important for the labor market, as residential construction payrolls have risen by roughly +130k over the past 12 months, which has more than offset the -44k decline in oil and gas extraction and support activities for mining

Hear that? That's the sound of a solid housing market recovery in the wind.

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