If you want to know what’s going on in the U.S. housing market, chances are you follow the Case-Shiller index. Robert Shiller, the Yale University economist who helped create the home-price gauge, was ...
Maybe — but it’s not a terrible time to rent. By Ronda Kaysen Inflation-corrected prices may end up substantially lower as factors driving high home prices weaken with time. By Robert J. Shiller Mr.
That was Yale economist Robert Shiller talking about the current state of the housing market during a March interview on on CNBC Overtime. Shiller, a researcher at the National Bureau of Economic ...
US house prices still look very high, according to Yale economist Robert Shiller. "Maybe if you have a good chance to delay your purchase, it might be a good time to do so," he told CNBC. Shiller ...
On the C-SPAN Networks: Robert J. Shiller is a Professor for Economics in the Yale University with eight videos in the C-SPAN Video Library; the first appearance was a 2000 Speech as an Author. The ...
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Robert Shiller, Yale finance professor and author of the highly touted "Irrational Exuberance" book on asset bubbles, said gradually falling home prices are nothing to fear. Sign ...
Traders at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange think the U.S. housing market may be slowing down and they've got the numbers to prove it, thanks to Yale economist Robert Shiller. Shiller explains a new ...
Central banks are faced with the unenviable task of trying to put a lid on decades-high inflation without triggering harsh recessions that could unleash misery around the world. But Robert Shiller, a ...
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Prices of existing single-family houses extended their slide across the country in May, marking the 18th consecutive decline in the growth rate, according to an index of major ...
Some people may refer to their company’s headquarters as the Mother Ship. But economist Robert Shiller has a different theory about the relationship between space, time and work. As companies ...
New home sales fell 2.2 percent in February. The drop in new-home sales was the fourth consecutive monthly decline, and the worst showing since 1963, when the Commerce Department started counting.
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