Over five years ago we suffered the worst recession since the great
depression almost 100 years ago. Since then our economic recovery has been the
weakest of all recoveries as well. There are many reasons for the weak
recoveries. The fact that our real estate market was devastated and needed years
to recover was certainly a main factor. But there were other reasons for the
stops and starts which were external. We had domestic and world-wide natural
disasters from hurricanes and super storms to tsunamis. We will not get into a
debate as to whether global warming is causing these extreme weather events but
we will acknowledge that they were very, very extreme and caused major damage to
populations and property.

There were events that were not weather related, of course. There was the
fiscal crisis in Europe and political crises at home. We had wars being fought
and terrorist events. Many of these events prolonged the recovery and made us
wonder whether we would suffer a double dip recession, which never came. 2014
has certainly not been smooth sailing with our famously cold winter and the
crisis in Ukraine. However, we believe our economy has recovered to the point
that we no longer talk about slipping back in recession. The drop in the
economic growth in the first quarter is a testament to that confidence.
Economists shrugged off the down quarter almost universally. So what comes
next?
The sun is shining and there is no more cold winter. We are running out of
excuses for the economy being so lackluster during a recovery period. The
employment report released on Friday showed continued progress in that regard.
The last two months has seen a significant pickup in hiring but the employment
report also shows how far we need to go. We have recovered all the jobs lost
during the recession, but accounting for population growth during the past six
years, we have seven million jobs to go. Economists surveyed by CNN/Money
indicate that it would take two years or more at this pace for the unemployment
rate to reach 5.5% and wage growth is still anemic. The good news? A slow
recovery continues to support low interest rates and hopefully the Federal
Reserve Board agrees with that assessment when they meet shortly.
Mike Ervin
Branch Manager/Mortgage Loan Officer
NMLS: 282715
W.J. Bradley Mortgage Capital, LLC
O: 650.735.5261
C: 650.766.8500
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