DAILY UPDATE: Home Prices and 23andMe as Stock Markets Wobble

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The median home price jumped 1.6% YoY last month and is sitting at $431,931. Meanwhile, mortgage rates for a 30-year fixed loan (the most common) are still hovering just under 7%. The chief economist of the National Association of Realtors said lower mortgage rates are the key to getting buyers to buy homes again.

CITE: https://tinyurl.com/2h47urt5

What’s up

  • Ulta Beauty is sitting pretty, up 11.78% after the cosmetics retailer crushed earnings expectations and raised its fiscal guidance for the year ahead.
  • Costco Wholesale rose 3.12% after beating Wall Street’s earnings expectations, though same-store sales did slip a bit.
  • Zscaler climbed 9.79% on strong earnings for the cybersecurity company, including 23% revenue growth.
  • Palantir popped 7.73% on a report from the New York Times that the Trump administration has asked the company to help the government compile data on US citizens.

What’s down

  • Nvidia slipped 2.92% as rhetoric between the US and China over semiconductor import restrictions reignited investor fears.
  • Gap plunged 20.18% after the retailer revealed that tariffs will cost between $100 and $150 million.
  • Marvell Technology fell 5.55% after the chip maker barely beat Wall Street expectations last quarter, failing to impress shareholders.
  • Regeneron Pharmaceuticals tumbled 19.01% thanks to mixed results for its new respiratory drug in late stage trials. The medication is made in partnership with Sanofi, which also dropped 5.61%.
  • Dell Technologies sank 2.08% after missing earnings expectations last quarter, though it did manage to beat on revenue.
  • Elastic NV beat analyst forecasts last quarter, but still fell 12.09% after the software company issued lower-than-expected revenue guidance.
  • PagerDuty, which is in fact a cloud computing company and not a seller of 1990s tech, lost 11.43% after issuing lower second-quarter guidance than Wall Street forecast.

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23andMe peaked at a $6 billion valuation in 2021 but never made a profit. It filed for bankruptcy on March 23rd and was put up for auction.

Visualize: How private equity tangled banks in a web of debt, from the Financial Times.

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Real Estate Agent VERSUS Realtor?

By AI

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The terms “real estate agent” and “realtor” are often used interchangeably to describe a licensed professional who can help you buy or sell a home. But the terms have different meanings. 

Real Estate Investing: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/2025/04/14/physicians-on-real-estate-investing/

  • A realtor is a licensed salesperson who belongs to the National Association of Realtors (NAR), and must comply with NAR’s code of ethics. The term is capitalized when describing a NAR member, and NAR owns the trademark.
  • A real estate agent is simply a licensed salesperson who does not belong to NAR, and refers to any individual who holds a real estate salesperson’s license.

REITS: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/2024/08/13/on-non-traded-real-estate-investment-trusts-reits/

Should you hire a real estate agent or a realtor? Agents who belong to NAR aren’t necessarily better than non-member agents. NAR is just a trade association — not a licensing body — so membership is optional. 

Commercial RE: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/2013/09/10/financial-freedom-through-commercial-real-estate-education-and-investing/

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DAILY UPDATE: NAR Commissions Down as Stock Markets Rise

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Essays, Opinions and Curated News in Health Economics, Investing, Business, Management and Financial Planning for Physician Entrepreneurs and their Savvy Advisors and Consultants

Serving Almost One Million Doctors, Financial Advisors and Medical Management Consultants Daily

A Partner of the Institute of Medical Business Advisors , Inc.

http://www.MedicalBusinessAdvisors.com

SPONSORED BY: Marcinko & Associates, Inc.

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http://www.MarcinkoAssociates.com

Daily Update Provided By Staff Reporters Since 2007.
How May We Serve You?
© Copyright Institute of Medical Business Advisors, Inc. All rights reserved. 2024

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On last Saturday, a class-action settlement with the National Association of Realtors (NAR) went into effect, ripping up the playbook on how real estate agents are compensated. The NAR was accused of artificially inflating commission rates, which have historically ranged from 5% to 6%, a higher fee than the rest of the world. Consumer advocates hope the new rules will lead to lower commissions, shift power away from agents, and add transparency into what’s been an opaque system.

CITE: https://www.r2library.com/Resource

What’s up

  • AMD rose 4.52% on the news that it will acquire server manufacturer ZT Systems for $4.9 billion. While this escalates the AI arms race, competitor Nvidia rose 4.35% regardless.
  • FuboTV soared yet another 17.65% after a judge temporarily blocked the launch of a sports streaming service created by Disney, Warner Bros. Discovery, and Fox last week.
  • McDonald’s climbed 3.25% after Evercore ISI analysts raised their price target for the stock to $320 per share.
  • Zim Integrated Shipping Services rocketed 16.74% higher after the marine shipping company posted impressive earnings and raised its full-year guidance.

What’s down

  • Trump Media & Technology Group fell 3.56% as the Democratic National Convention kicks off in Chicago today, with investors fretful that the stock could be more volatile than usual during the event.
  • HP sank 3.65% after Morgan Stanley analysts downgraded the stock from Equal Weight to Overweight, though they kept their price target the same.
  • Sweetgreen dropped 6.82% thanks to Piper Sandler analysts downgrading the stock from Overweight to Neutral after the company’s big pop last week made shares too pricey.

CITE: https://tinyurl.com/2h47urt5

Here’s where the major benchmarks ended:

  • The S&P 500 index rose 54.00 points (0.97%) to 5,608.25; the Dow Jones Industrial Average® ($DJI) added 236.77 points (0.58%) to 40,896.53; the NASDAQ Composite®($COMP) points increased 245.05 (1.39%) to 17, 876.77.
  • The 10-year Treasury note yield (TNX) fell about two basis points to just under 3.87%.
  • The CBOE Volatility Index® (VIX) fell to 14.61, near one-month lows.

CITE: https://tinyurl.com/tj8smmes

Stat: 12%. That’s how much mpox vaccine maker Bavarian Nordic’s stock shot up after the WHO declared a global health emergency. (Fortune)

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DAILY UPDATE: Salesforce Health Care AI and the National Association of Realtors Rebuke

By Staff Reporters

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Salesforce just announced new AI solutions for health-care workers that could help automate some of the manual administrative tasks that are driving physician burnout. READ MORE

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On Friday, National Association of Realtors (NAR) agreed to pay $418 million over the next four years to settle several lawsuits alleging it artificially inflated realtor commissions. Included in the deal is a policy change that will likely obliterate agents’ 5%–6% commissions.

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BUYING: Home Economics

By Staff Reporters

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A report released last month by the National Association of Realtors (NAR) confirms what many Americans suspect: home affordability is down. Due to rising interest rates and low inventory, NAR found that the average income of a home buyer between July 2022 and June 2023 was $107,000, up from $88,000 the year prior—one of the highest levels since NAR started tracking in 1981.

But the housing market continues to churn. The organization found…

  • More and more home buyers are single women. The share of single women buying homes is almost double that of men. They’re also slightly older—a single woman buying her first home is 38 on average, while a single man is 33 years old.
  • Buyers are older. The average first-time home buyer is 35, up from 29 in the 1980s, but it’s older people who are buying up the three-bedrooms after selling their starter homes: NAR found that the median age of a repeat home buyer last year was 58. In 1981, it was 36 years old.

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REAL ESTATE: Commissions

By Staff Reporters

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A federal jury in Missouri last week found the National Association of Realtors and large brokerages conspired to keep commissions artificially high, finding them liable for $1.8 billion in damages.

MORE: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/2023/01/19/real-estate-for-physician-investors/

This decision could have a major impact on anyone buying or selling a home. For one, it could lead to a 30% decrease in the $100 billion Americans pay in real estate commissions every year, according to investment banking firm Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW).

MORE: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/2022/12/07/daily-update-down-real-estate-and-down-markets/

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DAILY UPDATE: Realtors Liable for $1.8-B as US Millionaires and Stock Markets Rise Anew

By Staff Reporters

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KANSAS CITY, Mo.—A federal jury just found the National Association of Realtors and large residential brokerages liable for about $1.8 billion in damages after determining they conspired to keep commissions for home sales artificially high. The verdict could lead to industry wide upheaval by changing decades-old rules that have helped lock in commission rates even as home prices have skyrocketed—which has allowed real-estate agents to collect ever-larger sums. It comes in the first of two antitrust lawsuits arguing that unlawful industry practices have left consumers unable to lower their costs even though internet-era innovations have allowed many buyers to find homes themselves online.

Real Estate for Physicians: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/2023/01/19/real-estate-for-physician-investors/

The Sitzer/Burnett class action lawsuit alleged that some of the nation’s largest real estate companies, including NAR, Keller Williams, Anywhere (formerly, Realogy), RE/MAX, Berkshire Hathaway’s HomeServices of America and two of its subsidiaries conspired to inflate commissions.

Commercial Real Estate for Physicians: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/2022/05/03/on-doctors-investing-in-commercial-real-estate/

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  • Over 12% of American families, or over 16 million, are millionaires, per the WSJ.
  • Median net worth for the 80th-90th income percentile saw net worth gains of 69% from 2019 to 2022.
  • The upper-middle class is growing and becoming wealthier, particularly among those aged 55-74.

It’s not just the top 1% that’s getting richer — over 16 million American families now have a net worth over $1 million. That’s over 12% of American families, according to a Wall Street Journal analysis of the Federal Reserve’s Survey of Consumer Finances of over 4,600 American households. This compares to just 9.8 million families who were millionaires in 2019, the WSJ found.

Physician Finances: https://marcinkoassociates.com/financial-planning/

The analysis further noted how nearly eight million families have wealth over $2 million, compared to 4.7 million in 2019. This was particularly pronounced among families in the 55-74 age range. On the whole, median net worth — which measures household assets like houses and vehicles, minus debts like mortgages and student loans — rose an inflation-adjusted 37% between 2019 and 2022 up to around $193,000. Meanwhile, the average net worth rose to over $1 million, though this is skewed by extremely wealthy Americans.

Net worth has increased for all income percentiles even amid rising interest rates, though while the top 10% jumped from $1.84 million to $2.65 million, the bottom 20% rose from $10,780 to $16,900.

CITE: https://www.r2library.com/Resource

Finally, here is where the major US stock market benchmarks ended:

Economists expect the Fed to leave interest rates unchanged today, allowing previous rate increases to take greater hold of the economy and granting the central bank time to assess whether another hike will be necessary. Investors and policymakers will closely scour comments made by Fed Chair Jerome Powell for clues about the central bank’s path over the remainder of the year.

  • The S&P 500 Index was up 26.98 points (0.7%) at 4,193.80, down 2.2% for the month; the Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 123.91 points (0.4%) at 33,052.87, down 1.4% for the month; the NASDAQ Composite was up 61.76 points (0.5%) at 12,851.24, down 2.8% for the month.
  • The 10-year Treasury note yield was up about 3 basis points at 4.909%.
  • CBOE’s Volatility Index (VIX) was down 1.61 at 18.14.

Real estate and financial shares were among the strongest performers Tuesday. Semiconductor companies were also higher. Energy shares lagged as crude oil futures extended their slide, dropping to near $81 a barrel to end at a two-month low. The U.S. dollar index (DXY) strengthened to near 11-month highs in the wake of a Bank of Japan (BoJ) policy shift.

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