đ Welcome to housing purgatory
Plus: Stagflation nation?

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Call it a trade-off. A top Trump adviser has floated the idea of stripping the much-scrutinized ârevenge taxâ from the GOPâs megabill if more trade deals are signed.
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Core values. Nvidia stock closed at a record high as the company continues to shrug off any China-related losses, showing that itâs still firmly in control â and its comeback isnât over.
Bot to the future. Jensen Huang, Nvidiaâs CEO, said that he sees a future with âbillions of robotsâ (which includes self-driving cars) and that theyâre the companyâs other multibillion-dollar bet.
Microsoftâs Azure thing. The company got a price hike from Wedbush thanks to its rising revenue from Azure and Copilot, which analysts think could add $25 billion by FY26.
Charging into last place. Teslaâs sales have fallen in Europe for the fifth straight month â theyâre down 28% year over year â even while the broader EV market surges.
A barrel of surprises. Despite the Iran-Israel war, gas prices will stay low this summer, thanks to energy market efficiency, improved data, and better global dispersion.
Location, location, liquidation
Remember when homeownership was the American dream? Well, in some corners of the country, itâs starting to look more like a recurring financial nightmare. A growing number of U.S. homeowners are slipping underwater â meaning they owe more on their mortgages than their homes are currently worth.
The numbers are still relatively small, but the trend is sharpest in once-scorching markets such as Cape Coral, Florida (7.8% underwater), San Antonio, Texas (4.3%), and Austin, Texas (4.2%) â all pandemic darlings turned cautionary tales. Fueled by remote work, low rates, and a YOLO real estate attitude, these boomtowns saw prices skyrocket. But now the airâs coming out of the bubble, and the equity is evaporating.
Real estate agents are already seeing the panic set in. One Atlanta buyer, according to The Wall Street Journal, has listed his house for $15,000 less than he paid three years ago not because he has to sell, but because heâs afraid of falling into the red. His logic? Itâs better to take a loss now than drown later â homeownership as preemptive damage control.
Underwater status isnât just a financial inconvenience â itâs a lifestyle lock-in. Canât refinance, canât sell without coughing up cash, canât move for that new job or better school district. Itâs a housing market purgatory. And while this isnât 2008 dĂ©jĂ vu (credit standards are tighter, and overall equity is strong), it does expose vulnerabilities, particularly among recent buyers with FHA and VA loans, who often put little down and now have even less wiggle room.
No oneâs calling for a foreclosure flood yet. Most borrowers can still make payments, and thereâs no mortgage crisis on the immediate horizon. But with home values sliding and white-collar layoffs piling up, the psychological toll is mounting. The dream of mobility â up, out, onward â is colliding with the reality of debt, depreciation, and 7% mortgage rates. Quartzâs Catherine Baab has more on how underwater mortgages are locking Americans in place.
Rates of wrath
JPMorgan just poured cold water on any economic hot takes. In a new forecast, the bank slashed its 2025 GDP estimate from 2% to 1.3%, and itâs pointing the finger squarely at President Donald Trumpâs trade policy. The tariffs â a 10% blanket import tax that has climbed to 55% for countries such as China â may be âreciprocalâ in name, but theyâre inflationary in effect. The result? A rising risk of stagflation â the economic equivalent of slamming the brakes and the gas at the same time â and a slow crawl toward recession.
The bank now puts the odds of a 2025 downturn at just over 30%, saying, âWe continue to see heightened risks of a recession.â Thatâs not doom-and-gloom territory, but itâs enough to make the Fed sweat â and delay. JPMorgan expects just one rate cut this year (in December), compared with the two that markets were hoping for, and then expects three cuts in quick succession by spring 2026.
The Trump administrationâs trade agenda â part ideological, part electoral â could also take a chunk out of global growth while inflating prices at home. Add to that a projected $3.8 trillion increase in the national debt, and itâs no wonder JPMorgan is flashing warning signs across bond and currency markets. Growth slows, prices rise, and central bankers develop stress-induced tics.
Emerging market currencies may outperform the dollar as investors hunt for economies that arenât trying to self-sabotage. Meanwhile, bond yields are set to climb as demand weakens and Washington leans ever harder on the borrowing button. And yet JPMorgan still sees upside for U.S. stocks. The AI bull run, consumer spending, and momentum-driven strategies are keeping markets buoyant even as the macro picture teeters. In 2025, Wall Streetâs best trade might be denial. Quartzâs Niamh Rowe has more on why recession risk could be the new baseline, not a headline.
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