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    Mortgage demand falls even further, as rates shoot back up to July highs

    The average contract interest rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages with conforming loan balances ($647,200 or less) increased to 5.80% last week from 5.65% the previous week.
    Mortgage applications to purchase a home dropped 2% for the week and were 23% lower than the same week one year ago.
    The refinance share of mortgage activity decreased to 30.3% of total applications from about 66% a year ago.

    A real estate consultant shows a condo to a prospective buyer in Miami, Florida.
    Joe Raedle | Getty Images

    After falling back earlier this month, mortgage rates began rising sharply again to the highest level since mid-July. That caused mortgage demand to pull back even further.
    Total mortgage application volume fell 3.7% last week compared with the previous week, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association’s seasonally adjusted index. Volume was 63% lower than the same week one year ago.

    The average contract interest rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages with conforming loan balances ($647,200 or less) increased to 5.80% from 5.65%, with points rising to 0.71 from 0.68 (including the origination fee) for loans with a 20% down payment. That rate was 3.11% one year ago.
    “Mortgage rates and Treasury yields rose last week as Federal Reserve officials indicated that short-term rates would stay higher for longer. Mortgage rates have been volatile over the past month, bouncing between 5.4 percent and 5.8 percent,” said Joel Kan, MBA’s associate vice president of economic and industry forecasting.
    As a result, refinance demand, which is highly sensitive to weekly rate moves, fell another 8% for the week and was 83% lower than the same week one year ago. The refinance share of mortgage activity decreased to 30.3% of total applications from about 66% a year ago.
    Mortgage applications to purchase a home dropped 2% for the week and were 23% lower than the same week one year ago.
    “Purchase applications have declined in eight of the last nine weeks, as demand continues to shrink due to higher rates and a weaker economic outlook,” Kan said. “However, rising inventories and slower home-price growth could potentially bring some buyers back into the market later this year.”

    Home prices are still well above year-ago levels, but they did decline 0.77% from June to July. It was the first monthly fall in nearly three years, according to Black Knight, a mortgage software, data and analytics firm.
    While the drop may seem small, it is the largest single-month decline in prices since January 2011. It is also the second-worst July performance dating back to 1991, behind the 0.9% fall in July 2010, during the Great Recession.
    Given the recent volatility in mortgage rates, the spread between jumbo and conforming loan rates widened again. Jumbos, which used to carry higher rates due to the size of the loans, are now 48 basis points lower than conforming loans. That spread went over 50 basis points in July. This is likely because jumbos are not backed by the government, which has stricter risk tolerance, but held on bank balance sheets. Banks right now are desperate for mortgage business.

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    'There's no sign of any rain coming to us': Europe's extreme weather risks smaller harvests and higher prices

    Europe’s hot, dry weather is the latest challenge plaguing farmers this year, as market analysts warn that smaller harvests could result in higher grocery prices.
    Harvests of potatoes, onions, sugar beet, apples and hops are expected to fall short by 10-50% in the U.K. Meanwhile, EU harvest forecasts are down 16% for grain maize, 15% for soybeans and 12% for sunflowers.
    “We put 2018 as a once-in-a-lifetime drought, but here we are again,” Yorkshire farmer Rodger Hobson told CNBC.

    British farmers have warned that the country’s hot and dry conditions will inevitably lead to smaller harvests this year.
    Planet One Images | Universal Images Group | Getty Images

    In a typical year, Rodger Hobson can expect to produce around 35,000 tons of carrots on his 880-acre farm in Yorkshire in northern England. But 2022 has been anything but typical.
    As an extreme heatwave and subsequent drought have wreaked havoc on European agricultural cycles, large swathes of Hobson’s crop have blackened and died. He now expects a 30% shortfall in yields this year.

    “I’ve been farming crops for 30 years and this is equally the worst drought I’ve seen,” Hobson told CNBC.
    A prior dry spell four years ago — then dubbed the worst in a generation — was comparably bad, he said. Only this time record temperatures of 5 degrees Celsius above 2018’s highs are making matters worse.
    “We put 2018 as a once-in-a-lifetime drought, but here we are again,” he said.
    The hot, dry conditions are the latest in an onslaught of challenges plaguing farmers and their crops this year, with market analysts warning that smaller harvests could lead to higher grocery prices and potential food shortages.

    Britain’s long, hot summer devastates food crops

    The U.K. officially entered a state of drought across much of southern, central and eastern England — and later, Yorkshire — earlier this month.

    It follows the country’s driest July since 1935, during which temperatures hit 40.3 degrees Celsius (104.5 degrees Fahrenheit), exacerbating issues for a sector already feeling the heat from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, increased fertilizer prices and worker shortages.
    The drought represents a greater risk of crop failure, with reduced water supplies making it harder for farmers to irrigate fruit and vegetable crops and tend to the soil on which other grains are sown.
    “There’s no sign of any rain coming to us,” said Hobson. As of the third week of August, Yorkshire had received six millimeters of rain, well below the month’s 70-millimeter average.

    A carrot, it just loves the British climate … Anything above 30 degrees, they shrivel up and die.

    Rodger Hobson
    Chairman, British Carrot Growers Association

    Britain is not used to such extreme weather conditions, with much of its produce — predominantly, large open-field vegetables — dependent on the country’s temperate, maritime climate.
    That is causing concern for farmers like Hobson, chairman of the British Carrot Growers’ Association, whose farm produces around 4% of the U.K’s carrot crop and supplies many domestic food retailers.
    “A carrot, it just loves the British climate. It’s happy in temperatures between 18 and 22 degrees [Celsius]; plenty of rainfall. The archetypal English summer, basically,” Hobson said. “Anything above 30 degrees, they shrivel up and die. And that’s what we’ve seen.”

    July was the driest summer in England since 1935, with major implications for farmers and food prices.
    William Edwards | Afp | Getty Images

    Such conditions are having knock-on effects well beyond the humble orange vegetable. Harvests of other crops, including onions, sugar beet, apples and hops, are forecast to fall by between 10% and 50%, according to reports from the U.K.’s Environmental Agency. As much as half of this summer’s potato crop is set to fail.
    Smaller harvests, in turn, will likely translate into higher prices for consumers at the supermarket, said Alice Witchalls, analyst at market research company Mintec.
    “The critical development period for potatoes is August, and that crop is very water dependent. We could expect production to fall, with some growers reporting a decline of up to 40% for potatoes. That could then pass onto prices,” Witchalls told CNBC.
    A spokesperson for Tesco, one of the U.K.’s leading supermarkets, said it has not yet experienced availability issues across its fruit and vegetable lines, but it is working with growers to “understand the impact of the warm weather.”

    Europe’s worst drought in 500 years

    In other circumstances, Europe might be relied upon to fulfill agricultural shortfalls. But the continent, too, has been hammered by a relentless summer of hot, dry weather, sparking wildfires and droughts across large swathes of land.
    The European Commission said last week that Europe is currently witnessing its worst drought in 500 years, with 47% of the region in “warning” status. It added that conditions are intensifying in 15 countries, including Germany, France and the U.K., with droughts expected to last into at least November along the Mediterranean.

    If animals and pastures are suffering because of weather … it will impact the animals and reduce production.

    Paul Hughes
    Chief agricultural economist, S&P Global Commodity Insights

    European Union harvest forecasts are now down 16% for grain maize, 15% for soybeans and 12% for sunflowers compared with its average for the previous five years.
    Agricultural economists say that has implications not only for food production but also for the dairy and livestock farmers who rely on such items to rear their animals.
    “If animals and pastures are suffering because of weather, then it will impact the animals and reduce production of dairy, butter, milk,” said Paul Hughes, chief agricultural economist and director of research, agribusiness at S&P Global Commodity Insights.

    Mission critical for livestock and dairy farmers

    Karl Franklin, a sheep farmer based in Oxfordshire, southeast England, said the situation is now reaching mission critical.
    It will soon be time to flush his approximately 90 ewes — a process of increasing the nutrient intake of a flock prior to breeding — but a lack of grass could result in a depleted lambing season.
    “If the ewes don’t get flushed well enough, I could be as low as down to 120%, which could mean fewer lambs,” Franklin told CNBC, saying he may have to resort to costly hard feed. The usual reproductive rate for ewes is 180% to 200%, meaning approximately two lambs for every ewe.

    Dairy and livestock farmers have warned of the adverse impacts of extreme weather on their animals.
    Jacob King – Pa Images | Pa Images | Getty Images

    Agricultural industry bodies are now calling for more support for farmers, particularly as it pertains to how governments manage extreme weather conditions and national food security.
    “The situation on the ground continues to be hugely challenging across all farming sectors. Many farmers are facing serious impacts ranging from running out of irrigation water to not having enough grass and having to use winter feed,” Tom Bradshaw, vice-president of the U.K.’s National Farmers’ Union, said.

    “It highlights the urgent need to underwrite our food security and for government and its agencies to better plan for and manage the nation’s water resources; prioritizing water for food production alongside environmental protection,” he said.

    ‘The next few weeks will be crucial’

    Climate scientists have been warning for years that such heatwaves and droughts will become more common as a result of climate change.
    The planet has warmed by about 1.1 degrees Celsius since the Industrial Revolution, and leading scientists have concluded that the current heatwave would have been “almost impossible” without human-induced climate change.
    That is causing some farmers to consider the long-term prospects of their business and the wider industry.

    If there is a lot of rainfall, it could boost production.

    Alice Witchalls
    market analyst

    “Growing vegetables has become much less attractive,” Hobson said. “It’s making us all rethink what we do.”
    As for the coming harvest, analysts say the next few weeks will be vital for food supply chains and, ultimately, prices. A burst of wet weather could go some way in recovering certain crops and allowing for more planting for next year.
    “Within the fruit and veg industry, the next few weeks will be crucial. If there is a lot of rainfall, it could boost production,” Mintec’s Witchalls said.
    For many, it will be an agonizing wait.
    “It’s what the next few months have in store that we’ll be watching closely,” Franklin said. More

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    G-20 nations have gathered to talk carbon emissions. The negotiations won't be easy

    G-20 ministers gathered in Indonesia to discuss progress on carbon emissions, but expectations are low.
    The group of 20 countries represents about 75% of the world’s total greenhouse gas emissions.
    In 2021, the group recognized that to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius higher than pre-industrial levels, it would have to implement “meaningful and effective” steps.

    U.S Special Presidential Envoy for Climate John Kerry (right) with President of COP26 Alok Sharma at the G-20 Joint Environment and Climate Ministers’ Meeting in Nusa Dua, Indonesia’s Bali island, on Aug. 31, 2022.
    Firdia Lisnawati | Afp | Getty Images

    BALI, Indonesia — G-20 ministers have gathered in Indonesia to discuss their progress on carbon emissions. But expectations are low.
    The group of 20 countries represents about 75% of the world’s total greenhouse gas emissions. In 2021, the group recognized that limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels would require “meaningful and effective” steps.

    But there’s frustration about a lack of concrete measures at a time when Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has pushed several governments to continue to use coal for longer than they’d hoped.
    “A lot of countries in the world are strongly condemning the Russian aggression in Ukraine … so it’s been hard to have negotiations with the Russians,” Rob Jetten, the Dutch minister for climate and energy, told CNBC in Bali.
    Russia is among the G-20 nations. This month, Sky News and others reported that Russia is flaring off natural gas that it would normally have exported to Europe. According to the G-20 host nation, Indonesia, Russia’s President Vladimir Putin will take part in a leader’s meeting scheduled for November.
    “There’s also a huge energy crisis, worldwide prices are high, people are struggling to pay for energy. And this is also … not helping climate actions, because a lot of countries are going back to fossil fuels again,” Jetten said.

    In the wake of the Kremlin’s unprovoked invasion of Ukraine and the disruption of natural gas flows from Russia to Europe, countries including the Netherlands, Germany and Austria said they would have to burn more coal — a fossil fuel.

    Other parts of the world have stepped up their consumption of coal, including China, which has experienced a severe heat wave this summer and is using record amounts of energy.
    Those decisions, even if temporary, diverge from previous agreements.
    An official from one of the participating nations, who did not want to be named due to the sensitivity of the negotiations, said the main challenge going into these meetings is “how can we keep countries following (climate) targets.”

    Read more on climate change

    “Many (nations) are trying to be flexible. Can we please keep the targets?” the official said.
    The Indonesian government acknowledged the negotiations are tough.
    “The discussion on the commitment is rather challenging as it brings certain implications to some member countries,” the Indonesia presidency of the G-20 said in a statement ahead of the meetings.
    “The current geopolitical condition also create(s) a challenge in the ongoing negotiation process,” it added, in reference to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
    Tanya Plibersek, Australia’s minister for the environment and water, said Russia’s attack on its neighbor has “complicated negotiations. But there is no way that countries could ignore that illegal invasion of Ukraine. It has to be something that is talked about in international meetings like this.”

    More from CNBC Climate:

    Meanwhile, extreme weather events across the world would seem to make the need for government action ever more urgent. Pakistan, for example, is experiencing brutal floods, with a third of the nation under water.
    A government minister there told Reuters the international community has a “responsibility” to help Pakistan and prevent future extreme weather events, given the country’s carbon footprint is among the lowest in the world.
    In Europe, a German drought has reduced water levels of the Rhine River, making it harder to transport fuel, wheat and other items.
    “We need to step up our game, and all these extreme weather events all over the world — in Europe, in Asia Pacific, but also in America, [are] our real wake up call, for everyone. that we have to act now,” the Dutch minister Jetten said.

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    HP Inc. CEO sees signs that commercial PC demand is starting to slow down

    Monday – Friday, 6:00 – 7:00 PM ET

    HP Inc. CEO Enrique Lores told CNBC on Tuesday he sees indications that commercial customers are spending more cautiously on PCs.
    “We really think this is driven by the macroeconomic situation that we are facing,” Lores said on “Mad Money.”

    HP Inc. CEO Enrique Lores told CNBC on Tuesday he sees indications that commercial customers are spending more cautiously on PCs as macroeconomic uncertainty weighs on enterprises.
    Lores’ comments in a “Mad Money” interview come on the heels of a well-documented slowdown in consumer PC demand this year, even as sales of higher-performing machines favored by corporations appeared to be showing some resilience. However, worries about slowing economic growth have intensified in recent months, prompting concerns that enterprise PC sales would be the next shoe to drop in a market that saw Covid-fueled growth.

    “What we have seen during the quarter is a slowdown of consumer demand that really accelerated as the quarter progressed. We also have started to see some signs of slowing down on the commercial space,” Lores told CNBC’s Jim Cramer, after the PC and printer maker reported mixed results for quarter ended July 31.
    Quarterly sales of $14.66 billion fell short of the $15.74 billion analysts expected, according to Refinitiv, while better-than-projected margins helped earnings per share of $1.04 match estimates. HP Inc. on Tuesday lowered its full-year earnings forecast for fiscal 2022, which concludes in October.
    While the “overall situation we believe is temporary,” Lores said HP Inc.’s commercial business is nevertheless impacted by reports of hiring freezes and slowdowns.
    “We really think this is driven by the macroeconomic situation that we are facing,” Lores said, noting there “have been more and more companies being cautious about how to manage budget and really be careful about how many new employees they hire.”

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    NASA aims for Artemis launch attempt on Saturday after reviewing rocket engine problem

    NASA announced it will make another attempt to launch the Artemis I lunar mission on Saturday.
    The space agency called off the launch on Monday due to an engine temperature issue during the countdown.
    The space agency is working toward the debut of its Space Launch System (SLS) rocket and Orion capsule, for what would be a more than month-long journey around the moon.

    NASA’s next-generation moon rocket, the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket with its Orion crew capsule perched on top, as it stands on launch pad 39B in preparation for the unmanned Artemis 1 mission at Cape Canaveral, Florida, August 27, 2022.
    Joe Skipper | Reuters

    NASA announced it will make another attempt to launch the Artemis I lunar mission on Saturday, after calling off the launch on Monday due to an engine issue.
    The space agency is working toward the debut of its Space Launch System (SLS) rocket and Orion capsule, for what would be a more than month-long journey around the moon.

    On Monday, NASA was unable to resolve a temperature problem identified with one of the rocket’s four liquid-fueled engines, discovered with under two hours to go in the countdown. NASA’s manager of the SLS program John Honeycutt said during a press conference on Tuesday that the agency believes the engine issue was due to a faulty sensor, given a data analysis that showed propellant was flowing as expected.
    Honeycutt noted that the rocket’s technical team is continuing to review the data and still needs to “polish up on our plan” for making a Saturday launch possible. If NASA needs to roll SLS off the launchpad to get access to the engine sensor, that would likely mean a delay of weeks or months before another launch attempt.
    “Replacing the sensor at the launchpad would be tricky,” Honeycutt said.
    NASA’s Artemis I mission manager Mike Sarafin said that the team will change the procedure of loading propellant into the rocket, and will start trying to chill the engine to the optimal temperature earlier during the countdown.
    Notably, weather remains a concern for whether NASA can attempt the launch on Saturday, according to Space Force weather launch officer Mark Burger.

    “The probability of weather violation at any point in the countdown still looks to me rather high,” Burger said during the press conference.
    NASA said a two-hour long launch window opens at 2:17 p.m. ET on Saturday, meaning it could liftoff any time between then and 4:17 p.m. Due to the length of the launch window, Burger added that “I still think we have a pretty good opportunity”, despite a roughly 60% forecast that weather would prevent the rocket from launching.
    The uncrewed flight is set to be the first of the agency’s most powerful rocket ever assembled and kicks off NASA’s long-awaited return to the moon’s surface. It marks the beginning of NASA’s Artemis lunar program, which is expected to land the agency’s astronauts on the moon by its third mission in 2025.
    While Artemis I will not carry astronauts, nor land on the moon, the mission is critical to demonstrating that NASA’s monster rocket and deep space capsule can deliver on their promised abilities. Artemis I has been delayed for years, with the program running billions over budget.

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    Cramer says avoid all speculative investments like crypto as the Fed stays hawkish

    Monday – Friday, 6:00 – 7:00 PM ET

    Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell is “going to bring the pain until it puts an end to the gambling,” CNBC’s Jim Cramer said Tuesday.
    For that reason, the “Mad Money” host implored investors to avoid speculative assets like cryptocurrencies.

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Tuesday implored investors to stay away from speculative assets such as cryptocurrencies, warning that they will continue to struggle during the ongoing Federal Reserve tightening cycle.
    “Look, Fed chief Jay Powell told us that we need to stop doing stupid things with our money. That was the thrust of his speech on Friday,” the “Mad Money” host said, referring to the top U.S. central banker’s Jackson Hole address, in which Powell warned the Fed’s commitment to squashing inflation could bring “some pain” to American businesses and households.

    Wall Street has finished lower in three straight sessions as investors digest Powell’s Friday morning remarks.
    Powell is “going to bring the pain until it puts an end to the gambling,” Cramer said. “Of course, he’ll also hurt some good investments in the process … but we won’t see the end of this decline until we get a giant washout of all things that are speculative.”
    That includes, but is not limited to, cryptocurrencies, said Cramer, who also acknowledged he no longer believes in the argument that bitcoin is a store of value. In Cramer’s opinion, other speculative parts of the market to avoid are money-losing firms that went public via special purpose acquisition companies and meme stocks.
    “This is what it looks like when the Fed gets serious,” Cramer said. What matters is that we just have to get through it intact. Don’t get memed. Don’t get SPAC’d. Don’t get crypto’d. And you’ll get through this thicket and find yourself in a much better time when we are sufficiently oversold for a huge bounce.”

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    Cramer's lightning round: Li-Cycle Holdings is 'too risky' for this environment

    Monday – Friday, 6:00 – 7:00 PM ET

    It’s that time again! “Mad Money” host Jim Cramer rings the lightning round bell, which means he’s giving his answers to callers’ stock questions at rapid speed.

    Li-Cycle Holdings: “Too dangerous, too risky. Not the right thing for this environment. We’ve got to be more careful.”
    Epam Systems: “Very fast grower. Profitable. I like them. They must come on the show because they are [headquartered] right next to where I live.”

    AT&T: “[Sell, sell, sell].”
    Compass Pathways: “No, too dangerous. Too risky. Not what we want right now. Pharmaceutical company that is too dangerous.”

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    Jim Cramer says these are his 10 favorite 'dividend aristocrats' to own through year-end

    Monday – Friday, 6:00 – 7:00 PM ET

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Tuesday offered investors a list of his 10 favorite “dividend aristocrats” to own through year-end, including McDonald’s and Hormel.
    The “Mad Money” host said the companies’ quarterly payouts offer protection against Federal Reserve-related market declines.

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Tuesday offered investors a list of his 10 favorite “dividend aristocrats” to own through year-end, saying their payouts offer protection against Federal Reserve-related market declines.
    Amid the Fed’s tightening campaign this year, the S&P 500’s dividend aristocrats — companies that have consistently raised their payouts over the past 25 years — have held up better than the broader U.S. stock index, the “Mad Money” host noted.

    And now, given renewed concerns about a hawkish Fed, Cramer said he believes it’s the right time to zoom in on his favorites in the group for the rest of the year — just like he did at the start of 2022.

    Archer-Daniels-Midland: Cramer said he likes the agriculture firm as a play on supply chain disruptions. He also noted the stock has started to recover from its mid-July bottom, helped by a rebound in crop prices. “Conservative, decent stock,” he said.
    General Dynamics: While Cramer said he’s positive on the overall defense industry, General Dynamics is the only dividend aristocrat in its ranks. “Unfortunately, they also have a business jet division that will no doubt get hit if we have a nasty recession, but that hasn’t stopped the stock from rallying 11% this year, aided by a very hands-on management that knows what’s needed in a less secure world,” he said.
    Coca-Cola: Cramer said the beverage giant is a “textbook defensive stock,” and its roughly 2.8% dividend yield helps add protection. Shares of Coca-Cola have been basically flat over the past six months, but Cramer said Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s reminder that the central bank means business should boost the stock.
    Hormel: The parent company of Spam and Skippy peanut butter is another classic defensive name, Cramer said. Plus, as inflation squeezes consumers, he said Hormel could represent “a good trade-down play.”
    McDonald’s: Cramer said he thinks two recent overhangs on shares of the fast-food giant — cost inflation and the strong U.S. dollar — are past their peak. “I think McDonald’s can resume its long march higher real soon,” he said, calling it the perfect “bounce-back candidate.”
    Chubb: Cramer said the insurance company is a beneficiary of higher interest rates, which is noteworthy now that the Fed reinforced its hawkish posture. “With the Fed bringing the pain, I think rates will head higher again, and that means Chubb is going to be along for the ride,” he said.
    Federal Realty: The real estate investment trust yields around 4.2% and owns a large number of mixed-use suburban properties. Cramer said a key reason the REIT made this list is because he thinks those types of properties will be resilient in an economic slowdown.
    Realty Income Corporation: “The stock’s been punished lately because most retail has been struggling,” Cramer said, but this firm has “tons of consistent clients” like drugstores, supermarkets, dollar stores and convenience stores. “Best of all, Realty Income pays you a monthly dividend” that yields 4.3% here, Cramer said.
    Linde: Cramer noted his Charitable Trust owns shares of the industrial gas firm. While it’s a tough moment for cyclical companies, he said he believes Linde has a “great long-term story” and is worth buying on weakness.
    Caterpillar: Shares of the industrial giant have bounced off their July lows, but remain well below their April highs. “CAT should get a huge boost from recent legislation, and with the stock down at 15 times earnings, I’m betting Wall Street’s gotten too negative on Caterpillar,” Cramer said.

    Disclosure: Cramer’s Charitable Trust owns shares of Linde.

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