to your HTML Add class="sortable" to any table you'd like to make sortable Click on the headers to sort Thanks to many, many people for contributions and suggestions. Licenced as X11: http://www.kryogenix.org/code/browser/licence.html This basically means: do what you want with it. */ var stIsIE = /*@cc_on!@*/false; sorttable = { init: function() { // quit if this function has already been called if (arguments.callee.done) return; // flag this function so we don't do the same thing twice arguments.callee.done = true; // kill the timer if (_timer) clearInterval(_timer); if (!document.createElement || !document.getElementsByTagName) return; sorttable.DATE_RE = /^(\d\d?)[\/\.-](\d\d?)[\/\.-]((\d\d)?\d\d)$/; forEach(document.getElementsByTagName('table'), function(table) { if (table.className.search(/\bsortable\b/) != -1) { sorttable.makeSortable(table); } }); }, makeSortable: function(table) { if (table.getElementsByTagName('thead').length == 0) { // table doesn't have a tHead. Since it should have, create one and // put the first table row in it. the = document.createElement('thead'); the.appendChild(table.rows[0]); table.insertBefore(the,table.firstChild); } // Safari doesn't support table.tHead, sigh if (table.tHead == null) table.tHead = table.getElementsByTagName('thead')[0]; if (table.tHead.rows.length != 1) return; // can't cope with two header rows // Sorttable v1 put rows with a class of "sortbottom" at the bottom (as // "total" rows, for example). This is B&R, since what you're supposed // to do is put them in a tfoot. So, if there are sortbottom rows, // for backwards compatibility, move them to tfoot (creating it if needed). sortbottomrows = []; for (var i=0; i
Motio Research's initial estimate of U.S. median household income for April 2026 is $88,290. This value represents a $20 (or 0.02%) decrease from the firm's initial estimate of $88,310 for March 2026.
This month, Motio Research updated the visuals that accompany its monthly median household income series. The firm is now presenting an interactive chart of its nominal median household estimates for each month from January 2010 through April 2026. Here's a screenshot of the firm's chart presenting that data, which we encourage you to click through to their site to check out the non-inflation adjusted data for each month in the series.
The interactive chart captures revisions to Motio Research's previous median household income estimates. For March 2026, for example, the firm has revised its estimate of the income earned by a U.S. household at the exact middle of the U.S.' income spectrum down by $690 (-0.8%) to $87,620 from its initial estimate.
The firm has also modified how it presents its U.S. Real Median Household Income Index. These estimates are based on income data collected by the U.S. Census Bureau through its monthly Current Population Survey. Motio Research uses this survey data to create its raw monthly estimates, which it then adjusts to account for the effects of seasonality and inflation. Each month's data is now presented as a rolling three-month average, with the data for the three month period of January through March 2010 assigned a value of 100.
The change helps smooth out some of the month-to-month noise in the data series, making it easier to identify the level, direction, and momentum of the firm's inflation- and seasonality-adjusted measure. The following screenshot of Motio Research's interactive chart shows how this index has changed from March 2010 (covering January through March 2010) through April 2026 (covering February through April 2026):
The U.S. Real Median Household Income Index has a value of 119.7 for April 2026. Motio Research's data indicates median household income has been on a generally rising trend since May 2025, which has resumed following a small dip between December 2025 and February 2026.
The firm also presents a nominal and inflation-adjusted visualization of the year-over-year percentage change in median household income and also provides a chart revealing the ratio of the incomes of the 75th and 25th percentile households. This latter measure indicates how evenly income gains or losses are spread among the upper and lower portions of the U.S. income spectrum.
If you can't tell, we're fans of their work!
Political Calculations produces median household income estimates using other original data sources that complement Motio Research's survey-based estimates. Political Calculations' initial estimate of median household income in April 2026 is $87,444, a $280 (+0.3%) increase above our initial estimate of $87,164 for March 2026.
The following chart presents our estimates of U.S. median household income, both adjusted for inflation (blue) and not-adjusted for inflation (red) for each month from January 2000 through April 2026.
Political Calculations' April 2026 estimate is $846 (or 1.0%) below Motio Research's initial estimate of $88,290 for April 2026.
The BEA's aggregate wage and salary income data we use in generating our median household income estimates saw substantial downward revisions for the months of October 2025 (-0.33%), November 2025 (-0.55%), December 2025 (-0.67%), January 2026 (-0.67%), February 2026 (-0.72%), and March 2026 (-0.79%).
These downward revisions represent the BEA capturing the zeroing of income of millions of foreign-born individuals, who ranked among the lowest income earners in the U.S. According to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, some three million foreign-born individuals in the U.S. have exited the U.S. since January 2025, with 2.2 million taking advantage of cash and travel incentives to self-deport. The BEA's aggregate income data has lagged the changes affecting the bottom of the U.S. income distribution, which we think is a significant contributor to the rise of median household income given how the math of median numbers works.
For the latest in our coverage of median household income in the United States, follow this link!
U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis. Table 2.6. Personal Income and Its Disposition, Monthly, Personal Income and Outlays, Not Seasonally Adjusted, Monthly, Middle of Month. Population. [Online Database (via Federal Reserve Economic Data)]. Last Updated: 28 May 2026. Accessed: 28 May 2026.
U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis. Table 2.6. Personal Income and Its Disposition, Monthly, Personal Income and Outlays, Not Seasonally Adjusted, Monthly, Middle of Month. Compensation of Employees, Received: Wage and Salary Disbursements. [Online Database (via Federal Reserve Economic Data)]. Last Updated: 28 May 2026. Accessed: 28 May 2026.
Image credit: U.S. Census Bureau. We modified the public domain image to make it more generally applicable beyond reporting the median household income from 2022.
Labels: median household income
On Monday, 30 March 2026, the S&P 500 bottomed at 6,343.72. Stock prices had been battered in the month after the Iran War geopolitical conflict started, falling 535.16 points (7.8%) from the close of trading on Friday, 27 February 2026, the day before it began.
Then came word the conflict was likely to get worse. Oil prices surged. The possibility the U.S. economy might contract began to be seriously considered. All signs seemingly pointed to a bigger downward move for stock prices.
But then, something else happened. Stock prices began to rise as investors considered what those possibilities would mean. And what they saw was a Federal Reserve that had been considering hiking interest rates take them off the table instead.
Stock prices continued their new rally after a two-week cease fire was announced in the geopolitical conflict a little over a week later. Then 2026's second quarter earnings season got underway and investors were treated to some of the best earnings reports they had seen in years, combined with improved business outlooks for many companies standing to benefit from the buildout of Artificial Intelligence (AI) system infrastructure.
In the weeks since, that pattern has continued. The Iran war cease fire has been extended several times. In the stock market, companies kept reporting much better than expected earnings and business outlooks. Stock prices have taken off like they were strapped to a Spacex rocket, to name one firm whose imminent Initial Public Offering (IPO) is exciting the investing world. Through the close of trading on Friday, 29 May 2026, stock prices have increased by 16.3% above where they bottomed on 30 March 2026.
A month ago, when we looked at the value of the S&P 500 with respect to its underlying dividends per share, we weren't surprised to see the index was on track to make a full recovery from its geopolitical swoon. But now that it has, the rise of stock prices hasn't slowed down very much, which makes it different from previous recoveries in recent years. Instead, they are almost within a single standard deviation of crossing a critical level that would represent a breakdown of the relative order in the stock market that has been in place since 31 December 2023. The following chart presents the phenomenal rise of stock prices from 30 March 2026 through 29 May 2026 in the context of that relative period of order.
From where it closed on Friday, 29 March 2026, the S&P 500 would need to rise a little over 300 more points, or almost 4.0%, before the end of the quarter to break through the upper red dashed line that would potentially represent a break down of order in the stock market. We say potentially because just crossing the line isn't enough to qualify as a break down in order. Stock prices would have to be sustained above that upper threshold for long enough to rule out the possibility that it's just a simple statistical outlier. Much like how we determined the current period of order did not break down after stock prices broke below the lower limit back in April 2025.
But that's not all there is to need to be concerned about. This rally might qualify as a stock market bubble according to our working definition:
An economic bubble exists whenever the price of an asset that may be freely exchanged in a well-established market first soars then plummets over a sustained period of time at rates that are decoupled from the rate of growth of the income that might be realized from owning or holding the asset.
For stock prices, the income that might be realized from either owning or holding stocks are dividends. As shown in our chart, the rocketship ride of the S&P 500 in the last eight weeks is very close to qualifying as the inflation phase of a bubble.
What could possibly go wrong?
Aside from the now-classic example of the Dot Com Bubble, we've seen something like this pattern in historic data at least two other times. Once was before the Black Monday Crash of 1987. The other occurrence dates back to 1929, which defines an event we refer to as the Ultimate Sell Signal.
Which is not to say that stock prices are destined to immediately crash if they cross that upper threshold. The Dot Com Bubble inflated for years before it entered its deflation phase. What we can say is that if stock prices rise above that upper threshold and stay elevated above it, the stock market will have entered into a chaotic phase. Investors will need to adapt accordingly.
Image Credit: Microsoft Copilot Designer. Prompt: "An editorial cartoon of a Wall Street bull and bear riding on the outside of a rocket that is accelerating after launch".
Over the final trading week of May 2026, the S&P 500 (Index: SPX) rose 1.4% over its previous week's close to reach 7,580.06, a new record high for the index.
According to news headlines, it did so because of hopes of realizing a Middle East peace deal that might reopen the Hormuz Strait to oil shipping and because of strong earnings among technology companies whose products have become in high demand to build out the infrastructure to support Artificial Intelligence (AI) systems.
But we can't help noticing that these are variations of the same headlines that have accompanied the rise of the S&P 500 over much of the last two months. Can the prospect of a negotiated end to the Iran war geopolitical event still be powering stock prices higher? At what point are the expectations associated with a Middle East peace deal fully priced into the market? Especially when the proverbial can for actually reaching a deal to satisfactorily end the conflict keeps getting kicked down the road?
The real story is the outlook for both earnings and dividends has improved substantially throughout the past two months as the conflict's cease fire has held. These positive changes are the main drivers behind the rise in stock prices and they have benefited stock prices in two ways:
That's a state of affairs that could change quickly and negatively if the cease fire breaks down, but short of the announcement of a deal that definitively ends the conflict, there's little room left for stock prices to rise more on these headlines with 2026-Q2's earnings season mostly having come and gone.
Meanwhile, the progress of AI technologies and the massive investments being made to advance them continues to be *the* market moving story of the year. There's a strong argument to be made the development is a modern day analog of the 19th century's boom in railroads. The booming earnings of companies whose products have become essential to the rapid, widespread adoption of AI technologies have been key in powering stock prices higher.
Speaking of which, the latest update of the alternative futures chart shows we have come to the end of the redzone forecast range we added in late February. The S&P 500's trajectory has shifted in the last few days away from the trajectory associated with investors focusing mainly on 2026-Q2 in setting stock prices to the more distant future quarter of 2026-Q4.
Although this is a relatively small change, the shift in how far forward in time investors are focusing their attention represents a Lévy flight event.
That timing is interesting because it coincides with a growing expectation of when the Fed might act to next change U.S. interest rates. The CME Group's FedWatch Tool pushed back the expected timing of a quarter point increase in the Federal Funds Rate to 9 December (2026-Q4), six weeks later than it had projected on Friday, 22 May 2026. Beyond that hike, the FedWatch tool no longer anticipates the Fed will hold the Federal Funds Rate at a target rate of 3.75-4.00% through all of 2027.
But there's a bigger question that now needs to be asked. Since the S&P 500 bottomed on 30 March 2026, has the index risen too far too fast? We'll take that question on in the very near future.
Meanwhile, how long investor expectations might hold depends upon the random onset of new information. Here are the market moving headlines that affected investor outlooks for stock prices in the Memorial Day holiday-shortened trading week.
The Atlanta Fed's GDPNow toolestimate of real GDP growth for the U.S. economy in the current quarter of 2026-Q2 decreased to +3.8%, falling back from the +4.3% it projected a week earlier.
Image credit: Microsoft Copilot Designer. Prompt: "An editorial cartoon of a suit wearing Wall Street bull who is happy the S&P 500 has hit a new high and a bear who is reading a newspaper that says 'STOCKS UP ON MIDDLE EAST DEAL HOPES' and asks 'HOW MANY DAYS CAN STOCKS BE UP ON THE SAME HEADLINE?'"
There are quite a few famous unsolved problems in mathematics. Some are so famous they have million dollar bounties on them that will be paid out to the first mathematicians who definitively either prove or disprove them.
And then there are other important conjectures out there that, in addition to academic recognition, might pay smaller rewards to the people who crack them. But which if they are cracked, can be even more valuable if they can successfully be put to use.
One of those smaller conjectures is the Talagrand Convexity Conjecture. Proposed by French mathematician Michael Talagrand in 1995, Talagrand famously offered a $2,000 prize to anyone who solved it. Here is Jules Aknin's simplified description of the conjecture:
Talagrand’s convexity conjecture is a statement about high‑dimensional geometry: even in enormous, messy clouds of points, simple convex shapes are guaranteed to appear. In other words, no matter how chaotic the configuration looks, there is unavoidable structure hiding inside it.
If such structures are truly unavoidable, they can open the door to practical applications, including in financial markets. Aknin describes how they might contribute to finding order within chaos:
At a deeper level, results like this sit exactly at the intersection of geometry and probability. They don’t just create “pretty shapes” in higher dimensions, they show how structure emerges inside high‑dimensional random systems, which is the same conceptual problem we face when building models for complex datasets. In fact, as the original article notes, this kind of unification between geometric and probabilistic thinking could eventually influence how machines process high‑dimensional data and how we design algorithms that operate in those spaces.
[...]
On the surface, a high‑dimensional cloud of points in geometry and the Australian equity market do not look related. But in practice, we deal with a very similar object every day: hundreds of stocks, multiple time horizons, momentum profiles, risk factors, macro shocks and behavioural flows all interacting at once.
From a distance, that system may appear as pure noise. Talagrand’s result reinforces an idea that systematic managers have believed for a long time: structure is not optional, it is inevitable; the real question is whether you have the tools and discipline to find it.
Even though it doesn't carry the million-dollar prize of mathematics most famous unsolved problems, the stakes for those who can successfully build on the proven conjecture are still very high. That work is quite possibly worth a lot more than Talagrand's two-thousand dollar prize for the proof itself.
A team of three mathematicians stand to collect Talagrand's $2,000. Merrick Hua, Antoine Song, and Stefan Tudose posted a preprint paper of their proof on 11 May 2026, in which they converted the problem from one involving geometry to one involving probability and combinatorics. Like many math stories this year, AI is involved, but unlike those other stories, it's only a bit player.
The new proof was worked out by Dongming Hua and Antoine Song from the California Institute of Technology, and Stefan Tudose from Princeton University, who joined the other authors after hearing about their work. Together, the mathematicians reformulated Talagrand's geometric conjecture to a problem of probability theory and random vectors. In their paper published on the arXiv preprint server, they proved an equivalent conjecture for probability, showing that any 1-subgaussian random vector in n dimensions can be expressed as the sum of three standard Gaussian random vectors.
This result solves Talagrand's convexity problem, proving that for any large enough set in Gaussian space, a convex set of significant measures can be found inside a triple sum of the original set. The solution also confirms a combinatorial analog of the problem, which is important for discrete mathematics.
Initially, Song and Hua say they attempted to work out a solution with the help of ChatGPT. However, while the LLM helped to answer some of their questions and move them closer to a solution, it was Tudose who provided the final proof. Ultimately, the team did not use the work done with ChatGPT. In their paper, the team writes that Tudose's proof was "more general and conceptual."
It's a remarkable achievement. It is also a harbinger of the kind of role AI will find as just another tool used by people.
Image credit: Texture of an iced leaf image by Daniela deGol on Wikimedia Commons. Creative Commons CC By 4.0 Attribution 4.0 International Deed.
The U.S. new home market has largely recovered from the disruption of January 2026's blizzards. Unfortunately, rising mortgage rates combined with an uptick in the average sale price of new homes to reduce the quantity of sales. This combination of factors resulted in the total valuation of new homes sold in April 2026 to decline below the levels recorded a month earlier.
Political Calculations' initial estimate of the total value of new home sales in the United States during April 2026 is $28.30 billion. This value is slightly higher than the initial estimate of $28.24 billion for March 2026, but has declined from a revised value of $28.43 billion for the month.
The number of new home sales continues to hold relatively steady. The initial estimate of the annualized trailing twelve month average of the total number of new home sales for April 2026 is 665,000. This value falls below the range of 671,000 and 684,000 that had held since January 2024.
The initial estimate of the trailing twelve month average of a new home sold in April 2026 is $521,300. New home prices have generally rising since bottoming at $502,525 in September 2024. The average remains below the peak of $529,692 recorded for June 2022 at the height of the high inflation unleashed by the Biden administration.
All these figures represent time-shifted, partial trailing twelve month averages for each data series, which will be subject to revision for the next ten months before being finalized. The following charts present the U.S. new home market capitalization, the number of new home sales, and their average sale prices as measured by their time-shifted, trailing twelve month averages from January 1976 through April 2026.
New home sales were reported to have surged in March as prices fell to a five-year low, but much of this boost in sales may represent a springback from the impact of blizzards in much of the U.S. in January 2026 that shrank sales far below expectations.
Bloomberg confirms the April 2026 sales slump for new homes was not expected:
Sales of new US homes declined in April by more than forecast as builder incentives failed to motivate potential buyers at the start of the spring selling season.
Purchases of new single-family homes decreased 6.2% from March to a 622,000 annualized pace, according to government data released Thursday. Economists expected a 660,000 rate, based on the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey.
It would seem the springback in sales from January 2026's blizzards was truly that and not the start of an upward trend.
U.S. Census Bureau. New Residential Sales Historical Data. Houses Sold. [Excel Spreadsheet]. Accessed 28 May 2026.
U.S. Census Bureau. New Residential Sales Historical Data. Median and Average Sale Price of Houses Sold. [Excel Spreadsheet]. Accessed 28 May 2026.
Image Credit: High angle shot of suburban neighborhood photo by David McBee on Pexels.
Labels: real estate
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