Tuesday, March 24, 2015
Porcelain floor and wall tiles for bars and restaurants
Monday, March 23, 2015
How to Instal Glass Mosaic Tiles
Mosaic Tile Ideas
Stunning Mosaic Walls Featuring Bits And Pieces Of Glass
by Bernbaum Magadini Architects
Once again, you can see the intensity the mosaic wall adds to the bathroom, turning a calm, serene space into an invigorating oasis perfect for bath time pleasure.
Aqua Blue For Various Settings
Surprisingly, aqua blue is a quite well-liked color for artists designing a mosaic wall. This selection closely resembles the rippling of water under the sun, which can be fairly mesmerizing, even if it only requires shape in the form of little glass cubes.
by Birdhouse Media
by Bonick Landscaping
by Dkor Interiors Inc
by Triton Austin Architectural Interiors
A Option Of Colour
I like mosaic walls for their color. There is really no right or wrong way to come about such a design technique. As long as you pick the color of your selection, there is bound to be a pot of gold waiting at the finish of your style rainbow.
by Ekman Design Studio
by Elad Gonen
The sunflower mosaic above is a beautiful creation for residences hunting to establish a warm, comforting vibe. When a effective image is accented with the right backdrop colour, correct design and style magic occurs. Above we see how a deep tone of maroon offsets the radiant floral style, creating a spectacular attitude and overall impact.
by Esther Herschcorch
If massive flower mosaics are not your issue, maybe piecing with each other your favored quote across the wall of the room could be favorable. Let me guess yours… "carpe diem?"
by IMI Style Inc.
by Jen Chu Design
Superb and Colorful Patterns
We all take pleasure in a great pattern each now and once more, especially if it is completed correct and by the hands of a talented creative genius. Right here are some praiseworthy mosaic patterns that will lure you in, if you haven't already been swept away by it all.
by Kallista
The design and style above is meant to resemble flower petals, and if you ask me, I consider the designers did a great job in creating one thing abstractly wonderful.
Of course I usually like to save the very best for final. The selection above is almost certainly a single of my favored styles all through this post, because it ties in colour, story, and a bit of traditional taste. It's ideal for a monochromatic home that just demands a single feature to make the complete location pop.
Now that you've observed what you can do with mosaic walls, share your thoughts with other folks under…
Sunday, March 22, 2015
10 BATHROOM TILE IDEAS - MODERN TREND FORECASTING FOR 2015
1. Go Reflective
Now this is a beautiful tile idea. It makes the bathroom look bigger, even with its dark color.Archello.
2. Go With the Ocean Colors
Tile in turquoise, aqua, seafoam or blue green (whichever name you prefer) would work. Here's another bathroom in reflective tile but this time it's turquoise. It produces a very festive look.Archello.
Seafoam tile makes this tiny bathroom awesome. It makes you wanna take a swim, and the pool with the matching water color is right there. Photos: Ricardo Oliveira Alves
These blue green 'fish scale' tiles with the ocean motif are definitely in. Style-files.
3. Go Artistic
Designed by Marcel Wanders, even a bathroom is an art creation in this patterned and textured space.
4. Go Bold
Love the red tile and the beautiful accent it adds to the bathroom. Red works perfectly with natural wood color. Balance Associates Architects.
5. Go Horizontal
The long horizontal tile pattern is quite trendy now. Even Home Depot carries similar tile now. Makes room look wider.
6. Go Exotic
Finding exotic looking natural stone slabs is not easy but well worth the challenge. Many stone warehouses carry them on occasion. Symmetrical slabs make the most impression but they don't have to be symmetric to look exotic. A slab such as is must be 'on display', no questions about.Elliman.
7. Go Matchy-Matchy
In this bathroom idea, the multi-color tiles are perfectly coordinated with the colors of the recycled wood barn door and the color of the vanity. BeyondHomes.
8. Go Monochrome
Similar patterned tile (as above) but in monochrome colors. It's the latest hottest trend. Follow beautiful floor and wall tile ideas in this stunning warehouse renovation by Paola Navone.
Which new flooring trend matches your unique style?
Grey concrete tile, considered the new neutral, continue to be a popular choice for homeowners.
Saturday, March 21, 2015
Canadian Retail Sales Down 1.7% in January
Residential building activity levels down in early 2015 from a year ago
Tuesday, March 17, 2015
Monday, March 16, 2015
Weekly Economic and Financial Commentary
Consumers in Winter Hibernation?
- Retail sales unexpectedly fell 0.6 percent in February. Sales looked to have been depressed by the harsh winter weather that hit parts of the country during the month, with the biggest monthly declines occurring at auto retailers and building material stores.
- The labor market continued to show signs of tightening this week. Job openings rose to a 14 year high in January while initial jobless claims ticked lower over the past week.
- Inflation reports this week showed import prices rebounding on higher fuel costs, but widespread declines were reported across components of the Producer Price Index.
Consumer Spending Should Perk Up Come Spring
After an unimpressive start to the year, consumer spending does not look to have perked up much at all in February. Retail sales unexpectedly fell, declining 0.6 percent. The drop marks the third straight monthly decline, with sales now contracting at a threemonth average annualized rate of 4.8 percent. However, unlike previous months, February's miss was tougher to pin on pricerelated declines in sales at gasoline stations. Following the first monthly increase since June in AAA's measure of gas prices, sales at gasoline stations rose 1.5 percent.
Excluding gas, retail sales fell 0.8 percent. The broader miss comes as much of the Midwest and Northeast experienced record cold and snowfall, which likely kept many shoppers at home. Car purchases were put on the backburner, with sales falling 2.5 percent. In addition, sales at building material stores, which are likely to be more sensitive to outdoor temperatures and precipitation, saw the largest monthly decline in nearly three years. Only a handful of store categories besides gas stations recorded an increase in sales over the month. Among them were grocery stores and non-store retailers, i.e., online shopping, which rose at the fastest pace in more than a year.
Despite the disappointing run of retail sales reports the past few months, we still believe consumer spending is set to strengthen in the months ahead. Data released this week showed household wealth continues to rise, which should encourage more consumers to part with more of their income. Household net worth increased $1.5 trillion in Q4, led largely by growth in financial markets but also by higher real estate values. Net worth has recovered alongside consumer confidence, which sits near an eight-year high. Moreover, households' real income in the three months through January rose at a 7.7 percent annualized rate, supported by low inflation and solid job gains.
The run of strong job growth looks likely to continue. This week's Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey showed demand for workers continues to grow, with job openings rising to the highest level in 14 years. Involuntary separations, i.e., layoffs and firings, also moved lower, as employers seem to remain comfortable with the size of their workforce. The more timely initial jobless claims series showed claims edged lower last week, keeping the fourweek moving average near this cycle's lows.
Inflation Picture Still Favorable for Real Income Gains
The first of the inflation reports out for February showed that, even with a rebound in oil and gasoline prices over the month, inflation remains tepid. Import prices posted their first gain in seven months, but stripping out fuel and food, prices fell 0.3 percent. The producer price index for final demand fell 0.5 percent on a drop in the goods and services indices. The fall in energy costs is seeping into some services. Transportation services fell 1.1 percent, while lower margins at gasoline stations accounted for 30 percent of the drop in services prices. Price pressure further back in the pipeline continues to ease, with intermediate processed and unprocessed goods again falling.
U.S. Outlook
Industrial Production • Monday
Industrial production increased 0.2 percent in January, slightly below consensus, but still increased 4.8 percent year over year. Weakness mostly stemmed from autos and mining. Utilities output rose 2.3 percent. A warm December was followed by a cold January, contributing to the volatility in the demand for electricity and natural gas.
Capacity utilization remained flat at 79.4 in February and is near its long-run average. Mining capacity utilization, on the other hand, fell a full percentage point in January and has fallen three percentage points since the recent July peak.
We expect industrial production increased 0.2 percent month over month in February and that capacity utilization was flat at 79.4 percent on the month. We look for mining output to continue to be volatile in the coming months.
Previous: 0.2% Wells Fargo: 0.2% Consensus: 0.2% (Month-over-Month)
Housing Starts • Tuesday
Housing starts tumbled 2.0 percent in January to a 1.07 million unit rate. Single-family starts were the reason for the decline, falling 6.7 percent on the month. Multifamily, on the other hand, increased 7.5 percent. Weather was likely a factor in the decline in January. In addition, single-family starts outpaced permits in December, possibly indicating further weakness in the indicator. It appears as if we will see continued strength in multifamily, as multifamily permits outpaced starts on the month.
We expect that housing starts slowed to a 1.00 million-unit pace in February, reflecting the slower pace of permits and difficult building conditions in much of the country. Although the average temperature was near average nationally, the South and Northeast experienced below-average temperatures, and several winter storms likely weighed on housing starts during the month.
Previous: 1065K Wells Fargo: 1004K Consensus: 1050K (SAAR)
Current Account • Thursday
The current account deficit widened to $100.3 billion in Q3. This was largely in line with expectations; however, the new information revealed in the release was that the surplus in the income balance fell from $32.8 billion to $24.1 billion in Q3. This was largely a result of one-off fines paid to the U.S. government in Q2, which helped inflate the income receipts. Turning to the financial account, foreign direct investment and portfolio investment in the United States remained strong in Q3, reflecting the relative outperformance of the U.S. economy.
We expect the current account widened modestly to end the year. A stronger dollar and weak global economy likely supported imports and weighed on exports. The continued dollar appreciation may suggest investment in the United States was stronger in Q4, implying further strength in the financial account.
Previous: -$100.3B Wells Fargo: -$100.0B Consensus: -$104.1B
Global Review
Tough Sledding for European Manufacturing
- January industrial production figures for both the Eurozone and the United Kingdom hit the wire this week and, in both instances, we saw a modest decline despite expectations of small improvement. The manufacturing picture is likely better than these reports suggest, and the manufacturing PMIs shows that activity is slowly improving (bottom graph).
- Although Australia's February employment report beat expectations, the improvement was not enough to offset the weakness seen in the prior month.
Soft Industrial Production in the United Kingdom
Industrial production in the United Kingdom slipped 0.1 percent in January. The U.K. manufacturing PMI had improved in January, leading many market watchers to anticipate an increase in the output figures for January. Most of the weakness was in the volatile electricity, gas steam and AC category, which is similar to utilities production in the United States. Moves here can say as much about weather as they do about underlying manufacturing activity. The mining and quarrying category posted a 2.0 percent gain for January and oil & gas production increased 2.4 percent on the month.
The manufacturing PMI increased again in February, indicating that prospects for firming in the U.K. manufacturing sector are brightening. Indeed the year-over-year rate of output growth climbed to 1.2 percent, just shy of the fastest annual growth rate since August.
Eurozone Production Weak as Well
In a remarkably similar outturn, industrial production in the Eurozone also fell 0.1 percent, despite expectations for a 0.2 percent monthly increase. The key explanatory variable for the miss in the Eurozone, however, was the fact that December production figures were revised sharply higher. The initial industrial production report for December was 0.0 percent, but that figure was revised to a 0.3 percent monthly increase.
The revision set up a higher base for the monthly change, but the actual level of output was better than most were expecting. This is evident in the fact that the year-over-year rate of output growth in the Eurozone climbed to 1.2 percent (working-day adjusted), despite expectations for a scant increase of just 0.1 percent.
The PMI numbers in the Eurozone are not quite as robust as they are in the United Kingdom. The Eurozone manufacturing PMI, for example, was 51.0 in January and unchanged in February. That 51 figure is above the 50 line that separates growth from contraction, but only barely, and is consistent with slow growth in the Eurozone.
Better Jobs Report in Australia
In January, the Aussie economy shed 14,600 jobs and the unemployment rate climbed to 6.4 percent from 6.1 percent previously. We learned this week that Australian employers added a net 15,600 jobs in February and that was sufficient to bring the unemployment rate down to 6.3 percent.
While the outturn was better than the consensus had expected, Australia's labor market is not without its share of difficulties at the moment. Full-time jobs (up 10,300) comprised a healthy share of February's job growth, but it was a decline of 30,900 fulltime jobs that led January's decline. The improvement in February retraces only a third of the full-time job losses of the prior month. The lack of conviction in job growth, combined with below-target CPI inflation, will likely cause Australia's Reserve Bank to cut its cash rate again this year.
Global Outlook
Brazil Economic Activity Index • Monday
To argue that the Brazilian economy is in trouble is an understatement. From every side you look at the Brazilian economy, things are not looking good. The economic activity index will be released on Monday and we expect it will confirm the bad times ahead for the Brazilian economy. Although the index recovered a bit in December on a year-over-year basis, up 0.7 percent, the index dropped 0.6 percent from November. Thus, the prospects for this release, which will give a first hint at the conditions of the economy at the start of 2015, are probably going to disappoint. Higher inflation and significant depreciation of the currency since mid-2014 have pushed the Brazilian central bank to increase interest rates, which we expect may lead to further deterioration in domestic consumption. The only positive of the depreciation of the currency is its effects on exports, which could help the economy a bit this year.
Previous: 0.7% (Year-over-Year) Consensus: -1.4%
Germany ZEW Survey • Tuesday
The recent slight improvement in the German economy will be tested on Tuesday when the ZEW survey on current situation and expectations is released. The index has been giving a more positive signal over the past several months after weakening considerably during most of 2014. The better-than-expected growth coming from the German economy during the last quarter of 2014 confirmed this slight improvement. An even better reading will be a good indicator that the German economy has turned the corner and what is good for the German economy is good for the Eurozone. We have already seen some improvement in the industrial production index as well as in the manufacturing PMI, so a further improvement in the ZEW indices would tend to indicate that the German economy may continue to improve.
Previous: 53.0 Consensus: 59.4
U.K. Weekly Earnings • Wednesday
Several labor market indicators will be released next week in the United Kingdom, including jobless claims for February, as well as the ILO unemployment rate, employment change and three-month average weekly earnings for January. Average weekly earnings have been growing nicely since mid-2014, but the pace of growth remains low compared to the rate experienced during the first decade of the century. We suspect that relatively higher consumer price inflation in the prior decade may have played a role in the discrepancy.
Thus, growth in average weekly earnings that continues to be in line with the rate of inflation should not be of concern to the Bank of England as it continues to gauge its next monetary policy move, which we expect to come at the end of this year. Also slated for release on Wednesday are the Bank of England's minutes from its last monetary policy meeting.
Previous: 2.1% (Year-over-Year of 3-M Avg.) Consensus: 2.2%
Point of View
Interest Rate Watch
On Board for a June Rate Hike
Expectations for a June liftoff to Fed rate hikes increased considerably following February's strong employment report. The Fed's reluctance to normalize policy has largely hinged on the continued slack in the labor market but that argument now seems to have lost steam. Not only has job growth ramped up, but the quality of jobs has also increased and more workers are working longer hours and taking home larger paychecks. The unemployment rate has also fallen to 5.5 percent, which is the upper end of what is widely considered as the zone of full employment.
While there are still some powerful arguments to be made that there is still considerable slack available in the labor market and hourly wages have yet to increase significantly, the labor market appears to be well on its way to a full recovery.
Concerns about the timing of the Fed's first rate hike have now shifted to inflation, which has been running too low, the dollar, which has been strengthening rapidly and the recent weakness in retail sales. While all of these concerns are valid, none of these concerns preclude the Fed from hiking rates this year and most will likely improve before the Fed has to make a call.
February's weakness in retail sales added an unexpected wrinkle to the Fed's deliberations. Retail sales have fallen in each of the past three months, which is a rarity outside of recessions. Most of that drop, however, is tied to plunging gasoline prices. However, even after excluding sales at gasoline stations, as well as food, building materials and motor vehicles, sales have still fallen for the past two months and are up at just a 1.2 percent annual rate over the past three months.
While the weakness in retail sales is disconcerting it probably will not alter the timetable for the Fed's first rate hike. Warmer weather appears to have brought shoppers out of hiding in March and, with sales so weak over the past three months, even modest gains this spring should more than reverse the slowdown we have seen over the past three months.
Credit Market Insights
Defrosting the Housing Market
In the beginning of this year, we saw a slowdown in home sales and new home construction. Though concerning, weather has been a major hindrance for much of the country. That said, with the winter season coming to a close, the slowdown should prove to be primarily seasonal.
Improvements are already being seen in the market with mortgages applications for new home purchases as well as mortgage credit availability on the rise, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association. In accordance with that report, Freddie Mac released its Economic and Housing Market Outlook for March, which is calling 2015 a strong year for home sales and construction.
One thing worth noting that could put a damper on housing activity is higher mortgage rates. The Fed is looking to June as the start date for rate increases; mortgage rates will more than likely increase as well. However, with rates for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages at historic lows, marginal increases may not be significant enough to choke off activity. As the winter blues subside, we expect the housing market to thaw as we enter the home buying season. We are still hopeful that the housing market will improve this year. The most recent jobs report pointed to improvement in the labor markets across age groups, in spite of less than stellar wage growth. This should help increase demand for homes and apartments, as signs are pointing to potential pent up demand. In other words, we should see much needed growth in the housing market this year and the next with little lasting effect from the winter season.
Topic of the Week
The Dollar Soars
The U.S. dollar has strengthened significantly since last summer. As shown in the top chart, the Fed's "Major Currency" index, which, as the name implies, measures the value of the dollar versus a trade weighted index of seven major currencies, has risen 20 percent since last July to reach a 12-year high. Since last summer, the greenback has shot up 15 percent against the British pound, 20 percent versus the Japanese yen and 30 percent vis-à-vis the euro. The dollar has also enjoyed broad-based support against the currencies of many developing countries (bottom chart).
So what is driving the dollar at present? The main driver appears to be the expected and actual divergence in monetary policy stances among central banks in 2015. While most analysts, we included, look for the Fed to begin hiking rates later this year, many foreign central banks are embracing further policy accommodation. The yield on the 2-year government bond in the United States is up about 20 bps on balance since last July. In contrast, the yield on the comparable bond in Germany is down about 25 bps over the same period, and is actually in negative territory at present. This swing in interest rate differentials in the dollar's favor is helping support the value of the greenback versus most other currencies.
Will the dollar's appreciation have any detrimental effects on the U.S. economy? Statistical analysis confirms that dollar appreciation generally is associated with slower growth in U.S. exports. However, the most important variable determining export growth is the rate of economic growth in the rest of the world, not the value of the currency. History is instructive in that regard. Between early 1983 and mid-1985, the "Major Currency" index rose 25 percent, reaching levels that were 40 percent higher than the current level. Yet, real exports grew 8 percent in 1984 and 3 percent in 1985 due to solid growth in the rest of the world at that time. If dollar strength did not kill off American exports in the mid-80s, when the dollar was much stronger, it is unlikely to do so today.