Economic News

Greenspan: Odds of a U.S. recession 1 out of 3
Former Federal Reserve chairman says he still believes there's a one-third chance that economy will fall into recession in 2007.
May 11 2007: 6:40 AM EDT


SINGAPORE (Reuters) -- Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said on Friday he still believed there was a one-third chance that the U.S. economy would slip into recession this year, reiterating a statement made in March.

Greenspan shook markets in February when he said it was possible the U.S. economy might fall into recession by the end of the year. He later said he saw a one-third chance of a recession.


"My arithmetic says if there's a one-third probability of a recession, then there's a two-thirds probability there won't be a recession," Greenspan told a closed-door Merrill Lynch investor forum, according to an official at the U.S. investment bank.

The United States economy grew at a tepid 1.3 percent annualized rate in the first quarter -- the weakest pace in four years.

Greenspan said he had not changed his view on the health of the world's biggest economy but conceded that some might say he had changed his mind, the official quoted him as saying.

Greenspan spoke via a satellite link from Washington. His remarks contrast with those of Ben Bernanke, the Fed's chairman, who has played down the risk of a recession.

Commenting on the strength of the Chinese currency, the yuan or renminbi, Greenspan said China, the world's fourth-largest economy, would bear the brunt of its artificially weak currency and that money supply was growing too rapidly.

"It's in China's self-interest to allow the renminbi to move up faster," he was quoted as saying.

"There is an undue fear of allowing the exchange rate to rise. It's a mistake not allowing it to rise."

Greenspan said he doubted that unemployment would rise in China, should a stronger currency hit exports, adding that the country's labor market was "very sophisticated."

No repeat of 1997
He said the impact of any slowdown in the economy on Southeast Asia would be mitigated by high savings rates and domestic consumption.

"Any slowdown will be somewhat offset," Greenspan said, adding that he saw no repeat of the 1997 Asian financial crisis due to strengthened central bank foreign currency reserves.

"The chance of '97 happening again is virtually non-existent."

The fundamental reason for the yen carry trade -- borrowing the low-yielding currency to invest in high-yielding assets in other currencies -- was ultra-low Japanese interest rates, he said.

Congress, White House strike trade deal
"The yen carry trade is not an economic phenomenon, it is a cultural phenomenon. Why is it that the 10-year JGB (Japanese Government Bond) is yielding 1.6 percent, significantly less than anywhere else in the world?" Greenspan said towards the end of his address, when reporters were able to access the forum.

Greenspan has previously said he takes great care not to comment directly on monetary policy, but that making economic predictions is fair.

The Federal Reserve held interest rates steady at 5.25 percent on Wednesday and stuck to a forecast of steady growth despite signs of economic weakness.

Analysts expect a rate cut may be in store later this year, although the Fed remains focused on price pressures due to worries that the tight labor market could fuel inflation.

http://money.cnn.com/2007/05/11/news/newsmakers/greenspan.reut/index.htm
 
Another slow start to the week and we’ll be ramping up rather quick with CPI and NY Empire State Index on Tuesday. Wednesday Housing and Capacity Utilization; followed Thursday with initial claims and leading indicators. Here are the links to the calendars;

http://biz.yahoo.com/c/ec/200720.html

http://www.nasdaq.com/asp/econodayframe.asp?page=http://www.nasdaq.com/econoday/index.html

Bernanke will be speaking on Tuesday and Thursday; we also have a bunch of the FOMC voting members talking during the week. I never expect these guys to go off the company line; however I did see that Greespud did reiterate his stance that there is a 1 in 3 chance of a recession later in the year. So some damage control might be in the works.


We are starting to wind down the earnings reporting for the first quarter, but that doesn’t mean that investors won’t be tuning in; next week WalMart reports. Many investors look toward Wally World to get a read on retail health going forward. We also have Home Depot (lovingly referred to as Home Cheapo by many) and Agilent.

http://www.briefing.com/Investor/Private/Calendars/EarningsCalendarWeek2.htm

It seems that Bull and Bear Wise is having trouble with their site so I’ll have to get that info later.
 
ECONOMIC OUTLOOK

Outside of gasoline, CPI looks to be subdued: economists

By Rex Nutting, MarketWatch
Last Update: 5:33 PM ET May 14, 2007

WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) -- Although gas prices are heading out of sight, inflation is still subdued for other goods and services, economists said ahead of the release of the consumer price index for April on Tuesday.

The Labor Department will report on the data at 8:30 a.m.

With gasoline prices up about 10% in April, the CPI probably rose 0.5% in April after a 0.6% gain in March, according to the median forecast of economists surveyed by MarketWatch.

The core CPI -- which excludes food and energy prices to get a better view of underlying inflationary trends -- is expected to rise 0.2% in April, and chances are better that it will be another 0.1% gain than a 0.3% shocker, economists said. The core rate rose 0.1% in March.

On a year-over-year basis, the CPI probably slowed to a 2.7% increase from 2.8% in March. The core CPI would stay at 2.4% year-over-year, higher than the Federal Reserve's target.

Gasoline was a major story in April.

http://tinyurl.com/23lrof

Well they’re trying to predict what’s coming out tomorrow…..seems like the economist excluded gasoline, rent, food, medical, etc. Here’s how they predicted what would happen;

“Economists participating in an experimental pari-mutuel prediction market run by the National Association for Business Economics saw a 42% probability of the core CPI rounding to 0.2%, with a further 31% probability of it coming in at 0.1% or below. That leaves a 20% chance of an outcome rounding to 0.3% and about an 8% chance of a 0.4% outcome.”

Pari-mutuel prediction sounds like gambling to me….. :D
 
Put $20 on the 0.2% core CPI for me. And parlay that with the under 1485K housing starts.


I'll have the Daily Double on 0.3% core CPI and weak housing starts, and box the 0.1% core CPI just for kicks!

Oh, and $20 on the black horse to win.....



You guys cracked me up!

We better watch out, we might get busted for internet betting. :D
 
Core CPI Steady
Last Update: 15-May-07 08:44 ET


The inflation numbers this morning bring no major surprises. The April core CPI rose 0.2%. That was in line with expectations. Total CPI was up 0.4%, a bit lower than an expected 0.5% gain. Inflation remains reasonably well contained, with risks from rising energy prices and tight labor market conditions.

The core CPI gain follows a 0.1% gain in March, and a 0.2% February and 0.3% January increase. The trend is fairly steady and the year-over-year rate is at 2.3%. That is consistent with the current 0.2% monthly trend. The year-over-year core CPI is slightly above the Fed's forecast for 2007 of 2% to 2.25% for the core PCE, but that inflation measure tends to track a bit lower than CPI. That is because CPI includes a measure on implied housing costs that is not in the PCE. The current year-over-year core CPI is thus not of great concern and appears to be tracking steady.

http://tinyurl.com/3cqrg8
 
New York Manufacturing Expands as Orders Increase (Update2)
By Courtney Schlisserman

May 15 (Bloomberg) -- Manufacturing in New York state expanded at a faster rate for the second straight month in May as orders and shipments improved.
The Federal Reserve Bank of New York's general economic index rose to 8.0 from 3.8 in April, the bank said today. Readings greater than zero signal expansion.

Companies are gearing up again after restraining production to work off inventories accumulated last year. A recovery in manufacturing may soften the impact of the housing slump, which contributed to the slowest pace of economic growth in more than four years last quarter.
Today's report suggests ``the manufacturing recovery is underway,'' said Julia Coronado, an economist at Barclays Capital in New York. ``It's not roaring, but it's there.''

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601068&sid=aoSJfNMTate0&refer=economy

Up next is the red book.
 
Redbook

Highlights

Store sales rose 2.7 percent in the May 12 week compared to the year-ago week, a moderate pace confirmed by ICSC-UBS's tally of 2.6 percent released earlier this morning. Both reports said warm weather boosted sales. Retail strength in May will be closely watched given the surprising weakness of April, a month however that was distorted by the Easter calendar effect.

http://www.nasdaq.com/asp/econodayframe.asp?page=http://www.nasdaq.com/econoday/index.html
 
By Rex Nutting, MarketWatch
Last Update: 1:05 PM ET May 15, 2007


WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) -- Tightening lending standards shook U.S. home builders in May, sending a gauge of their confidence back down to a 16-year low, an industry trade group reported Tuesday.

The National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo housing market index slid three points to 30 in May, matching the 16-year low set in September. Economists were predicting the home builders' index would remain at 33, according to a survey conducted by MarketWatch.

The results show that roughly one-third of builders have confidence in the housing market.

http://tinyurl.com/ytfsd6

It will be interesting to see how the market reacts to the housing numbers tomorrow. We all know that the housing market is in a recession and the numbers will be off; I suspect that the market may have already factor this in and may not react to the report at all. Also, because the market is considered volatile a 5 month moving average is used to determine trends. So a movement down continues the current trend and any movement up should be disregarded until a new trend is established. IMHO Oldcoin
 
ECONOMIC REPORT

Building permits drop to a 10-year low
Housing starts gain 2.5% in April to 1.53 million annual rate

By Rex Nutting, MarketWatch
Last Update: 9:56 AM ET May 16, 2007


WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) -- U.S. builders pulled back on filing for permits to build homes in April, but started construction on more houses than they did in March, the Commerce Department reported Wednesday.

In mixed data on the housing market, the government said building permits fell 8.9% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.429 million, the lowest since June 1997.

It was the largest percentage decline in 17 years. And it was much lower than the 1.51 million pace expected by economists surveyed by MarketWatch.

http://tinyurl.com/yro6s6
 
2007 U.S. Economic Events & Analysis

Industrial Production

Highlights
Industrial production jumped 0.7 percent during April in a report that confirms strength in ISM manufacturing data and points to renewed growth in the manufacturing sector. Capacity utilization rose 4 tenths in the month to a still moderate 81.6 percent.

Manufacturing output, the most important of the report's three main industry categories, rose 0.5 percent and added to a 0.6 percent gain in the prior month. Capacity utilization edged higher to 80.2 percent. Manufacturing output had been flat for the prior six months. Output in utilities and mining, the other two industry categories, was mixed with utilities up 3.5 percent on the month and mining down 0.3 percent.

Year-on-year rates for manufacturing output have been on the decline, at only 1.9 percent in April for the lowest rate in about 3-1/2 years. The Federal Reserve's efforts to the slow economy have hit two sectors especially hard, housing and manufacturing. The outlook for housing is still uncertain, but the manufacturing sector appears to be coming back to speed. Treasuries eased in initial reaction to the report.

Market Consensus Before Announcement

Industrial production fell 0.2 percent in March, but manufacturing output jumped 0.7 percent. Overall weakness was in utilities. We are likely to see a reversal of the utilities component but manufacturing is not likely to post a similar gain in April. From the earlier employment report for April, manufacturing production hours fell 0.4 percent, following a 0.5 percent rise in March, suggesting a weak month for manufacturing in April.

Industrial production Consensus Forecast for April: +0.2 percent
Range: +0.1 to +0.6 percent


http://www.nasdaq.com/asp/econodayframe.asp?page=http://www.nasdaq.com/econoday/index.html
 
ECONOMIC REPORT

Jobless claims fall for 5th straight week

Four-week average at lowest level in more than a year

By Greg Robb, MarketWatch
Last Update: 8:30 AM ET May 17, 2007


WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) - The number of new filings for state unemployment benefits fell by 5,000 in the week ended May 5, the fifth straight decline, bringing claims to their lowest level since early January, the Labor Department said Thursday.

Economists had been expecting initial claims to rise to about 310,000.

First-time claims fell a revised 8,000 to 298,000 in the previous week, compared with the initial estimate of a drop of 9,000 to 297,000.

The four-week average of initial claims fell 12,000 to 305,500. This marked the lowest level since the week ended April 15, 2006.

The four-week average is considered a better gauge of underlying trends than the weekly number because it smoothes out one-time events, such as weather or holidays
Initial claims represent job destruction, while the level of continuing claims indicates how hard or easy it is for displaced workers to find new jobs.
Claims have been sending an upbeat message on labor markets, according to economists at JP Morgan/Chase.

Today's report covers the survey week for the May nonfarm payroll report. During the April survey week, claims were at 341,000 so claims have fallen substantially over the past month.
The number of continued claims fell by 78,000, to 2.47 million, in the week ended April 28.
The four-week moving average of continuing claims fell 14,000 to 2.53 million.

The insured unemployment rate -- the portion of all workers who are covered by unemployment insurance who are collecting benefits - held steady at 1.9%

http://tinyurl.com/2ho4jq
 
ECONOMIC REPORT

U.S. leading indicators point to slower growth
April index falls 0.5%, but March is revised much higher

By Greg Robb, MarketWatch
Last Update: 10:15 AM ET May 17, 2007


WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) -- The U.S. index of leading economic indicators fell a worse-than-expected 0.5% in April, pointing to slower growth this summer, the Conference Board said Thursday.

"With the industrial core of the economy already slow and housing mired in a continued slump, there are some signs that these weaknesses may be beginning to soften both consumer spending and hiring this summer," said Ken Goldstein, an economist for the research group.

"The data may be pointing to slower economic conditions this summer," Goldstein said.
Economists had expected the index to fall 0.2%, according to a survey conducted by MarketWatch

http://tinyurl.com/ypp6hz
 
ECONOMIC REPORT

Slow expansion in Philly factories continues
Philly Fed index rises to 4.2, highest since January

By Rex Nutting, MarketWatch
Last Update: 12:34 PM ET May 17, 2007


WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) - Factory activity in the Philadelphia region improved in may, but remained soft for the ninth straight month, the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia said Thursday.

The Philly Fed's index of manufacturing sentiment rose to 4.2 from 0.2 in April and March. It's the highest reading since January.

Readings over zero indicate expansion.

Economists were expecting the index to rise slightly to 3.0, according to the median forecast of economists surveyed by MarketWatch.

Indicators for new orders, production, shipments and employment all improved. Prices paid rose, but prices received were steady.

The firms surveyed were more upbeat about the near-term as well. The future activity index rose to 30.8 from 25.8, the highest since December 2005.

A slight plurality of firms said demand for their products was higher than they expected at the beginning of the year. A small plurality also said they were boosting their plans for capital spending this year.

http://tinyurl.com/33dakb
 
U.S. Michigan Consumer Confidence Index Rose in May (Update1)

By Shobhana Chandra

May 18 (Bloomberg) -- Confidence among U.S. consumers unexpectedly rose in May for the first time in four months as strength in the labor and stock markets helped overcome record gasoline prices.

The Reuters/University of Michigan's preliminary index of consumer sentiment increased to 88.7 from 87.1 in April. The measure has averaged 88.1 since monthly data were first compiled in 1978.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601068&sid=aScoE.DlWdaM&refer=economy

Checking my list, this looks like it's the only report due out today...
 
Monday may not be pretty.:(


Business
Markets


Published: 20/05/2007 12:00 AM (UAE)
No major changes in yuan ahead

Reuters​

Shanghai: China has taken its first decisive step to deflate a bubble building in its stock market, so equities may fall sharply early this week, but fund managers and analysts expect a correction rather than a crash.
The central bank announced late on Friday that it was raising benchmark lending and deposit rates, lifting bank reserve ratios and widening the yuan's trading band, its strongest package of steps since it began tightening policy a year ago.
"You will see a correction in the market, possibly a sharp one," said Zhu Ping, chief investment officer at GF Fund Management, which manages over 30 billion yuan ($3.9 billion).
"Banks will be among the biggest losers on Monday. Their business relies too much on lending. Investors have been worried about that for a long time.

"But I don't think these policies will turn the market into a bear market. The policies are aimed at making economic growth more sustainable."
Small cuts expected
Currencies and metals prices around the world were hit when Shanghai stocks tumbled 9 per cent on February 27, before rebounding the next day, so a major pull-back in Shanghai this week could have global implications.
The central bank's package is widely seen as aimed partly at soaring stock prices, after its governor Zhou Xiaochuan said this month he was concerned by a stock market bubble and was monitoring asset prices.
"Beijing is clearly brewing a series of measures to force a halt to stock price rises. Hiking rates is part of that. Others include cracking down on insider-trading, and public warnings from senior leaders on risks involved in the stock markets," said Standard Chartered Bank economist Stephen Green.
"We expect the market to fall (this) week, and if it proves resistant, Beijing will continue with a thousand small cuts until it does."
A fevered bull run has taken Shanghai's composite index up 51 per cent this year after 130 per cent last year, while daily turnover has ballooned to as much as 10 times year-earlier levels.
The bull run has already shown signs of flagging in the past week; after surging above 4,000 points for the first time on May 9, the index has swung wildly without extending its gains. Global portfolio data has shown some foreign investors reducing their exposure to Chinese stocks.
Beijing (AP) China took steps to let its currency trade more freely against the dollar and to cool its sizzling economy ahead of talks in US over Beijing's soaring trade surplus.
In the latest change, the yuan will be allowed to fluctuate against the dollar by 0.5 per cent a day, up from 0.3 per cent, the central bank said. Still, the bank said it would keep the yuan basically stable' to safeguard economic stability.
"It does not mean that the renminbi exchange rate will see large ups and downs, nor large appreciations," the bank said on its website.
http://www.gulfnews.com/business/Markets/10126453.html
 
They say, (who ever they are?) what goes up must come down, taking gravity into consideration, I would guess when it was coined. So what goes down must go up is what you are looking for. History demonstrates that it is true, in the long term, what goes down must come up so we could have a buying opportunity in the "I" fund if the OSMs consolidate, at least in the long term. Think Great Depression and we see that the rebound is not always as expedient as we would like.
What did I say?:cheesy:
 
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