26 May 2009
Economics Update
The economic press is touting the fact that consumer confidence hit an 8 month high.
More accurately, they are touting that the jump from 40.8 to 54.9, is the biggest in 6 years....Only, of course, the index is bench marked such that 1985=100, so the number is still crappy.
It's the same as the Chicago Bank of the Federal Reserve's April National Activity Index, which is up (Yay!), but this does not mean expansion, it means contraction, just not quite so fast (Awww!).
You know, maybe we can wait to call a recovery until we have a month where the year over year Case-Shiller housing price index does not fall by 18.7%.
Consumers will not spend under these circumstances, and the economy, which is/was 70%+ consumer spending, will not recover.
In any case, be glad we aren't German, and not just because that means that we aren't German, because Germany's GDP fell by 3.8% for the quarter and 6.7% year-over-year, as their export driven economy sputtered.
Meanwhile, in energy and currency land, oil was up on the consumer confidence figures, and the dollar rose as people freaked over the DPRK conducting another nuke test.
If I could predict the actions of the North Koreans, I would make a killing on the futures markets.
More accurately, they are touting that the jump from 40.8 to 54.9, is the biggest in 6 years....Only, of course, the index is bench marked such that 1985=100, so the number is still crappy.
It's the same as the Chicago Bank of the Federal Reserve's April National Activity Index, which is up (Yay!), but this does not mean expansion, it means contraction, just not quite so fast (Awww!).
You know, maybe we can wait to call a recovery until we have a month where the year over year Case-Shiller housing price index does not fall by 18.7%.
Consumers will not spend under these circumstances, and the economy, which is/was 70%+ consumer spending, will not recover.
In any case, be glad we aren't German, and not just because that means that we aren't German, because Germany's GDP fell by 3.8% for the quarter and 6.7% year-over-year, as their export driven economy sputtered.
Meanwhile, in energy and currency land, oil was up on the consumer confidence figures, and the dollar rose as people freaked over the DPRK conducting another nuke test.
If I could predict the actions of the North Koreans, I would make a killing on the futures markets.
Labels:
Currency
,
Economy
,
Energy
,
Europe
,
Far East
,
Nuclear Weapons
,
Proliferation
,
Recession
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