15 July 2009
Economics Update
Well, in the real economy, we have the Federal Reserve releasing yet more down numbers on industrial production and capacity utilization.
The most of the rest of today's (and yesterday's, I was not blogging yesterday) news today basically has to do with inflation, with increasing energy prices being responsible for increased retail and wholesale sales, producer prices rising 1.8% in June, and Consumer price rising 0.7% in June, though for the CPI, it was only 0.2% when the more volatile food and energy segments were taken out, and the CPI was down 1.4% year over year, the biggest drop since 1950.
We also have the yield curve slope hitting highs.
The yield curve slope is the difference in interest rates between 2-year and 10 year treasury bills, and is an indicator of market concerns about inflation, so it means that the bond market is seeing inflation out there in the medium term.
I'm not sure where this inflation would come from though, because this year's back to school sales season is looking as anemic as the 2008 Christmas shopping season.
In any case, good corporate returns for Intel, and obscene returns for Goldman Sachs have left people optimistic, and so the US dollar fell, and, with the help of an anemic inventories report, oil rose above $61/bbl.
The most of the rest of today's (and yesterday's, I was not blogging yesterday) news today basically has to do with inflation, with increasing energy prices being responsible for increased retail and wholesale sales, producer prices rising 1.8% in June, and Consumer price rising 0.7% in June, though for the CPI, it was only 0.2% when the more volatile food and energy segments were taken out, and the CPI was down 1.4% year over year, the biggest drop since 1950.
We also have the yield curve slope hitting highs.
The yield curve slope is the difference in interest rates between 2-year and 10 year treasury bills, and is an indicator of market concerns about inflation, so it means that the bond market is seeing inflation out there in the medium term.
I'm not sure where this inflation would come from though, because this year's back to school sales season is looking as anemic as the 2008 Christmas shopping season.
In any case, good corporate returns for Intel, and obscene returns for Goldman Sachs have left people optimistic, and so the US dollar fell, and, with the help of an anemic inventories report, oil rose above $61/bbl.
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