13 January 2010
Economics Update
The Federal Reserve has released its "Summary of Commentary on Current Economic Conditions", better known as the "Beige Book", and there has been a small improvement.
I'm not sure where the improvement is, since transportation indices continue to disappoint, with the American Association of Railroads' report on carload traffic showing the lowest level since 1988, and if goods aren't moving, then people aren't buying.
Meanwhile the trend in mortgages, with refinancing increasing and mortgages for purchases falling, continued this week.
Overseas, the GDPs of Britain and Germany both suffered the largest drop since before the 2nd World War, -4.8% and -5.0% respectively, while in Japan, machinery orders fell sharply in November.
In the world of US government finance, the US budget deficit doubled year over year in December, which probably had something to do with bond prices being mixed, with the 10-year bond falling slightly, and the 30-year bond rising slightly. (Yields move in the opposite direction of prices)
In energy, oil fell below $80/bbl, on reports of increasing US fuel inventories.
In currency, the dollar was mixed, down slightly versus the Pound and Euro, but up slightly versus the Yen.
I'm not sure where the improvement is, since transportation indices continue to disappoint, with the American Association of Railroads' report on carload traffic showing the lowest level since 1988, and if goods aren't moving, then people aren't buying.
Meanwhile the trend in mortgages, with refinancing increasing and mortgages for purchases falling, continued this week.
Overseas, the GDPs of Britain and Germany both suffered the largest drop since before the 2nd World War, -4.8% and -5.0% respectively, while in Japan, machinery orders fell sharply in November.
In the world of US government finance, the US budget deficit doubled year over year in December, which probably had something to do with bond prices being mixed, with the 10-year bond falling slightly, and the 30-year bond rising slightly. (Yields move in the opposite direction of prices)
In energy, oil fell below $80/bbl, on reports of increasing US fuel inventories.
In currency, the dollar was mixed, down slightly versus the Pound and Euro, but up slightly versus the Yen.
Labels:
Economy
,
Europe
,
Finance
,
Japan
,
Real Estate
,
Recession
,
Transportation
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