14 January 2010
Economics Update
Well, it's Thursday, and initial unemployment claims rose for the 2nd straight week, once again worse than forecast.
What might be more significant is the significant divergence between seasonally and non-seasonably adjusted numbers, because the NSA unemployment number was 800,000 initial claims. (see graph pr0n)
The 4 week moving average continued to fall though, down 9,000 to 440,750 and the continuing claims number fell by 211 thousand to 4.596 million, though it should be noted that all these numbers are seasonally adjusted, and it appears that the adjustments are getting a big hinky.
In any case, the DoL's numbers are here.
Retail sales also were below forecast, with the December number showing a -0.3% drop, missing analysts expectations of +0.5%.
We do have some good news though, with business inventories rising in November; it is the 2nd straight month, and the 2nd month-to-month increase in 15 months.
In real estate, foreclosures rose 14% in December, and total defaults for 2009 hit a record, 2,824,674, up 21% from 2008, and more than double the number for 2007.
In central bank land, Chilean central bank kept it's rate at 0.5%, as the economy in the Latin American nation remains mired in recession and deflation.
In the US, the bad financial numbers had Treasurys rising as investors looked for safety.
In energy, warmer weather continued to push oil prices down, while in currency, the dollar was essentially unchanged.
What might be more significant is the significant divergence between seasonally and non-seasonably adjusted numbers, because the NSA unemployment number was 800,000 initial claims. (see graph pr0n)
The 4 week moving average continued to fall though, down 9,000 to 440,750 and the continuing claims number fell by 211 thousand to 4.596 million, though it should be noted that all these numbers are seasonally adjusted, and it appears that the adjustments are getting a big hinky.
In any case, the DoL's numbers are here.
Retail sales also were below forecast, with the December number showing a -0.3% drop, missing analysts expectations of +0.5%.
We do have some good news though, with business inventories rising in November; it is the 2nd straight month, and the 2nd month-to-month increase in 15 months.
In real estate, foreclosures rose 14% in December, and total defaults for 2009 hit a record, 2,824,674, up 21% from 2008, and more than double the number for 2007.
In central bank land, Chilean central bank kept it's rate at 0.5%, as the economy in the Latin American nation remains mired in recession and deflation.
In the US, the bad financial numbers had Treasurys rising as investors looked for safety.
In energy, warmer weather continued to push oil prices down, while in currency, the dollar was essentially unchanged.
Labels:
Economy
,
employment
,
Finance
,
Latin America
,
Real Estate
,
Recession
,
regulation
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