Kauri
E/W Learner
- Joined
- 3 September 2005
- Posts
- 3,428
- Reactions
- 11
OOOOppps
The New York Times carried a piece over the weekend saying that a new government report shows that the U.S. economy may have created far fewer jobs this year than the payroll data implies. The sharp downward revision in Q2 personal income growth, when better employment figures were available, i.e. unemployment tax collections, make it likely that job creation data may be revised in coming months. Personal income grew 1.6% in Q2 against 4.5% estimated, suggesting job creation at 50,000 a month, not the current 126,000 estimate and an economy far weaker than had been thought. If this report gains credence, calls for a 50 pts rate cut will intensify.
Cheers
........kauri
Dec. 3 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. corporate profits are in a recession, and the entire economy may not be far behind.
Slower sales and higher energy and labor costs are forcing companies from Bear Stearns Cos. to Pitney Bowes Inc. to reduce spending and hiring. Their efforts to keep earnings from eroding even further raise the risk that the economy, already weakened by the steepest housing slide since 1991, may shrink sometime next year.
``The earnings recession has already arrived,'' says David Rosenberg, North America economist for Merrill Lynch & Co. in New York. ``We are going to see an economic recession in '08.''
December 4th. Merrill Lynch has just issued a comprehensive outlook for 2008 this morning, forecasting that the Fed will need to cut rates to 2% in 2008 from current levels of 4.25%. (Indeed it is very arguable that rates will have to go that low just to fund the mortgage resets that peak in Q1 2008.) Merrill"s economists also forecast the first consumer recession in the US since 1991. The investment bank is also tipping a Japanese rate cut next year as well as growth slows in Japan.
Life's hard.. it seems
Cheers
.........Kauri
Sydney December 5. The FT, Guardian, Telegraph and Times all lead with similar stories saying that the FSA has warned mortgage lenders that 1.4mln homeowners face a sharp jump in loan repayments and many may find it impossible to refinance their mortgages, while the Independent leads on a bearish round up of the UK"s economic problems entitled "is Britain heading for the perfect storm?".
These sentiments combined with the record fall in the Nationwide Consumer Confidence release today suggest that a negative bias is likely at the London open, with pressure building on the MPC for a rate cut on Thursday.
US futures are looking reasonable . Is this the Chrissie rally , looks like a 120+ open for the Dow ? Will there be a last hour sell off ?
Someone get on the blower and get Kev to freeze rates for 5 years .......
I wonder how the banks would handle that one ?
I can just see the bank boards lining up to get on this one ......... NOT .
Does that mean we should steer clear of US lenders for another 5 years ?
Or has Bush lost the plot as well as the constitution ...............
Free and fair market is it ?
Administrations create a problem and everyone else has to solve it !
"... a serious depression seems improbable"
- Harvard Economic Society, November 10, 1929
"The idea that we're going to see a collapse in the housing market seems to me improbable”
- John Snow, Secretary of the Treasury
"...there are indications that the severest phase of the recession is over..."
- Harvard Economic Society (HES) Jan 18, 1930
"... the outlook continues favorable..."
- HES Mar 29, 1930
"... the outlook is favorable..."
- HES Apr 19, 1930
"...by May or June the spring recovery forecast in our letters of last December and November should clearly be apparent..."
- HES May 17, 1930
"... irregular and conflicting movements of business should soon give way to a sustained recovery..."
- HES June 28, 1930
"... the present depression has about spent its force..."
- HES, Aug 30, 1930
"We are now near the end of the declining phase of the depression."
- HES Nov 15, 1930
"Stabilization at [present] levels is clearly possible."
- HES Oct 31, 1931
"The retreat in housing-market activity that's now under way amounts to a simmering-down process...rather than a classic cyclical contraction that could spiral down for some time."
- David Seiders, Chief Economist, National Association of Home Builders, Jan 2006
"One of the reasons we think this market will start to run out of gas at some point is that you've essentially created as much gold from straw as you can from this financial alchemy,"
- Scott Simon, mortgage chief at California bond house Pimco.
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