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Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Unemployment rate

The unemployment rate in May jumped more than it has in over two decades, reaching its highest level since October 2004 and emphasizing the recessionary risk the U.S. economy is currently facing. The civilian unemployment rate spiked to 5.5 percent from 5.0 percent in April, coming in much worse than the expectation of 5.1 percent. The last time the unemployment rate jumped half a percentage point was February 1985. With nearly 49,000 jobs cut from payrolls following decreases of 28,000 in April and 88,000 in March, May marked the fifth consecutive month of job losses. Overall, the economy has shed 324,000 jobs this year.
The latest decrease was led by declines in construction, professional & business services, retail trade, and manufacturing. Revisions to March and April resulted in a net revision downward of 15,000. On the inflation front, average hourly earnings advanced 0.3 percent in May, coming in above the market projection for a 0.2 percent boost.

With widespread payroll losses, the May non-farm report clearly portrayed further deterioration in the labor sector, lessening the ability of the consumer to support economic growth. The jump in unemployment may very well have been exaggerated for technical reasons such as graduating college students attempting to enter the labor market, but nevertheless points to weakening in employment. May's report has also put the Fed in a tough situation by lowering the odds of a healthy rebound in economic growth later this year. Treasury yields fell on the news and equities fell under downward pressure.

For week ending June 21, the Labor Department reported that the advance figure for seasonally adjusted initial claims was 384,000, unchanged from the previous week's revised figure of 384,000. They also reported a four-week moving average of 378,250, an increase of 2,250 from the previous week's revised average of 376,000.

SP 500 daily could crack support soon


We are making attempt at the support. This move has a bit more strength behind it compared to March's push down.
Normally, I would not expect it to push through before a 3 day weekend. But the news is not good and sentiment says short. Sentiment is behind and they are just starting to short the market so there is some room to go down. How much, we shall see.
Lots of different warning signs popping up. If anything happens with Iran I expect to see our currency take a beating and gold to go through the roof.
The next target on oil is $160, once we break the psychological $150 it is poised to take off.
Careful out there.

Monday, June 30, 2008

European Central Bank raises rates ahead of Fed

Treasury 10-year notes rose after the National Association of Purchasing Management-Milwaukee manufacturing index dropped to its lowest since October 2001 and stocks of several financial firms fell.

Citigroup Inc., Merrill Lynch & Co. and Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. were among the firms that declined. The purchasing association's monthly index of regional manufacturing fell to 39, its fourth straight month below 50. A reading lower than 50 means the number of manufacturers that said business deteriorated was greater than the number saying it improved.
Treasuries earlier fell, extending the biggest quarterly decline since 2004, as inflation in the euro region rose to the highest in 16 years and oil advanced above $143 a barrel.
The retreat pushed 10-year yields up from a three-week low after a European Union report showed the rate of euro-region inflation climbed to 4 percent, bolstering the case for the European Central Bank to raise rates. Why are they ahead of us?

Crude oil for August delivery rose as much as $3.46, or 2.5 percent, to $143.67 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. It reached $142.99 a barrel on June 27 after the Fed left interest rates unchanged at 2 percent. The market continues to struggle with what to do with the rise in oil.

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