distribution and cycle of expectations (vxx)
bears reached extreme short term around 08272010 AM when ben speaks
vxx then crashes
GDP Revised Down to 1.6% for Q2
By James Picerno|Aug 27, 2010, 9:30 AM|Author's Website
The U.S. economy grew at a tepid 1.6% annualized real rate in this year’s second quarter, the government reported today. That’s down from the earlier estimate of 2.4% growth. The revised 1.6% rise is slightly higher than consensus forecast among economists, but there’s no getting around this uncomfortable fact: the economy slowed dramatically in Q2, falling to a 1.6% pace from 3.7% in Q1.
Some growth is better than no growth, of course, but today’s update is sure to keep the debate going about whether the economy will continue to slow, perhaps to the point of falling into a new recession. By some accounts, the distinction no longer matters. “This is not a recovery,” Paul Krugman writes today. Maybe not, but whatever you call the current state of the economy, it could get worse.
Or better? Not likely, at least not anytime soon. But let’s also recognize that there was some good news in today’s GDP revision, or at least better-than-expected news. That includes the numbers on consumer spending. Personal consumption expenditures rose 2.0% in Q2, slightly higher than the 1.9% rate in Q1. The broad trend in consumption, in other words, is generally holding steady. That’s not a bad thing for a sector of the economy that represents more than 70% of GDP.
But the challenge is tied up with expectations for growth in consumption over the next several years. The probability that consumer spending will remain slow, if not dip a bit, can’t be written off as unlikely.
“The economy has slowed a bit and will probably continue to slow through the second half,” John Silvia, chief economist at Wells Fargo Securities, told Bloomberg News today. “We’re skating on thin ice, and we don’t have a lot of margin for error.”
The question before the house: Will the various macroeconomic weights on our collective backs break the ice, or allow us to skate tentatively forward until stronger recovery winds begin to blow? No one really knows the answer, but it’s getting harder to give the latter anything more than a 50% chance, if that.
John Silvia:Will the various macroeconomic weights on our collec
所有跟帖:
•
ReutersBirinyi Associates 10-Year Treasury Yield vs Dividend Yie
-marketreflections-
♂
(306 bytes)
()
08/27/2010 postreply
13:45:59
•
Ten-year government bond yields in the US and Europe are edging
-marketreflections-
♂
(4857 bytes)
()
08/27/2010 postreply
14:39:02