Re: [ob] Unemployment Probably Topped 9% in May: U.S. Economy Preview

2009-05-31 Terurut Topik Dean Earwicker
Charting untuk data-data fundamental (unemployment, GDP, inflasi, CPI, dst),
kali aja ada yang mau analisa secara TA.

http://www.economagic.com/em-cgi/charter.exe/fedstl/unrate+1950+2008+0+1+0+600+900++0

Regards,
DE

2009/5/31 Yuta Tiziano yuta.tizi...@gmail.com



 *Mulai keluar berita jelek untuk minggu depan...*

 http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087sid=aSc829RcWzScrefer=home

 Unemployment Probably Topped 9% in May: U.S. Economy Preview
 By Shobhana Chandra

 May 31 (Bloomberg) -- *Unemployment in the U.S. probably surpassed 9
 percent in May for the first time in more than 25 years*, underscoring
 forecasts that the economy will be slow to pull out of the worst recession
 in half a century, economists said before a report this week.

 The jobless rate 
 http://mail.google.com/apps/quote?ticker=USURTOT%3AINDclimbed to 9.2 
 percent,
 *the highest level since September 1983*, according to the median estimate
 in a Bloomberg News survey ahead of the Labor Department’s *June 5*report. 
 Other data may show manufacturing and service industries shrank at a
 slower pace and consumer spending dropped.

 “The economy is decaying at a slower rate and that is the best you can
 say,” said Steven 
 Ricchiutohttp://search.bloomberg.com/search?q=Steven+Ricchiutosite=wnewsclient=wnewsproxystylesheet=wnewsoutput=xml_no_dtdie=UTF-8oe=UTF-8filter=pgetfields=wnnissort=date:D:S:d1,
 chief economist at Mizuho Securities USA Inc. in New York. “I can’t tell you
 we are out of the woods yet.”

 *Economists forecast the jobless rate will head to almost 10 percent by
 the end of the year*, depriving Americans of the income needed to propel
 spending and stoke a vigorous recovery. Access to credit will likely also be
 limited as record defaults and foreclosures make banks reluctant to lend.

 The unemployment rate is predicted to rise from 8.9 percent in April.
 Payrolls probably fell by 521,000 this month after declining by 539,000 in
 April, the survey also showed. Job losses peaked at 741,000 in January, the
 most since 1949.

 The economy has lost 5.7 million jobs since the recession began in December
 2007, the most of any economic slump in the post-World War II era.

 Auto Slump

 Restructuring at automakers including General Motors 
 Corp.http://mail.google.com/apps/quote?ticker=GM%3AUSand Chrysler LLC may 
 generate more job losses. AutoNation
 Inc. http://mail.google.com/apps/quote?ticker=AN%3AUS, the largest U.S.
 new-vehicle retailer, has said it will close seven showrooms in line with
 bankrupt Chrysler’s termination of 789 dealerships.

 Economists project the Labor report will show 
 manufacturershttp://mail.google.com/apps/quote?ticker=USMMMNCH%3AINDcut 
 payrolls by 150,000 in May, after slashing them by 149,000 in April.

 Workforce reductions aren’t limited to the auto industry. American Express
 Co. http://mail.google.com/apps/quote?ticker=AXP%3AUS, the largest U.S.
 credit-card company by purchases, said on May 18 it will cut 4,000 positions
 as cardholders squeezed by rising unemployment fail to pay debts.

 “We continue to be very cautious about the economic outlook,” Chief
 Executive Officer Kenneth Chenault said in a statement.

 Consumer spending has taken a turn for the worse after improving in the
 first quarter. Purchases fell in April for a second month, and incomes
 declined for the sixth time in the last seven months, economists project a
 Commerce Department report tomorrow will show.

 Short-Lived Gain

 Household purchases rose at a 1.5 percent annual rate from January to
 March, less than previously estimated, after plunging at a 4.3 percent
 annual rate in the last three months of 2008, revised figures from Commerce
 last week showed.

 Gross domestic product shrank at a 5.7 percent pace in the first quarter,
 less than the government previously estimated in April, the figures also
 showed. Following the 6.3 percent pace of decline in the last three months
 of 2008, the drop capped the worst six-month performance in five decades.

 *Also tomorrow, a report may show manufacturing shrank this month at a
 slower pace*. The Institute for Supply Management’s factory 
 indexhttp://mail.google.com/apps/quote?ticker=NAPMPMI%3AINDrose to 42 in 
 May from 40.1 in April, according to the Bloomberg survey
 median. Readings below 50 signal contraction.

 Underscoring the improvement at manufacturers, orders placed with factories
 probably rose 0.8 percent in April, the second gain this year, economists
 predicted ahead of a Commerce Department report June 3.

 Service Industries

 An ISM report the same day may show service industries, which make up
 almost 90 percent of the economy, are also stabilizing. The Tempe,
 Arizona-based group’s 
 gaugehttp://mail.google.com/apps/quote?ticker=NAPMNMI%3AINDof non- 
 manufacturing businesses probably increased to 45 in May from 43.7
 the prior month, according to the Bloomberg survey.

 Stocks have surged and Treasuries have dropped amid reports 

[ob] Unemployment Probably Topped 9% in May: U.S. Economy Preview

2009-05-30 Terurut Topik Yuta Tiziano
*Mulai keluar berita jelek untuk minggu depan...*

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087sid=aSc829RcWzScrefer=home

Unemployment Probably Topped 9% in May: U.S. Economy Preview
By Shobhana Chandra

May 31 (Bloomberg) -- *Unemployment in the U.S. probably surpassed 9 percent
in May for the first time in more than 25 years*, underscoring forecasts
that the economy will be slow to pull out of the worst recession in half a
century, economists said before a report this week.

The jobless rate
http://mail.google.com/apps/quote?ticker=USURTOT%3AINDclimbed to 9.2
percent,
*the highest level since September 1983*, according to the median estimate
in a Bloomberg News survey ahead of the Labor Department’s *June 5* report.
Other data may show manufacturing and service industries shrank at a slower
pace and consumer spending dropped.

“The economy is decaying at a slower rate and that is the best you can say,”
said Steven 
Ricchiutohttp://search.bloomberg.com/search?q=Steven+Ricchiutosite=wnewsclient=wnewsproxystylesheet=wnewsoutput=xml_no_dtdie=UTF-8oe=UTF-8filter=pgetfields=wnnissort=date:D:S:d1,
chief economist at Mizuho Securities USA Inc. in New York. “I can’t tell you
we are out of the woods yet.”

*Economists forecast the jobless rate will head to almost 10 percent by the
end of the year*, depriving Americans of the income needed to propel
spending and stoke a vigorous recovery. Access to credit will likely also be
limited as record defaults and foreclosures make banks reluctant to lend.

The unemployment rate is predicted to rise from 8.9 percent in April.
Payrolls probably fell by 521,000 this month after declining by 539,000 in
April, the survey also showed. Job losses peaked at 741,000 in January, the
most since 1949.

The economy has lost 5.7 million jobs since the recession began in December
2007, the most of any economic slump in the post-World War II era.

Auto Slump

Restructuring at automakers including General Motors
Corp.http://mail.google.com/apps/quote?ticker=GM%3AUSand Chrysler
LLC may generate more job losses. AutoNation
Inc. http://mail.google.com/apps/quote?ticker=AN%3AUS, the largest U.S.
new-vehicle retailer, has said it will close seven showrooms in line with
bankrupt Chrysler’s termination of 789 dealerships.

Economists project the Labor report will show
manufacturershttp://mail.google.com/apps/quote?ticker=USMMMNCH%3AINDcut
payrolls by 150,000 in May, after slashing them by 149,000 in April.

Workforce reductions aren’t limited to the auto industry. American Express
Co. http://mail.google.com/apps/quote?ticker=AXP%3AUS, the largest U.S.
credit-card company by purchases, said on May 18 it will cut 4,000 positions
as cardholders squeezed by rising unemployment fail to pay debts.

“We continue to be very cautious about the economic outlook,” Chief
Executive Officer Kenneth Chenault said in a statement.

Consumer spending has taken a turn for the worse after improving in the
first quarter. Purchases fell in April for a second month, and incomes
declined for the sixth time in the last seven months, economists project a
Commerce Department report tomorrow will show.

Short-Lived Gain

Household purchases rose at a 1.5 percent annual rate from January to March,
less than previously estimated, after plunging at a 4.3 percent annual rate
in the last three months of 2008, revised figures from Commerce last week
showed.

Gross domestic product shrank at a 5.7 percent pace in the first quarter,
less than the government previously estimated in April, the figures also
showed. Following the 6.3 percent pace of decline in the last three months
of 2008, the drop capped the worst six-month performance in five decades.

*Also tomorrow, a report may show manufacturing shrank this month at a
slower pace*. The Institute for Supply Management’s factory
indexhttp://mail.google.com/apps/quote?ticker=NAPMPMI%3AINDrose to
42 in May from 40.1 in April, according to the Bloomberg survey
median. Readings below 50 signal contraction.

Underscoring the improvement at manufacturers, orders placed with factories
probably rose 0.8 percent in April, the second gain this year, economists
predicted ahead of a Commerce Department report June 3.

Service Industries

An ISM report the same day may show service industries, which make up almost
90 percent of the economy, are also stabilizing. The Tempe, Arizona-based
group’s gauge http://mail.google.com/apps/quote?ticker=NAPMNMI%3AIND of
non- manufacturing businesses probably increased to 45 in May from 43.7 the
prior month, according to the Bloomberg survey.

Stocks have surged and Treasuries have dropped amid reports showing the
worst of the downturn may have passed. The Standard  Poor’s 500 Index has
gained 36 percent since March 9, when it hit the lowest level in more than
12 years, closing at 919.14 on May 29. Yields on the benchmark 10-year note
climbed to 3.74 percent last week from 2.86 percent during that period.

In other reports this week, the National