NEW YORK (AP) - Wall Street heads back to work this week in a somewhat
calmer state of mind. Overall, investors
<http://www.abcmoney.co.uk/tag/investors.htm>  are more optimistic now about
the financial markets than they have been in several weeks. 

An interest rate cut from the Federal Reserve is far from guaranteed, but
after the central bank lowered its discount rate on Aug. 17 -- a rate that
several major banks took advantage of -- Wall Street feels it can rely on
the Fed as a safety net. 

The market had its most stable week in a month last week. The Dow Jones
industrials rose back above 13,300 after momentarily dipping below 12,600 in
the prior week. The Dow finished up 2.29 percent for the week, the S&P rose
2.31 percent, and the Nasdaq added 2.86 percent. 

Meanwhile, the yield on the three-month Treasury bill recovered to a more
reasonable 4.23 percent, after briefly falling under 3 percent last Monday
as nervous investors fled to the safety of short-term government securities.


Though some the worst is over for stocks, that the underlying strength in
the economy and corporate America will help the market overcome any credit
troubles, others argue things will get more difficult before they get
better. 

Worries about tightening credit haven't disappeared, with the housing market
looking dismal and certain types of assets still hard to sell -- like
asset-backed commercial paper, normally an easy way for companies to get
cash. 

It's possible that without a rate cut from the Fed, stocks
<http://www.abcmoney.co.uk/tag/stocks.htm>  could tumble further. Traders
are betting on the Fed cutting the benchmark fed funds rate at its Sept. 18
meeting or sooner, but many economists say the central bank -- which has
held rates steady for over a year -- is unlikely to waver. 

Wall Street could get some insight into the Fed's thinking Tuesday when the
central bank releases minutes from its last meeting. On Aug. 7, policymakers
held rates steady and said that while tight credit and the housing market
may drag on the economy, inflation is the primary risk. 

Investors will also be focusing on the Commerce Department's Friday report
on personal income, personal spending, and core personal consumption
expenditures inflation. Personal income is expected to tick up 0.3 percent,
spending is expected to rise 0.4 percent, and the year-over-year inflation
gauge is anticipated to register at 2.0 percent, slightly above last month's
reading of 1.9 percent. 

A FULL SCHEDULE OF ECONOMIC DATA ... 

Investors will have a lot of economic data to sift through this week. 

Wall Street will be reading two snapshots of the slumping housing market:
The National Association of Realtors' Monday report on sales of existing
homes, and Tuesday's S&P/Case-Shiller home price index. 

Existing home sales are expected to have held fairly steady in July,
according to the median estimate of economists surveyed Friday by Thomson
Financial, after dropping in June to the slowest rate in nearly five years. 

The market will also get two readings on August consumer sentiment this week
-- one Tuesday from the Conference Board, and one Friday from the University
of Michigan. 

Economic growth will be in focus as well. On Wednesday, the Commerce
Department releases its second estimate of second-quarter gross domestic
product. Economists forecast that GDP growth will register at 4.0 percent, a
faster pace than the department's July estimate of 3.4 percent. 

And on Friday, the Chicago Purchasing Managers releases its manufacturing
index, which is expected to show modest expansion. The Chicago PMI is a
precursor to next week's closely watched national manufacturing index from
the Institute for Supply Management. 

... AND A FEW EARNINGS REPORTS

http://www.abcmoney.co.uk/news/262007124007.htm

 

Bila data ekonomi makro sesuai dengan ekspektasi pasar, maka DOW minggu ini
akan naik.Kita tunggu saja.

 

Semoga.

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