My comment: The purchasing power falls.

U.S. Economy: GDP Shrinks at Fastest Pace Since 2001 (Update2)
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=al..RukPocIo&refer=home

On 28 oct, 18:04, "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> My comment: I have told several times that, nowadays, this index is
> extremely important as, in normal circumstances, it predicts social
> cohesion when its value is very high, and social unrest when its value
> is very low. Its current value, 38, is extremely low for a normal
> society.
>
> As I told by e-mail to some of you, I thought that it would be
> slightly above 50. I, and many other economists according to this
> report, was wrong. Anyway, the expectation that a new president can
> improve the situation probably will refrain demostrations, riots, etc.
> as would be the normal consequence of this value.
>
> I guess that this short period of relief that US economy is living
> this month and maybe one or two months ahead, will make this index to
> rise slightly until the next wave of bad news.
>
> Anyway, this index becomes extremely important nowadays and has to be
> monitored very close in the near future..
>
> Peace and best wishes.
>
> Xi
>
> http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=a08qtJ.tt8ng&refe...
>
> Oct. 28 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. consumer confidence fell to the lowest
> level on record in October as stocks plunged and banks shut off
> credit, raising the risk spending will collapse.
>
> The Conference Board's confidence index tumbled to 38, lower than
> forecast and the worst reading since monthly records began in 1967,
> the New York-based research group said today. A separate report showed
> home values continued to drop in August.
>
> Stocks pared gains on the outlook for consumer spending, which
> accounts for more than two-thirds of the economy. The report
> strengthened expectations that the Federal Reserve will lower interest
> rates again after a likely reduction tomorrow.
>
> ``It'll be a prolonged recession,'' said Carl Riccadonna, a senior
> economist at Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. in New York. ``We're
> looking at a very sharp pullback in consumer spending. As go
> consumers, so goes the broader economy.''
>
> Whirlpool Corp., the world's largest appliance maker, said today it
> will cut 5,000 jobs and forecast lower annual profit as the global
> credit crunch and U.S. housing slump clips appliance sales. Royal
> Caribbean Cruises Ltd., the world's second-largest cruise operator,
> forecast profit that trailed some analysts' estimates because of a
> ``significant deterioration'' in bookings.
>
> The confidence report underscored voter discontent with the country's
> direction heading into the Nov. 4 presidential election. A majority of
> voters think Illinois Senator Barack Obama, the Democrat, will be
> better able to handle the economic turmoil than Republican rival John
> McCain, according to polls.
>
> Consumer confidence was projected to drop to 52, according to the
> median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey of 66 economists. Forecasts
> ranged from 45 to 56.6. September's reading was revised up to 61.4
> from an originally reported 59.8.
>
> Heading South
>
> ``The economy feels like it is contracting at a rapid pace,'' Lewis
> Alexander, chief economist at Citigroup Global Markets Inc. in New
> York, said in a Bloomberg Television interview. ``It's clear that
> consumers have really been affected by the volatility we've seen in
> the last six weeks.''
>
> The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 9.4 points, or 1.1 percent, to
> 858.34 as of 11:50 a.m. in New York, after being up almost 33 points
> earlier. Treasury securities fell.
>
> The 23.4-point drop in confidence this month was the third- biggest on
> record, trailing two plunges in the early 1970s linked to oil shocks.
> Measures on current conditions and expectations both declined.
>
> Home prices in 20 U.S. metropolitan areas dropped 16.6 percent in
> August from the same month in 2007, the fastest pace since year-over-
> year records began in 2001, a report from S&P/Case-Shiller today
> showed. For a fifth consecutive month, all areas registered a decrease
> in prices from a year earlier.
>
> Foreclosures Climb
>
> The housing slump is likely to extend well into a fourth year as
> foreclosures put more properties on the market and drive down prices
> even more.
>
> The Conference Board's measure of present conditions dropped to 41.9
> from 61.1 the prior month. The gauge of expectations for the next six
> months slumped to 35.5 from 61.5.
>
> The share of consumers who said jobs are plentiful dropped to 8.9
> percent from 12.6 percent last month. The proportion of people who
> said jobs are hard to get jumped 5 points to 37.2 percent.
>
> The proportion of people who expect their incomes to rise over the
> next six months dropped to 10.8 percent from 15.1 percent. The share
> expecting more jobs decreased to 7.4 percent from 11.9 percent.
>
> The confidence figures corroborate declines seen in other measures. A
> report earlier this month showed the Reuters/University of Michigan
> preliminary index of consumer sentiment decreased in October by the
> most on record.
>
> The Conference Board's index tends to be more influenced by attitudes
> about the labor market, economists have said.
>
> Job Losses
>
> The economy lost jobs for nine consecutive months through September,
> bringing the total drop in payrolls to 760,000 this year, Labor
> Department figures showed. Some economists anticipate job losses
> accelerated in October.
>
> Consumer spending probably dropped last quarter by the most in almost
> two decades, economists forecast a Commerce Department report will
> show in two days. As a result, the economy probably shrank from July
> to September, the survey showed.
>
> Today's confidence report showed fewer people planned to purchase
> automobiles and major appliances. Home-buying plans improved.
>
> The slump in spending may be even bigger this quarter as consumers
> retrench. The International Council of Shopping Centers predicts the
> November-December holiday season, which brings in more than a third of
> some retailers' annual sales, will be the weakest since 2002.
>
> The credit freeze ``impacted consumers' attitudes,'' Farooq Kathwari,
> chief executive officer of home-furnishings retailer Ethan Allen
> Interiors Inc., said in a Bloomberg Television interview this month.
> ``People are cautious, people are holding back.''
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