My comment: Unfortunately, we do not see any significant change in the
pace of fall. To be honest, my main concern about US economy, right
now, is people s trust. We all can figure out objective data for the
near future, now what matters in the very short term is subjective
data. I want to see the next CCI (Consumer Confidence Index) at the
end of January.

Peace and best wishes.

Xi

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=akVSfn.0.ZmI&refer=home

Jan. 9 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. lost 524,000 jobs in December, making
last year’s collapse in employment the worst since the end of World
War II and underscoring the severity of the recession President-elect
Barack Obama will inherit.

The decline in payrolls was in line with forecasts and followed a drop
of 584,000 in November, bringing job losses for 2008 to 2.589 million,
the most since 1945, according to a Labor Department report today in
Washington. The jobless rate rose more than forecast to 7.2 percent, a
15-year high, from 6.8 percent.

The outlook for 2009 is no brighter as retailers from Wal- Mart Stores
Inc. to Macy’s Inc. slash profit forecasts and manufacturers including
Alcoa Inc. cut output and staff. The figures will intensify pressure
on U.S. lawmakers to speed Obama’s proposed fiscal stimulus through
Congress in an effort to save or create 3 million jobs.

“We’re seeing pretty ugly numbers as the recession is worsening,”
Michael Gregory, a senior economist at BMO Capital Markets in Toronto,
said before the report. “It’s going to be devastating in terms of
consumer confidence and spending. The next couple of months will be
dismal.”

Stock-index futures rose and Treasuries fell amid relief among some
investors the drop in payrolls wasn’t even bigger. Futures on the
Standard & Poor’s 500 Stock Index rose 0.6 percent to 912.20 at 8:34
a.m. in New York, and yields on benchmark 10- year notes were at 2.46
percent, from 2.44 percent late yesterday. The dollar was little
changed at $1.3690 per euro.

Economists’ Forecasts

Payrolls were forecast to drop 525,000 after a previously reported
533,000 decline in November, according to the median estimate of 73
economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. Revisions subtracted 154,000
from payroll figures previously reported for November and October.

The jobless rate was projected to jump to 7 percent from a previously
reported 6.7 percent in November.

Obama is pressing for a stimulus plan of about $775 billion, including
tax cuts and spending on everything from roads and schools to the
energy network. Yesterday he called for “dramatic action as soon as
possible” to help pull the world’s largest economy out of a slump
that’s into its second year. “If nothing is done, this recession could
linger for years,” Obama said in Fairfax, Virginia.

Benchmark Revisions

With today’s report, Labor revised figures from its household survey,
which includes the unemployment rate, going back five years. Benchmark
revisions to the payroll figures will be announced in February.

Last month’s decline was the 12th consecutive drop in payrolls. The
economy created 1.1 million jobs in 2007.

Today’s report showed factory payrolls shrank 149,000, the biggest
drop since August 2001, after decreasing 104,000 in November.
Economists had forecast a drop of 100,000.

The decrease included a loss of 21,400 jobs in auto and parts
industries. Manufacturing, which makes up 12 percent of the economy,
shrank in December at the fastest pace in 28 years, Institute for
Supply Management figures showed.

Payrolls at builders dropped by 101,000 after decreasing 85,000.
Financial firms reduced payrolls by 14,000, after a 28,000 loss the
prior month.

Service industries, which include banks, insurance companies,
restaurants and retailers, subtracted 273,000 workers after a decline
of 402,000. Retail payrolls dropped by 66,600 after a 100,000
decrease.

Government Jobs

Government payrolls increased by 7,000 after falling 3,000 the prior
month.

Federal Reserve staff last month cut projections for gross domestic
product and the job market, stating the unemployment rate was “likely
to rise significantly into 2010,” according to minutes of policy
makers’ December meeting.

Job losses threaten to pull the economy into a reinforcing cycle of
rising unemployment and declining household spending, what policy
makers call a negative feedback loop, which is difficult to snap once
it’s begun.

Wal-Mart, the world’s biggest retail chain, yesterday said fourth-
quarter profit will miss its earlier forecasts after sales rose less
than analysts anticipated. Macy’s said December revenue slipped 4
percent and announced it would close 11 stores.

Sales at stores open at least a year dropped 2.2 percent in the last
two month months of 2008, the biggest holiday-season decline since the
International Council of Shopping Centers started keeping records in
1970, the group said yesterday.

Alcoa Cuts

“These are extraordinary times, requiring speed and decisiveness to
address the current economic downturn,” Klaus Kleinfeld, chief
executive officer of Alcoa, said in a Jan. 6 statement announcing
13,500 job cuts worldwide. The world’s largest aluminum producer said
it will trim an additional 1,700 contractor positions and froze hiring
and salaries in some areas.

Some companies have taken other steps to lower costs. Caterpillar
Inc., the world’s largest maker of construction equipment, will put
814 workers on an “indefinite” layoff, shipper FedEx Corp. cut the pay
of Chief Executive Officer Fred Smith and other employees, and auto-
parts supplier Visteon Corp. said it will trim the workweek and some
salaries.

The average work week shrank to a record-low 33.3 hours from 33.5
hours, today’s figures showed. Average weekly hours worked by
production workers dropped to 39.9 hours from 40.3 hours, while
overtime decreased to 3 hours from 3.3 hours. That brought the average
weekly earnings down by $2 to $611.39.

Workers’ average hourly wages rose 5 cents, or 0.3 percent, to $18.36
from the prior month. Hourly earnings were 3.7 percent higher than
December 2007. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg had forecast a 0.2
percent increase from November and a 3.6 percent gain for the 12-month
period.
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