Wall Street dropped in thin trading as investors tried to make sense of the latest data on the strength and outlook for the world’s biggest economy ahead of the release of the August payrolls report tomorrow.
The Institute for Supply Management today said its index of national factory activity edged down to 50.6 from 50.9 in July. While a decline isn’t good news, it was better than expectations of a drop to 48.5.
To add to the conflicting data, US car makers reported increases in domestic sales last month that seemed to defy data showing declining consumer confidence.
Sales at Chrysler jumped by 31% from a year ago, General Motors Co posted an 18% increase and Ford Motor Co reported an 11% gain.
Still, the White House is reining its forecast for overall growth ahead of a major speech by President Barack Obama on September 8 on how he plans to bolster the economy and employment.
Under new projections, the White House said it expected gross domestic product to increase 1.7% this year, down from the 2.7% expected back in February, and 2.6% in 2012, down from a 3.6% prediction in February, according to Reuters.
“The economic outlook is still shaky, and that’s been driving the industrial metals and the energy sector lower,” Michael Banks, a London-based analyst at Hermes Commodities, told Bloomberg News. “It’s something we see continuing for the next one to three months.”
And it’s not just what’s happening in America that’s making it hard for investors to decide what to do with their money.
Data showed that euro-zone manufacturing contracted more than initially expected in August while Chinese manufacturing growth held near the lowest level in 29 months.
In late afternoon trading, the Dow Jones industrial average shed 0.59%, the Standard & Poor's 500 Index dropped 0.79% and the Nasdaq Composite Index fell 1.03%.
Analysts at UBS have reviewed the performance of the S&P 500 and they think investors have got it wrong. The analysts are seeing double-digit gains for the benchmark by the end of 2011, Reuters reported.
Excluding the current downturn, the S&P 500 has shed more than 17% 14 times since the end of World War Two, but the economy only fell into recession on nine of those occasions, equity strategists of the Swiss bank wrote in a research note published Thursday.
"Put differently, the market predicted roughly a third more recessions than actually occurred," they wrote in the report, entitled "14 of the last 9."
The S&P is trading at 11.3 times estimated earnings, below UBS's fair value estimate of 12.5 times, the report notes.
More immediately though, investors eyes are on tomorrow’s Labor Department report, which is expected to show non-farm payrolls climbed by 68,000 after a 117,000 increase in July, according to the median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News.
Goldman Sachs Group Inc economists today cut in half their expectations for job gains to 25,000, pointing to the slow pace of hiring in late July and August
In Europe, central bankers are starting to become a bit more forthright in their views on the situation in the U.S., perhaps looking to deflect criticism about how the E.U. is - is not - managing its finances.
"The crisis is not over. Not just in Europe is it not over, it is also not over in other regions of the world," European Central Bank policymaker Juergen Stark said, Reuters reported, adding the U.S. had an "enormous" debt problem and lacked the structures to get the problem under control.
Stark said there was no alternative but for countries to take painful steps to consolidate their public finances.
The key is who is willing to take those steps.
(BusinessDesk)
1 Comments
"The central banker rats are cornered"
http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/Article30212.html
Have this with your cuppa cawfee! enjoy....haha
We welcome your comments below. If you are not already registered, please register to comment.
Remember we welcome robust, respectful and insightful debate. We don't welcome abusive or defamatory comments and will de-register those repeatedly making such comments. Our current comment policy is here.