13:30 - Dados States
8 mensagens
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re
lican... isso mesmo...foi o q disse ali na frase do "entretanto...".... o mercado andava a descontar isso....
vamos ver se mercados sustentam nestas zonas
para já os States estão a fazer um dia de "empata"..
a ver se não descamba agora pr o final do dia e fecha no red
vamos ver se mercados sustentam nestas zonas
para já os States estão a fazer um dia de "empata"..
a ver se não descamba agora pr o final do dia e fecha no red
- Mensagens: 1620
- Registado: 17/11/2005 1:02
re
Ulisses.. nem mais... está a acontecer o que o mercado anda a tentar descontar nas últimas semanas
como disse ontem o cenário "bom" seria core cpi a 0.1 ou mesmo o previsto 0.2.....
entretanto ontem e hoje saiu o cenário que o mercado andava a descontar
mais um pouco de nervosinho prevejo para perto do 30 Junho como o personal spending e income e com o core PCI
como disse ontem o cenário "bom" seria core cpi a 0.1 ou mesmo o previsto 0.2.....
entretanto ontem e hoje saiu o cenário que o mercado andava a descontar
mais um pouco de nervosinho prevejo para perto do 30 Junho como o personal spending e income e com o core PCI
- Mensagens: 1620
- Registado: 17/11/2005 1:02
13:30 - Dados States
8:30 AM ET 6/14/06 U.S. MAY CPI AIRLINES UP 2.6%
8:30 AM ET 6/14/06 U.S. MAY REAL WEEKLY EARNINGS FALL 0.7%
8:30 AM ET 6/14/06 U.S. MAY CPI OWNERS' EQUIVALENT RENT UP 0.6%
8:30 AM ET 6/14/06 U.S. MAY CPI ENERGY PRICES UP 2.4%
8:30 AM ET 6/14/06 U.S. CORE CPI UP 2.4% IN PAST YEAR
8:30 AM ET 6/14/06 U.S. CPI UP 4.2% IN PAST YEAR
8:30 AM ET 6/14/06 U.S. MAY CORE CPI UP 0.3% VS. 0.2% EXPECTED
8:30 AM ET 6/14/06 U.S. MAY CPI UP 0.4% AS EXPECTED
ECONOMIC REPORT: Core inflation rises 0.3% in May; CPI reading boosted by big rise in U.S. shelter costs
By Rex Nutting, MarketWatch
Last Update: 8:39 AM ET Jun 14, 2006
WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) -- U.S. core inflation increased 0.3% for the third month in a row in May, putting pressure on the Federal Reserve to keep raising interest rates.
The consumer price index increased 0.4% in May, led by higher energy and shelter costs, the Labor Department said Wednesday. The increase matched expectations.
However, core prices -- which exclude volatile food and energy costs -- increased 0.3%, ahead of the 0.2% gain expected by economists surveyed by MarketWatch.
The core rate was boosted by a 0.6% gain in owners' equivalent rent, which accounts for nearly one-fourth of the CPI. It was the largest gain in owners' equivalent rent in 16 years.
Because of the odd way in which the government tracks housing prices in the CPI, the 0.6% increase in May likely reflects a slowdown in housing sales and price appreciation that's increasing demand for rental properties.
The core CPI excluding shelter rose 0.2%.
Energy prices increased 2.4% in May, marking the third straight month of 1%-plus gains. Food prices rose 0.1%.
Apparel prices rose 0.2%. Prices charged for medical care increased 0.3%.
In the past year, the CPI has risen 4.2% -- and at a 5.2% annual rate so far in 2005. The core CPI has risen 2.4%, the fastest year-over-year growth since February 2005, and well ahead of the 1%-to-2% comfort zone that Fed officials have talked about. The core CPI has risen at a 3.1% annualized pace so far in 2006.
A half-dozen Fed officials, including Chairman Ben Bernanke, have expressed concern recently that inflation is running faster than they'd like. But Fed officials also know that inflation typically continues to accelerate long after the economy has begun to cool under the slow influence of past interest-rate hikes.
Most analysts expect the Fed to hike interest rates to 5.25% when policymakers next meet June 29. It would be the 17th consecutive meeting for a rate hike, dating back to June 2004, when overnight rates were at a four-decade low of 1%.
Other economic data show the economy's cooling from a torrid pace. Real, or inflation-adjusted, retail sales fell in May. Housing is slowing.
Income growth is slowing as well. Real weekly earnings fell 0.7% in May, the government said in a separate report Wednesday. In the past year, real weekly earnings are down 0.2%, while real hourly earnings have fallen 0.6%.
In May, energy prices rose 2.4%, including a 4.9% rise in gasoline prices. Natural-gas prices fell 0.9%.
Transportation costs increased 1.5%, mostly on higher fuel costs. Airline fares rose 2.6%. New car prices fell 0.3%.
Drug prices gained 0.4%, while hospital fees increased 0.6%.
8:30 AM ET 6/14/06 U.S. MAY REAL WEEKLY EARNINGS FALL 0.7%
8:30 AM ET 6/14/06 U.S. MAY CPI OWNERS' EQUIVALENT RENT UP 0.6%
8:30 AM ET 6/14/06 U.S. MAY CPI ENERGY PRICES UP 2.4%
8:30 AM ET 6/14/06 U.S. CORE CPI UP 2.4% IN PAST YEAR
8:30 AM ET 6/14/06 U.S. CPI UP 4.2% IN PAST YEAR
8:30 AM ET 6/14/06 U.S. MAY CORE CPI UP 0.3% VS. 0.2% EXPECTED
8:30 AM ET 6/14/06 U.S. MAY CPI UP 0.4% AS EXPECTED
ECONOMIC REPORT: Core inflation rises 0.3% in May; CPI reading boosted by big rise in U.S. shelter costs
By Rex Nutting, MarketWatch
Last Update: 8:39 AM ET Jun 14, 2006
WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) -- U.S. core inflation increased 0.3% for the third month in a row in May, putting pressure on the Federal Reserve to keep raising interest rates.
The consumer price index increased 0.4% in May, led by higher energy and shelter costs, the Labor Department said Wednesday. The increase matched expectations.
However, core prices -- which exclude volatile food and energy costs -- increased 0.3%, ahead of the 0.2% gain expected by economists surveyed by MarketWatch.
The core rate was boosted by a 0.6% gain in owners' equivalent rent, which accounts for nearly one-fourth of the CPI. It was the largest gain in owners' equivalent rent in 16 years.
Because of the odd way in which the government tracks housing prices in the CPI, the 0.6% increase in May likely reflects a slowdown in housing sales and price appreciation that's increasing demand for rental properties.
The core CPI excluding shelter rose 0.2%.
Energy prices increased 2.4% in May, marking the third straight month of 1%-plus gains. Food prices rose 0.1%.
Apparel prices rose 0.2%. Prices charged for medical care increased 0.3%.
In the past year, the CPI has risen 4.2% -- and at a 5.2% annual rate so far in 2005. The core CPI has risen 2.4%, the fastest year-over-year growth since February 2005, and well ahead of the 1%-to-2% comfort zone that Fed officials have talked about. The core CPI has risen at a 3.1% annualized pace so far in 2006.
A half-dozen Fed officials, including Chairman Ben Bernanke, have expressed concern recently that inflation is running faster than they'd like. But Fed officials also know that inflation typically continues to accelerate long after the economy has begun to cool under the slow influence of past interest-rate hikes.
Most analysts expect the Fed to hike interest rates to 5.25% when policymakers next meet June 29. It would be the 17th consecutive meeting for a rate hike, dating back to June 2004, when overnight rates were at a four-decade low of 1%.
Other economic data show the economy's cooling from a torrid pace. Real, or inflation-adjusted, retail sales fell in May. Housing is slowing.
Income growth is slowing as well. Real weekly earnings fell 0.7% in May, the government said in a separate report Wednesday. In the past year, real weekly earnings are down 0.2%, while real hourly earnings have fallen 0.6%.
In May, energy prices rose 2.4%, including a 4.9% rise in gasoline prices. Natural-gas prices fell 0.9%.
Transportation costs increased 1.5%, mostly on higher fuel costs. Airline fares rose 2.6%. New car prices fell 0.3%.
Drug prices gained 0.4%, while hospital fees increased 0.6%.
- Mensagens: 1620
- Registado: 17/11/2005 1:02
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