Dados pra hoje ...
O enterra quando fala baralha os indices, os metais, o forex, baralha tudo...
---Tudo o que for por mim escrito expressa apenas a minha opinião pessoal e não é uma recomendação de investimento de qualquer tipo---
https://twitter.com/JCSTrendTrading
"We can confidently predict yesterdays price. Everything else is unknown."
"Every trade is a test"
"Price is the aggregation of everyone's expectations"
"I don't define a good trade as a trade that makes money. I define a good trade as a trade where I did the right thing". (Trend Follower Kevin Bruce, $5000 to $100.000.000 in 25 years).
https://twitter.com/JCSTrendTrading
"We can confidently predict yesterdays price. Everything else is unknown."
"Every trade is a test"
"Price is the aggregation of everyone's expectations"
"I don't define a good trade as a trade that makes money. I define a good trade as a trade where I did the right thing". (Trend Follower Kevin Bruce, $5000 to $100.000.000 in 25 years).
Dados Zona Euro:
Taxas Juro BCE:1.5% esp:1.50%
Taxas Juro BCE:1.5% esp:1.50%
Novo blog agora com a colaboração do J Alves, Paubo e Zecatreca- http://portugueseteamtraders.blogspot.com/
prumus Escreveu:hoje as 13.30 saem os dados dos states?
Sim, os Trade Balance, Initial Jobless Claims, Continuing Claims.
Às 14:45 o Bloomberg Consumer Comfort.
Já agora fica outros momentos importantes para hoje:
15:00 Merkel Holds Speech at CDU Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung, Berlin
17:00 Fed's Bernanke Speaks to Economics Club in Minnesota
19:00 Consumer Credit
Novo blog agora com a colaboração do J Alves, Paubo e Zecatreca- http://portugueseteamtraders.blogspot.com/
Dados Reino Unido:
Taxas Juro Bank of England:0.50 esp:0.50
Dados Grécia:
Unemployment Rate (Mon):16.0 esp:16.6%
Taxas Juro Bank of England:0.50 esp:0.50
Dados Grécia:
Unemployment Rate (Mon):16.0 esp:16.6%
Novo blog agora com a colaboração do J Alves, Paubo e Zecatreca- http://portugueseteamtraders.blogspot.com/
Com atraso de 45 minutos...
Dados Alemanha:
Industrial Production YoY:10.1% esp:6.5%
Industrial Production MoM:4.0% esp:0.5%
Dados Alemanha:
Industrial Production YoY:10.1% esp:6.5%
Industrial Production MoM:4.0% esp:0.5%
Novo blog agora com a colaboração do J Alves, Paubo e Zecatreca- http://portugueseteamtraders.blogspot.com/
Dados Zona Euro:
Retail Sales MoM:0.2 esp:0.0%
Retail Sales YoY:-0.2 esp:-1.0%
Retail Sales MoM:0.2 esp:0.0%
Retail Sales YoY:-0.2 esp:-1.0%
Novo blog agora com a colaboração do J Alves, Paubo e Zecatreca- http://portugueseteamtraders.blogspot.com/
Vai Bernanke que os estímulos estão a funcionar! Mas desta vez tem de ser mesmo a sério!





---Tudo o que for por mim escrito expressa apenas a minha opinião pessoal e não é uma recomendação de investimento de qualquer tipo---
https://twitter.com/JCSTrendTrading
"We can confidently predict yesterdays price. Everything else is unknown."
"Every trade is a test"
"Price is the aggregation of everyone's expectations"
"I don't define a good trade as a trade that makes money. I define a good trade as a trade where I did the right thing". (Trend Follower Kevin Bruce, $5000 to $100.000.000 in 25 years).
https://twitter.com/JCSTrendTrading
"We can confidently predict yesterdays price. Everything else is unknown."
"Every trade is a test"
"Price is the aggregation of everyone's expectations"
"I don't define a good trade as a trade that makes money. I define a good trade as a trade where I did the right thing". (Trend Follower Kevin Bruce, $5000 to $100.000.000 in 25 years).
Employment in U.S. Unexpectedly Stagnated in August; Jobless Rate at 9.1%
By Bob Willis - Sep 2, 2011 1:30 PM GMT
Employment in the U.S. unexpectedly stagnated in August and the jobless rate held at 9.1 percent as American employers became less confident in the strength of the recovery.
Payrolls were unchanged last month, the weakest reading since September 2010, after an 85,000 gain in July that was less than initially estimated, Labor Department data showed today in Washington. The median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey called for a rise of 65,000. Hourly earnings and hours worked both declined. The August data included a 48,000 drop in information industry jobs, mostly reflecting striking Verizon Communications Inc. (VZ) workers.
The first U.S. credit downgrade, political squabbling over the budget and mounting fear of a default in Europe caused the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index to plummet 17 percent from July 22 to Aug. 8, prompting companies and consumers to cut back. The lack of hiring is one reason Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke last week said the central bank still has tools available to stimulate growth.
“Net employment flat-lined in August,” Ellen Zentner, a senior U.S. economist at Nomura Securities International Inc. in New York, who forecast a decline of 5,000, said before the report. “When the outlook is uncertain, businesses don’t hire. Calls that we’re on the cusp of a recession or already there are not completely unwarranted.”
Estimates of the 86 economists surveyed by Bloomberg for overall payrolls ranged from a decline of 20,000 to a 160,000 increase. The unemployment rate was projected to hold at 9.1 percent, according to the survey median. Estimates ranged from 9 percent to 9.2 percent.
200,000 a Month
Sustained increases of around 150,000 a month are needed to bring unemployment down about half a percentage point over a year, according to Chris Rupkey, chief financial economist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd. in New York. “200,000 is the speed the economy needs to really cut into the jobless rate,” he said.
The jobs picture was brighter in a separate survey of households. The jobless rate held at 9.1 percent as the number of employed increased by 331,000. The share of the eligible population holding a job climbed to 58.2 percent from 58.1 percent.
Government payrolls decreased by 17,000 in August. Employment at state governments rose by 5,000 last month even after the end of a partial shutdown of the Minnesota government returned about 23,000 workers to their jobs. Local government employment slumped 20,000.
Private Hiring
Private hiring, which excludes government agencies, climbed 17,000 last month, the smallest increase since a decline in February 2010. The median forecast in the Bloomberg survey called for a 95,000 increase.
Factory payrolls fell by 3,000 in August after a 36,000 gain the prior month.
Employment at service-providers increased 3,000 in August. Construction employment fell by 5,000.
The drop in information industry employment reflected a strike of about 45,000 Verizon workers Aug. 7 after their contract expired. They began returning to work Aug. 22 and will be counted as employed in next month’s jobs report. The Labor Department’s survey week includes the 12th of the month.
Average hourly earnings fell 0.1 percent to $23.09X, today’s report showed. The average work week for all workers dropped six minutes to 34.2 hours.
Underemployment Rate
The so-called underemployment rate -- which includes part- time workers who’d prefer a full-time position and people who want work but have given up looking -- increased to 16.2 percent from 16.1 percent.
The economy expanded at a 1 percent pace in the second quarter following a 0.4 percent gain in the first three months of the year, the Commerce Department reported last month. Consumer spending grew 0.4 percent, the smallest increase since the last three months of 2009.
“The macroeconomic environment has remained difficult for consumers who continue to face high unemployment rates, high gasoline and high food costs,” Richard Dreiling, chairman and chief executive officer at Dollar General Corp., said on an Aug. 30 teleconference with analysts. The Goodlettsville, Tennessee- based company is the biggest dollar discount chain in the U.S.
The downgrade of U.S. debt by Standard & Poor’s and fears that one or more of the countries in the euro zone will default triggered a plunge in stocks last month that caused consumer confidence to sink. That raised concerns that companies will also pull back, hurting an already slowing U.S. economy.
Best in Class
U.S. debt was the best-performing asset class in August as bond investors ignored S&P’s decision to strip the U.S. of its AAA rating on Aug. 5. Treasuries returned 2.8 percent, while the global bond market gained 1.99 percent, Bank of America Merrill Lynch index data show.
Through July, the economy had recovered about 1.94 million of the 8.75 million jobs lost as a result of the 18-month recession that ended in June 2009.
“Economic growth has, for the most part, been at rates insufficient to achieve sustained reductions in unemployment,” Bernanke said Aug. 26 at the Jackson Hole, Wyoming, central bank symposium. “It is clear that the recovery from the crisis has been much less robust than we had hoped.”
Banks have been among companies announcing the biggest dismissals. Bank of America Corp. (BAC), the biggest U.S. lender, will eliminate about 3,500 jobs this quarter to focus “on what we can control” amid market turmoil, said Chief Executive Officer Brian T. Moynihan on Aug. 19.
Disapproval Rating
A stubbornly high unemployment rate has pushed President Barack Obama’s disapproval rating to an all-time high, according to a Quinnipiac University Aug. 16-27 poll of 2,730 registered voters. Some 52 percent disapprove of Obama’s job performance, up from 46 percent in July.
Obama this week agreed to delay by one day to Sept. 8 a presentation of his jobs agenda to a joint session of Congress after House Speaker John Boehner, a Republican, delivered an unprecedented rebuff to his request to speak a day earlier, when a Republican presidential debate is scheduled. The bickering may foreshadow further gridlock when a joint deficit-cutting committee meets begins meeting this month.
Among the provisions Obama has been considering for his jobs agenda are more infrastructure spending, tax incentives to spur hiring, a reduction in the employer portion of the payroll tax and changes to unemployment insurance to subsidize worker retraining, according to people familiar with discussions.
By Bob Willis - Sep 2, 2011 1:30 PM GMT
Employment in the U.S. unexpectedly stagnated in August and the jobless rate held at 9.1 percent as American employers became less confident in the strength of the recovery.
Payrolls were unchanged last month, the weakest reading since September 2010, after an 85,000 gain in July that was less than initially estimated, Labor Department data showed today in Washington. The median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey called for a rise of 65,000. Hourly earnings and hours worked both declined. The August data included a 48,000 drop in information industry jobs, mostly reflecting striking Verizon Communications Inc. (VZ) workers.
The first U.S. credit downgrade, political squabbling over the budget and mounting fear of a default in Europe caused the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index to plummet 17 percent from July 22 to Aug. 8, prompting companies and consumers to cut back. The lack of hiring is one reason Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke last week said the central bank still has tools available to stimulate growth.
“Net employment flat-lined in August,” Ellen Zentner, a senior U.S. economist at Nomura Securities International Inc. in New York, who forecast a decline of 5,000, said before the report. “When the outlook is uncertain, businesses don’t hire. Calls that we’re on the cusp of a recession or already there are not completely unwarranted.”
Estimates of the 86 economists surveyed by Bloomberg for overall payrolls ranged from a decline of 20,000 to a 160,000 increase. The unemployment rate was projected to hold at 9.1 percent, according to the survey median. Estimates ranged from 9 percent to 9.2 percent.
200,000 a Month
Sustained increases of around 150,000 a month are needed to bring unemployment down about half a percentage point over a year, according to Chris Rupkey, chief financial economist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd. in New York. “200,000 is the speed the economy needs to really cut into the jobless rate,” he said.
The jobs picture was brighter in a separate survey of households. The jobless rate held at 9.1 percent as the number of employed increased by 331,000. The share of the eligible population holding a job climbed to 58.2 percent from 58.1 percent.
Government payrolls decreased by 17,000 in August. Employment at state governments rose by 5,000 last month even after the end of a partial shutdown of the Minnesota government returned about 23,000 workers to their jobs. Local government employment slumped 20,000.
Private Hiring
Private hiring, which excludes government agencies, climbed 17,000 last month, the smallest increase since a decline in February 2010. The median forecast in the Bloomberg survey called for a 95,000 increase.
Factory payrolls fell by 3,000 in August after a 36,000 gain the prior month.
Employment at service-providers increased 3,000 in August. Construction employment fell by 5,000.
The drop in information industry employment reflected a strike of about 45,000 Verizon workers Aug. 7 after their contract expired. They began returning to work Aug. 22 and will be counted as employed in next month’s jobs report. The Labor Department’s survey week includes the 12th of the month.
Average hourly earnings fell 0.1 percent to $23.09X, today’s report showed. The average work week for all workers dropped six minutes to 34.2 hours.
Underemployment Rate
The so-called underemployment rate -- which includes part- time workers who’d prefer a full-time position and people who want work but have given up looking -- increased to 16.2 percent from 16.1 percent.
The economy expanded at a 1 percent pace in the second quarter following a 0.4 percent gain in the first three months of the year, the Commerce Department reported last month. Consumer spending grew 0.4 percent, the smallest increase since the last three months of 2009.
“The macroeconomic environment has remained difficult for consumers who continue to face high unemployment rates, high gasoline and high food costs,” Richard Dreiling, chairman and chief executive officer at Dollar General Corp., said on an Aug. 30 teleconference with analysts. The Goodlettsville, Tennessee- based company is the biggest dollar discount chain in the U.S.
The downgrade of U.S. debt by Standard & Poor’s and fears that one or more of the countries in the euro zone will default triggered a plunge in stocks last month that caused consumer confidence to sink. That raised concerns that companies will also pull back, hurting an already slowing U.S. economy.
Best in Class
U.S. debt was the best-performing asset class in August as bond investors ignored S&P’s decision to strip the U.S. of its AAA rating on Aug. 5. Treasuries returned 2.8 percent, while the global bond market gained 1.99 percent, Bank of America Merrill Lynch index data show.
Through July, the economy had recovered about 1.94 million of the 8.75 million jobs lost as a result of the 18-month recession that ended in June 2009.
“Economic growth has, for the most part, been at rates insufficient to achieve sustained reductions in unemployment,” Bernanke said Aug. 26 at the Jackson Hole, Wyoming, central bank symposium. “It is clear that the recovery from the crisis has been much less robust than we had hoped.”
Banks have been among companies announcing the biggest dismissals. Bank of America Corp. (BAC), the biggest U.S. lender, will eliminate about 3,500 jobs this quarter to focus “on what we can control” amid market turmoil, said Chief Executive Officer Brian T. Moynihan on Aug. 19.
Disapproval Rating
A stubbornly high unemployment rate has pushed President Barack Obama’s disapproval rating to an all-time high, according to a Quinnipiac University Aug. 16-27 poll of 2,730 registered voters. Some 52 percent disapprove of Obama’s job performance, up from 46 percent in July.
Obama this week agreed to delay by one day to Sept. 8 a presentation of his jobs agenda to a joint session of Congress after House Speaker John Boehner, a Republican, delivered an unprecedented rebuff to his request to speak a day earlier, when a Republican presidential debate is scheduled. The bickering may foreshadow further gridlock when a joint deficit-cutting committee meets begins meeting this month.
Among the provisions Obama has been considering for his jobs agenda are more infrastructure spending, tax incentives to spur hiring, a reduction in the employer portion of the payroll tax and changes to unemployment insurance to subsidize worker retraining, according to people familiar with discussions.
- Mensagens: 35428
- Registado: 5/11/2002 12:21
- Localização: Barlavento
O Roubini está a falar na Bloomberg e mesmo a reafirmar que existe 60% de probabilida dos US entrarem em recessão este anos, os indices descambaram. E ainda bem que escolheram as 16h00 para o por a falar, pq assim a Europa podia cair. Noutros tempos, era um ver se te avias. Mais um sinal Bull
- Mensagens: 676
- Registado: 8/1/2004 13:14
Nada cai eternamente, nem o oposto é verdade.
NEste momento como já foi dito em causa estão medida adicionais que Obama irá tomar.
A expectativa é grande, tal como a esperança.
As pessoas também se fartam de noticias negativas.
A bolsa é feita de comportamentos.
Por isso eu acredito que iremos a máximos anuais este ano, principalmente se as medidas de Obama forem (ou parecerem), solidas.
Não haverá QE3, nem o mercado espera isso.
é a minha modesta opinião.
NEste momento como já foi dito em causa estão medida adicionais que Obama irá tomar.
A expectativa é grande, tal como a esperança.
As pessoas também se fartam de noticias negativas.
A bolsa é feita de comportamentos.
Por isso eu acredito que iremos a máximos anuais este ano, principalmente se as medidas de Obama forem (ou parecerem), solidas.
Não haverá QE3, nem o mercado espera isso.
é a minha modesta opinião.
Elias Escreveu:É curioso que, apesar da sucessão de dados macro-económicos muito maus nas últimas duas semanas, os mercados não tenham parado de subir.
Não há dúvida que quando os mercados se decidem por uma dada direcção, nada parece demovê-los.
- Mensagens: 453
- Registado: 23/8/2011 11:35
- Localização: 12
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