cont

Enviado:
19/12/2006 14:40
por Infoo
muito obrigado e boas festas pr ti também
bem, e a reação "futurista" é
Futures 13:40
fair value / value / %
s&p 1432,95 / 1430,70 / -.16%
daq100 1811,33 / 1797,5 / -.75%

Enviado:
19/12/2006 14:36
por scpnuno
Bigadooooooo
Bom Natal, se já não tornares a apareçer....
Bijoca pra ti, meu bloombergzinho caldeireiro
13:30 Dados States

Enviado:
19/12/2006 14:34
por Infoo
U.S. Nov. PPI up 0.9% year-over-year
Biggest rise in core PPI since July 1980
U.S. Nov. core PPI rises 1.3% vs. 0.3% expected
U.S. Nov. PPI rises most since Nov. 1974
U.S. Nov. PPI rises 2.0% vs. 0.7% expected
ECONOMIC REPORT: U.S. Nov. PPI rises 2.0% vs. 0.7% expected; Core prices rise most since July 1980
By Robert Schroeder, MarketWatch Last Update: 8:33 AM ET Dec 19, 2006
WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) -- Producer prices rose much more than expected in November, as the core producer price index rose by the most since July 1980, the Labor Department said.
The November producer price index climbed by 2%, the biggest rise since November 1974, statistics show.
Most of the gain in the headline producer price number was in energy prices, which rose by 6.1%. Of that, 17.9% was gasoline prices, while 14.6% was diesel fuel.
Wholesale prices for home heating oil climbed by 7.7%. Natural gas prices, meanwhile, rose by 5.9% at the wholesale level in November.
A 13.7% gain in wholesale prices for light motor trucks powered the core PPI, which excludes food and energy prices.
Economists surveyed by MarketWatch were expecting the PPI to rise by 0.7%. They also forecast a 0.3% rise in the core PPI.
Year over year, the PPI is up 0.9%.
Year over year, the core PPI is up 1.8%.
The report follows on the heels of a benign inflation reading last week, with the Labor Department reporting U.S. consumer prices were unchanged in November. Core prices were also unchanged. Taken together, the numbers took pressure off the Federal Reserve to control inflation.
U.S. Nov. building permits fall to 9-year low
U.S. Nov. building permits short of 1.55 mln expected
U.S. Nov. housing starts exceed 1.54 mln expected
U.S. Nov. building permits fall 3% to 1.506 mln pace
U.S. Nov. housing starts up 6.7% to 1.588 mln pace
ECONOMIC REPORT: Housing starts rise 6.7% in November; Building permits fall to 9-year low with 10th straight decline
By Rex Nutting, MarketWatch Last Update: 8:31 AM ET Dec 19, 2006
WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) - Construction on new homes rebounded in November, rising 6.7% after a whopping 14% drop in October, the Commerce Department reported Tuesday.
Building permits, meanwhile, fell 3% to a fresh nine-year low, signaling that the housing market remains very weak.
Starts rose 6.7% in November to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.588 million from October's revised 1.488 million pace. Starts are down 25.5% in the past year and are down 12.5% in the first 11 months of 2006 compared with the same period in 2005.
Building permits, considered a leading indicator of the economy and of the housing market, fell 3% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.506 million, the 10th straight decline in permits, from October's 1.553 million pace.
Building permits are down 31.3% in the past year and are down 14.1% in the first 11 months of 2006 compared with the same period in 2005.
The pace of starts in November was above the expected 1.54 million, while permits fell short of the 1.55 million expected by economists polled by MarketWatch.
Completions of new homes were flat at a 1.915 million annual pace, indicating that a significant supply of homes is still entering the market.
Starts of single-family homes increased 8.1% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.281 million after a 15% drop in October. Permits of single-family homes fell 3.1% to a 1.144 million pace, also the lowest since December 1997.
The National Association of Home Builders reported on Monday that its survey of builder sentiment fell in December after two months of small gains. Builders' outlook for future sales improved, while buyer traffic evaporated. Builders said they saw signs of a turning point in the improved outlook.
The government's housing data are subject to large sampling and other statistical errors. It can take five months for a new trend in housing starts to emerge from the data. The standard error is so high, in fact, that the government is not confident that starts increased at all in November.
Starts in September and October were revised lower by a cumulative 14,000 annualized
In the past five months, housing starts have averaged 1.64 million annualized, down from 1.69 million in the five months ending in October and 2.12 million in January.
Regionally, starts rose 8.6% in the Northeast and rose 18.5% in the South. Starts fell 6.3% in the Midwest to the lowest level in 15 years. Starts fell 8.1% in the West to the lowest level in five years.