Página 1 de 1

MensagemEnviado: 5/6/2007 12:19
por Shevet
Obrigado Scpnuno & Noel

MensagemEnviado: 5/6/2007 12:18
por scpnuno
O Infoo só acorda ás 13.15

Segundo o Jornal de Negocios, sai isto:

05-06-2007 15:00 EUA Actividade no sector dos serviços [Estimativa: 55,5 pontos]

MensagemEnviado: 5/6/2007 12:17
por Noel
Lição esquecida da greve geral: os efeitos negativos da lamentável ineficácia dos sindicatos
4 Jun A recente greve geral gerou os habituais comentários que, desta vez, foram de quase inânime comprazimento com a baixa incidência da greve e a fraqueza e ineficácia da acção sindical.

Calendário

Data Título Acontecimento
05-06-2007 Banco de Portugal Divulgação do relatório de Estabilidade Financeira
05-06-2007 INE Índice de Novas Encomendas na Indústria - Total, Mercado Nacional e Mercado Externo Abril 2007
05-06-2007 BCE Jean-Claude Trichet participa em conferência.
05-06-2007 Zona Euro Vendas a retalho da Zona Euro
05-06-2007 15:00 EUA Actividade no sector dos serviços [Estimativa: 55,5 pontos]
06-06-2007 Alemanha Encomendas às fábricas em Abril
06-06-2007 BoE Reunião do Banco de Inglaterra [Estimativa: 5,5%]
06-06-2007 10:00 Fitor Assembleia geral anual dos accionistas da Fitor - Companhia Portuguesa de Têxteis, S.A.
06-06-2007 12:45 BCE BCE anuncia taxas de juro [Estimativa: subida para 4%]
06-06-2007 13:30 EUA Produtividade no primeiro trimestre [Estimativa: +1%]

Dados States

MensagemEnviado: 5/6/2007 12:15
por Shevet
Ola boa tarde Infoo, hoje sai alguma coisa de significante nos states??

Obrigado,
Shevet

15:00 - Dados States

MensagemEnviado: 4/6/2007 14:50
por Infoo
primeira reação foi positiva mas rapidamente fraquejou e voltou à zona de abertura

10:00 AM ET, Jun 04, 2007 - 26 minutes ago
U.S. April factory inventory-shipments ratio 1.24 vs. 1.25
U.S. April core capex orders revised up 2.1% vs. 1.2%
U.S. April nondurable shipments fall 0.2% on oil, coal
U.S. April durable-goods orders revised to 0.8% vs. 0.6%
U.S. April factory shipments rise 0.8%
U.S. April factory orders rise 0.3% vs. 0.8% expected

ECONOMIC REPORT: Capital spending revised higher in April; Factory orders rise 0.3%, held back by weakness in nondurable goods
By Rex Nutting, MarketWatch Last Update: 10:00 AM ET Jun 4, 2007

WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) - Businesses boosted their capital spending in April at a faster pace in April than previously reported, the Commerce Department said Monday.
Orders for core capital equipment goods rose 2.1% in April, revised up from 1.2% reported two weeks ago, the government said. Shipments of core capital goods - which exclude both defense goods and civilian aircraft - increased 1%, ahead of the 0.7% previously reported.
Combined with strong March data, the report shows a faster recovery in business spending and factory output, confirming other indicators of strength, such as the Institute for Supply Management index and industrial output data from the Federal Reserve.
The report lends credence to those who say we've seen the worst of the slump that brought first-quarter growth in at just 0.6% annualized.
Total factory orders rose 0.3% in April, below the 0.8% expected by economists surveyed by MarketWatch. However, orders in March were revised up to 4.1% from 3.5% previously, putting the level of orders close to expectations.
Orders were held back by a 0.2% decline in orders for nondurable goods, especially petroleum and coal. The declines were likely the result of lower prices, not lower volumes. The figures are not adjusted for price changes.
Excluding transportation goods, factory orders rose 0.7% after 2.4% in March.
Orders for durable goods, meanwhile, were revised higher to a 0.8% gain from 0.6% reported two weeks ago.
Shipments of factory goods increased 0.8% after a 2.1% gain in March. Shipments of durable goods rose 1.9%. Shipments of nondurable goods, which are identical to orders, fell 0.2%.
Inventories of factory goods rose 0.5%, including a 0.5% gain in durable goods inventories. Inventories of nondurable goods also increased 0.5%. The inventory-to-shipments ratio fell to 1.24 in April from 1.25 in March and 1.27 in February, indication manufacturers are making good progress in bringing inventories back down to desired levels.
Unfilled orders, which represent potential future output, increased 1.8%, with almost all the gain coming in civilian aircraft.