Bill Losey’s Weekly Economic Update for May 2, 2011

CONSUMER SPENDING INCREASES 0.6%
This March gain wasn’t that surprising in light of rising food and energy costs. (The Commerce Department just revised February’s gain to 0.9%). Disposable incomes were up by 0.1% in March while the personal savings rate held steady at 5.5%. The Commerce Department also released its initial estimate of 1Q 2011 GDP Friday (+1.8%) and 1Q consumer spending (+2.7%).

CONSUMER CONFIDENCE REBOUNDS
The University of Michigan’s final April consumer sentiment survey came in at 69.8, up from March’s final reading of 67.5. The one-year inflation expectation was 4.6%, the same as last month. The Conference Board’s April consumer confidence poll came in at 65.4, better than the median projection of economists surveyed by Bloomberg. Both indices improved despite gas prices rising – AAA said a gallon of regular unleaded averaged $3.87 on April 27, the highest price since August 2008.

CASE-SHILLER INDEX WITHIN .01% OF DOUBLE-DIP
February’s Case-Shiller Home Price Index revealed a 3.3% year-over-year drop in prices across 20 metro areas. Most notably, the index was down 1.1% from January to just .01% above its April 2009 trough. Prices in 14 of the index’s 20 metro areas have declined for six months or more. In more positive news, the Census Bureau said new home sales increased by 11.1% from February’s record low. The National Association of Realtors said pending home sales were 5.1% better in March than in February.

STOCKS FINISH APRIL WITH A FLOURISH
Stocks took their cues from earnings last week, and earnings were mostly strong. The weekly performance numbers: DJIA, +2.44% to 12,810.54; S&P 500, +1.96% to 1,363.60; NASDAQ, +1.89% to 2,873.54. The DJIA rose 3.98% in April.

 

My Attorney Made Me Include This:
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