Bill Losey’s Weekly Economic Update for Nov. 22, 2010

NO RISE IN CORE CPI OR CORE PPI IN OCTOBER

Last month, the Consumer Price Index rose 0.2% with core CPI flat for the third month in a row. Core CPI has advanced at a crawl in the past 12 months: just 0.6% compared to a Federal Reserve annualized target of 2.0%. Producer prices rose 0.4% last month, duplicating their August and September increase. Yet core producer prices fell 0.6%.

HOUSING STARTS SLIP, MORTGAGE RATES JUMP

The Commerce Department announced an 11.7% slump in new residential construction starts for the month of October, and a 1.9% slip from year-ago levels. A drop in apartment and condo construction accounted for most of the October decline. Last week, Freddie Mac said that the average rate on a 30-year conventional home loan had jumped to 4.39% from 4.17% a week prior. The average rate for a 15-year FRM had increased to 3.76%, up from 3.57% in Freddie’s previous survey.

RETAIL SALES 7.3% BETTER THAN A YEAR AGO

Car buying drove a 1.2% gain in U.S. retail sales in October. In fact, the Census Bureau reported a 14.7% year-over-year increase in sales volume at car dealerships. The year-over-year gain in overall retail sales was 7.3%, and 13.5% for non-store retailers.

CONFERENCE BOARD INDEX UP 0.5%

The Conference Board’s index of leading economic indicators notched its second straight half-percent increase in October. This was also its fourth straight advance.

GM IPO TURNS THE WEEK AROUND

Thursday’s eagerly awaited initial public offering from General Motors sent the Dow on a triple-digit rally and turned a down week into a flat one. Here is how the three marquee indices performed last week: DJIA, +0.10% to 11,203.55; S&P 500, +0.04% to 1,199.73; NASDAQ, 0.00% to 2,518.12 (it actually fell .09 on the week).

 

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