Bill Losey’s Weekly Economic Update for February 8, 2010Jobless rate falls to 9.7%. The January statistic from the Labor Department was encouraging – a 0.3% drop from December. Bizarrely, there was no job growth even with that sizable decline – payrolls slimmed by about 20,000 positions last month. Revised federal figures showed a gain of 64,000 jobs for November and a loss of 150,000 in December. ISM index hits 5½-year high. The Institute for Supply Management’s manufacturing index rose to 58.4 in January, a peak unseen since August 2004. Economists surveyed by Reuters thought it would come in at 55.5. As for ISM’s service sector gauge, it read 50.5 for January, showing growth. Spending, wages & savings rate rise. The Bureau of Economic Analysis said that consumer spending went up 0.2% in December. Wages rose 0.4% (the sixth straight monthly increase) and the personal savings rate went north to 4.8%. Factory orders up 1.0%. So indicates December data from the Commerce Department. This was the eighth monthly gain in the last nine. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast an 0.5% adavance. Wild week takes stocks a bit lower. After two triple-digit rallies and a major Thursday selloff triggered by sovereign debt concerns, the Dow pulled out of a descent and pulled off a 10-point gain on Friday, ending the week above 10,000. The S&P 500 closed Friday at 1,066.19, and was down 0.79% for the week. The NASDAQ wrapped up Friday at 2,141.12, down 0.29% last week. The Dow’s weekly loss was 0.55%, leaving it at 10,012.23. ![]() |
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