U.S. consumer confidence and Canadian GDP results will be released on Tuesday. U.S. consumer confidence is expected to climb to 28.0 in March from its record low level of 25.0 in February. "Any lift from the March stock market rally will be offset by the downdraft from a rapidly deteriorating job...
In this shortened trading week, Tuesday will be a busy day with the release of Canadian retail sales, U.S. third quarter GDP and U.S. consumer confidence . Markets will receive the second print of U.S. GDP for the third quarter, which is expected to come in down to -0.5% from the previous reading of...
Consumer confidence for July and the S&P/Case-Shiller's home price index for May will be the main focus of Tuesday's economic events with no major macroeconomic releases expected for Canada. Across the Atlantic, market participants will also be looking out for preliminary results of German CPI for July...
The Conference Board's consumer confidence index for May fell more than expected to 57.2 in Tuesday's report, led by a 5.5-point decline in the present situation component. The previous month's reading of 62.3 was revised upwards to 62.8. The three-month average for consumer confidence is now at 62.0...
The Conference Board's consumer confidence index fell to 62.3 in April's report on Tuesday, confirming declines seen earlier in the month from other measures of consumer sentiment, yet coming in slightly higher than the consensus expectation of 62.0. The previous month's reading of 64.0 was revised upwards...
FREDDIE ISSUES JUNE ECONOMIC PROGNOSTICATION If you want to add a headache to your day's aggravation, you are invited to read the latest Economic Outlook report issued late Wednesday by Freddie Mac's Office of the Chief Economist. It isn't their fault, nobody seems to understand what is going on nationally...
Posted to
MND NewsWire
by
Glenn Setzer
on
Fri, Jun 10 2005
Filed under:
Filed under: mortgage rates, home prices, mortgage originations, new home sales, existing home sales, consumer confidence, gross domestic product, trade deficit, Freddie Mac economic report, GDP first quarter 2005, Freddy Mac, unemployment, stable inflation, low inflation, U.S. exports, labor costs, job creation