skip to main
|
skip to sidebar
work
Friday, October 31, 2008
Consumers have thrown in the towel
--Spending by US consumers dropped more than forecast in Sep, -0.3% drop, after being flat in Aug and July. --Major drivers of less consumption are durable (auto, furniture), -32.8 and nondurable consumption(clothing, drining etc), 18.3%
No comments:
Post a Comment
Newer Post
Older Post
Home
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Blog Archive
►
2020
(1)
►
January
(1)
►
2019
(3)
►
December
(1)
►
August
(2)
►
2018
(1)
►
June
(1)
►
2017
(7)
►
December
(2)
►
November
(1)
►
April
(1)
►
January
(3)
►
2016
(13)
►
December
(1)
►
November
(2)
►
April
(6)
►
March
(2)
►
January
(2)
►
2015
(68)
►
September
(2)
►
August
(3)
►
July
(5)
►
June
(11)
►
May
(2)
►
April
(10)
►
March
(10)
►
February
(6)
►
January
(19)
►
2014
(86)
►
December
(6)
►
November
(4)
►
October
(4)
►
September
(2)
►
August
(6)
►
July
(15)
►
June
(8)
►
May
(6)
►
April
(1)
►
March
(17)
►
February
(8)
►
January
(9)
►
2013
(81)
►
November
(5)
►
October
(1)
►
September
(7)
►
August
(2)
►
July
(5)
►
June
(13)
►
May
(7)
►
April
(9)
►
March
(6)
►
February
(12)
►
January
(14)
►
2012
(40)
►
December
(4)
►
November
(4)
►
October
(8)
►
September
(3)
►
August
(7)
►
July
(1)
►
May
(1)
►
April
(1)
►
March
(4)
►
February
(2)
►
January
(5)
►
2011
(210)
►
December
(1)
►
November
(2)
►
September
(2)
►
August
(7)
►
July
(29)
►
June
(27)
►
May
(20)
►
April
(28)
►
March
(37)
►
February
(27)
►
January
(30)
►
2010
(440)
►
December
(24)
►
November
(25)
►
October
(42)
►
September
(28)
►
August
(35)
►
July
(60)
►
June
(54)
►
May
(35)
►
April
(29)
►
March
(38)
►
February
(41)
►
January
(29)
►
2009
(1185)
►
December
(56)
►
November
(48)
►
October
(52)
►
September
(71)
►
August
(62)
►
July
(91)
►
June
(101)
►
May
(143)
►
April
(146)
►
March
(160)
►
February
(120)
►
January
(135)
▼
2008
(869)
►
December
(91)
►
November
(84)
▼
October
(102)
market outlook as of 11/01/2008
"20% high-yield defaults? Don't underestimate the ...
Consumers have thrown in the towel
Accounting Change Lifts Deutsche Bank
Hospitals could be forced to buy back $8bn of debt
Securities-Lending Sector Feels Credit-Crisis Squeeze
Japan is the Victim of Collateral damage - ECO
FOMC Oct 29th
Credit Crisis is hruting Asian Trades
Iceland's deperate move to defend its currency
Barclays Capital Loan Sale Finds Few Buyers
Economists Search for End of Woes - WSJ
China cuts interest rate to 6.66%
The pendulum swings towards regulation - Lawrence ...
Austria abandons its bond offering - FT
back to rudiment - barter trade - FT
South Korea - Second time around
Who's next? Easter Europe is at Risk - ECO
Emerging Market Into the Storm - ECO
A taxonomy of trouble
The incredible shrinking funds
What is Leveraged Finance?
Dubai Real Property Bubble
世界感受中国经济放缓之痛
Credit Crunch Rocks Bain, as Funds Fall Up to 50%
中国政府降低购房税赋提振楼市
中国力保房地产业
Foreclosure Filings Rose 71% in Third Quarter as P...
Argentina Makes Grab for Pensions Amid Crisis - WS...
Fed Sets Up New Program to Buy Money-Fund Assets (...
Argentine Bonds, Stocks Plunge on Pension Takeover...
Argentina presses ahead with bond offer - FT
中国汽油价格超过美国,引发政策辩论
中国经济增长大幅放缓
Against the Odds, Financial Crisis Helps Stimulate...
汽车金融将成北美下一场“次贷危机”?
经济学家献策中国“避险”之道
截至8月底商品房空置面积达1.3亿平方米
market outlook as of 10/19/2008
On Wall Street: Overcoming the herd instinct - FT
Capitalism at bay - ECO
Threat of Deflatoin Looms - WSJ
Fideility Mutual Funds Lag Behind
Hitch Emerges in U.S. Bank Rescue
Lessons from a “lost decade” - ECO
Lessons from Japan's Malaise - Bill Emmolt
The Economist debate series: Financial crisis - Pr...
TrimTabs Investment Research
'Armageddon' Prices Fail to Lure Buyers Amid Selli...
Oversupply drives ‘90s cycle, but it’s easy credit...
End of the Office Party Is Coming - WSJ
'DIP' Loans Are Scarce, Complicating Bankruptcies ...
Sovereign Wealth Returns from Sidelines
For Fast Cash, Firms Tap Revolving Loans
Crisis Reverberates in Credit, Stock Markets - WSJ
Armageddon fears ease, but lending needs to begin ...
美国将调整十年
Highland Shuts Funds Amid 'Unprecedented' Disrupti...
Hedge Funds Performance for Q3 08
Housing Bubble Bursts in London
Bernanke's defense to let Lehman Fail
US Retail Sales Slump 1.2%, most in three years an...
Major Components of the U.S. Bank Initiative
Fed flooed financial system with unlimited dollars
Europe Raises Stakes in Bank Bailout Race
When fortune frowned - Economist print edition
Banks on the edge - Bloomberg Market Magzine
JC Flower - the first Private Equity fund launche...
Why the settlment of Leh CDS might not cause upheaval
GM Had Talks With Chrysler
Corporate bonds market is reeling too
market outlook as of 10/11/2008
European Banks look precarious - Nakedcapitalism
专访蒙代尔:金融危机最困难的时候已经过去 10月3日
市场还没有到最坏的时候 - 肇越
Another sign of market panic - Agency MBS yields ...
Why GSEs subordinated debt is auctioned higher tha...
China's rate cut - FT Lex
pros and cons of direct capital injection
STT ties more with Treasury
Lehman CDS Settlement: payout of 91.375
AIG Increases Borrowings While Racing to Sell Assets
How a Dublin Firm Roils Money Market
Fed, ECB, Central Banks Cut Rates in Coordinated Move
Global financial crisis: How long? How deep - Stij...
Overnight CP drops
BAC Q3 08
US money market funds shun investors - FT
Caution and lack of experience limited the extent ...
Now comes the hard part: raising the money to pay ...
Fed Doubled Its Auctions of Cash to Banks
Germany followed suit to guarantee savings
Fleeing Money Market Funds in Setp 08 was not prec...
market outlook as of 10/05/2008
The long march backwards - Economist
What caused Fannie's Doom - failed economic policy...
The battle of hope and experience - Economist
The need to keep an eye on liquidity and its movem...
World on the edge
Sigma collapse ends shadow bank project
►
September
(97)
►
August
(45)
►
July
(49)
►
June
(32)
►
May
(33)
►
April
(74)
►
March
(121)
►
February
(53)
►
January
(88)
►
2007
(568)
►
December
(67)
►
November
(67)
►
October
(53)
►
September
(35)
►
August
(89)
►
July
(125)
►
June
(73)
►
May
(8)
►
April
(26)
►
March
(24)
►
February
(1)
About Me
minuteman
View my complete profile
No comments:
Post a Comment