| Key Indicator Summary - Shaky Earnings, Uncertain Consumers Rattle Markets |
| Written by Jonathan Dienhart | |
| 10.16.2009 | |
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Wall Although stocks continued to rally to begin the fourth quarter, all major indexes look to be headed lower today. The Dow Jones Industrial Index closed above the 10,000 level earlier in the week for the first time since the financial crisis hit last October, and after some muted glee at reaching the milestone again, has now retreated back to under those levels through mid-day trading. The broader S&P 500 index reached its highest close yesterday since October 3, 2008 but is still hitting resistance to top the 1,100 level; the S&P 500 index has not closed above those levels since last October. However, the S&P is still trading over 2% higher since the beginning of the month. The markets will continue to be driven by earnings announcements as they represent a key measure of the velocity of economic recovery. The National Association of Realtors reported positive news on the housing front at the beginning of the month. The realtor group’s Pending Home Sales Index rose for the seventh straight month in August. While encouraging, the fate of a housing market recovery is more than likely now in the hands of the broader economy. With persisting high unemployment and uncertain consumers, housing demand is not likely to substantially increase until there are more convincing signs we are in a true recovery phase. The Economy The consumer price index in September increased slightly driven by higher transportation and energy costs. The consumer price index in September increased 0.1% from August on a non-seasonally adjusted basis and increased 0.2% from the previous month on a seasonally-adjusted basis. The core-CPI, which excludes the food and energy portions that are seen by some as skewing the index by virtue of their volatility, increased 0.2% from August on a non-seasonally adjusted basis while also increasing 0.2% from the previous month on a seasonally-adjusted basis. On an unadjusted basis, headline CPI fell 1.3% from its year ago levels while core CPI increased 1.5% year-over-year in September. This is the seventh straight month that headline consumer prices have recorded a year-over-year decline. It will be important to keep an eye on inflation going forward due to rising crude prices and the massive government spending that has taken place to restore the economy.
The National Association of Realtor’s Pending Home Sales Index increased 6.4% to a reading of National average mortgage rates increased from the previous week to 4.92% in the latest Primary Mortgage Market Survey released weekly by Freddie Mac on October 15th. This is the first time mortgage rates have recorded a weekly gain since the end of August. It is the second straight week that mortgage rates have averaged less than 5.0% while remaining at historically low levels. In the week ending October 12th, the MBA’s seasonally-adjusted purchase index dropped 5.0% from the previous week and was down 7.32% compared to the same time last year. Purchase applications were coming off their highest levels since the beginning of the year in the previous week. Lower rates have spurred mortgage application activity over the past several weeks.
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