Monday, December 11, 2006

Economic Highlights for the Week Ending December 8, 2006


Monday, December 4th
The NAR's pending home sales index fell 1.7% in October after a 1.1% drop in September. The index measures the number of signed contracts and is considered a leading indicator of existing home sales. Recent index declines suggest that after rebounding in October, existing home sales will be softer in November and December.
Weaker than expected economic conditions heading into the fourth quarter combined with other signals such as a weaker dollar and reduction in the yield curve inversion have increased rate cut expectations. While the Fed is expected to remain on hold when they meet next week chances have increased to 25% for a rate cut at the end of January with fed funds futures traders pricing in roughly a 70% chance of easing following the conclusion of the March meeting.
Tuesday, December 5th
The ISM non-manufacturing index increased to 58.9% in November from 57.1% in October. Expectations were for a small decline to a reading of 56.0%. The level of the index suggests that the service producing sectors of the economy are expanding nicely and are expected to extend gains through the holiday season. Some deceleration in activity is expected post-holidays.
Productivity was upwardly revised to show a 0.2% rate of growth in the third quarter rather than a flat reading in the preliminary estimate. Even with the revision, growth in productivity was slower than expected. Also, longer term growth is down as well with productivity gaining just 1.4% over the past year compared to an average yearly gain of 3.1% since 2000. Inflation news was good as unit labor costs were downwardly revised to 2.3% in Q3 vs. 3.8% originally.
Wednesday, December 6th
The MBA mortgage applications index jumped 8.1% to 647.6% for the week that ended December 1. The purchase index was up 4.9% on the week while the refinance index surged 13.9%. The gain in the purchase index reflects more stable home buying activity while the gain in the refinance index is mostly attributable to homeowners converting their adjustable rate mortgages and locking in fixed rates.
Thursday, December 7th
Consumer credit declined $1.2 billion in October and is growing at a 4.2% rate over the past year. The decline was led by the non-revolving credit category which fell by $4.2 billion due to softer vehicle sales during the month. Revolving credit outstanding increased $2.9 billion in October. Cash out refinancing activity has limited consumer credit growth. Strong refinancing activity has been driven lately by homeowners, facing resets on their adjustable rate mortgages are looking to lock in fixed rates.
Jobless claims tumbled 34k to 324k for the week that ended December 2. This week's decline almost totally reverses last week's gain. Claims data tends to be volatile during the holidays and severe winter weather. Nevertheless, the level of claims is consistent with fairly tight labor market conditions and modest monthly payroll gains.
Mortgage rates slipped again this week on continued signs of slowing in the housing market and weakness in the manufacturing sector. 30-year fixed rate mortgages averaged 6.11% this week compared to 6.14% last week according to Freddie Mac's mortgage market survey. Economists at Freddie Mac project that the correction in the housing market is about two-thirds of the way through and with conditions stabilizing around mid-2007.
Friday, December 8th
The economy created 132,000 new jobs in November, higher than expectations for a gain of 110,000. Moreover, revisions in the prior two months resulted in a net 42,000 more jobs. Average hourly earnings rose 0.2% on the month, less than expected, while the average workweek remained unchanged at 33.9 hours. The unemployment rate climbed 0.1% to 4.5% of the workforce. Labor market strength was apparent but not so robust as to rekindle rate hike fears.
Stock Market Close for the Week
Index Latest A Week Ago Change
DJIA 12307.49 12194.13 +113.36 or +0.93%
NASDAQ 2437.36 2413.21 +24.15 or +1.00%
WEEK IN ADVANCE
Unanimous expectations for steady monetary policy at the FOMC meeting Tuesday will put most of the attention on the statement following the meeting, as usual. Other data this week including retail sales, the consumer price index and industrial production will garner their share of attention as well and help to refine the economic and interest rate outlook going forward.

Sources: IBC' s Money Fund Report; Bank Rate Monitor; Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco

No comments: