The Tiger

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I am a tiger in the game of stock trading. I relentlessly looking for candidates to trade. When it is an inflection point. You would see i am actively participate in the game.

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Economy contracting at slower pace, no bottom yet

New economic reports on construction spending, manufacturing and pending home sales suggest the recession may be moving closer to a bottom.
But most analysts think the low point is still months away, with more bad news likely before the economy stabilizes and begins to rebound.

"I think the best that can be said right now is that the pace of decline has slowed, but we are still heading down," said David Wyss, chief economist at Standard & Poor's in New York. "Any recovery is still a work in progress."

Wyss predicted that the recession, already the longest in a quarter-century, will last until September. But he said the decline in the gross domestic product in the current April-June quarter will probably be just half the 6.3 percent drop that was recorded in the final three months of last year.

The manufacturing report, based on a poll of the Tempe, Ariz.-based trade group of purchasing executives, covers indicators including new orders, production, employment, inventories and prices. None of the 18 manufacturing industries grew in March, and new jobs are unlikely before next year.

Inventories will need at least three more months to fall to healthy levels. When that happens, new orders could rebound "and then it's a number of months before you see any improvement in employment," said Norbert Ore, chair of the ISM manufacturing survey committee.

"It's going to be long, and it's going to be slow," Ore said.

The Commerce Department report showed nonresidential construction rose 0.3 percent in February. That was a slight rebound after a 4.3 percent drop in January that had been the biggest decline in 15 years.

With the financial sector facing its worst crisis in seven decades, banks have tightened their loan standards, making it harder to get financing for shopping centers and other commercial projects.

Analysts are forecasting that the commercial real estate industry is poised to fall into the worst crisis since the last great property bust of the early 1990s. Delinquency rates on loans for hotels, offices, retail and industrial buildings have risen sharply in recent months and are likely to soar through the end of 2010 as companies lay off workers, downsize or close.

Construction spending by the government showed a 0.8 percent increase in February after two months of declines. All the changes left total construction spending at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $967.5 billion in February, the slowest pace since March 2004.

source from yahoo finance

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