SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Pastimes : Clown-Free Zone... sorry, no clowns allowed -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: AllansAlias who wrote (72818)2/28/2001 8:40:43 AM
From: limtex  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 436258
 
AA - OK. But there is a Fed and it has a policy. It has the power to change the policy and to do what it can to prevent a meltdown of the economy.

I haven't seen very much of a committed attempt to stop an economic meltdown.

Best regards,

L



To: AllansAlias who wrote (72818)2/28/2001 8:41:18 AM
From: UnBelievable  Respond to of 436258
 
US GDP-OVERVIEW
Futures World News - February 28, 2001 08:30

--US Q4 GDP at +1.1% revised from +1.4%
--US Q4 real final sales revised to +1.5% vs +1.6%
--US Q4 final sales to domestic buyers unrevised at +2.1%
--US net inventories subtract 0.5 pt; revised from -0.2 pt
--US Q4 consumer spending revised to +2.8% vs +2.9%
--US Q4 government spending revised to +2.7% vs +2.9%
--US net exports subtracted unrevised 0.6 point from GDP
--US Q4 capital spending at -0.6% revised vs -1.5%
--US Q4 GDP PCE price index revised to +1.9% vs +2.2%
--US Q4 core GDP PCE price index revised to +1.6% from +2.0%
--Q4 GDP price deflator revised to +1.9% from +2.1%
--US Q4 GDP growth lowest since +0.8% in Q2 1995

By Andrew Williams, BridgeNews
Washington--Feb. 28--A reduction in inventory investment left growth
in U.S. gross domestic product at an annual rate of just 1.1% in the
fourth quarter, three tenths of a percentage point beneath the earlier
government estimate. The revised GDP figure marks the slowest U.S.
economic growth since the second quarter 1995 and is only half the 2.2%
growth rate in the third quarter. Analysts were expecting fourth quarter
growth to be revised to 1.0%.
* * *
The U.S. Department of Commerce attributed the revision in
fourth-quarter GDP to a downward revision in inventory investment "mainly
reflecting newly available...inventory data for December and revised data
for November."
Real final sales--gross domestic product excluding inventory
investment--grew at a revised 1.5% rate in the fourth quarter, previously
reported up 1.6%. Real final sales to domestic purchasers grew at an
unrevised 2.1% pace.
The report contained some good news regarding inflation: the GDP price
deflator rose at a 1.9% pace in the fourth quarter, previously reported up
2.1%. Similarly, the consumer spending price index rose at a 1.9% pace,
versus the 2.2% reported previously, while the core consumer spending
price index was up 1.6% versus the previous 2.0% rise.

INVENTORIES, SPENDING AND TRADE DETAILS
--Total inventories, subtracted a revised 0.5 percentage point from
GDP, previously reported as reducing growth by just 0.2 percentage point.
--Consumer spending, which accounts for around two-thirds of output,
rose at an revised annual rate of 2.8%, after being reported up 2.9% in
the advance report.
--Government spending rose a revised 2.7%, compared with 2.9% rise
when last reported. Federal government spending rose 3.7%, compared with
the 4.6% increase previously reported, as defense spending was revised
downward.
--Capital spending, the hallmark of the economic boom, fell only
0.6%--compared with the 1.5% decline reported last month. Business
spending on equipment and software fell at an annual rate of 3.5%, less
severe than the 4.7% drop previously reported.
--Net exports of goods and services subtracted an unrevised 0.6
percentage point from GDP growth. "Both imports and exports of goods and
services were revised down, mainly reflecting...newly available...data on
shipments for December, revised shipments data for November and newly
available aircraft imports data for December," Commerce said.

WHAT WAS EXPECTED
The BridgeNews survey of economists' estimates for the revised GDP
figure ranged from up 0.6% to up 1.4%, while estimates for the price
deflator range from 2.1% to 2.2%. The final sales projections ranged from
up 1.3% to up _ 1.9%. End



To: AllansAlias who wrote (72818)2/28/2001 8:45:09 AM
From: Terry Whitman  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 436258
 
Wow AA. You guys are getting way too literate over here. You could have saved a lot of effort with a simple-
...GFY
<g>

Who's up for chasing some charts? securitytrader.com^NDX&ChartID=20047&ChartType=D