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To: Zardoz who wrote (25810)1/10/1999 7:06:00 PM
From: goldsnow  Respond to of 116791
 
Will the real economy please stand up?
This week's big data: Retail sales, production, inflation

By Rex Nutting, CBS MarketWatch
Last Update: 5:26 PM ET Jan 8, 1999
Washington schedule

WASHINGTON (CBS.MW) -- Will the real economy please stand up?

Is it the robust economy that created 378,000 jobs in December? Or is it
the economy that cost 678,000 workers their jobs at major corporations?
Could it be the economy of strong consumer spending, or the economy of
sagging industrial strength?

Both economies are probably real. "We
have a real dichotomy between the
manufacturing and trade sectors versus the
services and spending side," said Joe
Abate, economist at Lehman Brothers.

In the coming week, investors will have
fresh data on the two faces of the
economy, plus news on a story that's
dropped off the front-page: inflation.

Retail sales

The big numbers come on Thursday and
Friday. First, the Commerce Department
will release its retail sales numbers for
December. The big retail chains and
automakers have already reported some
pretty stellar results from the holiday
season.

"Retail sales will be very strong," said
Mickey Levy, chief economist at
NationsBanc Montgomery Securities. He said sales probably grew 0.6 in
December. The boom in consumer spending will last as long as personal
wealth is growing, Levy said.

Abate said retail spending probably rose 0.7 percent in December with a
0.4 percent gain in sales excluding autos.

"People are spending as if there's no tomorrow," Abate said. But that'll
change as the slowdown in manufacturing spreads to other sectors.

Industrial production

The week's second big report comes Friday when
the Federal Reserve will report on the healthy of
the industrial economy. Economists are expecting a
modest gain in output, given the increase in hours
worked reported by the Labor Department. Levy
is looking for a 0.5 percent gain in production,
while Abate predicts a 0.4 percent increase.

Levy said production will now begin to recover
after months of shocks to the system from weak
foreign demand, an inventory overhang and a
crippling autoworkers strike. "The worst of the
decline has occurred," Levy said, as domestic
demand makes up for weakness overseas.

Abate isn't so sure the factory sector has hit
bottom. He sees growth slowing to 1 percent in the
first three quarters of 1999. The Fed won't make a
move to ease the slump until May, he said.

Levy said the Fed has already gone too far.

"The biggest risk on the domestic side is too much liquidity," Levy said.
The economy is awash with cash, which is propping up both real spending
and the record-setting performance in the stock market.

Inflation

All that money hasn't translated into higher prices, yet. Levy said we could
"see creeping price pressures later in the year." But Abate said firms just
don't have the power to raise prices. "Consumers have become used to
shopping around and getting the best price," Abate said.

The Labor Department will report on both the consumer and producer
price indexes in the coming week. That big jump in cigarette prices is
expected to show up in both numbers, meaning investors will have to
"weed out" tobacco prices from the inflation numbers, he joked.

Abate said he's looking for the "smokeless core" of both indexes to rise
about 0.1 percent or 0.2 percent, in-line with recent increases in the
inflation gauges. Levy said the PPI excluding tobacco likely fell 0.1
percent because of much-lower energy price.
cbs.marketwatch.com