Rover's Weekly Market Brief — 3/2/2018

Indices

DJIA: 24,538.10 (-3.05%)

NASDAQ: 7,258.00 (-1.08%)

S&P 500: 2,691.00 (-2.05%)

Commodities

Gold: 1,322.80 (-0.56%)

Copper: 312.30 (-2.79%)

Crude Oil: 61.41 (-3.37%)

Economy


Following two consecutive monthly increases, a $8.6 billion (-10.0%) drop in orders for transportation equipment was a major component in January’s $9.2 billion (-3.7%) overall drop in new durable goods orders, for the largest decline in orders since a -6.8% drop in July 2017. Increases in orders for computers (+6.4%), communications equipment (+6.6%), fabricated metal products (+0.5%), and motor vehicles (+0.1%) were offset by declines for defense aircraft (-45.6%), civilian aircraft (-28.4%), capital goods (-5.1%), electrical equipment/appliances (-0.8%), and machinery (-0.4%). Excluding defense, orders were down -2.7%, and excluding transportation orders were down -0.3%. On a yearly basis, orders were up 8.9%, with gains in all areas other than computers (-2.9%), defense aircraft (-35.0%), and defense capital goods (-7.2%)

Strong consumer spending caused more of an increase in imports and draw down in inventory builds than originally estimated, resulting in a -0.1% downward revision in the second estimate of 2017 Q4 GDP to 2.5% and widening the drop from the previous quarter’s 3.2% rate. The import and inventory updates were offset by residential fixed investments (+13.0%), consumer spending (+3.8%), exports (+7.1%), nonresidential fixed investments (+6.6%), and government spending (+2.9%). On a yearly basis, GDP increased 2.3% in 2017 compared to 1.5% in 2016.

Personal income increased +0.4% in January, with after tax disposable personal income (DPI) up +0.9%, and inflation adjusted real DPI up +0.6%. Personal consumption expenditure (PCE) growth slowed to +0.2%, down from the +0.4% and +0.7% increases in the preceding two months, as some of the income growth helped fuel a +0.7% bump in the savings rate to +3.2%, its highest rate since +3.5% in August. Inflation adjusted real PCE spending fell -0.1%, with a +$4.8 billion increase in service spending somewhat offsetting a -$24.6 billion drop in durable goods spending that was led by a drop in new car sales. PCE inflation was up +0.4% (+1.7% Y/Y), with core PCE, which strips out energy and food and is the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation measure, up +0.3%, to an unchanged annual rate of +1.5%.

Upcoming Economic Reports:

Wednesday March 7 – International Trade

Friday March 9 – Employment Situation

Earnings Calendar:

 

Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday
Toyota Motor
(TM)
HDFC Bank
(HDB)
Costco
Wholesale
(COST)
Kroger
(KR)
GEA Group
(GEAGY)
ams
(AMSSY)
Nintendo Co
(NTDOY)
SMC
(SMCAY)
Dell-VMWare
Tracking
(DVMT)
American
Woodmark
(AMWD)



Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

We value your privacy and will not display or share your email address

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.




Top