The S&P 500 posted an almost 3 percent gain this week, bolstered by improvement in the employment situation. Stocks moved sharply higher today after the latest jobs report showed that the labor market shed just 36,000 jobs in February. Manufacturing jobs actually increased by 1,000, far better than the 15,000 jobs economists had expected the economy to shed. Consensus had pegged overall job losses at 68,000. Despite this improvement, the unemployment rate remained unchanged at 9.7 percent.
But some economists question the validity of the jobs report, wondering if the severe snows that hammered the Northeast might have skewed the numbers; many state employment offices were closed due to inclement weather.
Average hourly earnings also grew modestly, up 0.1 percent from the prior month and 1.9 percent from a year ago, fostering hope that personal incomes will increase in February after a 0.1 percent gain in January.
Hours worked fell slightly, down to 33.8 from 33.9, largely due to productivity enhancement. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that nonfarm productivity rose 6.9 percent in the fourth quarter of last year, reducing labor costs by 5.9 percent.
The weekly jobs number ostensibly reinforced this improvement; initial claims declined from 498,000 to 469,000, while continuing claims declined from an upwardly revised 6.634 million to 4.5 million.
Real estate news wasn’t nearly as positive this week. The National Association of Realtors reported that pending home sales nosedived 7.6 percent on a month-over-month basis in January. The trade group blames the severe winter weather that gripped much of the nation that month. Others point to the dip in sales as a sign that the real estate recovery remains on shaky ground and suggest that it the high unemployment rate and stricter lending standards are making it difficult to attract buyers. Nevertheless, January sales were up 8.8 percent from a year ago.
A 0.6 percent decline in construction spending is also widely attributed to adverse weather conditions.
Race to the Summit
How best to ride this market? Join me and my colleagues GS Early, Elliott Gue, Yiannis Mostrous, and Roger Conrad at the historic Hotel del Coronado for the 2010 Wealth Society Member Summit.
You’ll have the extraordinary opportunity to meet one-on-one with me, Elliott Gue, Yiannis Mostrous, Roger Conrad and GS Early and ask anything you want about how to keep and grow your nest egg.
We’ll give it to you straight: the brightest trends and our best recommendations, and anything else you might want to know about how to profit in 2010 and beyond.
Space and time limit us to 100 participants, so mark the date on your calendar: April 23-24, 2010, in San Diego, where they say it’s 72 and sunny every day of the year. You may find all details at www.InvestingSummit.com. Better yet, call 1-800-832-2330 (between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. EST Monday through Friday) or go online now to reserve your seat at the table.
Email to Friend
Print
Bookmark
Share
|

Editor: Global ETF Profits, Louis Rukeyser’s Mutual Funds and Louis Rukeyser's Wall Street
Research Editor: Personal Finance
Benjamin Shepherd, editor of Louis Rukeyser’s Mutual Funds and Louis Rukeyser’s Wall Street, focuses on time-tested mutual fund managers and investment strategies which have proven themselves in both bull and bear markets. He and his team spend hours every month discussing the state of the global economy and the markets with many of the best known and well-respected money managers in the industry. They then distill that wisdom and their own analysis into twelve pages of actionable advice geared towards generating returns while preserving capital for both mutual fund and stock investors. Mr. Shepherd is also associate editor of Personal Finance, one of the world’s most widely-read investment newsletters, contributing his knowledge of the fund industry to the newsletters ongoing commentary.
Sign up to receive a FREE copy of Mr. Shepherd's lastest FREE special report Top ETFs to Own Now!
View all articles by Benjamin Shepherd
|
SIGN UP for Stocks to Watch
|