Saturday, 3 September 2011

Global economy


Global Recession, Right Here, Right Now




It's time to stop debating whether or not the US or Europe is headed into recession. The facts show the entire global economy is in recession. 

Global Recession Supporting Data-Points 

Euro zone’s manufacturing purchasing managers’ index fell to a two-year low of 49.0 in August, down from a preliminary reading of 49.7.

PMI’s contractions in Ireland, France, Italy, Spain and Greece.

Germany’s manufacturing PMI slowed to its lowest level since September 2009, slumping to 50.9, well below an initial estimate of 52.0. 

US Manufacturing ISM ex-inventory Growth in contraction 

Japan's PMI fell at three-month low

PMI Readings in Switzerland, Sweden Drop

British manufacturing PMI falls 49, a 26-month low, in contraction 

Germany private consumption fell for first time since Q4 2009, Manufacturing growth slowest in 23 months

Japan Capital Spending Plummets 7.8% In Q2, Expectations were 1% Increase 

US Construction Declines 3.5% vs. Same period in 2010 

China exports to US contract, PMI barely above contraction 

Container traffic at Port of Long Beach drops 3.17% smack in face of normal Christmas season ramp-up 

Canada GDP unexpectedly declines led by a 2.1% drop in exports
Brazil Unexpectedly cuts interest rates .5% to combat recession.62 of 62 Analysts Miss Call on rate cut 

Taiwan's PMI dropped to 45.2 in August, the lowest reading since January 2009 

German economy grew just 0.1 percent in the second quarter 

Switzerland, economy grew at its slowest pace since 2009, as a record strong Swiss franc also bites into exports. 

Retail Giant in Australia Warns of Massive Price Deflation and Falling Sales, "Hardest Christmas in Retailer Lives" Coming Up 

US Zero Jobs Growth, Unemployment Rate Flat at 9.1%; Charts, Graphs, Details  

Ten Things to Remember 

1. Prior stimulus in the US is dead, having run its full course

2. There is no incentive in the US Congress for more stimulus

3. Austerity measures have yet to hit Italy and France

4. Austerity measures will continue to bite Spain, Greece, Ireland

5. Germany export machine will die without the rest of Europe

6. QE3 will fail much sooner than QE2 as interest rates already extremely accommodating 

7. Gold may respond well to competitive currency devaluation schemes

8. The Eurozone is highly likely to breakup although timing is unknown

9. Global equities and commodities are priced for perfection.

10. Perfection is not happening.


References have been omitted .  For full article GO HERE



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