Time to quantify

Email this post Print this post
By Peter Boockvar - March 29th, 2011, 7:20AM

Beginning today with the March Conference Board Consumer Confidence figure (key employment questions included), economic data will start to reflect the late Feb spike in oil prices and the human and economic reverberations of the March 11th Japanese earthquake so we can thus start the process of better quantifying the impacts. Specifically with gasoline prices and its effect on consumer spending, AAA said the average gallon yesterday hit $3.59, the most since Oct ’08 and is just .52 from the record high in July ’08 as we are just a few months from the beginning of the summer driving season. Since the Libya unrest began in earnest, prices are up .40 which equates to about $56b of extra gasoline spending annualized. In Europe, elevated inflation data out of Germany has likely clinched a rate hike next week from the ECB and the German Finance Minister said Portugal will most likely get a bailout in June when their new government is in place.

Comments

Please use the comments to demonstrate your own ignorance, unfamiliarity with empirical data, ability to repeat discredited memes, and lack of respect for scientific knowledge. Also, be sure to create straw men and argue against things I have neither said nor even implied. Any irrelevancies you can mention will also be appreciated. Lastly, kindly forgo all civility in your discourse . . . you are, after all, anonymous.

One Response to “Time to quantify”

  1. JimmyDean Says:

    Chicago PMI Feb: 71.2, Mar expectations: 70
    ISM Manu Feb: 61.4, Mar expectations: 61
    ISM Svcs Feb: 59.7, Mar expectations: 60

    Hard to see how these don’t miss.

48 queries. 0.342 seconds.