Leading economic indicators rise in August

Yahoo! News: Leading economic indicators rise in August

Private research group's forecast of economic activity rises in August for 5th straight month.

NEW YORK (AP) — A private forecast of U.S. economic activity rose in August for the fifth straight month, the latest sign the recession has ended. The Conference's Board leading indicators point to an economy on solid ground early next year, though some analysts caution that a rising unemployment rate will restrain growth.

The Conference Board said Monday its index of leading indicators rose 0.6 percent in August. That follows a 0.9 percent gain in July revised up from 0.6 percent. Economists surveyed by Thomson Reuters had expected an 0.7 percent gain last month.

The indicators are designed to project economic activity in the next three to six months. The August results support many analysts' projections that the economy started growing again in the current July-September quarter and will continue to gain in the fourth quarter.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke last week said the recession was "very likely over."

The recession's end "is no longer a source of heated discussion … but whether or not the economy can keep grinding forward (and at what speed) is still a big question mark," Jennifer Lee, an economist at BMO Capital Markets, wrote in a note to clients Monday.

Some analysts worry that any current economic growth will falter as unemployment rises from the August rate of 9.7 percent to above 10 percent. But the leading indicators provided a rosier outlook for next year, said Bank of America Merrill Lynch analyst Ethan Harris.

"This is good news, no question about it," he said. "The data's more of an argument against the so-called double dip. They're all looking like next year's going to be a solid growth year." …


Comments

3 responses to “Leading economic indicators rise in August”

  1. William Apel Avatar
    William Apel

    Michael,
    I got this from an economics blog back in February:
    “A paraphrase of a quote from an economist (can’t remember which one) heard at a recent conference:
    ‘Everyone can explain why the dollar rose or fell yesterday. No one can predict what it will do tomorrow.’”

  2. Before you become to critical just remember that economists have predicted nine of the last five recessions. 🙂

  3. William Apel Avatar
    William Apel

    Re: 9 in the last 5
    I always thought that it was those who engage in Technical Analysis – not just economists in general.
    But then there was always the way that Louis Ruykeser would sign off his show (usually after hearing a dozen reasons/forecasts) with something like “at least some of them will be wrong.”
    Shalom,
    Bill:-)

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