Free Stock Market Education Training Videos
Stock Futures
Stocks
Index Videos
Featured Trading Videos
Market Commentary
Options
Predictions
Stock Market Trading Education
ETF
Day Trading Software
Economy
Disclosure
Day Trading
Technical Analysis
Trading Stocks
Volatility
Online Trading Platform Software
Videos
Mario Marciano Is The Real Deal
StockMarketFunding Review: SMF uses the latest market analysis available to buy and sell like the pr
StockMarketFunding.com Review New Free Trial MMT Ken 37K Trading Profits
How Market Makers Think
Investment Education Review Trading With Professionals
Learn Stock Market Investing
Mario Marciano SUPER TRADER
Outstanding Trading Platform
Stock Market Degree in Trading Exposed in 5 days
Stock Market Trading Education Reviews The TRUTH must be known
StockMarketFunding.com Reviews Video Testimonial of Stock Market Funding
The Best Investment Education
Trading Education
2012 Global Economic Recession & Banking Crisis
Double Dip Recession Analysis
Treasury Bubble Bond Bubble U.S. GDP Downgraded by SMF Slower Growth Higher Taxes
Home
Videos
Options Trading
Reviews
PodCast
Stock Radio
Stock Trading School
Trader Bonus
Credit Services
Seminars
Signup
Live chat software
Technical Analysis Free Video Ebook Sign Up
Premier Trading Videos Sign Up
International Stock Trading Sign Up
SMF Services
Earnings
Events Calendar
Online Trading Community
SMF Blogs
Live Training Room
Technical Analysis Training
Fundamental Analysis Training
Economic Analysis Training
Direct Access Trading
Coaching Programs
Mentoring Programs
Financial News
SMF Blogs
>
Economic Analysis
>
April 2009
>
Consumer prices dip unexpectedly in March
Consumer prices dip unexpectedly in March
Consumer prices dipped unexpectedly in March, leaving inflation over the past year falling at the fastest clip in more than a half-century. The recession is expected to keep a lid on inflation as widespread layoffs dampen wage pressures and weak demand keeps companies from raising prices.
The Labor Department said Wednesday that consumer prices edged down 0.1 percent last month as a drop in energy prices offset the biggest rise in tobacco prices in more than a decade. It was a better performance than the 0.1 percent rise in the Consumer Price Index that economists had expected.
Over the past 12 months, consumer prices have fallen 0.4 percent, the first 12-month decline since a similar drop for the year ending in August 1955. Meanwhile, the Federal Reserve said Wednesday that production at the nation's factories, mines and utilities dropped a seasonally adjusted 1.5 percent in March, the fifth straight monthly decline.
Watch
options analysis video
course lessons!
That matched February's drop and was worse than the 1 percent dip analysts expected. Factories and mines are increasingly idle, as the total industrial capacity utilization rate fell to 69.3 percent from 70.3 percent, the lowest on records dating to 1967, the Fed said.
Core inflation, which excludes energy and food, rose 0.2 percent last month, matching the gains of the past three months. It was slightly higher than the 0.1 percent rise economists expected. Over the past 12 months, core inflation has risen 1.8 percent.
While some economists have expressed fears the recession could spawn a destabilizing period of falling prices, other analysts point to the rise in core inflation as evidence that deflation remains only a distant threat.
In fact, some economists worry that all of the moves the Federal Reserve has made to fight the recession and the worst financial crisis in 70 years could be sowing the seeds for inflation troubles down the road. In a speech Tuesday, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke repeated assurances that the central bank is always mindful of the threats of inflation and is prepared to remove the monetary stimulus it has provided once the economy shows signs of stabilizing.
On Wall Street, stocks were mixed as investors worried about the latest signs that the economy has a long way to go before stabilizing and Intel Corp.'s decision not to provide detailed forecasts for future quarters.
The Dow Jones industrial average added about 15 points in early trading, while broader indices slipped. For March, energy prices fell 3 percent, reversing a 3.3 percent jump in February. Gasoline prices fell 4 percent last month, home heating oil plunged 8.5 percent and natural gas slid 4.8 percent. Food costs dropped 0.1 percent in March. Dairy products led the decline with a drop of 2.4 percent.
More than half of the increase in costs outside of food and energy came from an 11 percent rise in tobacco prices, the biggest one-month surge in that category since December 1988. New car prices also rose in March by 0.6 percent, but airline fares declined 2.3 percent. Clothing costs, which had jumped in February by the largest amount in nearly two decades, posted a 0.2 percent drop in March.
The nation has not had a prolonged bout of deflation since the Great Depression of the 1930s, although Japan suffered through a deflationary period during the 1990s after a real estate bubble burst there.
The 0.1 percent dip in consumer prices followed a report Tuesday that inflation at the wholesale level fell 1.2 percent last month, a decline also heavily influenced by a plunge in energy prices. Only last summer, Fed officials worried that a surge in energy costs could spread to other areas and boost inflation to unacceptable levels. But after the financial crisis struck in the fall, the central bank switched signals and is aggressively fighting to keep the economy from falling into an even deeper recession. Job cuts across the economy are expected to keep the lid on wage demands and overall inflation.
The government last week reported that the unemployment rate shot up to 8.5 percent in March as businesses cut a net total of 663,000 jobs. More layoffs were announced this week. UBS AG, Switzerland's largest bank, said it expects a first-quarter loss of about $1.75 billion and will cut 8,700 jobs worldwide by the end of next year. ArcelorMittal SA, the world's largest steel maker, said it will idle a plant in Indiana and lay off about 400 workers. Credit card company Discover Financial Services said it plans to cut 500 jobs next month, or 4 percent of its work force.
Watch our
Trading Videos
!
Posted:
4/15/2009 10:21:50 AM
by
Global Administrator
| with
0 comments
Comments
There are no comments on this post.
My favorite websites
Recent posts
Stock Market Forecast Stock Market Correction Coming Dow Jones S&P 500 Nasdaq Indexes
Jobless Claims Surge by 51,000 Jobs
New Technical Analysis Videos for Today
NASDAQ 100 (NDX, QQQQ) Weak & Strong Stocks
Google Stock Price Upgraded to $800 at Canaccord Genuity (Nasdaq: GOOG)
Syndication
Post archive
January 2011(
2
)
August 2010(
4
)
July 2010(
4
)
June 2010(
1
)
May 2010(
4
)
April 2010(
1
)
February 2010(
1
)
October 2009(
1
)
September 2009(
1
)
August 2009(
4
)
July 2009(
1
)
June 2009(
7
)
May 2009(
37
)
April 2009(
27
)
March 2009(
95
)
February 2009(
44
)
January 2009(
42
)
December 2008(
70
)
November 2008(
46
)
October 2008(
151
)
September 2008(
119
)
August 2008(
16
)