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Bad news: USA Jobs market getting worse

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smartrader
    04-Oct-2009 10:14  
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Improved revenue could boost US earnings
Sat, Oct 03, 2009
AFP


By Caroline Valetkevitch

NEW YORK, US - If the stock market bulls are right, U.S. third-quarter corporate earnings could show revenue kicked into gear after some disappointing numbers last quarter, sustaining the rally.

As the reporting period approaches, analysts said economic growth in the quarter could lift companies' sales in contrast to the previous quarter, when revenue lagged bottom-line earnings.

"The key is revenue. I think (it) will surprise. It will grow from the second quarter along with GDP, and I think that's what investors are going to focus on," said Jeff Kleintop, chief market strategist at LPL Financial in Boston.

Hopes the economy was stabilizing and an improved outlook for earnings helped propel the Standard & Poor's 500 Index up as much as 60 percent from March through last week, but analysts say an improvement in revenue is needed to sustain those gains.

Companies also should start issuing outlooks for next year, and those will be closely watched as well, analysts said.

The lack of revenue growth has come as consumers grapple with the highest jobless rate in 26 years and banks' reluctance to lend money, even though the second quarter was expected to mark the last one of declines in output for the U.S. economy since it fell into a recession at 2007's end.

Weak economic data, including Friday's Labor Department report showing far more job losses than expected in September, added this week to recent doubts about the recovery's strength.

"The third quarter is going to be very telling," said Howard Silverblatt, an analyst at Standard & Poor's in New York. "We need to see we are holding the path, going according to plan."

TURNAROUND TIME

The third quarter was a strong one for markets. Both the Dow Jones industrial average and the S&P 500 gained 15 percent from the previous quarter, thanks in large part to a boost in investors' optimism due to better-than-expected second-quarter earnings.

More than 70 percent of S&P 500 companies beat expectations in the quarter, well above the 61 percent average for a typical quarter, but analysts said it was mainly the result of heavy cost-cutting and not revenue growth.

The third-quarter earnings season will kick off with results from Alcoa Inc on Wednesday after the closing bell.

On Friday, stocks finished off a second straight week of losses, with some analysts predicting a further pullback. Despite those back-to-back weekly declines, the S&P 500 is still up 51 percent since its early March lows.

Based on the latest available earnings estimates, though, revenue, like income, should improve from the second quarter, though it will still be down year over year.

"We might start seeing some top-line growth in the third, and certainly in the fourth, quarter as in our view, the economy has turned and the recovery is well in place," said Henry Smith, chief investment officer of Haverford Trust Co. in Philadelphia.

Thomson Reuters' data shows S&P 500 third-quarter earnings declining 24.8 percent from a year ago, compared with the second-quarter's 27.3 percent drop.

Revenue is expected to fall 11.4 percent -- a big improvement from a drop of 14 percent in the second quarter.

"As of right now, the growth rates are improving for earnings and revenues," said John Butters, director of U.S. earnings for Thomson Reuters.

The financial sector is expected to show the highest growth rate of any S&P 500 sector, followed by consumer discretionaries, while materials should have the lowest earnings growth rate, Thomson Reuters data showed.

Along with Alcoa, other major companies set to report results next week are Costco Wholesale Corp., Family Dollar, Yum! Brands Inc and PepsiCo.

Along with a stronger economy, the falling dollar was also seen as providing a boost to corporate earnings.

Analysts said big technology companies like Microsoft Corp, whose software is used around the globe, stand to gain from the dollar's weakness
 
 
iPunter
    04-Oct-2009 09:53  
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And also our friend, Newmoon... 

with hi very handy Vix Index, etc... 

he was so right too... Smiley
 
 
iPunter
    04-Oct-2009 09:51  
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By the way, it's so very boring without Robert here...

wonder where he's gone to... hehehe... 

If only people had listened to him, they would not have lost so much in the meltdown... Smiley
 

 
iPunter
    04-Oct-2009 09:49  
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Watch the trickling trend...

it goes bit by bit unnoticed...

thus gradually bearable... until...  Smiley
 
 
des_khor
    04-Oct-2009 09:33  
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wah lau ah..... where got up everyday one... over react la.....
 
 
Hulumas
    03-Oct-2009 22:43  
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No problem, after all, it is still single digit not to worry.

lookcc      ( Date: 02-Oct-2009 22:21) Posted:

fty orders 4 aug expected up by 1.00% compared 2 last mth....but actual data is decrease of 0.8% compared 2 july...tch.

 

 
lookcc
    02-Oct-2009 22:21  
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fty orders 4 aug expected up by 1.00% compared 2 last mth....but actual data is decrease of 0.8% compared 2 july...tch.
 
 
nickyng
    02-Oct-2009 21:38  
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Bad news: Jobs market getting worse

More jobs were lost in September than expected and unemployment rate hits 26-year high of 9.8%.

 

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Employers cut more jobs from their payrolls in September and the unemployment rate hit another 26-year high, as the long-battered U.S. labor market took an unexpected turn for the worse, according to a government report Friday.

The Labor Department said there was a net loss of 263,000 jobs in the month, up from a revised loss of 201,000 jobs in August. Economists surveyed by Briefing.com had forecast losses would fall to 175,000 jobs.

This is only the second time this year that job losses rose from the previous month, as the labor market had shown slow but relatively steady improvement since a loss of 741,000 jobs in January.

September marked the 21st consecutive month that the number of workers on payrolls has shrunk, a period during which 7.2 million jobs have been lost.

Even though many economists, including those at the Federal Reserve, have said there are signs that the economy is growing once again, Friday's jobs report shows that job losses could continue well into the recovery, limiting the strength of any economic turnaround.

U.S. stock futures, which predict the direction of markets in early trading, fell sharply following the release of the jobs report.

The unemployment rate rose to 9.8% in September from 9.7% in August. That was in line with economists' forecasts, but the unemployment rate is now the highest since June 1983.

The average work week also fell to a record low of 33 hours, down from 33.1 hours in August. In addition, the number of workers who want full-time jobs who are only able to find part-time work rose to a record 9.2 million.

Counting these involuntary part-time workers and those without work who have stopped looking for jobs and are not counted in the unemployment rate, the so-called underemployment rate rose to 17%, the highest reading in the 16 years it's been calculated.

 
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