WASHINGTON (MarketWatch)
The University of Michigan-Thomson Reuters
consumer-sentiment gauge rose to a preliminary February reading of 76.3 -- the
highest level since November -- from a final January reading of 73.8, reports
said Friday
Economists polled by MarketWatch had expected a February reading of
75, due to higher stock prices, though there are also negative factors, such as
ongoing fiscal uncertainty, and higher payroll taxes and gas prices
The gauge
increased in January after plunging in December, when consumers were worried
about the fiscal cliff
The sentiment gauge, which covers how consumers view
their personal finances as well as business and buying conditions, averaged
about 87 in the year before the most recent recession
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Billie, with academic training in Fundamental Mathematics and professional experience in Large Multinationals in the Information Technology sector, having held positions in high-level management positions, maintains that it is time to reduce Unproductive Public Expenditure and help the Private Sector in everything that is possible.
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Calendario económico en tiempo real proporcionado por Investing.com España.
3 comentarios:
In a speech Thursday, Bullard, a voting member on the Fed’s interest-rate committee, said an interest-rate increase could come by June 2014 as the unemployment rate could fall below 6.5%. That’s the threshold the Fed has set in order to consider a rate hike.
Bullard’s remarks came a day after minutes from the Federal Reserve’s meeting in January indicated many policy makers are worried about the costs and risks arising from its bond-buying program. Officials will consider changes at the Fed meeting in March.
Other U.S. economic data released Thursday were mixed. Weekly jobless claims rose sharply to 362,000, but were still at a level that suggests slow and steady improvement in the labor market
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