| ESH0 For 12/24/2009 |
How To Use |
| Symbol | R1 | R2 | Pivot | S1 | S2 | |
| ESH0 | 1119.92 | 1124.33 | 1115.58 | 1111.17 | 1106.83 | |
Fed and Fed Agency Announcements
Most of the CME Markets close at noon today for the Christmas Break, expect trading this morning to be light as many traders take the entire day off.
![[Report]](http://mam.econoday.com/images/mam/byreport_butt_new.gif)
8:30 AM ET![[Report]](http://mam.econoday.com/images/mam/byreport_butt_new.gif)
8:30 AM ET![[Report]](http://mam.econoday.com/images/mam/byreport_butt_new.gif)
9:00 AM ET![[Report]](http://mam.econoday.com/images/mam/byreport_butt_new.gif)
9:00 AM ET
10:30 AM ETNYSE Early Close – 1:00 ET
SIFMA Rec. Early Close 2:00 ET
4:30 PM ETMoney Supply
4:30 PM ET
Relevant Consensus Analysis
Durable Goods Orders |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Highlights Boeing orders slipped in November but the rest of durables orders look good. New orders for durable goods in November rebounded 0.2 percent after a 0.6 percent decline in October. The boost in November came in below the consensus forecast for a 0.5 percent increase. Excluding the transportation component, new durables orders posted a 2.0 percent gain, following a 0.7 percent drop in October. The weakness in transportation was a huge drop in civilian aircraft orders. The November rebound in new orders was broad-based outside of transportation. Sizeable gains were seen in communication equipment, up 4.0 percent, computers & electronics, up 3.7 percent; machinery, up 3.5 percent; and electrical equipment, up 3.2 percent. Also posting gains were primary metals and fabricated metals. Transportation fell 5.5 percent after slipping 0.2 percent in October. Within transportation, nondefense aircraft dropped 32.6 percent in November; defense aircraft fell 3.2 percent; and motor vehicles slipped 0.2 percent. The outlook for capital goods spending is improving at the core level-although it may be foreign spending more than domestic investment. However, headline new orders for nondefense capital goods fell 1.9 percent in November after an increase of 0.8 percent the previous month. The weakness was in the volatile aircraft component. Excluding aircraft, new orders for nondefense capital goods rebounded 2.9 percent after a 2.0 percent dip in October. These numbers reflect orders from both foreign and U.S. businesses. Year-on-year, overall new orders for durable goods improved to minus 7.8 percent in November from minus 11.7 percent the month before. Excluding transportation, new durables orders increased to minus 6.9 percent from down 10.5 percent in October. Overall, today’s durables report shows manufacturing still on a gradual uptrend. Growth in this sector is leading the economy but at a moderate pace. Equities might be disappointed in the shortfall from expectation other than jobless claims fell more sharply than projected. Equities will likely rise on that report. However, Treasury yields were marginally lower on the two releases. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Jobless Claims |
|||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||
| Highlights The brightest spot on the economic calendar continues to be initial jobless claims which fell a very substantial 28,000 in the Dec. 19 week to 452,000 — a dip that the Labor Department describes as a part of “long-term trend” of improvement. The four-week average continues to come down, now at 465,250 for a 2,750 decrease. Continuing claims also continue to come down, 127,000 lower in the Dec. 12 week to 5.076 million. Trends for both initial and continuing claims show sizable improvement from November in what will raise talk of a possible gain for December payrolls. |
|||||||||||||
I endorse a state of the art trading program for beginners at Trading Concepts, Inc It’s an awesome product that will have you well on your way to trading success. Plus, it has a money back guarantee…you have nothing to lose and thousands to gain.
![[Report]](http://mam.econoday.com/images/mam/byconsensus_butt.gif)



