The Big Picture |
- Weekly Eurozone Watch
- Vampire Weekend on Jimmy Kimmel
- Succinct Summation of Week’s Events (11/23/12)
- Housing: Stable, Not in ‘Full-Blown Recovery’
- FRED Widget
- Black Friday Skepticism (Finally!) Goes Mainstream
- All the macro news that’s fit to email
- ThanksFriday
- Turn Old iPhones into Always-on Video Messaging Units
- 10 Black Friday AM Reads
- Which One Are You?
- Autonomy Merger Pitchbook
| Posted: 23 Nov 2012 05:12 PM PST Key Data Points Quote of the Week
Comments Charts (click here if charts are not observable) |
| Vampire Weekend on Jimmy Kimmel Posted: 23 Nov 2012 03:00 PM PST Jimmy Kimmel Live: Back to Brooklyn – Vampire Weekend performs during Jimmy’s week of shows in Brooklyn. Vampire Weekend Performs “Unbelievers” ~~~ Vampire Weekend Performs “Oxford Comma |
| Succinct Summation of Week’s Events (11/23/12) Posted: 23 Nov 2012 10:30 AM PST Succinct summation of week’s events: Positives:
Negatives:
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| Housing: Stable, Not in ‘Full-Blown Recovery’ Posted: 23 Nov 2012 09:32 AM PST |
| Posted: 23 Nov 2012 09:30 AM PST We previously mentioned the very cool FRED app for iPhone/iPad users. Don’t despair, desktop users, there is also a widget for you:
Hat tip Econ Academics
I think I need to install this in my side bar! A combination of 5 most important data points change monthly + the 5 most recent data points would be Ideal. Permanent data points: NFP, U3 Unemployment, CPI, GDP and 10 year Interest Rates are the ones I want to be permanent, updating as new data comes out. Below that, I would like to see whatever the 5 most recent releases were. Now if I can only figure out how to customize the data feed . . .
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| Black Friday Skepticism (Finally!) Goes Mainstream Posted: 23 Nov 2012 07:30 AM PST Over the years, I have been rather annoyed (perhaps too much) at the annual foolishness over Black Friday forecasts. Each year, we hear breathless predictions of ridiculous increases in consumer spending — holiday shopping rises 16% this season! — which turn out to be wildly over-optimistic, and are never confirmed by the actual data. This year, the idea seems to have spread into the mainstream: Lots of coverage about it, with a few choice quotes from you know who tossed in for good measure. Here is the The Globe and Mail:
And NBC:
And MoneyWatch:
So the good news is that print media has figured this out. Now, let’s see if television and radio can get their story straight . . .
Previously: Retail Sales Disappoint on False Black Friday Reports (December 13th, 2011) No, Black Friday Sales Were Not Up 16% (not even 6%) (November 28th, 2011) Entering the Holiday Shopping Season (Beware Surveys!) (October 28th, 2009) Spinning Black Friday Retail Sales (December 1st, 2008) Repeat After Me: Spending Surveys Are Meaningless (October 2007) More Bad Data from the NRF? (November 2006) Holiday Sales Numbers Don't Add Up (December 1st, 2005)
Sources: Despite Hype, Black Friday Can’t Predict Holiday Shopping Patterns Lies, damned lies and Black Friday sales
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| All the macro news that’s fit to email Posted: 23 Nov 2012 06:27 AM PST China’s economy continues to show signs of stabilizing as the private sector weighted HSBC flash mfr’g PMI rose to 50.4 in Nov from 49.5 in Oct. It’s the 1st time since Oct ’11 above 50 but the Shanghai index is actually down a touch over the past two days with the number reported Wed night. Taiwan’s stock market though rallied 3.1% as their Finance Minister was quoted as saying that funds either fully or partially owned by the state should buy stocks. While closed today, the Nikkei yesterday rallied another 1.5%, taking its 7 day move to up 8.1% to the best close since early May on the weaker yen theme. In Europe yesterday, the mfr’g and services composite index for the region stabilized at near the lowest level since June ’09 at 45.8 in Nov vs 45.7 in Oct. Today, the German IFO business confidence # unexpectedly rose to 101.4 vs 100 in Oct and was better than the estimate of 99.5. It is now back to where it was in Sept and the euro is at a 3 week high vs the US$ in response. French business confidence also improved to 88 from 85 which was the weakest since Aug ’09. On Greece, talks will continue into next week. Back home, the WSJ is quoting voting member Williams that he’ll basically be voting for QE4 as he thinks the market expects it and if they didn’t, “it would push rates up and cause financial conditions to be a little less supportive of growth.” Based on this thought, we may go to QE10. The Fed also seems to want to wait until after inflation gets above their target to reevaluate its policy and ECB member Weidmann said this today, “flirt with inflation and you’ll end up married to it.” |
| Posted: 23 Nov 2012 05:00 AM PST Interesting visualization that allows you to track the differences between social media allowing you to visualize the differences between activity on Thanksgiving and Black Friday in real time. The georeferenced Twitter and Instagram contributions related to Thanksgiving and Black Friday over the 3 days of November 21 (eve), 22 (Thanksgiving) and 23 (Black Friday) 2012 over the city of New York might reveal something interesting. Or it might not, and merely look pretty cool. by accurat |
| Turn Old iPhones into Always-on Video Messaging Units Posted: 23 Nov 2012 04:30 AM PST |
| Posted: 23 Nov 2012 03:30 AM PST Are you back at work? Sorry. see if these help:
What are you reading?
Boom and bust: Biggest annual rates of growth and contraction since 1980 |
| Posted: 23 Nov 2012 03:16 AM PST |
| Posted: 23 Nov 2012 03:00 AM PST |
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