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3/13/14, "Revisions bite into retail sales, economists cut growth forecasts," ForexLive.com, Adam Button
"January and February are the least-important months for the US
consumer and wintery weather likely kept shoppers sidelined more than
usual this year. Some of the headlines in the retail sales report beat
estimates but the overall tone was weakness. To recap:
*Overall retail sales grew 0.3% compared to 0.2% expected but January sales were revised to -0.6% from -0.4%
*Excluding autos and gas also grew 0.3% compared to 0.2% expected while the prior was revised to -0.5% from -0.2%
*The control group, which strips out autos, gas and building
supplies, was up 0.3% compared to 0.2% expected but the prior was
revised to -0.6% from -0.3%.
With the revisions, January was the worst month since June 2012. Over
the two-month period, sales were certainly weaker than expected. The
lone areas of strength were health and personal care (+1.2%) and
sporting goods (+2.5%) and neither is a bellwether of economic
confidence. One line that often signals economic optimism is furniture
sales which grew just 0.4% after three months of sharp declines.
After the report, economists at Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley,
Barclays and Credit Suisse all lowered tracking estimates for first
quarter growth. Goldman cuts its estimate to 1.5% from 1.7%; at the turn
of the calendar Goldman was forecasting 3.0% Q1 growth. Even more
dramatic, Morgan Stanley is now forecasting just 0.9% growth in Q1 from
1.9% before.
Bottom line: Weather is still the main story and the market is
looking beyond February data but traders will be extremely sensitive to
March numbers. If there isn’t a quick turn toward upbeat economic data,
worries will quickly mount and risk trades will slump. The initial jobless claims report is a good sign." via Zero Hedge
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3/13/14, "Goldman Cuts Q1 GDP Forecast To 1.5% On Weaker Retail Sales; Half Of Goldman's Original Q1 GDP Forecast," Zero Hedge
"As a reminder, Goldman's original Q1 GDP forecast, as recently as a month ago, was for a growth of 3%. How things change when weathermen, pardon economists, are shocked to find it gets cold in the winter."..
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