Tim Iacono's Contributions

Rise in Housing Starts Disappoint, Permits Fall

The Commerce Department reported(.pdf) that U.S. housing starts rose 2.8 percent last month, from an upwardly revised seasonally adjusted annual rate of 920,000 in February to 946,000 in April, however, this was below the consensus estimate of 955,000 that was expected, at least in part, due to better weather in the spring after a severe winter.

Retail Sales Surge on Spring Thaw

The Commerce Department reported that U.S. retail sales jumped 1.1 percent in March, the biggest monthly increase since September 2012, as Americans released pent-up demand that resulted from an unusually harsh winter.

The Colorful Case-Shiller Home Price Indexes

This item at The Economist carried the chart below with the latest home price data that was released earlier in the week by S&P Case-Shiller. A similar chart has appeared here many times over the years, however...

Inflation Tame, Housing Starts Mixed

The Labor Department reported that U.S. consumer prices rose 0.1 percent in February for the second straight month and that the annual rate of inflation dropped from 1.6 percent in January to just 1.1 percent last month, one of the lowest rates since 2009.

Retail Sales Rise More Than Expected

The Commerce Department reported(.pdf) that U.S. retail sales rose for the first time in three months, up 0.3 percent in February after downwardly revised declines of 0.3 percent in December and 0.6 percent in January.

Payrolls Up 175K, Jobless Rate Climbs to 6.7%

The Labor Department reported that nonfarm payrolls rose by 175,000 in February after an upwardly revised gain of 129,000 in January and the jobless rate increased from 6.6 percent to 6.7 percent as more workers entered the labor force but were not able to find jobs.

All the Home Prices in China

Reuters reports that efforts to slow credit growth and other measures taken by the Chinese government have finally succeeded in slowing the rate of growth in property values as new home prices in 70 major cities rose...

Weather Blamed for Existing Home Sales Drop

The National Association of Realtors reported that sales of existing homes fell 5.1 percent last month, from an annual rate of 4.87 million units in December to 4.62 million in January, due in large part to bad weather and low inventory.

Weather Blamed for Dismal Housing Starts

As with many other recent economic reports, bad weather is getting much of the blame for the result, however, there were tremendous differences in homebuilding activity across the country in January as housing starts actually...

Retail Sales Disappoint, Weather Blamed

The Commerce Department reported (.pdf) that, following a downwardly revised seasonally adjusted decline of 0.1 percent in December (originally reported as a gain of 0.2 percent), retail sales in the U.S. fell 0.4 percent in January, the largest drop in ten months and the first back-to-back decline in almost two years.

Public Expecting Much Higher Inflation for 2014

Given the dearth of officially reported consumer price inflation in recent years, don’t look for this to be a major topic today when new Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen appears before the House Financial Services Committee in the first of two appearances on Capitol Hill this week to present the central bank’s semi-annual monetary policy report to Congress.

Manufacturing Slows, New Orders Plunge

The Institute for Supply Management reported that U.S. manufacturing growth saw its sharpest slowdown in almost three years as national factory activity fell from 56.5 in December to 51.3 in January, the lowest level since last May.

Confidence Remains (Relatively) High

Earlier yesterday, the Conference Board reported that consumer confidence rose again this month, up from a downwardly revised 77.5 in December to 80.7 in January, as the current conditions index rose to the highest reading of the recovery, up 3.8 points to 79.1.

Gallup: Americans Say They’re Worse Off, Don’t Trust Stock Market

A couple of sets of brand new poll results from Gallup show how increasingly difficult it has become for Americans to achieve any real financial security — for the first time since 2012 they are now worse off financially than a year ago and they still think stocks are a bad idea.

Home Prices Continue to Rise

Standard & Poor’s reported that U.S. home prices continued to rise in October, despite the ongoing seasonal slowdown that is clear to see in the unadjusted data below.

Less Christmas Cheer this Year?

For a data series such as this, it’s important to remember that Americans often say and do two completely different things...

Declining Auto Sales Push Retail Sales Lower

The Commerce Department reported that retail sales fell 0.1 percent in September after a gain of 0.2 percent in August as a sharp decline in auto sales more than offset other gains. Excluding autos, sales rose 0.4 percent after a gain of 0.1 percent the month prior.

The Land of (Less) Opportunity

Granted, there weren’t a whole lot of data points available to assemble the graphic below from this item at Gallup, but the trend of the chart is consistent with how many Americans feel about the changing nature of economic opportunity in the U.S.

Payrolls Up 148K, Jobless Rate Down to 7.2%

The Labor Department reported that nonfarm payrolls came in well below expectations last month, up just 148,000 in September as compared to the consensus estimate of 185,000, and the unemployment rate fell from 7.3 percent to 7.2 percent...

Ouch! Obama's Epic "Failure of Leadership" Debt Ceiling Speech from '06

CNBC personality Rick Santelli shares some thoughts about raising the debt ceiling that were offered up on Capitol Hill back in March 2006 by a freshman Senator from Illinois.

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