September 13, 2016   //   Financial Planning   //   By PKF Mueller Solutions

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September 12, 2016

SERVICE SECTOR SEES WEAKEST GROWTH SINCE 2010

The Institute for Supply Management’s non-manufacturing purchasing manager index came in at a disappointing 51.4 in August, 4.1 points below its July level. While American service industries expanded for a 79th consecutive month, the pace of expansion was the slowest since February 2010, and the monthly drop in the ISM index was the largest recorded since November 2008.

BEIGE BOOK SHOWS LITTLE WAGE PRESSURE

If the economy is near full employment, it is not seeing the strong wage and inflation gains usually linked with that situation. The Federal Reserve’s latest summation of economic activity in its 12 districts stated that wage growth was “fairly modest” with little improvement expected in the near term. While wages increased in many districts for highly skilled workers, the Fed also noted that employers had been hard-pressed to fill job vacancies in the IT, engineering, and construction fields.

OIL, GOLD PUSH HIGHER

WTI crude advanced 3.2% last week, even with a 3.7% Friday slip. Crude settled at $45.88 a barrel on the NYMEX Friday. Gold ended the week at a COMEX price of $1,334.50, up 0.6% in five days.

VOLATILITY RETURNS

Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren created some market turbulence Friday, warning that the economy could overheat if the central bank waits much longer to raise interest rates. His remarks came just a day after European Central Bank president Mario Draghi indicated a reduced possibility of further stimulus efforts for the European Union. A sharp Friday selloff sent the major indices significantly down for the week – the S&P 500 fell 2.39% to 2,127.81; the Nasdaq, 2.36% to 5,125.91; and the Dow, 2.20% to 18,085.45.

THIS WEEK: Nothing major is scheduled on Monday or Tuesday. On Wednesday, Analogic and Cracker Barrel Old Country Store announce earnings. The data stream picks up on Thursday, when investors consider August retail sales numbers, August industrial production, the August Producer Price Index, a new initial claims report, and earnings from Oracle and Progressive. On Friday, the August Consumer Price Index arrives, along with September’s preliminary University of Michigan consumer sentiment index.

table 2 9.13

Sources: wsj.com, bigcharts.com, treasury.gov – 9/9/16

Indices are unmanaged, do not incur fees or expenses, and cannot be invested into directly. These returns do not include dividends. 10-year TIPS real yield = projected return at maturity given expected inflation.

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