Sentences with phrase «gdp report»

30 Year Fixed Rate Loan at Cost of One Point: 3.375 % * (APR = 3.59 %) Rates improved Friday primarily in response to the weaker than expected GDP report.
30 Year Fixed Rate Loan at a Cost of One Point: 3.5 % * (APR = 3.73 %) Rates improved slightly today after a weak GDP report surfaced.
The pound got a sharp kick lower ahead of the GDP report because BOE Guv» nah Carney was
The pound got a sharp kick lower ahead of the GDP report because BOE Guv» nah Carney was interviewed by the BBC.
Anyhow, the Loonie's broad - based rise on Tuesday and the inherrent vulnerability of the Kiwi, the euro, and the Aussie were able to partially offset the Loonie's slide in the wake of Poloz's speech and Canada's disappointing GDP report, which is why the Loonie was mixed but still a net loser this week.
Treasury notes (excluding effects from the GDP report) should sell off.
And the GDP report scheduled for release tomorrow is, as the title says, the advanced or first estimate.
Oh, do note that the U.S. GDP report also comes in three versions: (1) the first or advanced estimate (2) the second or preliminary estimate, and (3) the third and final estimate.
What I'm getting at here is that there's a higher chance that tomorrow's GDP report will have a bigger impact on the Greenback's price action.
And as mentioned earlier, bond yields took directional cues from the GDP report last time around, even though the Greenback had a more mixed performance.
However, the GDP report didn't really have a noticeable effect on the Greenback's price action since the Greenback was reeling at the time from U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin's comment that «A weaker dollar is good for us as it relates to trade and opportunities.»
Robust U.S. GDP Report Renews Interest in Higher Yielding Currencies A better than expected U.S. Third Quarter GDP Report is sending the Dollar sharply lower at the mid-session.
, which was released a few hours after Germany's GDP report, was unrevised at +0.6 % quarter - on - quarter and +2.5 % year - on - year.
Despite Germany's strong Q3 GDP, however, the second estimate for the whole Euro Zone's Q3 GDP, which was released a few hours after Germany's GDP report, was unrevised at +0.6 % quarter - on - quarter and +2.5 % year - on - year.
The Loonie's price action was not dictated solely by oil prices, though, since Canadian economic data also had an impact, namely Canadian monthly GDP report, which surprised by printing a 0.1 % contraction in August instead of growing by 0.1 % as expected.
Think of it this way: if the GDP report comes out strong, we can likely expect corporate profits to be better, so the expected cash flows from equities in the future should be better.
«In today's financial news, stock prices fell when the GDP report came out stronger than expected, leading investors to pursue investments in newly - issued bonds, stocks, and private equity.»
When the GDP report came out, not only did come get optimistic about corporate profits, but perhaps realized:
Recent economic data have been soft, including this week's first - quarter U.S. GDP report that showed the slowest growth since the fourth quarter of 2012.
The third quarter GDP report, showing 2 % annual growth, was also interesting.
Canada's surprisingly strong first - quarter GDP report was the best quarterly print since the second quarter of 2014 and...
The buck is slightly lower against the Euro and the Japanese Yen, but is climbing against the British pound after the disappointing UK GDP report.
Added revenue from the Olympic Games could be hiding weakness in the third - quarter GDP report.
Most economists followed the GDP report with forecasts that the quarter likely will be the slowest for growth this year.
Silver prices received a boost from a slightly better than expected EU GDP report.
Stocks fell off sharply after a stronger than expected GDP report causing Wall Street to worry that the Fed could cut stimulus sooner.
The latest GDP report — coupled with unemployment at just 5 percent and wages rising — undermines that case.
Japan is expected to release its third - quarter GDP report on November 11.
True, the market did give back some gains as we neared the close, perhaps on anticipation ahead of the GDP report and nervousness about interest rates and next week's FOMC meeting.
Breaking the GDP report down, we see that in addition to overall modest strength in the economy (growth was still off from the fourth quarter's 2.9 %), the upturn was helped individually by positive contributions from nonresidential fixed investment, exports, private inventory investment, federal government spending, and state and local government spending.
As to the GDP report, issued at 8:30 (EDT) this morning, we see that growth in the first quarter came to 2.3 %.
And with real exports of goods growing in Q3 at about a third of the pace estimated by the BEA, and real imports of goods growing faster in the quarter than what the agency had anticipated, it seems that trade may have been a drag on the economy in Q3 rather than a contributor as depicted in last week's GDP report.
With some good earnings reports this week, and a strong GDP report on Friday, the market should turn up by week's end.
This week delivered two major blows to the already struggling Greenback, as the dovish Fed - statement was followed by a prelim GDP report that showed very weak inflationary forces.
Will cutting rates really boost the sectors that did much of the damage to April's GDP report like resources (can't influence commodities), utilities (can't influence weather, with utilities output just coming off a large surge in Jan / Feb) and manufacturing (bigger challenges than CAD)?
Last week's preliminary GDP report for Q1 revealed a slowdown in growth.
A subscriber of mine sent an article to me in which the Wall Street economist, Joe LaVorgna, was forecasting today's GDP report to surprise everyone by coming in at 5 %.
Which has been almost universally strong, including a GDP report last week that confirms the country is in the middle of its strongest growth spurt in more than a decade and eating into slack much more quickly than the Bank of Canada had anticipated only two months ago.
Canada's first - quarter GDP report was not just «atrocious,» as predicted by Stephen Poloz. It was downright negative: total real GDP shrank at an annualized rate of 0.6 % (fastest pace of decline since the 2008 - 09 recession).
U.S. stocks SPX, -0.23 % rose after the GDP report.
I didn't much like that GDP report from last Friday, showing that the economy expanded at an annual rate of 1.2 % in the second quarter.
@justinwolfers: Underneath the bad GDP report, we see solid growth in consumption and investment.
The first release of the agency's contemporary monthly GDP report was in the summer of 1981.
After the GDP report, Mark Chandler, an economist at RBC Dominion Securities, said the stronger data gave the Bank of Canada «breathing room.»
Alongside the GDP report, the NBS also released annual growth figures for retail sales, industrial output and urban fixed asset investment, with all bar the latter topping expectations.
The GDP report is also a way to look at which sectors of the economy are growing and which are declining.
Updated GDP reports are scheduled for Aug. 27 and Sept. 25.
As a bonus, the GDP reports also contain data on personal consumption expenditure; the benchmark for Canadian exports of travel services, another segment the Bank of Canada expects to lead the export recovery.
Chinese economic growth met expectations during the September quarter, maintaining the familiar pattern seen in each of the past ten GDP reports.
We received a more honest and complete economic reading a few days ago in the revisions to prior year's GDP reports.
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