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Forecast for the week

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Forecast for the Week

Two important reports bookend the week ahead, and hopefully both will show changes in a good economic direction.

Monday’s Personal Income and Personal Spending Reports will give us a look at the Core Personal Consumption Expenditure (PCE), which is the Fed’s favorite gauge of inflation. Rest assured the Fed will be watching this report very closely, as it could impact their decisions on rates and Policy Statement verbiage, as we discussed.

Thursday will bring another Initial Jobless Claims Report. At this stage in the economic recovery, the weekly Initial Jobless Claims readings we are seeing are still pretty high, which suggests that businesses are both reluctant to hire and are looking to trim overhead.

And the big enchilada of employment news wraps up the week, as April’s Jobs Report is due for delivery on Friday morning. Last month’s report showed that 162,000 jobs were created in March, making it the biggest one-month increase in three years. Additionally, there were upward revisions to January and February, which brought the last two months’ net job losses to near zero. But it’s not time to break out the party hats just yet…last month’s report also showed that the official Unemployment Rate remained steady at 9.7%, and when factoring in the “underemployed”, including people who accepted part-time work because full-time work is simply not available, the rate of unemployment overall rose from 16.8% to 16.9%. This report will be very important to watch, as the labor market is key to our economic recovery.

Remember this rule of thumb: Weak or negative economic news normally causes money to flow out of Stocks and into Bonds, helping Bonds and home loan rates improve, while strong or positive economic news normally has the opposite result.

As you can see in the chart below, the instability in Greece and the Fed’s decision to keep rates low for an extended period of time gave Bonds a boost above a key technical level. But remember, volatility is the name of the game at the moment, and things can change quickly. I’ll be watching closely to see in which direction Bonds and home loan rates move this week
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