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  • 2008/02/13 22:41
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  • Feb. 13 (Bloomberg) -- Retail sales in the U.S. unexpectedly rose in January as Americans spent more on autos and gasoline to run them, a sign the consumer buying that accounts for the biggest part of the economy is holding up even as the housing slump deepens.

    The 0.3 percent increase followed a 0.4 percent decrease the prior month, the Commerce Department said today in Washington. Excluding automobiles and gasoline, purchases were unchanged from a month earlier.

Today's Commerce Department report also runs counter to industry figures that show January sales fell at stores from Target Corp. to Nordstrom Inc. even as some retailers slashed prices by as much as 75 percent. Sales at stores open at least a year rose 0.5 percent from a year earlier, the worst January since 1970, according to the International Council of Shopping Centers.

The report may ease concern that falling property values and a cooling job market will lead to sustained declines in consumer spending and push the economy into a recession. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke will likely cut interest rates further as other risks to growth remain, economists said.

``The consumer seems to pull through,'' Karen Cordes, an economist at Scotia Capital Inc. in Toronto, said before the report. ``It would be fair to say consumer spending will not go off the rails, though we do expect a stronger slowdown going forward. We're not calling for a recession.''

The industry figures account for about 17 percent of total retail sales, which make up almost half of consumer spending. Retailers' January results followed the worst holiday shopping season since 2002, according to ICSC.

Consumers are increasingly limiting expenses to those they can't avoid. The amount Americans must spend each month on debt service, housing, medical costs, and food and energy bills rose to 66.9 percent of their total spending in December, the highest since records began in 1980, according to Bloomberg figures.

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  • 2008/02/12 19:59
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  • U.K. inflation accelerated to a seven- month high in January as higher costs of gasoline, food and furniture offset lower clothing prices.

    Consumer prices climbed 2.2 percent from a year earlier, compared with 2.1 percent in December, the Office for National Statistics said today in London. Economists predicted 2.3 percent, according to the median of 36 forecasts in a Bloomberg News survey. Prices fell 0.7 percent on the month.

    Inflation has now exceeded the Bank of England's 2 percent target for four months, adding to the risk that higher consumer prices get entrenched as record gains in raw-material costs feed through to the economy. Policy makers are weighing that threat against the need for more rate reductions after last week's cut to protect Britain against the economic slowdown.
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  • 2008/02/10 15:45
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  • Feb. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Group of Seven policy makers said the U.S. economy may slow further, eroding global growth, and officials forecast more financial-market turmoil.

    ``Downside risks still persist, which include further deterioration of the U.S. residential housing markets'' and tighter credit conditions, G-7 finance ministers and central bankers said in a statement in Tokyo yesterday. U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said ``we should expect continued volatility'' in markets as risk is repriced.

    The G-7 is trying to limit the damage from a housing slump that has pushed the U.S. to the brink of a recession and may consign the world economy to its worst year since 2003. While the statement didn't propose specific measures, European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said officials will do what's necessary to counter a ``significant market correction.''

``The problems are going right through all parts of the financial markets and there's not much the G-7 can do about this,'' said Gilles Moec, an economist at Bank of America Corp. in London. ``There's a danger that the downturn will become a self-fulfilling prophecy.''

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  • 2008/02/10 14:15
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  • 2008/02/09 14:54
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  • ±Ý³âµµ ¿¹»ó ½ÇÀû È£ÀüÁ¾¸ñÁß ÀúÆò°¡µÈ Á¾¸ñ À§ÁÖ·Î ÅõÀÚ ÃÊÁ¡À» ¸ÂÃç¾ß ÇÑ´Ù. PEG È£Àü Á¾¸ñÀ» º¸ÀÚ. (PEG´Â PERÀ» ±Ý³âµµ ¿¹»ó EPS Áõ°¡À²·Î ³ª´« °ÍÀÌ´Ù) ±×·± Á¾¸ñ Áß¿¡¼­ ½ÃÀåÁ¡À¯À²ÀÌ ³ô°í ¾ÈÁ¤ÀûÀÎ ¿µ¾÷ÀÌÀÍ·ü ´Þ¼ºÀÌ °¡´ÉÇÑ Á¾¸ñµéÀ» °ñ¶ó³»¾ß ÇÑ´Ù.

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