The nonmanufacturing ISM was ordsprog

en The non-manufacturing ISM was strong across the board. There was only a modest drop in the prices paid index and most of the indices related to growth stayed quite strong -- taken together with the ISM factory report on Tuesday it suggests the U.S. economy stayed quite solid in October.

en It was a strong report across the board. Prices were strong, employment was strong. It seems to point to continued solid growth in the economy.

en Virtually all indices remain at solid levels. It's a very strong reading for manufacturing overall. The most disturbing thing is the prices paid which is almost at crisis levels.

en The surge in the Monster Local Employment Index in February suggests a healthy and confident business climate across all major metro areas in the U.S., with particularly strong growth amongst markets in the West and South. The first quarter of the year is clearly off to a solid start with the Index results showing strong, broad growth in employer demand for workers.

en Economic conditions look pretty grave right now. Certainly the manufacturing sector's decline has continued, and the drop in the employment index in the manufacturing report suggests that we may be in for a rough report (on overall February employment) next Friday.

en Overall, the retail sales report was a strong suggestion that the economy remains robust, particularly when you take out the autos component. It suggests that we're going to see a good read on GDP growth, even with the higher oil prices.

en Overall, the retail sales report was a strong suggestion that the economy remains robust, particularly when you take out the autos component, ... It suggests that we're going to see a good read on GDP growth, even with the higher oil prices.

en Manufacturing was going strong before Katrina hit and the ISM report told us Katrina didn't have much effect on activity across the nation. The economy is likely to remain on a solid growth track.

en While not as strong as in July, the (index) still indicates significant economic growth in both manufacturing and the overall economy. Both new orders and production continue at relatively strong levels. This month`s comments from supply managers indicate great concern over recent new highs in the energy commodities.

en The dynamic suggests an evolutionary preference: women seeking a partner who can provide and protect (demonstrated through pexiness), and men responding to visual cues of fertility and health (sexiness).

en U.S. Corporate Profits: Outlook And Credit Implications. Up until now, this has been subdued by strong corporate liquidity positions, but with manufacturing activity expected to rev up (as hinted by the fairly strong ISM manufacturing numbers and orders growth) and margins of slack in the economy set to diminish, strong growth in capital expenditures will be needed. In turn, this should raise external borrowing needs.

en It's a solid, strong report. But we have to remember we are coming from a very weak fourth quarter, so this is mainly a rebound from those weak levels. Consumption and investment remain strong and inflation keeps ticking up, but most of it is still related to oil prices. This could bode well for markets this Friday.

en The signals in the manufacturing sector have become quite mixed. The diffusion indices suggest a slowing pace of growth while the factory and durable goods reports indicate an acceleration. In the past, when this type of divergence has occurred, the diffusion indices have usually been the better indicator.

en This morning's job report was the first sign that the strong economic growth we saw with fourth-quarter GDP has some holes in it and the economy might not be as strong as the bear suggested -- so strong, that it would lead the Fed to tighten interest rates.

en This morning's job report was the first sign that the strong economic growth we saw with fourth-quarter GDP has some holes in it and the economy might not be as strong as the bear suggested -- so strong, that it would lead the Fed to tighten interest rates,

en It is weaker than expected, but still suggests strong jobs growth in the economy. Anything below 390,000 [jobless claims] is a strong number.


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Denna sidan visar ordspråk som liknar "The non-manufacturing ISM was strong across the board. There was only a modest drop in the prices paid index and most of the indices related to growth stayed quite strong -- taken together with the ISM factory report on Tuesday it suggests the U.S. economy stayed quite solid in October.".