Wo will er hin, der DAX?
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Eröffnet am: | 20.03.02 21:17 | von: Neee Max! | Anzahl Beiträge: | 14 |
Neuester Beitrag: | 21.03.02 21:39 | von: Neee Max! | Leser gesamt: | 2.837 |
Forum: | Börse | Leser heute: | 4 | |
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So ratlos wie heute war ich selten:
- Durchbruch des 2000er Abwärtstrends nach unten?
- hält der starke Widerstand bei 5370 (Seitwärtskonsolidierung)?
- Welche Bedeutung kommt dem Februar Aufwärtstrend zu?
- Höherer Korrekturbedarf in S&P und DOW als im DAX?
Also: Glaskugeln raus und her mit den Kommentaren. Danke 8O)
Also, rötlicher Morgen, gruener Abend?
Also, nichts ist unmöglich!
Gr.Gr.
Tips werden gerne angenommen:
Konsumentenpreis-Index
14:30 USA
Realeinkommen
14:30 USA
Erstanträge auf Arbeitslosenhilfe
14:30 USA
Frühindikatoren
16:00 USA
Philadelphia FED-Umfrage
18:00 USA
Eine wunderschöne gute Nacht, Herrschaften!
Claims for state unemployment benefits were nearly unchanged in the latest week, the Labor Department said Thursday. Weekly first-time claims for benefits fell 12,000 to 371,000 from a revised 383,000 while the more informative four-week average rose by 2,500 to 379,000. Meanwhile, continuing claims rose 11,000 to 3.465 million with the four-week average of continuing claims also climbed by about 10,000 to 3.442 million. Initial claims, one gauge of labor market slack, have been basically unchanged for the past seven weeks. Small changes in the data have no significance. Initial claims peaked at 535,000 in the week of Sept. 29.
Feb. CPI up 0.2%, core CPI up 0.3% by Rex Nutting
Consumer prices continued their modest upward climb in February, rising a tame 0.2 percent, the Labor Department said Thursday. Prices are up 1.1 percent in the past year. Energy prices fell 0.8 percent in February reversing the 0.9 percent rise in January. Energy prices have fallen nearly 16 percent in the past year. The core rate of inflation - which strips out food and energy prices - rose 0.3 percent behind a 3.8 percent jump in tobacco prices. Excluding tobacco, the core rate rose 0.2 percent. Shelter costs, which have accounted for all inflation in the past year, rose 0.5 percent. Medical costs rose 0.3 percent. Apparel prices, which have been falling, rose 0.5 percent.
After four months of healthy gains, the index of leading economic indictors was flat in February, the Conference Board said Thursday. Five of the 10 indicators rose in February, led by money supply, jobless claims and the factory work week. The index rose a revised 0.8 percent in January. The index of coincident indicators rose 0.2 percent while the lagging index fell 0.3 percent. The indexes suggest the trough of the recession may have occurred in November, the board said. The economy "is now firmly in recovery," said board economist Ken Goldstein. "But the road ahead is far from smooth." In the past six months, the leading index is up 2.4 percent, with seven of 10 indicators rising.
PHILLY FED EXPECTATIONS 55.7 VS. 51.8
MARCH PHILLY FED NEW ORDERS 7.3 VS. 13.7
MARCH PHILLY FED FALLS TO 11.4 VS. 16.0 IN FEB.