- A busy week of economic data releases boosted by an upward revised Q2 real GDP growth rate, a double-digit monthly gain of durable goods orders in July and better than expected consumer confidence going into the back-to-school shopping season.
- Mixed housing sales data in July combined with more modest price appreciation and higher housing inventory will likely boost future sales.
- Slightly better results for the recent week’s claim numbers; modest personal income growth in July, and smaller spending helped improve savings rate.
- U.S. equity markets crossed a historical milestone: The S&P 500 index closed above the 2,000 mark for the first time, fueled by strong domestic economic data and a new M&A transaction between Burger King and Canada-based Tim Horton’s. This was despite the escalating conflict between Ukraine and Russia and investors’ concerns on deflation and low growth in the euro-zone.
Amid a week of light trading ahead of the long Labor Day/Back-to-School holiday weekend, domestic equity markets continued marching higher. The S&P 500 index cleared the 2,000 psychological price barrier for the first time, more than 16 years after the index surpassed the 1,000 level in February 1998. The positive week was helped by a stronger Q2 real GDP report, robust durable goods orders, and upbeat consumer confidence reinforced by multiple survey indices. Small cap outperformed mid and large cap stocks as investor sentiments were high. Energy, utilities, and healthcare sectors outperformed industrials, consumer defensive, and technology sectors. Continue reading




