PAYROLL TAX HOLIDAY EXTENDED FOR 2 MONTHS Friday, President Obama signed an extension of the payroll tax cut lasting through February 29. The stopgap legislation also extends long-term unemployment benefits through that date and postpones a 27% reduction in Medicare payments to doctors. The federal government will pay for the extenders by having Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac hike guarantee fees on new mortgages, a cost that will be passed on to those buying or refinancing a home in 2012. (1) GAINS IN HARD GOODS ORDERS, CONSUMER SPENDING November's consumer spending increase was tiny: 0.1%. Wages advanced just 0.1% as well. However, last month also saw a 3.8% rise in durable goods orders (the best month for that indicator since July).(2,3)
IMPROVED HOME SALES, HOUSING STARTS The Census Bureau reported a 1.6% increase in new home purchases in November, with the new home inventory at its smallest since March 2006. Housing starts hit a 19-month peak in November, soaring 9.3% on the month. Existing home sales also improved notably in November, rising 4.0%; according to the National Association of Realtors, that was the best month since January.(3)
CONSUMERS FEELING MERRIER December's final Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan consumer sentiment survey came in at 69.9 compared with November's final 64.1 mark. That also beat the 68.0 estimate forecast by economists Reuters had surveyed. (4)
A YEAR-END RALLY GETS ROLLING Stocks showed definite momentum last week. The 5-day performances: DJIA, +3.60% to 12,294.00: NASDAQ, +2.48% to 2,618.64; S&P 500, +3.74% to 1,265.33. At the close on Friday, oil settled at $99.68 on the NYMEX, gold closed at $1,606.00 on the COMEX, retail gasoline prices had fallen 2.15% in the past 30 days and natural gas futures were at lows unseen in four years. (2,5) |