First the Institute for Supply Management's manufacturing index just fell off a cliff, dropping to 43.5%, when the consensus was for 49.6%.
This is the lowest number since October, 2001, when manufacturers were freaking out over 911, and the biggest drop since 1984.
The fact that factory orders are down 4%, and that the
Baltic Dry Index Tanks, a survey of shipping costs are also in the tank, reinforce the idea that something is amiss, though I woul,d be remiss not to note that the Baltic Dry Index has a lot of noise in the data, and so is not particularly reliable.
Meanwhile, the marginally less noisy weekly jobless claims number have shown an increase too, up 1000, to 497K.
We also have evidence that the credit freeze up continues, with LIBOR spreads rising, and commercial paper basically going away.
In fact, the spread between two year debt swaps and treasuries hit a record, 167.25 basis points.
It doesn't help that hedge funds are experiencing problems related to the Lehman collapse, with billions of dollars still tied up with mess, while facing a surge of withdrawals from their clients.
Furthermore, there are rumors of a major insurance company on the verge of collapse, and so borrowing costs for the major insurance companies have spiked.
Things aren't looking great with college's finances either, with Commonfund restricting withdrawals from its Intermediate Term Fund, which serves schools and other non-profits, because of liquidity concerns.
On the other side of the ocean, the ECB is openly talking about a rate cut, which has pushed the Euro below $1.40:€1.00.
This is all pushing commodities down in price, with Oil, Gold, and Corn falling on the expectation of a stronger dollar and a weaker global economy.
In banking and real estate, 30-year fixed-rate mortgage rates are up marginally, and Citi bought Wachovia for some magic beans (actually around $1/share), and the FDIC got preferred shares.
While not technically a bank failure, that is what it is in reality.
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