Well, the jobless numbers are out, and they are not pretty with initial claims running at 588,000,continuing claims rising 159,000 to 4.776 million, which is the highest number recorded since the 1967, when they started collecting the data, and the 4 week moving average rose by 24,250 to 542,500.
Additionally durable goods orders fell by 3.7% in 2008.
And if you are wondering if there is a segment of the banking industry that won't need a bailout, stop wondering.
There isn't a segment of the banking industry that is not in trouble, as regulators are not moving to inject capital into credit unions, which are traditionally the most conservative, and the safest of the bank like institutions.
The fact that new home sales have fallen to the lowest level ever recorded (recording started in 1963) probably has a lot to do with this.
Also, freight truck tonnage is cliff diving. (H/T Calculated Risk)
Meanwhile, the most healthy of the Big 3 (Big 2½) auto makers, Ford, just reported a larger-than-expected $5.9 billion loss in the last quarter.
In international finance New Zealand is aggressively dropping its benchmark interest rates too, with their central bank 150 basis points (1½%) to the record low of 3.5%.
About the only good news is that it appears that deflationary expectations are easing, as the spread between 10 year Treasury Inflation Protected Securities (TIPS)and 10 year nominal securities has risen about 1% for the first time since November 10.
Meanwhile, the dollar was mixed today, and oil fell on the housing news.
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