On the other hand, manufacturing jobs are reported to be growing strongly since the beginning of the year, which is a bit of a surprise.
In real estate, and, as Calculated Risk notes, the Case-Shiller numbers are out, and they are positively schizophrenic:
From the Financial Times: US home prices slip in JulyBasically, some of them are reporting seasonally adjusted numbers, and some are reporting non-seasonally adjusted numbers. I would tend to go with the latter with July, since I think that the expiration of the tax credits probably overwhelmed any seasonal effects, and the composite 10 and the composite 20 numbers are a bit different, but basically it's flat near the recent bottoms.
From the WSJ: Home Prices Rose in July
From CNBC: US Home Prices Slipped In July And May Stabilize Near Lows
From MarketWatch: Home price growth slows in July
From HousingWire: S&P/Case-Shiller 20-city composite index rose 0.6% for July
Finally, we have the various reports from the regional Federal reserve banks: Dallas, up slightly in September, Chicago down slightly in August, and Richmond down slightly in September.
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