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Week Ahead: US GDP and consumer confidence shake as inflationary pressure grows

Sun, 23 May 2021 | Written By: Alec Malloy Alec Malloy is a content writer with over 7 years’ experience spanning a range of commercial sectors. Week Ahead: US GDP and consumer confidence shake as inflationary pressure grows Week Ahead It’s relatively quiet in terms of major announcements this week. The bulk of the key market-moving data will be coming from the US, as preliminary quarterly GDP figures are released alongside the latest CB consumer confidence sentiment. Both will be enlightening as to US economic sentiment as inflation stops lurking in the background and comes to the fore.  We start, though, with New Zealand. The Reserve Bank of New Zealand’s latest cash rate decision and statement is due early on Wednesday morning. No major changes are expected to the current official cash rate (OCR) of 0.25%, although inflationary pressures look like they are starting to make their mark on New Zealand’s economy.  

Bulls Betting on Corporate Tax Compromise

Bulls Betting on Corporate Tax Compromise  Share   Share With the month of May already getting plenty of scrutiny as to whether investors should “sell and go away,” it seems pretty clear to me, based on how well a number of fluid factors are playing out, that the S&P is ripe for advancing another 10% higher from its current level of 4,200. Sure, a 5% pullback to 4,000 is quite possible and more likely probable in that the narrative of the past week was to sell the earnings news, regardless of blowout numbers crossing the tape. Even Amazon.com (AMZN) finished in the red after hitting fresh record highs, despite crushing analysts’ consensus first-quarter estimates and issuing above-consensus revenue guidance for Q2.

As Biden Signs Relief Bill, Voters Give Him Highest Marks on Economy, COVID

Tomorrow will mark 50 days in office for President Biden, halfway to the 100-day symbolic milestone that became a yardstick in the first year of Franklin Roosevelt’s presidency and even more so with John Kennedy’s too-brief tenure in the White House. On March 1, this column took a look at Biden’s early numbers, but a wave of data has come this week to give us a more complete report card. A massive, 12,055-interview national survey by the Pew Research Center showed 54 percent of adults approving of Biden’s performance and 42 percent disapproving, for a net positive of 12 points. Remember, President Trump never reached 50 percent in a major national poll in four years.

As Biden Signs Relief Bill, Voters Give Him Highest Marks on Economy, COVID

Tomorrow will mark 50 days in office for President Biden, halfway to the 100-day symbolic milestone that became a yardstick in the first year of Franklin Roosevelt’s presidency and even more so with John Kennedy’s too-brief tenure in the White House.

OFF TO THE RACES: As Biden signs relief bill, voters give him highest marks on economy, COVIDBut in these tribal times, can any president break through to the other party?

OFF TO THE RACES: As Biden signs relief bill, voters give him highest marks on economy, COVIDBut in these tribal times, can any president break through to the other party?
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