10 Countries that will survive the credit meltdown of next year.
December 22, 2009 by MoneyElement · Leave a Comment
10.Switzerland – Probability of Default 3.9%
9. Belgium – 3.8%
8.Australia – 3.2%
7. USA – 2.9%
6.Denmark – 2.6%
5.Netherlands – 2.5%
4.France – 2.2%
3.Finland – 2.1%
2.Germany – 1.9%
………………
1.Norway – with cumulative probability of Default = 1.4%…. The Statistics Norway announced that the trade surplus stood at NOK 29.8 billion in November, down from NOK 38.29 billion surplus recorded a [...]
Lawmakers looking to extend deadline
December 8, 2009 by MoneyElement · Leave a Comment
Last month we saw a record long extension of federally paid benefits. Both the House and Senate are looking to push this same deadline to 2011, or we would see 1Million jobless people loose their benefits beginning January and another 3Milion as reported by the National Employment Law Project will stop receiving checks by March. [...]
Disappointing Retail Sales
December 3, 2009 by MoneyElement · Leave a Comment
November had lower than expected sales numbers. According to ICSC report “These data suggested that the holiday season got off to a weak start in November for retailers–though the tail-end of the month saw relatively strong sales for electronics and online spending, but that seemed to be at the expense of some in-store performance and [...]
More jobs cut
December 2, 2009 by MoneyElement · Leave a Comment
ADP reported that job cuts were more than estimated in November. Last month roughly 169,000 jobs were eliminated as supposed to the 150,000 expected. Reports show that the job market will continue to worsen in the upcoming 2010 even as the economic conditions are improving.
Read more here.
Shop, Shop, Shop until you drop
November 24, 2009 by MoneyElement · Leave a Comment
Consumer confidence jumped in November 0.8% since October, from 48.7 to 49.5. Not a surprise since Holiday Season is right around the corner, as well as Black Friday. The Expectation Index increased to 68.5 from 67. “The Consumer Confidence Survey® is based on a representative sample of 5,000 U.S. households. The monthly survey is conducted [...]
Stocks up
November 23, 2009 by MoneyElement · Leave a Comment
Since March’s lows stocks have climbed close to 65% and significantly surpassed fair values. The chart suggests that stocks have gotten fairly ahead of themselves especially considering the economic struggle. Many still argue whether the enormous stimulus and near zero interest rates will lead to “V-shaped” or more of a “U-Shaped” recovery. One thing is [...]
Not a VShaped Recovery
November 17, 2009 by MoneyElement · Leave a Comment
Strong retail sales in the midst of this year’s holiday sales season. High oil prices and decline in the core PPI were making headlines today. After dropping down 0.6% last month, in October we see overall increase of 0.3% in PPI. Boosts were also spotted in the energy and food sectors – 1.6%. There are [...]
What do the charts reveal?
November 16, 2009 by MoneyElement · Leave a Comment
Many small business owners are still very pessimistic about today’s economy. Merchant Circle reveals gloom statistics. As we can see close to 50% of more than 12,000 respondents to the survey disagree that the worse of the recession is behind us. We all have witnessed the tight lending by banks, but the once impacted more [...]
Worst October Deficit Ever
November 13, 2009 by MoneyElement · Leave a Comment
Fed deficit hit $176.4 billion, which was way higher than the expected $150. Grand total of America’s total deficit for 2009 is $1.42 trillion. If we were to break it down this number will equal $4,671 per person. This record-high number worries many economist who foresee and increase of interest rates which in tern will [...]
From cash in the bank to IOUs
November 11, 2009 by MoneyElement · Leave a Comment
”Congress is not willing to take short-term pain for long-term pain,” Sen. George Voinovich, R-Ohio, told a Senate Budget Committee.
The country’s long-term debt load is climbing. Just the interest on it alone may total $4.8 Trillion between 2010 and 2019. This is what two wars, a decade of tax cuts, and all of the financed [...]

