Cuando el ISM a las 4 salga por debajo de 50 puntos, No corraís...Que está todo descontado¡¡¡
Han subido 100 puntos el SP para tirarlo...por el precipicio...
Mirad el gráfico de la farsa de INDICE QUE EL SP...y eso que es el SP¡¡¡¡imaginaros el IBEX¡¡¡:)
LA BOLSA ES UNA CUEVA DE ALIBABA
BIENVENIDOS A LA VERDADERA RECESION MUNDIAL.
Los últimos años han sido una farsa contable de maquillajes infinitos...
Recuerdo que por debajo de 50 es MAIDAI OBAMA...y ya puedes poner QE3 e imprimir porque os vaís al hoyo USA , en especial sus munibonds que son BAZZZURA (Pennsylvania especialmente)
ISM Mfg Index
Released on 9/1/2011 10:00:00 AM For Aug, 2011
Prior Consensus Consensus Range
ISM Mfg Index - Level 50.9 48.5 47.0 to 51.9
Market Consensus Before Announcement
The composite index from the ISM manufacturing survey in July eased to a disappointing 50.9 reading from a moderately healthy 55.3 figure for June. Although the July index is still above 50 to indicate monthly expansion in business conditions, it indicates only very marginal growth and is now at the slowest rate so far of the recovery. Forward momentum has stalled. New orders technically contracted in the month, coming in below breakeven at 49.3. However, new orders are volatile and this is the first sub-50 reading since June 2009. Backlog orders contracted more deeply, down four points to 45.0 for the lowest reading since April 2009. Factory managers are still hopeful about output growth as the employment index posted in positive territory 53.5 (indicating workforce gain).
Definition
The Institute for Supply Management surveys more than 300 manufacturing firms on employment, production, new orders, supplier deliveries, and inventories. A composite diffusion index of national manufacturing conditions is constructed, where readings above (below) 50 percent indicate an expanding (contracting) factory sector. Export orders, import orders, backlog orders and prices paid for raw and unfinished materials are also measured, but these are not included in the overall index. Why Investors Care