Clipping Econômico – 22.09

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Fonte: Infomoney

Bolsas mundiais buscam alta após forte aversão ao risco na véspera

As bolsas mundiais buscam alta nesta manhã, tentando se recuperar das perdas vistas na véspera, quando receios sobre o coronavírus e acusações contra bancos globais derrubaram os mercados. Na Europa, as bolsas mostram ligeira alta, enquanto os futuros de Nova York não têm direção única. Já na Ásia, os mercados fecharam no negativo.

Na Europa, os índices das bolsas têm pequena alta. O índice Euro Stoxx sobe 0,48%. O FTSE MIB, da Itália, sobe 0,32%, enquanto o DAX, da Alemanha, sobe 0,73%. Já o CAC, de Paris, e o FTSE 100, de Londres, flutuam entre o negativo e o positivo. Há pouco, o CAC subia 0,02% e o FTSE recuava 0,08%.

Ontem, ações de bancos e das empresas de turismo pressionaram os índices, em meio a um temor de que países europeus voltem a impor restrições para conter o novo avanço do coronavírus na região.

Nos Estados Unidos, os índices futuros estão com dificuldade de se firmar no positivo. Os futuros do S&P 500 estão em queda de 0,21%, enquanto os do Dow Jones recuam 2,07%. Os futuros da Nasdaq sobem 0,09%.

Na Ásia, os mercados fecharam em queda liderada pela Coreia do Sul, onde o índice Kospi caiu 2,38%. Na China, o Shangai SE recuou 1,29%, enquanto o índice Hang Seng, de Hong Kong, recuou 0,98%.

No mercado de commodities, os futuros de minério de ferro voltaram a cair, com baixa de 2,03% na bolsa de Dalian, a 772.500 iuanes. Já o petróleo mostra recuperação, com alta de 0,81% do WTI e avanço de 1,13% do tipo Brent.

Economic Activity in the U.S. Slows Further in August — Chicago Fed

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Provided by Dow Jones

The U.S. economy continued to grow in August above its average but at a slower pace compared with the previous three months, data from the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago showed Monday.

The Chicago Fed National Activity Index came in at 0.79 in August, down from an upwardly revised 2.54 in July. Economists polled by FactSet expected the index to stand at a higher 1.2.

The index, which plunged to its lower reading ever in April amid strict lockdowns to contain the spread of the coronavirus, rebounded strongly in the next months as restrictions eased and despite the surge in infections across the country. However, the rates of increase have been diminishing over the months, signaling that the initial strong rebound is losing steam.

The CFNAI is composed of 85 economic indicators drawn from four broad categories of data: production and income; employment, unemployment and hours; personal consumption and housing; and sales, orders and inventories. A positive index reading corresponds to growth above trend and a negative index reading corresponds to growth below trend.

In August, two out of four broad categories the index is made up of contributed positively, but all four categories decreased from July.

Forty-five of the 85 individual indicators made positive contributions to the CFNAI in August, while 40 made negative contributions. Twenty-nine indicators improved in the last month, while 56 indicators deteriorated, the Chicago Fed said.

The CFNAI diffusion index was also down to 0.62 in August from 0.73 in July. Despite the fall, the reading still signals that national economic growth is increasing, as it is well above the minus 0.35 level that historically has been associated with periods of economic growth.

The index’s three-month moving average, the CFNAI-MA3, decreased to 3.05 from 4.23 in July. Month-to-month movements can be volatile, as it has occurred during the coronavirus pandemic, so the indicator provides a more consistent picture of national economic growth. In line with the diffusion index, the CFNAI-MA3 signals the economy is in expansion territory, as a value above minus 0.70 has been associated with an increasing likelihood of economic growth.

For CFNAI August reading, production-related indicators contributed 0.23 points, down from 1.26 in July, as industrial production slowed in August compared with the previous month.

Employment-related indicators contributed 0.63 points to the index, slightly down from 0.65 in July. While nonfarm payrolls moved up by 1.4 million in August–less than the 1.7 million registered in July– the unemployment rate fell by 1.8 percentage points in the month, more than the 0.9 percentage points decline in July.

The personal consumption and housing category contributed negatively, though marginally, to the CFNAI, by minus 0.04 points, compared with 0.09 points in July, as housing starts decreased in the month.

Sales, orders and inventories category also swung to negative territory in August, moving down to minus 0.04 from 0.53 the prior month, the Chicago Fed said.

Write to Xavier Fontdegloria at xavier.fontdegloria@wsj.com

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

September 21, 2020 08:44 ET (12:44 GMT)Copyright (c) 2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

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