The third quarter showed great confidence in the form of stock market returns. We started off with better than expected earnings reports and a nice stock market rally. Consumers are wondering if the recession is over or is this just a tease.
There are many opinions of economists and analysts and anyone can choose what you wish to believe. Some say the recession is over and the economy is recovering, others say we are still in contraction. I believe it is worth taking a closer look at what the economic data is telling us.
Unemployment is considered to be a lagging indicator meaning we may still have job losses after we are in recovery. Some have named this a “jobless recovery” similar to the 1991 recession. Recently the unemployment rate rose to 9.7%. The nation is still showing job losses, not job growth. However there is slight growth in government and health care related jobs.
Housing appears to be stabilizing as there were increased sales in the last three months. Some cities, including Denver are showing the least rate of decline in housing prices and some analysts are calling a bottom here. However some believe the summer months may not be giving us a true measurement and any increases were largely on foreclosed properties. This again is a trend in the right direction but certainly not a significant recovery yet after over three years of recessionary housing prices.
Retail sales are also a good indicator of what the consumer confidence is and how well the household is managing. While back to school season helped some retailers, it was mostly the large discounters who benefited.
Consumer spending makes up 70 percent of the GDP number and with high unemployment and low housing prices it will be difficult to see much of a rise in GDP without the other indicators improving. Consumer savings are up and spending is down which are good lessons learned during hard times. Recovery will need sustainable, reasonable spending to gradually return.
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) which measures the growth of the economy in general is still negative by 1.5 percent for the second quarter 2009. Again, this is a nice trend up from where we were at the deepest part of the recession, but it is still showing the economy is in contraction.
The Consumer Price Index (CPI) is a measurement of price inflation or deflation. At 0.1 percent this is very low indicating a neutral position.
The Consumer Credit numbers declined significantly for the last several months. This indicator is popular since our credit crisis focuses on bank lending and the consumer’s ability to borrow money. There has been a significant contraction indicating once again the drag on growth potential without the consumer’s ability to borrow.
There are many other economic indicators that may be helpful but these are the areas most affected by consumers. Investors may be looking at different indicators, such as stock market trends, investment fundamentals, dividend yields and historical trends.
The overall picture looks significantly better than even a few months ago. My favorite analogy is the business cycle which moves from recession to growth and back again over a period of years. This would indicate that 20 months of recession is pushing the outer limits of previous contractions. Just by looking at the business cycle alone some analysts can determine we are nearing the end of ‘The Great Recession’ or the largest economic decline since the Great Depression.
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Monday, December 28, 2009
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
Latisys Expands Chicago Data Center
The company says the expansion is designed to meet its singificant growth. The company has doubled the size of its Chicago employee base since the beginning of the year and expects to grow staff at the Chicago-area data center by an additional 33 percent over the next six months.
Phase 1 of the expansion project brings an additional 9,000 square feet of high density raised floor to Latisys' Oak Brook, Illinois data center.
This additional space is already 70 percent sold, and the data center now has 70 customers that are using Latisys' managed hosting, colocation and disaster recovery services.
"An increasing number of organizations are turning to our suburban Chicago facility as a cost-effective, secure and seamless way to address their long term need for additional data center space, power and services," says John McCreary, general manager of Latisys. "The completion of the first phase of our facility expansion and employee growth reflect Latisys' commitment to providing customers with the scalability, flexibility and agility to grow and thrive."
Latisys is also currently constructing the second phase of the expansion project, which will add an additional 13,000 square feet of high density raised floor space to the Oak Brook facility in Q3 2009.
A couple of other data center operators also recently announced data center expansions in the Chicago area.
Source
Phase 1 of the expansion project brings an additional 9,000 square feet of high density raised floor to Latisys' Oak Brook, Illinois data center.
This additional space is already 70 percent sold, and the data center now has 70 customers that are using Latisys' managed hosting, colocation and disaster recovery services.
"An increasing number of organizations are turning to our suburban Chicago facility as a cost-effective, secure and seamless way to address their long term need for additional data center space, power and services," says John McCreary, general manager of Latisys. "The completion of the first phase of our facility expansion and employee growth reflect Latisys' commitment to providing customers with the scalability, flexibility and agility to grow and thrive."
Latisys is also currently constructing the second phase of the expansion project, which will add an additional 13,000 square feet of high density raised floor space to the Oak Brook facility in Q3 2009.
A couple of other data center operators also recently announced data center expansions in the Chicago area.
Source
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