Top Takes From RealMoney
The RealMoney contributors are in the business of trading and investing all day on the basis of ongoing news flow. Below, we offer the top five ideas that RealMoney contributors posted today and how they played those ideas.
TheStreet.com brings you the news all day, and with RealMoney's "Columnist Conversation," you can see how the pros are playing it on a real-time basis. Here are the top five ideas played today. To see all that RealMoney offers, click here for a free trial. 1. Canada August GDP DisappointsBy Marc Chandler
9:46 a.m. EDT Canada reported that August GDP contracted by 0.1%, whereas the consensus expected a 0.1% increase. Small change for sure, but the sign is wrong. And it likely prevents the Canadian dollar from recovering from the recent slide that has brought it to a four-week low against the otherwise sagging U.S. dollar. Although the U.S. reported a 3.5% expansion in third-quarter GDP yesterday on a preliminary basis, it is not clear that the Canadian economy has exited from its recession. The economy was flat in July before the 0.1% contraction in August. The weakness in the report was noteworthy in the oil and gas sectors, which contracted 2.3%. Manufacturing remains in the doldrums, contracting 0.7%. Some may attribute the weakness in manufacturing to the strength of the Canadian dollar, but the soft demand may be a bigger culprit. What strength there was in the Canadian economy stemmed from the fiscal assistance. Many investors recognize that Canada is in better fiscal shape than the U.S., but the risk is being exaggerated somewhat. Yesterday, the S&P cut the province of Ontario's credit rating a notch due to the fiscal deterioration. Canada's national budget deficit is about 6% of GDP, and the government debt is about 64%. The Canadian dollar's downside momentum see at the end of last week and earlier this week has eased. The US. dollar has found a near-term base near CAD1.0630-50. As this was just tested, the rule of alternation now suggests that the upper end of the new range may be tested -- this is seen near CAD1.0820-50. The data underscore the idea that Canada is lagging behind others in the recovery and in the ability to normalize policy. Key reports next week include employment and IVEY PMI for October and are expected to softened from the September readings. No positions.
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