GDP
GDP Articles
The U.S. Commerce Department has released its first read on real gross domestic product for the third quarter of 2014.
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It is not particularly surprising that a major shipping company would disclose that the holiday season will be its busiest.
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thinkstockThe global population is aging rapidly. Today, there are roughly 868 million people who are at least 60 years old globally, or about 12% of the world’s population. By 2050, more than 2...
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The Institute for Supply Management released its Non-Manufacturing Index for September with a reading of 58.6%.
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Christine Lagarde of the IMF gave a speech on the new mediocrity at Georgetown University, and she also spoke with Bloomberg's Tom Keene on Thursday.
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With Friday's key unemployment and payrolls report coming up, investors are looking for any glimmer of what to expect in directional movement.
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Fitch Ratings' latest Global Economic Outlook forecasts that global GDP growth will pick up in 2015 and 2016.
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The National Association for Business Economics (NABE) offered its September 2014 Outlook Survey report. The numbers were not rosy.
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Investors have been taught that the Commerce Department's reading on durable goods each month is perhaps the most volatile of all major economic readings.
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The Bureau of Economic Analysis reported its readings on gross domestic product Friday morning.
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ThinkstockThe U.S. Department of Commerce is set to come out with the gross domestic product (GDP) reading Friday morning before the market opens. This will be the final revision for the second...
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These trends almost certainly will press the prices of individual stocks, and the market as a whole, upward for months.
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The Business Roundtable's third-quarter 2014 CEO Economic Outlook Index signals that chief executives expect growth to slow in the six months ahead.
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ThinkstockTracking economic data out of China is extremely hard to compare to the rest of the world. After all, most of the world would be thrilled to have growth numbers of 5%, 6%, 7% and more. Not...
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After sliding for four consecutive years, the United States moved up two places for the second year in a row in the World Economic Forum’s competitiveness rankings, from fifth last year to third in...
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