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More Good News: Consumer Confidence, Retail Sales and the TED Spread

While the unemployment rate continues to rise, it is important to remember two things. First, it is a lagging indicator of the economy. More on that in a minute. The second is that there are lots of signs of good news around:

The changes in the capital markets are all signs that the Fed's program of driving up the opportunity cost of holding cash (by driving short term rates basically to zero) is working and investor willingness to take risk is being restored.

They also serve as an indication of why you should not panic when you see the unemployment rate continue to rise. As I mentioned, it is a lagging indicator, meaning the economy tends to recover before the unemployment rate begins to decline.

On the other hand, the stock market is a leading indicator. As proof of that, consider the following: Since 1970 stocks have returned 15 percent per year when unemployment has been higher than 6 percent. That is more than 50 percent above the long-term average. However, when unemployment was less than 4.3 percent, stocks returned just 2.1 percent a year, or about 80 percent less than the long term average.

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