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Is the worst of the economic storm behind us?
Consider the evidence: the Dow Jones Industrial Average
leapt about 7.3 percent this week to its biggest weekly gain since March. Positive earnings or upbeat remarks from
Intel, Goldman Sachs, and JPMorgan Chase have contributed to the optimism. During the past five days, stock market bears have been roasted alive.
Yet. And but. There is another side to the story, which is the lackluster state of much of the rest of the economy. Heavy consumer debt loads have not vanished. Neither have the housing market's woes, and still-to-come price declines in many areas. CIT Group's potential demise -- for once, a Wall Street firm that
didn't get a bailout -- is further evidence that the plague of financial contagion has not run its course.
On the earnings front, the
Wall Street Journal reminds us that analysts predict all 10 of the major industry groups represented in the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index will experience a second-quarter decline in profitability from 2008 to 2009.
A Goldman Sachs report says: "We find that under reasonable parameters of supply and demand growth, it will take at least two years, and probably more like three to five years, to eliminate spare capacity in the manufacturing sector... In the labor market, the unemployment rate is likely to remain above the current concept of 'normal' for an even longer period."
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