Monday, August 13, 2012
Dog Days of Summer
According to Wikipedia, the Dog Days (Read: Dog Days of Summer) were
believed to be an evil time when “the Sea boiled, the wine turned sour,
dogs grew mad, and all other creatures became languid; causing to man,
among other diseases, burning
fevers, hysterics, and phrensies”- Brady’s Clavis Calendaria,
1813. Add to that, high blood pressure, stress, stomach ulcers and any
other malady that permeates the investment community and Brady is spot
on. While the Old Farmer’s Almanac says the Dog
Day’s should have ended on Saturday it looks like they’ll persist at
least until the extended Labor Day weekend here in the U.S. - from a
financial market standpoint- as more indications of a global economic
slowdown and sovereign debt fears keep things interesting.
Japan, the world’s #3 economy, released data today showing that GDP
grew at a dismal pace of just .3% in the second quarter. Meanwhile, the
mercury is rising in Europe, along with Spanish and Italian bond yields
that continue to hover at unsustainable levels
making potential bailouts for both countries seemingly inevitable.
Italy’s debt load is said to be 123% of output, second only to Greece in
the euro region. There are no economic reports on tap for today and
earnings season is coming to a close so expect the
week to start off with light trading volumes as investors ponder what
to do next ahead of the next central bank meetings. Have a great day!
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