Sunday, May 15, 2011

The Weekly summaries: The A List = Calculated Risk & The Paper Economy; The B List = BLS-TED and MarketWatch - This Week in Charts

[mEDITate-OR:
not know about The Weekly summaries...
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If you do not "follow the lead of" Calculated Risk you probably do not know that at the end of each week, Bill provides two Summaries - what significant happened last week, and what significant will happen this week.
This is The Classic Debate Method = Tell them what you are gonna tell them - tell them - and then tell them what they should remember about what you have told them.
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Sold on the Top doesn't do that - he merely provides wonderful charts, and decent explanations.
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MarketWatch and BLS-TED are two very good but very different week sets of charts.
MW is a weekly Summary, TED is not.
MW also provides a quick link to the main WSJ articles about each chart.
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Daniel and Colin are "analysts"
while their charts are good, and Daniel's are generally better...
tis there analysis of their charts that is outstanding.
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Each of these very valuable resources are weekly must reads.
FYI
Enjoy.
=====     The A List:
Summary for Week Ending May 13th
http://www.calculatedriskblog.com/2011/05/summary-for-week-ending-may-13th.html
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Schedule for Week of May 15th
http://www.calculatedriskblog.com/2011/05/schedule-for-week-of-may-15th.html
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The Paper Economy
= A US real estate bubble blog
http://paper-money.blogspot.com/
=======     The B List
THE WEEK IN CHARTS May 13:
Rising Prices; Food at home; Four-week jobless claims average; Job openings rise
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/in-charts-inflation-and-inflation-expectations-2011-05-13?link=mw_story_kiosk
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BLS-TED:
Job openings and rate; Import and export prices increase; Productivity 1stQ;Unemployment rate at 9.0 percent; Employment changes by industry
http://www.bls.gov/opub/ted/archive.htm#may11
==========    THE Analysts:
Daniel Indiviglio 
is an associate editor at The Atlantic, where he writes about credit markets, regulation, monetary & fiscal policy, taxes, banking, trade, emerging markets and technology.
http://www.theatlantic.com/daniel-indiviglio
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Street Sweep by Colin Barr
Following the money in banking, economics and Washington
http://finance.fortune.cnn.com/category/street-sweep/?iid=H_F_QL
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