Housing. The consumer economy continued to improve last week, as evidenced by positive housing news:
Consumer confidence. The Conference Board’s Consumer Confidence Index posted a substantial increase for August, from 90.9 to 101.5, well above expectations and more than offsetting the prior month’s fall. The rise was broad based, with improvements in the present conditions index and in the number of people reporting that jobs were hard to get.
Personal income and spending. Although not outstanding, these figures continue to show steady growth:
Business results. From a business perspective, the news was positive as well:
GDP growth. The big news last week was the jump in second-quarter GDP growth, which was revised up to 3.7 percent from the previous estimate of 2.3 percent. Coming in well above expectations of 3.2 percent, this result indicates that growth remained strong despite all the turbulence during the quarter.
Tuesday: The ISM Manufacturing Index is expected to remain stable, with the potential for a small increase. Although results may not be especially strong, the fact that the index should stay in growth territory despite many headwinds for manufacturing is a positive sign.
Thursday: The ISM Non-Manufacturing Index, which covers the much larger U.S. service sector, is expected to decline from last month’s exceptionally strong level while continuing to indicate high growth.
Friday: The major release of the week, the employment report should show continued growth at healthy levels. Based on the coverage of the Federal Reserve conference in Jackson Hole over the weekend, it appears that a rate increase this year is still on the table. Friday's employment report should have a lot of influence on whether that happens.