Each week we highlight five things affecting the life sciences industry. Here's the latest. FDA approves new self-collection approach to cervical cancer screening According to the Washington Post, the Food and Drug Administration has approved a newly developed screening test for cervical cancer that ... READ MORE >
Search Results for: inflation
Soft housing and manufacturing data fuels prospect of rate cut
Economic data on housing, manufacturing and jobs released on Thursday pointed to softer-than-expected economic activity in the second quarter. Most notably was April’s data on housing starts and permits, which not only came in below estimates, but prior readings were also revised down. Rising mortgage ... READ MORE >
Producer price offers mixed result ahead of CPI release
The producer price index increased by 0.5% in April, above estimates, as both goods and services prices accelerated, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data released on Tuesday. The increase, however, was offset by a downward revision to March’s number, from a 0.2% increase to a 0.1% decline. That ... READ MORE >
Interest rate volatility: Why Fed policy guidance is less effective
In less than a year, the 10-year yield has moved more than 350 basis points in both directions, a volatility not seen since the financial crisis. The MOVE Index, a measure of bond market volatility, has experienced what can politely be called excessive volatility since the Federal Reserve started ... READ MORE >
How Canada can improve its lagging productivity
Increased productivity is a rising tide that lifts all boats, and the lack of it stifles growth. By keeping inflation low while improving efficiency, it is a kind of virtuous cycle that benefits consumers and businesses alike. Yet Canada’s productivity has stagnated, and, not surprisingly, so has ... READ MORE >
Intervening in foreign exchange markets: The poverty of dollar devaluation
The United States has become a magnet for global capital as investors flock to its resilient economy because of interest rate and growth differentials between the U.S. and its major trading partners and a structural budget deficit featuring robust spending on infrastructure, supply chain resilience and ... READ MORE >
Canadian economy showed resilience in April, adding 90,400 jobs
Resilience in the economy should not be a reason to delay rate cuts. While the stronger-than expected job report released on Friday speaks to the resilience of the Canadian economy, the long-term trend is an undeniable weakening in the job market. In April, Canada added 90,400 jobs, far surpassing ... READ MORE >
U.S. monthly employment report: Hiring cools in April
Hiring cooled in April from the torrid pace of 269,000 jobs on average during the first three months of 2024, as the economy generated an average increase of 175,000 positions in total employment and enters the second quarter of the year, according to data released on Friday from the Bureau of Labor ... READ MORE >
Job openings fall to a three-year low as manufacturing softens
Job openings in March plunged to 8.49 million, the lowest level in three years, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics on Wednesday. The drop was in line with our forecast that pointed to a cooling labor market where the imbalance between labor demand and supply is narrowing. Our two preferred ... READ MORE >
Labor costs rise, complicating Fed’s decision on rate cuts
The employment cost index accelerated above expectations in the first quarter, complicating the Federal Reserve's decision of when to start cutting its policy rate. The index, a closely watched indicator of labor costs by the Fed, will almost certainly guarantee a more hawkish tone from the central ... READ MORE >