2015/3/20 기준

US Treasury Bonds Rates

Maturity

Yield

Yesterday

Last Week

Last Month

3 Month

0.00

0.01

0.03

0.00

6 Month

0.09

0.10

0.10

0.05

2 Year

0.58

0.61

0.65

0.60

3 Year

0.93

0.99

1.06

1.01

5 Year

1.41

1.47

1.58

1.51

10 Year

1.93

1.97

2.12

2.08

30 Year

2.51

2.53

2.70

2.71

Bonds Market Summary

3:35 pm - Good Day, Great Week: The Treasury finished a great week on a good note with additional gains across the curve, led by the belly 2-yr yield -2 bps to 0.59% (-7 bps for the week) 5-yr yield -5 bps to 1.42% (-17 bps for the week) 7-yr yield -5 bps to 1.73% (-19 bps for the week) 10-yr yield -4 bps to 1.93% (-18 bps for the week) 30-yr bond -3 bps to 2.50% (-20 bps for theMore...

-------------------

5년 국채금리 동향. 5% 정도 될때도 있었다니…

10년 국채금리 동향.

Posted by 쁘레드

미국의 주택경기는 2007년 경제위기 몇년만에 주요도시 위주로 가파른 상승을 보여줬지요.

그렇지만 아직까지 2007년 버블까지 따라잡으려면 더 많은 노력을 해야겠네요. 여기에 이자율까지 오르면 어떤 상황이 벌어질지… 재밌겠네요.

 

 

좋은 사이트 : http://www.calculatedriskblog.com/

Posted by 쁘레드

 

2015년 2월 현재 5.5%, 3월은 5.1-5.2% 사이로 예상된다고 함. 5%정도가 완전고용으로 본다는 기본 관념이 있었는데 시대가 변했으니 완전고용에 대한 정의를 빠꿔야 한다는 논의가 활발해게 진행중.

1982년 10.8%, 60년간 최고점

2009년에 10.0% : 경제위기후 최고점

미국의 경우는 정말 특이한 현상인데, 대체적으로 경제가 한번 무너지면 경제성장률이 낮고 물가도 많이 안오르는 추세속에서는 완전고용으로 다시 가기는 정말 어렵다고 봅니다. 한국의 실업률을 유심히 보면 재밌을듯.

https://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/UNRATE

Civilian Unemployment Rate

 

미국 public debt가 지난 15년간 엄청나게 증가하고 있는데 이건 어떻게 이해하면 좋을지, 다른 국가들이 따라해도 좋을지 생각해 볼 문제네요.

 

이것은 중앙정부 debt. GDP에 100%에 욱박하는데.

 

참고로 그리스 data를 찾아보니 2000년초에 이미 GDP대비 120% 부채가 있었고 경제위기 시작되고 163%까지 폭등했네요. 다른 뉴스에서 2014년에 175%까지 올랐다고 하니…


연준 경제 DB : http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/


Posted by 쁘레드
경제이야기/Stock2015. 3. 21. 09:17

작년에 AA에서 쉽게 큰 수익을 봤었는데 요즘 속절없이 무너져서 아주 군침을 돌리며 바라보고 있습니다.

가장큰문제는 aluminum 가격이 고가대비 30%이상 급락한 영향이 큰것 같습니다.

To be updated

  • 알루미늄 가격이 떨어진 이유와 전망
  • AA의 Aluminum 매출/순이익 대비 비율
  • Fundamental analysis
  • 회사예상가치
  • 경쟁자
  • 최근 발표된 인수합병관련 영향
  • 내부자 거래동향

 

-------------------------------

Today’s Trading

Previous close12.96
Today’s open13.02
Day’s range12.90 - 13.09
Volume38,762,284
Average volume (3 months)21,945,226
Market cap$15.9B
Dividend yield0.93%
Data as of 4:00pm ET, 03/20/2015

Growth & Valuation

Earnings growth (last year)--
Earnings growth (this year)+20.88%
Earnings growth (next 5 years)+10.00%
Revenue growth (last year)+3.57%
P/E ratio57.1
Price/Sales0.77
Price/Book1.29

Competitors

 Today’s
change
Today’s
% change
AAPRBAlcoa Inc+0.13+0.30%
AAPRAlcoa Inc0.000.00%
Data as of 4:02pm ET, 03/20/2015

Financials

Next reporting dateApril 9, 2015
EPS forecast (this quarter)$0.25
Annual revenue (last year)$23.9B
Annual profit (last year)$268.0M
Net profit margin1.12%

Profile

Sector
Non-Energy Minerals
Industry
Aluminum
Chairman &
Chief Executive Officer
Klaus-Christian Kleinfeld
Chief Financial Officer &
Executive Vice President
William F. Oplinger
Corporate headquarters
New York, New York





















































Forecasts


-------------------------------

Data provided by Capital IQ, except where noted.

Valuation Measures 
Market Cap (intraday)5:15.85B
Enterprise Value (Mar 21, 2015)3:22.88B
Trailing P/E (ttm, intraday):61.76
Forward P/E (fye Dec 31, 2016)1:9.90
PEG Ratio (5 yr expected)1:1.05
Price/Sales (ttm):0.66
Price/Book (mrq):1.29
Enterprise Value/Revenue (ttm)3:0.96
Enterprise Value/EBITDA (ttm)6:6.64

Financial Highlights 
Fiscal Year
Fiscal Year Ends:Dec 31
Most Recent Quarter (mrq):Dec 31, 2014
Profitability
Profit Margin (ttm):1.12%
Operating Margin (ttm):9.53%
Management Effectiveness
Return on Assets (ttm):3.89%
Return on Equity (ttm):1.25%
Income Statement
Revenue (ttm):23.91B
Revenue Per Share (ttm):20.57
Qtrly Revenue Growth (yoy):14.20%
Gross Profit (ttm):4.77B
EBITDA (ttm)6:3.45B
Net Income Avl to Common (ttm):247.00M
Diluted EPS (ttm):0.21
Qtrly Earnings Growth (yoy):N/A
Balance Sheet
Total Cash (mrq):1.88B
Total Cash Per Share (mrq):1.54
Total Debt (mrq):8.85B
Total Debt/Equity (mrq):59.84
Current Ratio (mrq):1.49
Book Value Per Share (mrq):10.07
Cash Flow Statement
Operating Cash Flow (ttm):1.67B
Levered Free Cash Flow (ttm):369.12M

Trading Information 
Stock Price History
Beta:0.73
52-Week Change3:7.99%
S&P500 52-Week Change3:13.49%
52-Week High (Nov 21, 2014)3:17.75
52-Week Low (Mar 26, 2014)3:11.85
50-Day Moving Average3:14.96
200-Day Moving Average3:15.82

-------------------------------

 

Trefis Analysts estimate a price of $15.98 for Alcoa's stock, about 23% higher than the current market price. * Engineered Products constitute 38% of the Trefis price estimate for Alcoa's stock. * Primary Metals constitute 27% of the Trefis price estimate for Alcoa's stock. * Alumina constitutes 19% of the Trefis price estimate for Alcoa's stock

 

Analyst Research

More »

No Credit Suisse report available. 

  Thomson Reuters

Last Reported 3/20/15

  S&P Capital IQ

Last Reported 3/14/15

  SmartConsensus Report

Last Reported 03/20/2015

 

Technical Research 

  Market Edge Second Opinion

Last Reported 3/13/15

Technical Analysis »

 

Shareholder Equity

Shares Outstanding 

1.2 B 

Institutional Ownership 

63.47% 

Number of Floating Shares 

1.2 B 

Short Interest as % of Float 

2.50% 

Financial Strength (MRQ)

Quick Ratio 

0.94x 

     

Current Ratio 

1.49x 

     

Debt/Equity 

0.72x 

     

Debt/Assets 

0.24x 

     

AA's debt to equity ratio indicates that it has been more aggressive with using debt to finance growth than 63% of its peers in the Metal Mining industry. The resultant effect on earnings would be more volatile than related companies.

Valuation (MRQ)

Price/Earnings (TTM) 

63.75x 

     

Price/Sales (TTM) 

0.66x 

     

Price/Book 

1.29x 

     

Price/Cash Flow 

9.18x 

     

AA's P/E Ratio is greater than 91% of other companies in the Metal Mining industry. This typically means that investors are willing to pay more for its level of earnings relative to future growth.

Profitability (TTM)

Gross Margin 

19.99% 

     

Operating Margin 

4.30% 

     

EBITDA Margin 

14.93% 

     

Net Profit Margin 

0.74% 

     

AA's Gross Margin is comparable to other companies in the Metal Mining industry, which means it has relatively the same amount of cash to spend on business operations as its peers. As indicated by the Operating Margin, AA controls its costs and expenses better than 69% of its peers.

Management Effectiveness (TTM)

Return on Assets

0.48% 

     

Return on Equity 

2.17% 

     

Return on Inves. Capital 

0.63% 

     

The Return on Equity for AA shows that it is able to reinvest its earnings more efficiently than 75% of its competitors in the Metal Mining industry. Typically, companies that have higher return on equity values are more attractive to investors.

Growth Rate (TTM)

Earnings Per Share 

109.5 

     

Sales 

3.8 

     

Dividend (MRQ) 

0.0 

     

AA's EPS Growth Rate is greater than 92% of its peers in the Metal Mining industry.

Dividend (TTM)

Dividend Yield 

0.93% 

     

Payout Ratio 

56.68% 

     

Annual Dividend 

0.12 

     

AA's dividend yield is less than 94% of other companies in the Metal Mining industry. As indicated by the payout ratio, AA's earnings support the dividend payouts as well as others in the group.

Operating Ratios (TTM)

Asset Turnover 

0.65% 

     

Inventory Turnover 

6.61% 

     

Receivables Turnover 

18.29% 

     

Effective Tax Rate 

64.39% 

     

------------------------------------

 

 

 

 

 

Posted by 쁘레드
경제이야기2015. 3. 20. 11:31

악덕기업이 망하는것이야 할수없지만 한국 기업은 자기 임직원을 너무 부려먹고 한국국민에게 더 비싸게 받는듯 존경하기 어려운 기업들이 많은데. 시장에 인력은 넘쳐나고 갑의 위치에서 폭력은 더 심해질듯. 직장구하기도 어려운 판에 임금을 상승 압력은 상당히 약할듯.

결국 지금까지 국민들의 도움으로 잘먹고 잘 살던 얘들이 조금 어려워졌다고 나부터 살자로 나가는듯. 오히려 지금까지 고마웠으니 이번에는 내가 도울차례라고 임금을 올리고 고용을 늘려도 시원찮을판에.

  • 삼성전자 임금동결, 구조조정, 중복 조직 통폐합,
  • 삼성물산 300명 해고,
  • 현대 중공업 30% 구조조정
  • SKT 명퇴신청받는중
  • KT명퇴신청받는중
  • 팬택망하고
  • 동양그룹
  • 건설사들 실적하향후 인력줄이기
  • 은행 저금리에 구조조정
  • 두산 구조조정
  • 대한전선, 성동조선해양, SPP조선, STX 구조조정
  • Etc etc

앞으로 정직원 중직원 계약직 등으로 계약직들이 세분화되면 노동시장이 더 유연해지겠지만 고용자들의 폭력이 더 심화될것이 뻔함.

Posted by 쁘레드
경제이야기/Stock2015. 3. 19. 11:36

좋은 배당주 한둘정도 추가해주면 꾸준히 income도 되고 될성부릇한(?) 놈은 가격까지 상승하니 꿩먹고 알먹고. 내 투자 성향상 배당주는 썩 별로지만 10년만 지나도 많은 자산을 배당주에 넣을 확률은 높다.

Kiplinger's에서 추천하는 주식과 펀드는 상당히 믿을 만하다. 잡지를 구독하면 한두개씩 보내주는데, 돈주고 보기는 아깝지만 상당히 유용하다.

'경제이야기 > Stock' 카테고리의 다른 글

2015년 유가상승 가능성을 이용한 투자 idea  (0) 2015.03.23
AA Alcoa 추천  (0) 2015.03.21
Crude oil 상승/하락에 베팅하기  (0) 2015.03.18
F How Ford And GM Compare In China  (0) 2015.03.17
AA This Is Not The Same Alcoa  (0) 2015.03.17
Posted by 쁘레드

불평등의 경제학. 미국 대도시의 상위5% 하위 20% 차이를 track하는 data. 아틀란다(Atlanta) 가장 심하다고 한다. 추세가 점점 벌어지고 있는듯.

-----------------------

Some cities are still more unequal than others
—an update

By: Alan Berube and Natalie Holmes

More than five years after the end of the Great Recession, and three years since the Occupy movement took on Wall Street, high and growing levels of income inequality continue to animate debates on politics and public policy. Inequality provided the economic backdrop for President Obama's 2015 State of the Union address, the recent report of a transatlantic Commission on Inclusive Prosperity, and one of the most talked-about books of 2014, French economist Thomas Piketty's Capital in the Twenty-First Century.

Although each of those examples focuses on the actions that national governments should take to address inequality, continued gridlock in Washington has inspired growing interest and activity at the sub-national level around ameliorating inequality and promoting social mobility. In 2014 alone, 14 states and the District of Columbia enacted increases in their minimum wagesMany cities adopted or considered similar measures, most notably Seattle, which is raising its minimum wage to $15/hour by 2017. Some observers argue that cities themselves are better positioned to enhance social mobility for low-income residents than the federal government.

This report updates a 2014 analysis that looked at levels of income inequality in the 50 largest U.S. cities, and examines in particular trends between 2012 and 2013, the most recent data available from the U.S. Census Bureau. Like the earlier analysis, it focuses on incomes among households near the top of the distribution—those earning more than 95 percent of all other households—and households closer to the bottom of the distribution—those earning more than only 20 percent of all other households. It then measures the gap between the two, or the "95/20 ratio." All dollar amounts are adjusted for inflation to 2013 levels.

Large cities remain more unequal by income than the nation overall

In 2013, big cities continued to exhibit greater income disparities between rich and poor households than the rest of the country (Figure 1). Across the 50 largest cities, households in the 95th percentile of income earned 11.6 times as much as households at the 20th percentile, a considerably wider margin than the national average ratio of 9.3. This difference reflects the fact that in big cities the rich have higher incomes, and the poor lower incomes, than their counterparts nationally. From 2012 to 2013, the inequality ratio widened in both cities and the nation overall, as incomes at the top grew somewhat faster than incomes at the bottom. Notably, incomes grew faster for both the rich and poor in cities than they did elsewhere.

DOWNLOAD

17 KB

AUTHORS

Alan Berube

Alan Berube is a senior fellow and deputy director of the Brookings Metropolitan Policy Program. A former policy advisor to the U.S. Treasury Department, he is an expert on metropolitan demographics, low-wage workers, and urban poverty.

@berubea1

Natalie Holmes

Natalie Holmes is a senior research assistant at the Metropolitan Policy Program. Her work focuses on poverty, access to opportunity, and tax policies that support low-income workers and communities in metropolitan America.

In 12 of the 50 largest cities, the rich became significantly richer between 2012 and 2013

Several cities witnessed dramatic growth in the incomes of their highest-earning households between 2012 and 2013 (Table 1). In 12 cities, incomes for the 95th percentile of households in 2013 exceeded those in 2012 by a statistically significant margin. Seattle topped the list with 15 percent growth in income among those households, equivalent to a $36,000 increase. The three cities with the next-largest increases at the 95th percentile—Cleveland, Jacksonville, Fla., and Louisville, Ky.—are not generally regarded as wealthy cities, and indeed the 14 percent increases they registered near the top translated to lower increases in absolute dollar terms ($21,000 in Jacksonville and Louisville; $14,000 in Cleveland). Incomes for wealthy households also jumped by double-digit rates in San Jose, Calif., Dallas, and Portland, Ore.

In only one of the 50 largest cities—Albuquerque, N.M.—did 95th-percentile incomes decline from 2012 to 2013. The Albuquerque region has struggled economically in recent years, and weak growth there seems to have affected households near the top.

While not statistically significant, the estimated rate of income growth for rich households in San Francisco topped 18 percent, equivalent to a $66,000 bump. The Census Bureau does not provide enough data on high-income earners in San Francisco to conclusively demonstrate that increase, but the trend is consistent with anecdotal evidence on growing concentrations of very-high-paying jobs and households in that city.

San Francisco also stands apart from the pack in just how rich its richest households were in 2013 (Figure 2). They earned at least $423,000, more than $100,000 clear of their counterparts in San Jose. Wealthy households in Washington, D.C. were the only other group whose incomes topped $300,000 in 2013. These cities contrasted sharply with Detroit, where incomes at the 95th percentile reached only $108,000. And despite a significant increase from 2012 to 2013, incomes among Cleveland's top-earning households cleared just $116,000 in 2013.

Most high-income households in cities have recovered the ground they lost during the recession. By 2013, in only eight of the 50 largest cities were incomes for top-earning households significantly below their 2007, pre-recession levels. Las Vegas registered the largest dip, at 19 percent. In four cities—Cleveland, Portland, San Francisco, and San Jose—top incomes in 2013 significantly exceeded their 2007 levels.

In 11 of the 50 largest cities, low-income households made significant gains from 2012 to 2013

About one in five of the nation's largest cities posted significant income gains at the lower end of the distribution between 2012 and 2013 (Table 1). Jacksonville, San Francisco, Nashville, Tenn., Oklahoma City, and Kansas City, Mo. all posted double-digit increases in 20th-percentile incomes. In both Jacksonville and San Francisco, those translated to increases of at least $3,000 for households at that level. No cities experienced statistically significant income declines among lower-income households from 2012 to 2013.

Notably, cities where incomes grew at the top overlapped very little with those where incomes grew at the bottom. Of the 11 cities where 20th-percentile incomes increased by a statistically significant margin from 2012 to 2013, just two (Jacksonville and Houston) also posted gains at the 95th percentile. It thus seemed that households near the bottom of the income ladder did not benefit from the significant gains accruing to high-income households in many cities. By the same token, low-income households made progress in several cities—particularly Southern and Western cities like Nashville, Oklahoma City, Colorado Springs, Colo., and Austin, Texas—despite little movement at the top.

San Francisco again proved an exceptional story. The 20th-percentile income in that city rose from $21,500 in 2012 to $24,800 in 2013, a 15 percent jump that registered highest among the 50 cities. The Census Bureau data do not reveal, however, how much those gains accrued to low-income households who remained in San Francisco (or any other city, for that matter) versus how much they reflect changes in who lived in the city across those two years. Incomes near the bottom could have increased due in part to very-low-income households leaving the city, perhaps because of affordability challenges. The fact that Oakland, Calif. also saw significant income growth at the lower end may signal that a strong Bay Area economy lifted all boats; or low-income households in Oakland may have also experienced affordability pressures similar to their counterparts across the Bay.

Despite positive trends in some cities from 2012 to 2013, lower-income households in the majority (31) of the 50 largest cities had lower incomes in 2013 than they did in 2007. That contrasts sharply with the small number of cities (8) in which incomes declined at the top from 2007 to 2013. Incomes at the 20th percentile were down more than one-quarter from their 2007 levels in Sacramento, Calif., Indianapolis, and Las Vegas, reflecting the lingering impacts a severe recession had on lower-income households in those cities and regions.

Income inequality rose in two cities and fell in four others from 2012 to 2013

How incomes change at the top and bottom of the distribution in a city dictates how its level of inequality, measured by the 95/20 income ratio, changes as well.

Between 2012 and 2013, the inequality ratio rose by a statistically significant margin in just two cities (Table 2). In Cleveland and Dallas, incomes for the rich rose significantly while they stagnated for low-income households. At the other end of the spectrum, four cities posted significant declines in their inequality ratios, in most cases because low incomes rose while those at the top held steady. Kansas City and Nashville registered the largest inequality decreases. The relatively small sample of households in the Census Bureau data introduced too much uncertainty about changes in other cities to definitively conclude that inequality had increased or decreased there. Nevertheless, the fact that estimated inequality ratios rose in 42 cities, and fell in only eight, suggests that the predominant trend in these big cities is toward rising inequality.

Given these dynamics, the map of the most unequal cities in 2013 changed little from the previous year (Figure 3). Atlanta continued to lead the list, with top household incomes in that city nearly 20 times those near the bottom (Table 3). San Francisco still ranked second, with a 95/20 ratio of roughly 17. Boston moved up to third place at 15, while Miami dropped to fourth place thanks to modest income growth among its poorer households. Washington, D.C., New York, Chicago, and Los Angeles all remained in the top 10, while Dallas and Minneapolis moved in as Oakland and Baltimore moved out. Indeed, eight of the top 10 cities for inequality in 2013 also ranked in the top 10 in 2007.

The cities with the most equal distribution of incomes also remained largely the same from 2012 to 2013. All are geographically large cities that incorporate large swaths of suburban territory within their borders, and most are in the South and West. In addition, these cities are not home to the concentrations of technology and financial/professional services industries that pay the very highest salaries and that characterize many of the cities at the top of the inequality rankings.

Trends through 2013 left many cities with higher levels of inequality than they exhibited in 2007, prior to the recession. Twenty-one (21) of the 50 cities had a higher 95/20 income ratio in 2013 than in 2007. Atlanta and San Francisco, the cities with the highest inequality ratios in 2013, exhibited the largest increases in their ratios over that time. Interestingly, Cleveland's increase followed closely behind, driven by the modest gains its top-earning households made in 2013, combined with losses its low-income households suffered in earlier years.

Conclusion

These findings confirm that income inequality remains a salient issue in many big cities today. Moreover, they lend support to the concern that rising incomes at the top of the distribution are not—at least in the short term—lifting earnings near the bottom, even in local markets.

Since the debate over the $15/hour minimum wage started in Seattle in late 2013, many other cities—including Chicago, Los Angeles, New York, and San Francisco—are considering or have enacted increases to the minimum wage locally. While the minimum wage is a potentially important means for helping low-earner households living in high-cost places, local policymakers should not ignore the other tools they have at hand—from education to economic development to housing and zoning policies—that are essential for improving social mobility and sustaining income diversity in big cities today.

Download appendix (XLS) 

Posted by 쁘레드

상황히 급격히 악화되는듯. 악순환이 심해지다보면 좋은 정책도 안먹힐텐데.

통계청 2015년 2월 고용동향

http://kostat.go.kr/portal/korea/kor_nw/2/3/1/index.board?bmode=read&aSeq=334459


------------------

http://www.edaily.co.kr/news/NewsRead.edy?newsid=02145126609304632&SCD=JA11&DCD=A00101

실업자 120만명 시대…고용시장은 '춘래불사춘'(종합)

입력시간 | 2015.03.18 10:27 | 윤종성 기자 jsyoon@


▲실업자 및 실업률 추이(자료= 통계청)

실업자 120만3000명..5년여 만에 최대
청년실업률은 11.1%..외환위기後 최고치
체감실업률 12.5%..통계작성 이래 최고

[세종= 이데일리 윤종성 김상윤 기자] 꽁꽁 얼어붙은 고용시장이 좀처럼 풀릴 기미를 보이지 않고 있다. 계절은 봄을 치닫고 있지만, 일자리 사정은 '춘래불사춘(春來不似春, 봄이 왔지만 봄 같지 않다)''이다. 

18일 통계청이 발표한 '2월 고용동향' 자료를 보면 지난달 실업자 수는 120만3000명으로 집계됐다. 이는 지난 2010년 1월(121만6000명) 이후 5년 여 만에 가장 많은 숫자다. 실업자 수가 100만명을 넘은 것도 지난해 4월 이후 처음이다. 

실업률은 4.6%를 기록해 지난 2010년 2월 이후 5년 만에 가장 높았다. 특히 청년실업률은 심각한 수준을 보였다. 지난달 청년실업률은 11.1%로, 1년 전에 비해 0.5%포인트나 높아졌다.

11.1%라는 청년실업률 수치는 IMF 외환위기 직후인 지난 1999년 7월 이후 가장 높은 수치다. 청년실업률이 두자릿수대로 올라선 것도 지난해 4월(10.0%) 이후 10개월 만이다. 

실업률 관련지표가 모조리 치솟으면서 체감실업률을 의미하는 '고용보조지표3'은 12.5%로 지난해 5월 관련지표 도입 이래 최고치를 기록했다. 

정부는 비경제활동인구가 경제활동에 참여하면서 빚어진 현상이라며, 대수롭지 않게 여기고 있다. 

주환욱 기획재정부 정책기획과장은 "경활참가율 증가세가 지속되는 가운데 실업률이 소폭 상승했다"면서 "일반적으로 2월은 방학, 취업시즌 등 계절적 특성으로 다른 달에 비해 평균 1.1%v포인트 이상 높다"고 설명이다. 

하지만 이날 발표된 고용동향 자료를 뜯어보면 갈수록 악화되는 고용 사정을 엿볼 수 있다. 지난달 취업자수는 2519만5000명으로 전년 동월대비 37만6000명 증가하는데 그쳤다. 

올 들어 취업자수 증가 폭은 지난 1월(34만7000명)에 이어 두달째 30만명대에 머물고 있다. 지난해의 경우 취업자수 증가 폭은 6월(39만8000명) 한달을 제외하고 매월 40만명대 이상을 기록했다. 

지난해 8개월 연속 60%를 넘었던 고용률도 올 들어 한풀 꺾였다. 고용률은 지난해 10월 60.9%에서 △11월 60.8% △12월 59.4% △올해 1월 58.7%로 줄곧 하락하다, 2월에는 0.1%포인트 늘어난 58.8%를 기록했다. 사실상의 보합이다. 

지난달 청년층 고용률(15~29세)은 41.1%로, 1년 전보다 0.5%포인트 증가한 것으로 나타났다. 하지만 한달 전(41.3%)과 비교해보면 0.2%포인트 하락한 수치다. 

주 과장은 "비정규직 차별 완화 등 노동시장 구조개혁, 교육개혁 등을 통해 청년층에 대한 양질의 일자리 창출 노력을 강화할 필요가 있다"고 말했다. 

한편, 지난달 비경제활동인구는 1642만9000명으로 전년동월대비 8만3000명(0.5%) 증가한 것으로 나타났다. 

남성 비경제활동인구는 562만9000명으로 1년 전보다 9만1000명(1.6%) 늘어난 반면, 여자는 1080만1000명으로 8000명(-0.1%) 감소한 것으로 집계됐다. 

비경제활동 인구 가운데 구직단념자는 45만6000명으로, 1년새 18만9000명 늘어난 것으로 나타났다. XML:Y

Posted by 쁘레드
경제이야기/Stock2015. 3. 18. 06:02

Margin계좌를 만드어서 option을 하는것이 좋겠지만, 주식을 사고 팔듯이 쉽게(???) 할수 있는 방법이 많이 있습니다. 제가 지난 경제위기때 은행주 오르고 내림에 배팅해 본 결과 절대로 초보는 하지 말아야 겠구나 몸소 체험했습니다. 주식도 크게보면 도박인데, 옵션으로 갈수록 이건 완전도박. 대박도 쪽박도 이상하지 않음.

----------------------

3x Bear(Inverse) : DWTI



3x BULL(Long) : UWTI



2x Long(Bull) : UCO

'경제이야기 > Stock' 카테고리의 다른 글

AA Alcoa 추천  (0) 2015.03.21
Investing for income 2014 August  (0) 2015.03.19
F How Ford And GM Compare In China  (0) 2015.03.17
AA This Is Not The Same Alcoa  (0) 2015.03.17
F Ford Motor Could Be Worth Up To $37 Per Share  (0) 2015.03.17
Posted by 쁘레드
경제이야기/Stock2015. 3. 17. 05:46

GM이 미리 중국에 진출에서 좋은 성과를 낸것은 잘한것 같다. Ford도 최근에 높은 성장률을 보이고 있으니 이것도 다행이고. 둘 비교는 의미가 크다.

이번년 중국의 성장률이 7%도 어려울듯 한데, 자동차 산업은 어떨지 또 궁금. 내수를 살릴 생각이면 중국내 자동차 판매에 도움이 되겠지만, 공해문제 해소에 초점을 마추면 자동차 판매는 쉽지 않을것 같고.


------------------------

How Ford And GM Compare In China

Summary

  • Ford is behind GM in China, although recent sales figures seem to favor the former.
  • In absolute numbers, GM remains ahead of Ford and gives it a big advantage.
  • GM shouldn't take its current position for granted because things can always change.

Ford (NYSE:F) and GM (NYSE:GM) are the two most prominent car manufacturers from the United States. Throughout their long history together, they have competed with one another and the two can be considered rivals. Neither of the two companies has a clear advantage over the other to be number one in the United States. They go back and forth as time goes by.

With that said, it can be argued that Ford has been the better of the two in recent years. For instance, while GM needed a massive government bailout to recover from bankruptcy at the height of the Financial Crisis in 2008/2009, Ford did much better and was able to keep its problems more or less under control.

However, the one consistent and constant advantage that GM has had over Ford is in the Chinese market. In China, GM is way ahead of Ford by a huge margin. Some of GM's brands such as Buick are doing very well there, even though they may be struggling elsewhere. That helps illustrate the level of success GM has managed to achieve in China.

The trend in China may be changing in favor of Ford

GMUnit Sales% Change (Y/Y)
January 2015339,781-2.4
February 2015261,0721.3

Source: GM releases

FordUnit Sales% Change (Y/Y)
January 2015112,59919
February 201579,3848.7

Source: Ford releases

Recent sales figures from GM and Ford in collaboration with their Chinese partners seem to suggest that this advantage may be slipping. In fact, GMsales in China are actually down in comparison to the previous year. Ford, on the other hand, is doing much better with significant sales increases. Some would therefore argue that Ford is gaining on GM in a market where it has long trailed.

Ford versus GM in China

The latest sales figures come on the heels of other reports which indicate that Ford increased sales last year by over 19 percent in China. GM also did well with a 12 percent increase, but that's substantially below that of Ford. The tables below show the performance of GM and Ford over the last several years.

Furthermore, Ford has beaten GM for the last three years using this metric. You would have to go all the way back to 2011 for the last time that GM was able to post a higher number than Ford. It would seem that a pattern is beginning to appear.

GMUnit SalesUnit Increase% Increase
20091,826,424  
20102,351,610525,18628.8
20112,547,171195,5618.3
20122,836,128288,95711.3
20133,160,377324,24911.4
20143,539,970379,59312.0
FordUnit SalesUnit Increase% Increase
2009440,619  
2010483,28842,6699.6
2011519,39036,1027.4
2012626,616107,22620.6
2013935,812309,19649.3
20141,114,669178,85719.1

The market in China continues to grow

With China now being the largest market in terms of vehicles sold, it's important for automakers to do well there as best as they can. No car manufacturer can aspire to be number one globally without also having a strong position in China. Especially not with the Chinese market continuing to grow at a strong clip.

The China Association of Automobile Manufacturers ("CAAM") forecasts sales to grow by around 7 percent in 2015 to 25.1 million vehicles. That continues the steady expansion of the market as seen in recent years. The table below shows the total number of vehicles sold in the preceding years.

 Unit Sales (in millions)% Increase
200913.64 
201018.0632.4
201118.52.4
201219.314.4
201321.9913.9
201423.56.9

Source: CAAM

Is Ford really doing better than GM in China?

It's important to note that while Ford may be posting higher sales figures than GM in terms of percentages, its sales are coming off a much lower base. Therefore, GM sales may seem smaller because the base is so much bigger. Ford's increases in percentages may seem bigger, but they also translate into much smaller increases in absolute terms.

Taking a closer look at the sales statistics shows that while Ford may have increases sales last year by over 19 percent and GM by 12 percent, GM sold 379,593 more vehicles. Ford had 178,857 more vehicles. In other words, GM sales increase in absolute numbers is more than twice that of Ford, even though Ford increased its sales by a higher percentage.

Conclusion

Bottom line, GM is still comfortably ahead of Ford in China despite the progress Ford has made. Even though Ford last year managed to sell more than one million vehicles for the first time in China, GM managed to do that a long time ago and is now at more than 3.5 million vehicles. GM's unit sales are easily over three times that of Ford. China remains a strength of GM.

Granted, GM had a headstart because it entered the Chinese market before Ford did. GM first entered China in the early part of the twentieth century and re-entered the market in the mid nineties. Compared to Ford's greater reluctance, GM placed much stronger emphasis on China than Ford did.

The former is now reaping the benefits of its decision and Ford is forced to play catch up in a market that GM projects could grow to 35 million (passenger and commercial) vehicles by 2020. If this turns out to be accurate, GM will be in an excellent position to take advantage and eclipse the competition.

To Ford's credit, it has managed to make impressive strides even though it's behind. For instance, it has managed to beat Japanese manufacturers such as Toyota (NYSE:TM) and has now surpassed them in sales. The key is to keep up the effort and it's possible that for Ford the best is yet to come.

With all that said, GM should not become complacent even if it doesn't have to worry too much about Ford. Frequent recalls like you have now and other technical defects don't exactly help your reputation when you're selling a product.

GM therefore shouldn't take its current position for granted. It would not be the first time that an automaker lost its leading position. After all, just because you're ahead in the race doesn't mean you've also won the race. The race is far from over.


Posted by 쁘레드