Huwebes, Hunyo 16, 2011

Economy gets lift: Layoffs ease, home building up

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Fewer Americans applied for unemployment benefits last week and builders broke ground on more homes in May. The latest data offered some hope that the economy may be improving after hitting a slump in late spring.
Unemployment benefit applications fell to a seasonally adjusted 414,000, the Labor Department said. It was the second drop in three weeks and a positive sign that layoffs are slowing.
Still, applications have been above 400,000 for 10 straight weeks, evidence that the job market is weak compared to earlier this year.
Home construction rose last month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 560,000 units per year, the Commerce Department said. Economists say the pace of construction is far below the 1.2 million homes per year that must be built to sustain a healthy housing market. Many credit-strapped builders are struggling to compete with low-priced foreclosures.
The modest improvements in two of the economy's most troubled areas were enough to give Wall Street a lift after a major sell-off the previous day. The Dow Jones industrial average gained 64 points in afternoon trading. Broader indexes also rose.
Investors seemed to look past fears that Greece will be forced to default on its bonds -- an event that could trigger another financial crisis -- and a poor readout of manufacturing conditions in the Northeast from the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia.
Unemployment applications had fallen in February to 375,000, a level that signals sustainable job growth. They stayed below 400,000 for seven of nine weeks. But applications surged in April to 478,000 -- an eight-month high -- and they have declined slowly since then.
Economists said the steady decline in unemployment applications signals that the job market is improving, but at a very slow pace.
"This is not a derailing of the economy," said Bricklin Dwyer, an economist at BNP Paribas. "This is a period of weak growth, and we're going to see this for some time."
The elevated level of applications suggests that companies pulled back on hiring in the face of higher gas and food prices, which have cut into consumer spending. Hiring has slowed sharply since applications rose.
Employers added only 54,000 net new jobs in May, much slower than the average gain of 220,000 per month in the previous three months. The unemployment rate rose to 9.1 percent from 9 percent.
Employers probably added more jobs in June than in May, but less than the robust pace from earlier this year, economists said.
More hiring is important because it's key to boosting consumers' incomes, which in turn would fuel more spending. Consumer spending grew at a weak 2.2 percent annual rate in the January-March quarter, down from 4 percent in the previous quarter. That pushed down economic growth to 1.8 percent from 3.1 percent.
Yet some companies are cutting jobs. Johnson & Johnson said this week it will stop making some of its heart devices because of falling sales, a move that will eliminate up to 1,000 positions. And state and local governments are laying off thousands of employees in order to close large budget deficits.
While the job market was improving earlier this year, home building is coming off the two worst years on records dating back five decades. And the May data suggest that won't change anytime soon.
The number of single-family homes started in May rose a modest 3.7 percent. But the construction pace of single-family homes, which accounts for about 80 percent of all residential construction, is well below the 2010 rate. Construction of those traditional homes is "still very much dead in the water," said Mark Vitner, senior economist at Wells Fargo.
Housing permits, a gauge of future construction, rose last month to the highest level since December. But apartment and condominium construction accounted for a large portion of that increase. Renting has become a preferred option for many Americans who lost their jobs in the recession and who were forced to leave their rapidly depreciating homes.
Though new homes represent a small fraction of the overall housing market, they have an outsize impact on the economy. Each home built generates, on average, three jobs and $90,000 in taxes, according to the National Association of Home Builders.
And single-family home purchases ultimately contribute more to the broader economy than apartment sales do. That's because buyers of single-family homes tend to spend more on furnishings, appliances, landscaping and other home improvements. They are also more likely to move up to bigger and more expensive homes later.
Apartments typically end up being occupied more often by renters, who spend less on their homes.
Foreclosures and falling home prices have made re-sales more attractive. The median price of a new home is about 34 percent higher than the median price for a re-sale. That's more than twice the markup in healthy housing markets.
Factory output, which has been one of the strongest sectors of the economy since the recession ended two years ago, has also slowed this spring. And it may be getting worse in the Northeast.
The Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia said its regional index of manufacturing conditions dropped to -7.7 in June, down from 3.9 in May. It was the first negative reading since last September and the lowest reading for the index since July 2009.
The index tracks manufacturing conditions in the region covered by the Philadelphia Fed. That includes eastern Pennsylvania, southern New Jersey and Delaware.
High gas prices have trimmed consumer spending, cutting demand for factory goods.
AP Economics Writer Martin Crutsinger contributed to this report.

Pandora's stock retreats to below IPO price

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Buyer's remorse already may be setting in for some investors in Internet radio station Pandora Media Inc.
After intense demand drove up the price for Pandora's initial public offering of stock, the shares lost nearly a quarter of their value their second day of trading.
Thursday's harsh reversal of fortune left Pandora's stock below its IPO price of $16. The shares fell $4.16, or 24 percent, to close at $13.26.
The downturn indicates the earlier euphoria about Pandora Media may have been misguided. The excitement enabled Pandora Media's IPO to sell for twice as much as an $8 target price set two weeks ago.
The misgivings are bad news for investors who paid as much as $26 on Pandora's first day of trading.
But the circumspection is encouraging for those worried about an investment bubble forming around promising Internet services that have attracted large audiences.
Pandora boasts 94 million users looking for a different kind of radio station. The company, based in Oakland, Calif., streams music over high-speed Internet connections and relies on computer formulas to tailor individual songs for listeners.
The approach hasn't been profitable yet, one reason some analysts thought Pandora had been overvalued in its IPO. The company has lost a total of $92 million during its 11-year history. The problem: Pandora's main source of revenue, advertising, hasn't been growing fast enough to cover the royalties for playing music.
Pandora's IPO came less than a month after the stock market debut of online professional networking service LinkedIn Corp. evoked memories of the dot-com boom in the late 1990s.
LinkedIn's shares more than doubled on their first day of trading to give the company a market value of $9 billion. The stock has plunged nearly 28 percent since then, although it remains well above LinkedIn's IPO price of $45. LinkedIn shares shed $6.35, or 8.5 percent, Thursday to close at $68.27.

Gerald Abramovitz, 82-year-old architect, dies two weeks after being brutally beaten on UWS


An elderly architect whose work is featured at the Museum of Modern Art died today - two weeks after he was brutally beaten in an upper West Side apartment building, police sources and a friend said.
Gerald Abramovitz, 82, was attacked after he rang the buzzer to his friend's W. 89th St. apartment near Central Park West about 5:20 p.m. on May 25, the friend said.
"I found him on the floor of the vestibule bleeding," said Gene Koretz, 80. "His shirt was soaked in blood."
The respected architect - who designed a cantilever desk lamp that is part of MoMA's permanent collection - was taken to Mt. Sinai Hospital, but later released.
Koretz said his longtime friend became weak and dizzy a couple of days later and returned to the hospital, where a CT scan revealed a brain hemorrhage.
The South American artist died at the hospital about 4 a.m.
Police sources said the case may be investigated as a homicide, depending on what the city's medical examiner determines as the cause of death. An autopsy is scheduled for Friday.
Koretz said he is convinced Abramovitz died as a result of his injuries. He said he and other friends have put together a $3,000 reward to add to the $2,000 offered by theNYPD's Crime Stoppers unit for information leading to the arrest of the attacker, who is still at large.
"Everybody's apprehensive now," said Koretz. "There's a predator out there. He took away a good friend. We're going to miss him terribly."
Police ask anyone with information to call the Crime Stoppers hotline, (800) 577-TIPS.