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Economic Data Deluge

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The initial read on fourth quarter Gross Domestic Product (Q4 GDP) hit the tape ahead of today’s opening bell, with results better than analysts had been predicting: +2.1% was 30 basis points higher than the 1.8% expected, and exactly in-line with the third and final read on Q3 GDP. This brings the initial 2019 GDP tally to 2.3% growth, the lowest rate since 2016.

Digging into the details a bit, what stands out is a negative number on Business Investment, -1.5% in the quarter, while Consumption (consumer buying power) was up 1.8%. On this initial read, this is a notable drop from the 4.6% Consumption read in Q2 and the 3.6% in Q3. Then again, we will be seeing a couple revisions to this report in the months to come; perhaps these figures will come in stronger over time.

A couple healthy numbers from this report came from Housing, +5.8% in Q4 and +4.6% averaging the past two quarters together, and Federal Spending +3.6% — partially on increased defense spending. The all-important Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) price ides came in at 1.6% in the quarter; core PCE was 1.3%. These are overall tepid numbers, but shouldn’t be hard for market participants to live with.

Initial Jobless Claims saw a big upward revision to results from two weeks ago — +12K to 223K — and then came down by 7000 claims for last week, to 216K. This is solidly in the middle of our long-term 200-225K range consistent with a robust U.S. labor market. Continuing Claims, reported for the week previous, continue to dwindle down from the 1.8 million we saw a few weeks ago, and have moved down from 1.747 million to 1.702 million this go-around. Any figure beneath 2 million for long-term jobless claims is very good, and we have not seen those levels in several years.

Turning to Q4 earnings season, Verizon (VZ - Free Report)  actuals came up a tad short on the bottom line — $1.13 per share from $1.15 expected, though a penny better than the year-ago quarter — on revenues of $34.78 billion, up 0.74% from the Zacks consensus and an improvement from the $34.28 billion reported in Q4 2018. Shares, which had already fallen 3% year to date, are down another 1.3% in today’s pre-market. For more on VZ’s earnings, click here.

Coca-Cola (KO - Free Report)  beat estimates on both top and bottom lines this morning, beating on the bottom line by a penny to 44 cents per share, while revenues of $9.07 billion outpaced expectations by 1.82% and way up from the year-ago $7.06 billion. Shares of Coke had grown 3% year to date, and have increased this by more than 1% in early trading. For more on KO’s earnings, click here.

Sherwin-Williams (SHW - Free Report)  shares are falling 4.8% on an earnings and sales miss in its Q4 today, with a headline $4.27 per share underperforming the $4.40 expected, on $4.11 billion in sales which missed expectations by 1.7%. Both figures were up year over year, however, from $3.54 per share and $4.06 billion, respectively. This is what happens when a company reports a negative surprise while the entire market is selling off. For more on SHW’s earnings, click here.

After today’s closing bell, we look forward to new earnings results from Amazon (AMZN - Free Report) , Visa (V - Free Report) , Amgen (AMGN - Free Report)  and homebuilder Beazer Home (BZH - Free Report) .

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