I guess that the lede here is consumer confidence, which The Conference Board reports has fallen to a 7 month low. My personal guess is that the number is low because of the news reports that the recession has been over for over a year, which is so clearly contrary to what consumers see that it depresses them.
On the other hand, manufacturing jobs are reported to be growing strongly since the beginning of the year, which is a bit of a surprise.
In real estate, and, as Calculated Risk notes, the Case-Shiller numbers are out, and they are positively schizophrenic:
From the Financial Times: US home prices slip in July
From the WSJ: Home Prices Rose in July
From CNBC: US Home Prices Slipped In July And May Stabilize Near Lows
From MarketWatch: Home price growth slows in July
From HousingWire: S&P/Case-Shiller 20-city composite index rose 0.6% for July
Basically, some of them are reporting seasonally adjusted numbers, and some are reporting non-seasonally adjusted numbers. I would tend to go with the latter with July, since I think that the expiration of the tax credits probably overwhelmed any seasonal effects, and the composite 10 and the composite 20 numbers are a bit different, but basically it’s flat near the recent bottoms.
Finally, we have the various reports from the regional Federal reserve banks: Dallas, up slightly in September, Chicago down slightly in August, and Richmond down slightly in September.