Catching up on the economic number dump, first we have the Federal Reserve’s so-called Beige Book, which shows that growth has continued, but it is very sluggish.
This is reinforced by the fact that consumer confidence fell in October, factory production and capacity utilization fell in September, for the first time in a year, though home builder confidence rose (to a truly pathetic 16 where 50 is neutral), and housing starts rose.
We also have some importing news out of China, with their central bank making a surprise increase in its benchmark rate, and Chinese government published new statistics showing that its growth slowed and inflation edged up.
Certainly, it looks like the Central bank is concerned about inflation, and the statistics, even considering the general unreliability of official government statistics, indicate a problem.
One interesting effect of the rate hike is that it should place additional upward pressure on the Yuan.