On the St. Patricks Day Today show, NBCs Ann Curry asked
colleague Jim Cramer for his reaction to a new government report
showing consumer prices have jumped. The real numbers actually
showed Curry was full of blarney.
That is not a bad number for [the] consumer price [index], Cramer
told the NBC anchor. Other experts quoted in the media agreed. What
Curry considered a jump in inflation was actually a significant
drop from the previous months increase. The February inflation rate
fell from 0.7 in January to 0.1 in February. The core rate for CPI,
which excludes volatile price factors for fuel and food, also
increased at 0.1 percent.
The housing market is cooling off but not
too much, and inflation looks relatively benign, a March 17
Reuters
story quoted A.G. Edwards chief economist Gary Thayer. It suggests
that the economy is on a healthy growth plan.
With inflation in check, the cost of
borrowing money should also stay in check, said UBS economist James
OSullivan in the March 17 edition of
The New York Times.
There is certainly nothing to egg the Fed on to keep tightening
interest rates, said OSullivan.
Aside from worrying about inflations jump, Curry asked Cramer
about the big negative of General Motorss upwardly revised 2005
loss number. Im pushing you here, because people are worried. Is
that going to be a drag on the market?
Cramer dismissed Currys fears, noting GMs sliding market share
meant its no longer a significant part of the American economy.
Ive got to tell you, I believe the largest auto company in the
country will soon be Toyota. I know we dont think of that as an
American company. I think we should, Cramer argued.
Curry didnt stop there. She tied an uptick in crude oil prices to
the March 16 air assault in Iraq. But in placing the blaming the
Iraq war, Curry left out how unrest elsewhere in the world has made
the oil market nervous, including threats from Venezuelan strongman
Hugo Chavez to cut off oil sales to the U.S. The Business & Media Institute
has noted how little the broadcast networks
have reported on those threats.
Oil prices are about 12 percent higher
than a year ago, reflecting worries about the stability of supplies
from Iran, Nigeria and elsewhere, the
Associated Press reported on March 17.
The Business & Media Institute has previously
documented the medias
fear of
foreign motors
and anxiety over
inflation.
NBCs Curry Peppers Jim Cramer with Worry and Woe
suggested reading