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Since July 21, the market has gone from one crisis to another, and the weakening U.S. economy has been at the heart of the selling. In late July, the concern was the debt debate going on in Washington. In early August, it was the downgrade of the U.S. debt rating by Standard & Poor's. Since then, worries about the impact of the downgrade have faded, and growing evidence that the economy is slowing has driven stocks down. Signs of a slower economy around the world have only made investors more pessimistic about the U.S. Earlier this week, Germany said its economy grew just 0.1 percent in the second quarter. And Germany is the strongest economy in Europe. Stocks fell Thursday on news of another drop in home sales, weaker manufacturing in the mid-Atlantic states and an increase in the number of people who applied for unemployment benefits. The stock market tends to reflect the expectations that investors have for the economy and company earnings six to nine months in the future. So traders are interpreting the numbers they're seeing as part of a slide in the economy that will continue for some time. A recession is generally thought of as two consecutive quarters in which the economy contracts, as measured by a country's gross domestic product. With expectations of growth in the U.S. already low, investors worry that the economy can't withstand another unexpected event like the earthquake in Japan or the string of bad weather that ravaged the South earlier this year. JPMorgan analyst Michael Feroli said business confidence, household wealth and global growth all look worse than just a few weeks ago. He expects economic growth to be nearly flat into the first quarter of 2012. Next week is likely to bring more volatility. On Friday, the government will give its second estimate of how the economy did during the second quarter. It said a month ago that the GDP grew at an annual rate of just 1.3 percent during the quarter. Economists expect the government to announce a lower reading: 1.1 percent. The GDP report July 29 contributed to the market's heavy losses. So did the government's revised estimate for the first quarter: 0.4 percent. Next Friday also brings the Federal Reserve's annual retreat at Jackson Hole, Wyo. It was a year ago at Jackson Hole that Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke hinted that the central bank would begin buying $600 billion in Treasury securities to stimulate the economy. The buying ended June 30. Now investors want to know if the Fed will act again. But some analysts think that the U.S. economy will continue to grow on its own, although slowly. "The market is thinking that we're going into a recession, but the data is telling you that we're not," said Jonathan Golub, chief U.S. market strategist for UBS. He pointed to an increase Thursday in an index of economic leading indicators that suggested the economy is expanding slowly.
[Associated
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