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CEO gloom at record highs

Every year, the world's elite converge on Davos, a Swiss mountain village, to discuss the world and what they want to do to it. We're not invited but we end up paying the price for the mistakes that Davos Man makes. This year, Davos Man is feeling weepy. Let's hope that doesn't lead to a year of inaction on the world's pressing problems.

PriceWaterhouseCoopers (PWC), which is now famous for not catching a fraud of epic proportions at Satyam Computer Services (NYSE: SAY), has done a survey of Davos attendees which gives a flavor for just how pessimistic they are. It found that only 20% of 1,124 CEOs in 50 nations said they were very confident about prospects for revenue growth in 2009, down from half last year, and 25% said they were pessimistic -- this is the most gloomy result since PWC began tracking the CEO outlook in 2003.

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European business confidence index falls to lowest level since May 2005

European business confidence declined more than forecast, the European Commission announced Friday -- an indication slowing euro-zone economy and rising inflation are beginning to lower business executives' expectations for the immediate quarters ahead.

The EC's sentiment index fell to 94.9 in May from 97.6 in April. It was the index's lowest reading since May 2005, Bloomberg News reported Friday.

Europe's major stock markets closed mixed Friday on the news. London's FTSE gained 11.70 points to 5529.90, Germany's DAX decline 37.69 to 6,421.91, and France's CAC 40 dropped 28.87 to 4,397.32.

Europe's execs: in defensive mode

London-based economist Mark Chandler told BloggingStocks that the slowdown in the United States, record oil prices, and rising inflation on the continent have but many of Europe's executives in defensive mode.

"Maybe the biggest concern is the impact of the slowdown in America and its affect on trade. Executives here are really concerned about a possible deeper U.S. recession dragging Europe lower. Their concern is well-rooted, because there's just not enough Asia demand to compensate," Chandler said. "Oil prices hitting $140 are another negative. It's not going to hurt the U.K. as much, but Europe could really be hurt by consumers cutting back spending on retail goods.

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U.S. leading economic indicators' January decline suggests weak growth ahead

The index of leading economic indicators declined 0.1% in January 2008 -- its forth consecutive monthly decline, the Conference Board announced Thursday, suggesting the U.S. economy is likely to register weak growth in the period ahead.

One bright spot: the group's coincident index, which measures current conditions, rose 0.1% in January 2008, indicating that the economy wasn't in recession last month.

The Conference Board said five of the 10 components that make up the leading indicators -- stock prices, building permits, manufacturers' new orders, non-defense capital goods, and interest-rate spreads -- declined in January 2008. Real money supply, average weekly jobless claims, and consumer expectations/vendor performance increased. Average weekly manufacturing hours and manufacturers' new orders for consumer goods/materials remained the same.

Continue reading U.S. leading economic indicators' January decline suggests weak growth ahead

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Last updated: November 11, 2009: 10:37 PM

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