The Zacks Analyst Blog Highlights: American Woodmark, Callaway Golf, Guess', Summer Infant and WideOpenWest
The Children's Place, Inc. (PLCE) is looking like an interesting pick from a technical perspective, as the company is seeing favorable trends on the moving average crossover front · Zacks

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For Immediate Release

Chicago, IL –September 24, 2018 – Zacks.com announces the list of stocks featured in the Analyst Blog. Every day the Zacks Equity Research analysts discuss the latest news and events impacting stocks and the financial markets. Stocks recently featured in the blog include: American Woodmark Corp. AMWD, Callaway Golf Company ELY, Guess', Inc. GES, Summer Infant, Inc. SUMR and WideOpenWest, Inc. WOW.

Here are highlights from Friday’s Analyst Blog:

Consumer Comfort Rises as Economy Gains Steam: 5 Winners

Americans are increasingly comfortable about their well-being as the nine-year economic expansion continues to go strong for a solid performance in the second half of 2018. Current credit spreads are also at historic lows, which paint a rosier economic picture.

Since Americans gained optimism on the economy, things have been looking up for consumer stocks. Stocks of consumer discretionary companies are well poised to grow on signs of renewed consumer spending strength.

Consumer Comfort Rises to 17-Year High

The Bloomberg Consumer Comfort Index showed on Sep 20, that U.S. consumer sentiment went up last week to a new 17-year high on brighter views of the economy. While the weekly comfort index rose to 60.2, the highest since January 2001, a gauge tracking views about the economy also hit a 17-year high. A measure of buying climate, in the meanwhile, jumped to 52.5, the highest since September 2000. In addition, the survey’s monthly economic expectations index increased to 57.5 this month, the highest since March 2002.

Bloomberg’s survey remained consistent with the latest University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment report. The preliminary report showed that the consumer sentiment index came in at 100.8, the second-highest level since 2004. Americans, in fact, haven’t been this confident about their well-being in 18 years. Per the Conference Board, the consumer confidence index had climbed to 133.4 in August from a revised 127.9 in July. Thus, the key economic indicator that measures attitudes on future economic prospects reached the highest level since October 2000 and surpassed the post-recession high of 130 scaled this February.

Leading Indicators Signal Economy’s in Fine Fettle

Most of the components of the Conference Board’s Leading Economic Index indicated a 3% or more growth rate in GDP in the final two quarters of the year and is on track to hit the Trump administration’s annual growth target of 3%. If that happens, it would be the best yearly performance since 2005, two years before the Great Recession.