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It’s jobs Friday, and markets are taking disappointing December jobs creation in stride. Stock futures edged higher, gold prices ticked lower and crude oil prices were in a holding pattern as expectations for abating U.S.-Iran tensions continued.
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9:15 a.m. ET: Jobs still solid, but slower payrolls growth seen ‘inevitable’
Wall Street economists aren’t overreacting to the December jobs report, which checked in at a solid yet disappointing 145,000 last month. Capital Economics notes that the U.S. economy is still generating more positions than what’s needed to keep up with new workers — even as earnings growth turns muted:
The potentially worse news is that we know there will be big downward revisions to past months’ payroll gains as part of the benchmark revisions, due to be released in the January Employment Report. But with much of the recent survey evidence suggesting that the underlying pace of hiring is bouncing back, and jobless claims low, the improvement in the pace of payroll gains over the past six months or so is unlikely to be revised away entirely.
Overall, the solid jobs figures add to the evidence from the incoming activity data, which suggest the economy is nearing a turning point, with economic growth likely to bottom out close to 2.0% annualised and reaccelerate back above trend in the second half of 2020.
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8:55 a.m. ET: Stock futures flat after jobs data letdown
Major benchmarks flattened after December nonfarm payrolls missed expectations, with the economy creating 145,000 jobs (versus the 160K expected by Wall Street). That said, the unemployment rate held steady at 3.5% and the miss wasn’t that large — which means investors will likely take the numbers in stride when the market opens for trading.
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8:08 a.m. ET: Here’s a look at what analysts are saying before the jobs report
Most analysts are optimistic that the December jobs report will show still-strong hiring trends to cap off 2019. However, they anticipate the overall pace of employment growth will slow compared to 2018, when job gains averaged 227,000 per month. An in-line print Friday would bring 2019’s average for non-farm payroll additions to 178,000 per month.
Here’s what some analysts said in notes ahead of the December jobs report:
Lewis Alexander, Nomura: “We forecast a 155k increase in non-farm payrolls in December, a slowdown relative to November’s likely unsustainable pace, with some upside risk. Business surveys suggest steady hiring activity but at a pace that remains consistent with a slowing trend. We expect average hourly earnings to rise 0.2% m-o-m, lowering the y-o-y rate 0.1pp to 3.0%. Finally, we think the unemployment rate will hold at 3.5% as the job finding rate shows some signs of softening.”
Jan Hatzius, Goldman Sachs: “We estimate non-farm payrolls increased 185k in December, above consensus of +160k. Our forecast reflects solid employment fundamentals, a rebound in retail job growth related to the late Thanksgiving, and a weather-related rebound in the Midwest after winter storms during the November survey period. We also note that December job growth tends to remain strong in tight labor markets, as labor supply constraints may incentivize firms to reduce end-of-year layoffs.”
Daniel Silver, JPMorgan: “We forecast that non-farm employment increased 125,000 in December, while the unemployment rate held at 3.5%. We think the unusual holiday alignment in recent months will generate some seasonal distortions that depress the December jobs count. We see evidence of similar distortions in the jobless claims data, as recent weekly changes have aligned closely with what occurred in comparable periods in 2013/2014 (the latest instance with the timing of holidays that matches what occurred this past holiday season).”
James Knightley, ING: “The November report showed job creation well ahead of expectations, but slower growth is likely in December. Moreover, labor market slack is greater than implied by the unemployment alone, meaning wage growth will remain subdued. The net result implies little upside threat for interest rates.”
Jay Bryson, Wells Fargo Securities: “We look for the pace of non-farm hiring to slow in December, with employers adding 150,000 jobs. Secondary labor market indicators continue to suggest a slower pace of hiring in 2020. Layoffs rose in December, though they remain low and consistent with a tight labor market. Job openings, however, have rolled over and small business hiring plans remain below last year’s level.”
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7:38 a.m. ET: S&P 500 looks to open at new record ahead of jobs report
Stocks pointed to a higher open Friday as investors awaited the Labor Department’s December jobs report. S&P 500 futures held above the index’s all-time high reached Thursday.
Here were the main moves during the pre-market session, as of 7:38 a.m. ET:
S&P futures (ES=F): 3,283.50, up 7.5 points or 0.23%
Dow futures (YM=F): 28,979, up 50 points or 0.17%
Nasdaq futures (NQ=F): 9,046, up 37 points or 0.41%
Crude oil (CL=F): $59.70 per barrel, up $0.14 or 0.24%
Gold (GC=F): $1,550.40 per ounce, down $3.90 or 0.25%
Consensus economists expect the U.S. economy added 160,000 new jobs in December, according to Bloomberg-compiled data. The economy had added 266,000 payrolls in November, which was boosted by the return to work of General Motors employees who had been on strike between September and October.
The unemployment rate is expected to hold at 3.5%, a five-decade low. And wages are expected to have risen modestly, up 0.3% month on month and 3.1% year on year.
READ MORE: What to expect in the December jobs report.
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2020-01-10 13:57:00Z
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