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Nonfarm Payrolls Preview: Encouraging data but little action expected

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  • US employment sector is foreseen growing yet at a slow pace.
  • The US presidential election’s dispute will likely overshadow employment data.
  • USD moving on the market’s sentiment, risk-on may not survive upcoming events.

The US will release October employment figures this Friday. The Nonfarm Payroll report is expected to show that the economy added 600K positions, while the unemployment rate is foreseen declining from 7.9% to 7.7%.

The news will come in the heat of the US presidential election, as  President Trump is disputing the results of several states in court. Also, the US Federal Reserve is having a monetary policy meeting late Thursday, although the most likely scenario is that it will be a non-event. Elections, on the other hand, will likely continue to overshadow everything else.

Leading indicators hint at a strong figure

Ahead of the release, some mixed signals are coming from employment-related indicators. Overall, the numbers have been improving, suggesting a positive outcome, yet it seems that the employment sector has been growing at a slower pace when compared to the previous months.

The ADP survey on job creation in the private sector was the only negative number from these weeks, as it showed an increase of 365K, well below the 650K expected.

Initial Jobless Claims, on the other hand, have fallen below the 800K threshold mid-October and remain there.  Also, the Challenger Job Cuts report showed that the number of corporate layoffs has retraced to 80.666K.

The most encouraging signs come from ISM as the sub-employment component in the October Manufacturing PMI has jumped to 53.2 from 49.6, the first time it reaches expansion territory this year. The sub-component from the Services index came in at 50.1, beating expectations although below the previous 51.8.

 

US jobs report pre-release checklist – Nov 6th, 2020

Previous Non-Farm Payrolls Negative The US economy added 661K jobs in September, way worse than expected and less than half the number in August.
Challenger Job Cuts Positive The number of corporate layoffs has retraced again in October (80.66K), down below 100K for the first time since the pandemic struck. 
Initial Jobless Claims Positive First-time employment claims resumed the post-pandemic downtrend in the last couple of weeks, finally breaking below 800K per week.
Continuing Jobless Claims Positive The number of unemployment benefit claimants downtrend has accelerated in the last month, from more than 11M to below 8M in the week ending on Oct 16.
ISM Services PMI Positive The employment sub-index in the US main services survey has now registered two consecutive months of expansion.
ISM Manufacturing PMI Positive The employment sub-index in the US main manufacturing survey has accelerated its recovery, jumping to expansion territory in October for the first time since July 2019.
University of Michigan Consumer Confidence Index Positive The UMich consumer sentiment survey continued its slow recovery in October, rising from 80.4 to 81.8, still far from pre-pandemic levels.
Conference Board Consumer Confidence Index Neutral The Conference Board Consumer Confidence Index® has seen its recovery halted in October, although it stays above 100.
ADP Employment Report Negative Private sector employment just added 365K jobs in October, much lower than the 650K expected.
JOLTS Job Openings Neutral The hiring recovery slowed down in August, printing 6.49M job openings, down from 6.697M from July, but still way up from the numbers seen during the spring months. 

Dollar’s possible reaction to different scenarios

The dollar is down across the board against all of its major rivals, as the market is in risk-on mode. This last, however, could be affected by developments related to the US presidential election, which are still underway.

The safe-haven yen is the laggard, as investors are buying high-yielding assets. Should the dollar remain weak, the USD/JPY pair may be the worst performer. In such a scenario, Gold and the AUD could be the best performers.

European currencies are up, but Brexit caps GBP while the latest ECB’s announcement should keep EUR gains in check. Rallies in EUR/USD and GBP/USD are expected to be temporal within the release of the NFP report.

 

  • US employment sector is foreseen growing yet at a slow pace.
  • The US presidential election’s dispute will likely overshadow employment data.
  • USD moving on the market’s sentiment, risk-on may not survive upcoming events.

The US will release October employment figures this Friday. The Nonfarm Payroll report is expected to show that the economy added 600K positions, while the unemployment rate is foreseen declining from 7.9% to 7.7%.

The news will come in the heat of the US presidential election, as  President Trump is disputing the results of several states in court. Also, the US Federal Reserve is having a monetary policy meeting late Thursday, although the most likely scenario is that it will be a non-event. Elections, on the other hand, will likely continue to overshadow everything else.

Leading indicators hint at a strong figure

Ahead of the release, some mixed signals are coming from employment-related indicators. Overall, the numbers have been improving, suggesting a positive outcome, yet it seems that the employment sector has been growing at a slower pace when compared to the previous months.

The ADP survey on job creation in the private sector was the only negative number from these weeks, as it showed an increase of 365K, well below the 650K expected.

Initial Jobless Claims, on the other hand, have fallen below the 800K threshold mid-October and remain there.  Also, the Challenger Job Cuts report showed that the number of corporate layoffs has retraced to 80.666K.

The most encouraging signs come from ISM as the sub-employment component in the October Manufacturing PMI has jumped to 53.2 from 49.6, the first time it reaches expansion territory this year. The sub-component from the Services index came in at 50.1, beating expectations although below the previous 51.8.

 

US jobs report pre-release checklist – Nov 6th, 2020

Previous Non-Farm Payrolls Negative The US economy added 661K jobs in September, way worse than expected and less than half the number in August.
Challenger Job Cuts Positive The number of corporate layoffs has retraced again in October (80.66K), down below 100K for the first time since the pandemic struck. 
Initial Jobless Claims Positive First-time employment claims resumed the post-pandemic downtrend in the last couple of weeks, finally breaking below 800K per week.
Continuing Jobless Claims Positive The number of unemployment benefit claimants downtrend has accelerated in the last month, from more than 11M to below 8M in the week ending on Oct 16.
ISM Services PMI Positive The employment sub-index in the US main services survey has now registered two consecutive months of expansion.
ISM Manufacturing PMI Positive The employment sub-index in the US main manufacturing survey has accelerated its recovery, jumping to expansion territory in October for the first time since July 2019.
University of Michigan Consumer Confidence Index Positive The UMich consumer sentiment survey continued its slow recovery in October, rising from 80.4 to 81.8, still far from pre-pandemic levels.
Conference Board Consumer Confidence Index Neutral The Conference Board Consumer Confidence Index® has seen its recovery halted in October, although it stays above 100.
ADP Employment Report Negative Private sector employment just added 365K jobs in October, much lower than the 650K expected.
JOLTS Job Openings Neutral The hiring recovery slowed down in August, printing 6.49M job openings, down from 6.697M from July, but still way up from the numbers seen during the spring months. 

Dollar’s possible reaction to different scenarios

The dollar is down across the board against all of its major rivals, as the market is in risk-on mode. This last, however, could be affected by developments related to the US presidential election, which are still underway.

The safe-haven yen is the laggard, as investors are buying high-yielding assets. Should the dollar remain weak, the USD/JPY pair may be the worst performer. In such a scenario, Gold and the AUD could be the best performers.

European currencies are up, but Brexit caps GBP while the latest ECB’s announcement should keep EUR gains in check. Rallies in EUR/USD and GBP/USD are expected to be temporal within the release of the NFP report.

 

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