|

NFP Recap: Impressive Growth Continues, but Is the “Breakout” in Wages Legit?

Much like we saw with the Bank of England meeting getting overshadowed by Brexit developments earlier this week, traditional market-moving economic releases are taking a back seat to geopolitical developments in the US as well.

Today's Non-Farm Payroll report, usually the marquee economic release of every month, has been partially overshadowed by news that President Trump asked his cabinet to draw up a possible trade deal with China. The prospect of a truce in the escalating trade war has taken some of the sheen off today's labor market data.

Nonetheless, today's US jobs report offered some strong news for US economic data watchers. On a headline basis, the US economy created 250k jobs in October, well above the 190k expected by economists. Despite fears of hurricane-induced distortions to last month's report, there were 0 net revisions to the previous two months' reports.

Meanwhile, the unemployment rate held steady at 3.7%, its lowest level in nearly 50 years. Making this figure more impressive, we saw the Labor Force Participation Rate tick up 0.2% to 62.9%, signaling that the labor market was able to draw in previously discouraged workers and comfortably assimilate them into new jobs.

The figure that will draw all the headlines on the evening news is the change in average hourly earnings, which rose 3.1% year-over-year, its highest clip since the Great Financial Crisis in 2009. That said, we encourage readers to tap the brakes on the "breakout" in wages, as this month's reading benefitted from a favorable comparison to the reading twelve months ago, meaning that it may be a one-off outlier. If next month's wage growth figure holds above 3.0%, it would solidify the impression that wage growth is sustainably accelerating.

If I may editorialize a bit here, it's truly astounding to see the US labor market continue to create jobs at this clip, and while there's still evidence of some "slack," we may start to see fewer jobs created, but more acceleration in wages (i.e. "full employment" jobs reports) as we flip the calendars into 2019...though many have made similar calls over the past half-decade!

Notwithstanding the swoon in global equity markets over the last month, traders continue to price in another interest rate hike from the Federal Reserve in December. According to the CME's FedWatch tool, Fed Funds futures traders were discounting about an 80% chance of a rate increase at the start of October; in the wake of today's release, that figure sits at 77%. In other words, a December rate hike isn't quite fully priced in to the market, but there's relatively little blood to squeeze from that stone. Assuming no surprises, traders will soon start to turn their attention to Fed policy in 2019.

Market Reaction

The battered buck caught a bid in the wake of the jobs report, with the US dollar rising by 20-30 pips against most of its major rivals. Meanwhile, US stock index futures ticked lower on the release, though the Dow Jones Industrial Average and S&P 500 are both pointing toward higher opens; the NASDAQ is set to open near flat after disappointing earnings from Apple after the close yesterday. Finally, the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury bond is ticking up 4bps to 3.18% on the day.

Author

Matt Weller, CFA, CMT

Matt Weller, CFA, CMT

Faraday Research

Matthew is a former Senior Market Analyst at Forex.com whose research is regularly quoted in The Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg and Reuters. Based in the US, Matthew provides live trading recommendations during US market hours, c

More from Matt Weller, CFA, CMT
Share:

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD trims losses, flirts with the 1.1850 zone

EUR/USD is back on the back foot on Wednesday, slipping below the 1.1850 area as the US Dollar picks up some modest traction. The move comes as traders position ahead of a busy run of US data and the release of the FOMC Minutes. Adding to the pullback are reports that the ECB’s Lagarde may step down before completing her term.

GBP/USD flirts with daily highs near 1.3580

GBP/USD manages to set aside two consecutive daily declines and trades with slight gains in the 1.3580 zone on Wednesday. Cable’s uptick comes despite acceptable gains in the Greenback and easing UK inflation figures, which seem to have reinforced the case for a BoE rate cut in March.

Gold regains some shine, retargets $5,000 ahead of FOMC Minutes

Gold gathers fresh upside traction on Wednesday, leaving part of the weakness seen at the beginning of the week and refocusing its attention to the key $5,000 mark per troy ounce, all ahead of the release of the FOMC Minutes and despite the modest uptick in the US Dollar.

Pi Network rally defies market pressure ahead of its first anniversary

Pi Network is trading above $0.1900 at press time on Wednesday, extending the weekly gains by nearly 8% so far. The steady recovery is supported by a short-term pause in mainnet migration, which reduces pressure on the PI token supply for Centralized Exchanges. The technical outlook focuses on the $0.1919 resistance as bullish momentum increases.

Mixed UK inflation data no gamechanger for the Bank of England

Food inflation plunged in January, but service sector price pressure is proving stickier. We continue to expect Bank of England rate cuts in March and June. The latest UK inflation read is a mixed bag for the Bank of England, but we doubt it drastically changes the odds of a March rate cut.

Top 3 Price Prediction: Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Ripple face downside risk as bears regain control

Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Ripple remain under pressure on Wednesday, with the broader trend still sideways. BTC is edging below $68,000, nearing the lower consolidating boundary, while ETH and XRP also declined slightly, approaching their key supports.