Discover and read the best of Twitter Threads about #payrolls

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Earlier this week the @federalreserve raised #policy rates at an extraordinary 75 basis point increment (its fourth time doing so this year), in an attempt to moderate excessively high levels of #inflation.
Still, if the central bankers were hoping to see signs of slowing in the persistently solid #LaborMarkets, as an indicator that policies were slowing growth and in turn #inflation, they may be somewhat disheartened by today’s data.
Indeed, nonfarm #payrolls increased by 261k jobs in Oct, with private employment rising an average of 262k/month over the past three months, which does not yet imply that the slowing that policymakers believe we’ll need to see to tame #inflation has arrived.
Read 16 tweets
The @federalreserve’s #FOMC has now moved in 75 basis point increments four times this year to get to a sought-after #policy destination very quickly.
Yet, the destination seems to have moved further away with each subsequent elevated #inflation print, and with #employment in the country remaining very tight.
Hence, while moving the #FederalFunds rate at a very fast 75 bps increment seemed almost inconceivable several months ago, especially as the #Fed was still undertaking quantitative easing (#QE) in March, we have become used to this extraordinary increment.
Read 15 tweets
Citibank 1/5: Data releases Friday:
#USD: Nonfarm #payrolls - fewer new jobs leave markets pricing a bigger fiscal expansion – US economy adds just 49K jobs in Jan, sharply weaker than consensus for 105K. But hiring as measured in the household survey shows employment up by 201K,
Citibank 2/5: leading the unemployment rate to decline from 6.7% to 6.3%. Average hourly earnings rise 0.2%MoM. Market react to the weaker jobs report (higher US yields and weaker USD) by pricing an increased probability of a larger US fiscal package.
Citibank 3/5: Citi analysts now expect a ~$1.5trln package in March & raising US nominal GDP by 0.7pp with about 2/3 of that showing up as real growth & 1/3 in faster inflation. Citi analysts expect 5.4%YoY real US GDP growth in 2021 and 2.1-2.2%YoY core PCE inflation at year-end
Read 5 tweets
Daily Bookmarks to GAVNet 01/06/2021 greeneracresvaluenetwork.wordpress.com/2021/01/06/dai…
A robotic revolution for urban nature

phys.org/news/2021-01-r…

#nature #robotic #revolution
Modern Monetary Theory Gains Traction

spearswms.com/modern-monetar…

#MMT
Read 8 tweets
The March #JobsReport released this morning largely reflects lagged conditions, as there’s a mismatch between the timing of #coronavirus-related developments later in the month of March, and the timing of the @BLS_gov’s establishment survey earlier in the month.
And the decline in nonfarm #payrolls, of -701,000 jobs, while a sharp reversal from strong Jan/Feb #employment figures, is going to get much worse in the months to come, as the #BLS’s surveys catch up with the reality of significant #economic shutdowns across most states.
Therefore, #employment data such as today’s report, and initial and continuing claims for #unemployment, will grow in importance from here as a broad barometer of #economic health and for understanding the transition of the #economy through this crisis.
Read 6 tweets
At the end of last year, we highlighted our theme that 2020 would likely hew to around a 1.8%ish year (on real #GDP, Core #PCE, the 10-Year UST and the #Fed Funds Rate), but there are some other areas in which variations on this numeric guidepost also seem relevant too.
For instance, we’ve been impressed that the 3-month moving average on #payrolls resides now at 184,000, although it may well decelerate somewhat from that pace as the year goes on.
Further, roughly 1.8 million people will be hitting their formal #retirement age (65 years) every six months in 2020, which is nearly double the pace from just 20 years ago! Image
Read 6 tweets
Today’s #payrolls figures were quite good overall, but various policy and global macro uncertainties are clouding its meaning for #investors.
In fact, uncertain messaging from the #Fed, a resumption of #trade-war tensions, a slowdown in underlying business conditions, and weak global growth, particularly in places like Europe, are all concerns that obscure the outlook.
Finally, we think these factors are collectively driving the risk-free rate (U.S. Treasuries) lower in #yield; confirming our view that Treasuries, and fixed #income assets more broadly, are working quite nicely in a balanced portfolio at this point.
Read 3 tweets
As my colleague Bob Miller recently pointed out, while the #Fed’s policy rate hike pause has received all the attention of late, the #FOMC Minutes released this week make it clear that the balance sheet discussion will be the next big thing for markets to focus on.
Indeed, the fact that the #FOMC spent three consecutive #policy meetings discussing the balance sheet in detail is telling, and we expect to see Chair Powell provide Congress with approximate numbers and rough timing for an end to balance sheet reduction during Feb 26 testimony.
The week after that we’ll pay close attention to nonfarm #payrolls, which have been very strong, in contrast to other #economic data points. In particular, in coming months we’ll be curious to see if the labor force participation rate (LFPR) continues rising.
Read 4 tweets
In the wake of solid nonfarm #payrolls, decent manufacturing ISM, and strong Core CPI; have markets gone too far in assuming no rate hikes in 2019, and likely cuts in 2020? We think perhaps so, as the #Fed may yet take an opportunity to hike this year if data allows. Image
Still, Chair Powell is right in suggesting that there are complex cross-currents at play, since stronger US #economic data may be perceived as #Fed-hawkish, but to the degree that it leads to incremental USD strength, it is a tightening all by itself.
Also, #dollar strength mitigates the ability of #EM central banks to ease, even if local conditions warrant it.
Read 5 tweets
At 250,000 #jobs gained, #payrolls were quite solid today, and it’s clear that our economy requires more and more people to meet the overall demand for goods and services, and it is still cost-efficient to make those hires.
Perhaps even more remarkably, average-hourly-earnings accelerated to a year-on-year gain of 3.1%, which is impressive in terms of what it’s telling us about today’s #economy, and where we are going in terms of marginally, but tangibly, higher #wages.
Still, despite the improved gains in wages, we do not believe that feeds through to meaningfully higher #inflation, as some commentators have suggested, as secular trends, such as #technology and demographics, should hold price increases in check.
Read 4 tweets

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