Solid US Job growth but slower earnings

Expert market comment from Alex Kuptsikevich of the FxPro Analyst Team: Solid US Job growth but slower earnings
FxPro | 1350 days ago

Solid US Job growth but slower earnings

The US economy added 263K jobs in September - slightly above forecasts for growth of 250K-255K. The unemployment rate has returned to 3.5% after 3.7%, reversing concerns that there was already a sustained upward trend in the rate. We recall that the Fed expects unemployment to rise to 4% by the end of the year, calling for economic pain to be accepted to suppress inflation.

Impressive job growth and falling unemployment rates are fuelling speculation that the Fed will once again raise the rate by 75 points in early November. CME's FedWatch tool indicates that markets have an 82% chance of such an outcome. A week ago, the odds of such an outcome were below 57%, and this shift is lying behind the latest boost to the dollar and the decline in equities.

However, the situation is not clear-cut, as rising employment almost paradoxically leads to slower wage growth. After adding 0.3% for the month, hourly earnings added 5.0% y/y against 5.2% a month earlier and a peak of 5.6% in March.

Job growth would allow the Fed to take another big step towards a rate hike without fear of bringing down the economy. But already in November, we should expect signals of a further reduction in the pace of rate hikes, which limits the medium-term potential for a stronger dollar and weaker stock markets.

 

By the FxPro Analyst Team 

FxPro
Type: NDD
Regulation: FCA (UK), SCB (The Bahamas)
read more
Has Crypto Lost the Capital… or Has The S&P500 Stolen the Spotlight?

Has Crypto Lost the Capital… or Has The S&P500 Stolen the Spotlight?

Bitcoin is weakening whilst the US equities and AI-driven IPOs continue attracting billions in fresh capital. The real story isn't falling crypto prices—it's the rotation of liquidity. Follow where the money is flowing, because capital has a habit of finding tomorrow's winners long before the headlines do.
Headway | 1 day ago