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Rainbows over Canyonlands - Dave Stoker

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Showing posts with label workweek. Show all posts
Showing posts with label workweek. Show all posts

Friday, February 06, 2015

Job Seekers Find Their Place Again

FINANCIAL REVIEW

Job Seekers Find Their Place Again

DOW – 60 = 17,824
SPX – 7 = 2055
NAS – 20 = 4744
10 YR YLD + .12 = 1.94%
OIL + 1.60 = 52.08
GOLD – 31.20 = 1234.30
SILV – .54 = 16.79
The U.S. added 257,000 new jobs in January. The unemployment rate edged up to 5.7% from 5.6%, but that’s because more people looked for jobs. The January report topped expectations of 230,000 to 245,000 new jobs.
The Labor Force Participation Rate increased 0.2% to 62.9%. The Labor Department’s survey of households, used to derive the unemployment rate, showed about 1.05 million people entered the labor force and 759,000 found work. These numbers also reflect new estimates on the size of the population. Even as the labor-force participation rate rose last month, it’s held to roughly the same level for the past year and a half. The hope is that there is a trend developing of more people looking for work. Consumers believe job prospects have improved. That perception was evident in last week’s confidence report that showed a jump in the number of consumers who think jobs were “plentiful” last month.  Better confidence in job availability should lead to a jump in the number of people quitting. That’s one data series the Fed tracks as a sign of labor-market tightening beyond what the jobless rate says.
The economy has now added at least 200,000 jobs for 12 straight months, a feat last accomplished in 1994-1995, and averaged 260,000 jobs for the course of the year. November’s jobs gain was revised higher to 423,000 from 353,000; that was the best month of 2014, and one of the strongest monthly numbers since May 2010. December was revised up to 329,000 from 252,000. Total employment gains in November and December of last year were therefore 147,000 higher than previously reported. The U.S. has added an average of 336,000 jobs in the past three months, or right at 1 million jobs in 3 months, the best 3 months for job gains since 1997. The economy has added 3.21 million jobs in the last 12 months. Total employment is up 11.2 million from the employment recession low, and up 2.5 million above the previous peak.
Average hourly wages jumped 0.5% in January to $24.75 after declining in December. That’s the biggest monthly gain in six years, but wages were up only 2.2 percent from a year earlier, a historically slow pace. The current pace of growth in salaries is far from the rates seen before the 2007-09 recession of 3-4 percent a year. In January, factory workers earned 1.2 percent an hour more than a year earlier, while construction workers got 2.3 percent more. The length of the workweek was unchanged from December at 34.6 hours; the workweek is hovering at its longest in six years.
More than two million workers received raises last month, thanks to minimum-wage increases in 20 states. Minimum-wage increases, ranging from a $1.25 jump in South Dakota to a 12-cent bump in Florida, went into effect starting with the first paycheck of the year. About half the increases reflect new pay floors established last year by lawmakers or voters, while the others are annual increases tied to inflation. Minimum wage increases only had a very small effect on wage gains.
The wages gains did push incomes above the inflation rate; this means we should see workers saving or spending a few extra dollars from each paycheck. The Consumer Price Index, a measure of inflation at the retail level, increased by 0.8% in December, and the core rate, excluding food and energy rose at a 1.6% annualized pace. Part of the reason for the tame inflation numbers is lower oil prices, but wage increases might, in time, put pressure on inflation. For now, there is still plenty of slack in the labor market and wage push inflation doesn’t look like a significant factor.
On Thursday, the Labor Department reported nonfarm productivity fell at a 1.8% annual rate in the fourth quarter, a poorer showing than economists had expected.  The upward revisions to November and December payrolls suggest the economy used more labor last quarter and so productivity was weaker than the initial numbers suggest. Productivity revisions will be reported March 5. The tightening of the labor market and the weak productivity growth are likely to put downward pressure on corporate profits that are already taking a hit from the strengthening of the dollar.
When you combine the increase in wages with the longer workweek and lower inflation you come up with something called the inflation adjusted aggregate payrolls for all US workers; it’s up 5.8 percent in the 12 months through January, the best performance in records dating back to 2007.
The number of unemployed private sector workers for every job opening more than tripled during the recession, topping out above six in late 2009, and has fallen steadily in the recovery. In October and November it averaged 1.5, just a tenth of a point higher than its average in the year prior to the recession, indicating a tighter job market is in the offing.
For all the progress in the labor market, though, millions of Americans are still left out. Some 18 million people who want a full-time job still can’t find one, including 6.8 million workers who have been forced to work part-time instead. The U-6 unemployment rate rose to 11.3% from 11.2% in December; this is a measure of unemployed plus underutilized workers, and this number is still higher than might be expected at this point in a recovery. There are 2.80 million workers who have been unemployed for more than 26 weeks and still want a job. This was up from 2.78 million in December.
Most industries added jobs. Health services added 38,000 jobs and education added 12,000; retail trade added 45,900; construction companies hired 39,000 employees; professional and business services gained 39,000; leisure and hospitality, 37,000; financial activities accounted for 26,000 jobs; manufacturers added 22,000 workers; and wholesale trades added 12,000. Mining and transportation both lost jobs for the month. Private payrolls increased 267,000, which means government lost 10,000 jobs.
Those are the major factors in this month’s jobs report, now let’s break it down for the meaning. And by the way, the reason we analyze this report is simply because jobs are probably the most important part of the economy; more important than stock or bond prices, even though you might not see it today. You can’t take the jobs report and use it to reliably pick stocks any given month, but you can use this information to determine macro-trends in the economy, and over time that should help you determine the direction of not just the economy but also the markets. Understand that there can be a lag; for example, in 2008 and 2009, the economy was hemorrhaging jobs, but the stock market bottomed in the spring of 2009 and took off.
And the jobs being created aren’t government jobs, they are private sector jobs. Indeed, one of the reasons this job recovery has been long and slow is because we have not seen government jobs. We actually lost 10,000 government jobs last month, and we have lost 688,000 government jobs since the start of 2009 
We are starting to see the first hints of rising wages; and when that is combined with low inflation it means people have cash in their pockets. We will likely see continued deleveraging as people pay down debt, but if this trend can continue, it will result in spending. We may be seeing some of this already, for example in auto sales. When better wages eventually turn into spending, we will see a pick-up in demand; which will push businesses to create more jobs. 
We have seen regular upward revisions to jobs numbers. This says the labor market is stronger than it looks; much better than downward revisions, which might indicate undetected problems. And the labor pool has been growing; more people are looking for work. You have to have a positive attitude to get back into the labor pool; you have to think that there is a job for you where none previously existed, or a better job than where you currently work. While the labor force participation rate has been low for some time, part of the reason is because the boomer generation is retiring; now maybe some are un-retiring; and younger workers are gaining the confidence to jump in the pool. Bottom line, more people are working, fewer people are just scraping by, and fewer are requiring assistance. Millions of people were displaced by the downturn, now they are starting to find their place again. 
Today, Charles Plosser, the president of the Philadelphia Fed, said it’s hard to justify not hiking interest rates. Atlanta Fed President Dennis Lockhart said he didn’t have sufficient confidence yet to vote to raise rates. The Fed funds futures contract now implies a rate between 1.23-1.5% in December 2016. Investors have now fully priced in the first rate increase by October, which was not the case before the January job report. The baseline thinking remains a mid-year move, in June or possibly September. 
Let’s hope the Fed is in no hurry. Earlier this week, Warren Buffett said it would not be feasible for the Federal Reserve to increase rates. “If Europe’s got them at zero, and you get higher rates in the United States, that would exacerbate a problem with the stronger dollar and funds flow.” There are plenty of things that could derail the jobs train: the Fed, the government, geopolitical events – take your pick; but maybe we are about to see something close to full employment and genuine, sustained economic prosperity. At least I hope that’s what the light is at the end of the tunnel.

Thursday, July 03, 2014

Thursday, July 03, 2014 - Jobs Report Thursday

Financial Review with Sinclair Noe

DOW + 92 = 17,068
SPX + 10 = 1985
NAS + 28 = 4485
10 YR YLD + .02 = 2.65%
OIL - .42 = 104.06
GOLD – 7.60 = 1320.60
SILV - .02 = 21.23
 
Record high closes for the Dow and the S&P 500.

The first Friday of each month is typically a big day for economic data because the Labor Department releases the nonfarm employment report. I have always considered this to be one of the most important economic reports because jobs make everything happen; it’s the stuff of work and production and a driver of capital, and sweat and blood. So, we spend extra time to really dig into the jobs report, which was released today because tomorrow is a holiday.

This was a very good jobs report. The economy added 288,000 net new jobs in June and the unemployment rate dropped from 6.3% to 6.1%; that’s the lowest unemployment rate since September 2008. The report topped estimates of 215,000 jobs. The jobs reports for April and May were revised higher; April was revised from 282,000 to 304,000 net new jobs; May was revised from 217,000 to 224,000 new jobs; meaning there were 29,000 more jobs than previously reported.

June marked the best five-month stretch of job creation since early 2006; for the past five months the economy has added at least 200,000 jobs per month. The three-month average rate of hiring in the second quarter now stands at 272,000, compared with 190,000 a month in the first quarter.

The economy has added private sector jobs for 52 straight months. During this span, 9.7 million private sector jobs have been created. Over the past 12 months, the economy has added 2.495 million jobs; and year-to-date the economy has added 1.385 million job; and 2014 is on track to be the best year for job growth since 1999.

Total employment is now 415,000 above the pre-recession peak; and private employment is now 895,000 above the previous peak; the difference between private and total is the loss of government jobs, which has been like an anchor dragging down total employment. State and local governments added 24,000 jobs last month; state and local government employment is up 138,000 from the bottom but still more than 600,000 below the peak. The federal government added 2,000 jobs in June but federal employment is still down 23,000 for the year.

Breaking down the government jobs a bit further, the improvement likely reflects a stabilizing financial outlook for municipalities. When home prices crashed, it cut into the tax base of cities and counties, and the response was to lay off workers. A return to government hiring, even a modest increase could have long term benefits from investment in education and infrastructure.

More than 7.5 million people are employed part-time for economic reasons; this number is up 275,000 in June, although the trend has been and remains down for the year. People who are working part-time because their hours have been cut back or they can’t find full-time employment are included in an alternate measure known as labor underutilization or U-6. The U-6 rate decreased to 12.1% in June from 12.2% in May; and this is the lowest U-6 reading since October 2008.

Full-time employment suffered its third-largest single month-over-month decline since the recession ended; 523,000 full-time jobs were lost while a stunning 799,000 new part-time jobs were added in June. Part-time workers again account for more than 18% of the total workforce, a level that has remained relatively stable since the recession, despite efforts to deny the truth that this is a "part-time" recovery. Part-time jobs had been in rapid decline over the past year, but June's spike cancels out that shift. There are now almost exactly as many part-time workers (28 million) as there were a year ago.

The Labor Force Participation Rate was unchanged in June at 62.8%. This is the percentage of the working age population in the labor force.  We would like to see the participation rate increase, meaning more people are looking for jobs, but a large portion of the recent decline in the participation rate is due to demographics; people are retiring and won’t be re-entering the labor force. The Employment-Population ratio increased in June to 59.0%.

The unemployment rate is calculated by dividing the number of people who are unemployed by the total number of people working or looking for work. The best way for the rate to fall is for the number of unemployed to drop because more people found a job, but it can also decline when people give up looking for work altogether. Still, the jobless rate dropped to 6.1% and that’s because more people found work, not because more people were dropping out of the labor pool; so the jobless rate fell for the right reasons.

As the labor market recovers, it creates a challenge of more people re-entering the labor pool. If more people re-enter the labor pool, the unemployment rate could go up, even as the economy adds jobs. But that hasn’t happened; rather, the number of unemployed who were re-entering the labor pool actually fell in June.

The number of long term unemployed workers has dropped by 1.2 million over the past year but there are still just over 3 million workers who have been unemployed for more than 26 weeks and they are still trying to find work; this is down from over 3.3 million people in May. There are many long term unemployed who may never get jobs again, and the longer they go without jobs, the tougher it will be. And more jobseekers gave up looking for work than found a job, for the 49th time in the past 50 months. This is surely a demographic shift, but it also means we’re losing the skills and productivity of some of the most experienced workers.  For people who are finding jobs, the median duration of unemployment continues to drop rapidly, from 25 weeks coming out of the recession to just 13.1 weeks today.

Long term unemployment and underutilization indicate that there is still significant slack in the labor market, even though some companies are now beginning to report that they are having to compete to find workers.

So far, the trend has not resulted in higher incomes. Average pay has grown just 2% during the recovery, barely matching inflation and below the long term trend of 3.5%. Last month, the average hourly wage for private-sector workers rose six cents to $24.45. If workers earn more money, they’ll spend more money and that is a boost to the overall economy. The silver lining to the weak wages is that there is no wage inflation, so even though the jobs picture is improving, wage inflation should not influence the Federal Reserve.  Even if hourly wages aren’t moving much, there was a small pickup in the average work week and aggregate hours worked grew by a fairly strong 3.8% annual rate in the last quarter.

Job gains in June were widespread. Retailers added 40,200 workers last month. Financial and insurance firms increased their payrolls by 17,000. Restaurants and bars employed nearly 33,000 more people. Higher-paying sectors continued to lag behind in the jobs recovery. Factories added 16,000 workers, and construction added 6,000 workers, which would not be considered particularly strong. Factory payrolls have increased for 11 consecutive months, adding a total of 139,000 new jobs, well below the target of one million manufacturing jobs for the year. Factory payrolls remain a shadow of their former selves, but the revival in manufacturing is finally creating more job opportunities on the factory floor.

Shrinking unemployment and growing payrolls are always good signs for a stronger economy. However, the nature of these changes matters. If unemployment is low primarily due to labor force dropouts, and if employment growth is being driven by hundreds of thousands of low-earning part-time workers rather than growth in valuable and decent paying full-time positions, it means that the economic recovery still faces a hard slog.

The jobs report was far from perfect but it was very good and it should lead to growth in the economy for the second quarter. So today, stocks had another good day. The Dow closed above 17,000 for the first time ever. The S&P 500 is closing in on 2000. The Nasdaq is back to its highest level since 2000. Bonds dropped. And that is an ongoing trend, the markets race along while workers trudge.