Morning in Arizona

Morning in Arizona
Rainbows over Canyonlands - Dave Stoker

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Showing posts with label labor force participation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label labor force participation. Show all posts

Friday, December 08, 2017

November 2017 Jobs Report

Financial Review

November 2017 Jobs Report


DOW + 117 = 24,329
SPX + 14 = 2651
NAS + 27 = 6840
RUT + 1 = 1521
10 Y + .01 = 2.38%
OIL + .67 = 57.36
GOLD + .90 = 1248.70

Cryptocurrency

Top Cryptocurrencies

  Name Symbol Price USD Market Cap Volume (24h) Total Vol. % Price BTC Chg. % 1D Chg. % 7D

Bitcoin BTC 15,990.0 $276.87B $21.19B 60.04% 1 -3.69% +51.10%

Ethereum ETH 442.86 $43.91B $2.35B 6.66% 0.0282401 +6.71% -2.23%

Bitcoin Cash BCH 1,390.00 $24.71B $2.56B 7.26% 0.0906245 +12.80% +0.18%

IOTA MIOTA 4.87100 $13.84B $910.05M 2.58% 0.00030818 +18.80% +254.38%

Ripple XRP 0.23333 $9.79B $661.69M 1.87% 0.00001563 +14.89% -1.52%

Litecoin LTC 127.820 $6.82B $1.52B 4.30% 0.00778303 +30.51% +27.24%

NEM XEM 0.63875 $5.87B $252.16M 0.71% 0.00004038 +126.04% +171.44%

Dash DASH 702.00 $5.63B $288.67M 0.82% 0.0450115 +5.92% -8.31%

Bitcoin Gold BTG 238.58 $4.36B $179.46M 0.51% 0.0161369 +11.23% -15.69%

Monero XMR 260.48 $4.26B $200.65M 0.57% 0.0170735 +0.27% +44.91%

The economy added 228,000 new jobs in November, beating expectations for about 200,000. The unemployment rate was unchanged at 4.1%, a 17-year low.

October job gains were revised lower, to 244,000 from 261,000. The increase in jobs in September was raised to 38,000 from 18,000. Hurricane damage skewed the past two employment reports, with the storms temporarily pushing hundreds of thousands of workers, particularly in the service sector, out of their jobs.

They largely flocked back in October, accounting for much of the month’s larger-than-usual job growth. Payrolls for September and October were revised up by a combined 3 thousand. Accounting for these revisions, job gains have averaged 170,000 over the last three months.

In the first 10 months of the Trump administration the economy has added 1.7 million jobs. In the last 10 months of the Obama administration, the economy added 1.85 million jobs. For the full year of 2016, the economy added 2.24 million jobs.

The United States has now added jobs for 86 consecutive months — a downward blip in September was later revised to show a small gain — and the unemployment rate is lower than it ever got during the last boom, which ended when the housing bubble burst.

Job growth has gradually slowed since 2014, when the American economy added close to three million jobs. But hiring remains remarkably steady. Employers are on track to add about two million jobs in 2017, a solid pace 8 years into an economic expansion.

What we haven’t seen is a substantial increase in wage growth. Worker pay rose 5 cents, or 0.2%, to an average of $26.55 an hour. The yearly increase in hourly pay moved up to 2.5% from 2.3%; this means that over the past year, average hourly earnings have risen by 64 cents; an improvement but still tepid wage growth.

The increase in average hourly earnings is barely enough to keep up with inflation. The average workweek for all employees increased by 0.1 hour to 34.5 hours in November. So, wages didn’t really go up, workers just worked a little longer.

The Labor Force Participation Rate was unchanged in November at 62.7%. This is the percentage of the working age population in the labor force. So, while the labor market is strong, it was not strong enough to pull workers off the sidelines. Or perhaps more significantly, companies were not offering enough in wages to pull workers off the sidelines.

The unemployment rate is approaching the level many economists consider “full employment” — the point at which essentially everyone who wants a job can find one. But the unemployment rate may not fully reflect the number of available workers. Many employers are starting to complain about the lack of available workers – but we still do not see a big move in wage increases.

If workers are so hard to find, why aren’t companies raising pay? The simple answer is that there are plenty of people who still want a job, they just might not be an employers’ ideal candidate. We need to train workers or pay up for trained workers.

The U-6 unemployment rate ticked up to 8% from 7.9% in October. The headline unemployment rate or U-3 is at 4.1%. The U-6 includes the unemployed plus people who are marginally attached to the labor force or working part time for economic reasons. Year-over-year, however, the 8% rate marks an improvement; in November 2016, the figure stood at 9%.

The health care sector added 30,000 jobs. This has been one of the fastest growing sectors in the labor market, but not all those jobs offer good wages. The home health aide industry, paying workers about $22,000 per year, will produce an estimated 425,600 positions by 2026.

Education gained 24,000. Professional and business services added 46,000.

Manufacturing gained 31,000 and a total of 189,000 jobs over the past 12 months. What’s more, manufacturers have now added just over 1 million new jobs since industry employment fell to a post-World War II low of 11.45 million in early 2010. These companies now employ 12.5 million Americans.

Construction added 24,000 in November and a total of 132,000 for the 12 months. Leisure and hospitality up 14,000. Transportation gained 10,000. Financial activities 8,000. And government added 7,000 new jobs.

Retail gained over 18,000 jobs. Many of the jobs in retail are seasonal. Retailers hired 595,000 workers in October and November, this is up from just over 509,000 for the same period last year, and about the same level as the previous four years. This is a good indicator for holiday shopping sales.

The holiday shopping season had a strong kick-off to the year. Sales got off to a great start on Black Friday weekend, and a massive shift toward online shopping has sent shippers scrambling to catch up. Packages are taking longer to arrive, and it might get worse.

One caveat: Gasoline prices usually don’t rise in November, but this time they did. That will make retail sales look even better, even though it puts a dent into the finances of consumers.

In a separate report today, the University of Michigan consumer sentiment index dipped to a 3-month low of 96.8. Consumers are by and large upbeat. They’re expecting higher income, and higher inflation as well.

So long as the job market is strong — and the latest report from the Labor Department was — the economy should be in pretty good shape. Consumer expectations fell, while consumers said the current situation improved. The economy seems good now, but we are concerned it will get worse.

Policymakers at the Federal Reserve have sent clear signals that they plan to raise the benchmark interest rate at their meeting next week. It would probably have taken a nearly catastrophic jobs report to change that — and today’s report was a little better than expected.

If the economy continues to add jobs at the current rate, it probably means more rate hikes in 2018 – and especially if wages start to rise more quickly — Fed officials could feel pressure to raise rates faster to head off inflation.

There are also political implications to be drawn from the labor market. At the heart of the Republican tax plan hurtling through Congress is an implicit promise that cutting corporate taxes will lift the middle class through higher wages and more jobs.

Speaker Paul Ryan, for example, said in a recent speech that “fixing the business side of our tax code is really all about helping families and workers,” adding that “cutting the corporate tax rate means more jobs here in the United States. It will foster increased competition, which will directly drive up wages for our workers.”

Yet few American companies have offered specific plans that support those promises. The lack of pledges to create jobs has not been lost on Trump’s top economic adviser, Gary Cohn. At a recent Wall Street Journal conference, Cohn asked his audience of chief executives how many of them would invest more if the tax cut were passed.

When only a few attendees raised their hands, Cohn asked: “Why aren’t the other hands up?”

A few companies say they plan to hire if tax cuts are passed, but most will be looking at share buybacks, increased dividends, or just hoarding the cash. This highlights a critical question over who would benefit the most from the tax bill: shareholders or workers?

The promise of the administration is that a tax overhaul will result in faster economic growth, which will lead to more investment and will eventually trickle down in the form of higher wages. And there is near unanimous consensus among economists that the tax bill will not grow the economy.

Wage growth has remained relatively sluggish over the past several years, even as corporate profits hover near all-time highs as a share of the economy, and the unemployment rate continues to fall to levels that economists normally associate with rapid increases in worker pay. Corporate profit rates have been historically high since 2007, while business investment has been historically low, and that hasn’t been enough to spark meaningful gains in wages.

Productivity growth remains low, inching up at an average annual rate of 1.2 percent over the last eight years, compared with its historic rate of 2.1 percent from 1974 to 2017. There is a strong chance that business could invest in equipment to improve productivity, rather than investing in workers’ wages.

It is possible that a tax cut could increase wages even if companies do not intend it to, but that could just be because there is less slack in the labor market, where unemployment is hovering just above 4 percent.

Frankly it’s time to give up the charade that eliminating estate taxes for Ivanka Trump and her brothers or creating a lower “pass-through” rate for President Trump’s maze of LLC’s is going to boost the economy in the way we now need. We have jobs; we need higher skilled workers and other elements to make workers richer.

What would spur productivity and in turn raise wages? Invest in infrastructure, move capable workers to where the jobs are, get the best and the brightest people from around the world to immigrate here, invest in R & D, improve schools (for all the education “reform,” American students still trail their foreign peers in math) and create a path for teaching high-skill trades outside the four-year college system.

Friday, November 03, 2017

Jobs Report Friday – Bounce Back Edition

Financial Review

Jobs Report Friday – Bounce Back Edition


DOW + 22 = 23,539 (Record)
SPX + 7 = 2587
NAS + 49 = 6764
RUT – 1 = 1494
10 Y – .04 = 2.34%
OIL + 1.14 = 55.68
GOLD – 6.10 = 1270.40
  • Number of Currencies: 893
  • Total Market Cap: $194,825,439,980
  • 24H Volume: $7,975,210,591

Top Cryptocurrencies

  Name Symbol Price USD Market Cap Vol. Total Vol. % Price BTC Chg. % 1D Chg. % 7D
  Bitcoin BTC 7,111.9 $119.47B $3.53B 44.23% 1 -2.29% +23.65%
  Ethereum ETH 293.82 $28.33B $642.47M 8.06% 0.0414614 -1.53% -0.01%
  Bitcoin Cash BCH 615.00 $10.46B $2.01B 25.21% 0.0871951 -8.89% +65.22%
  Ripple XRP 0.20000 $7.87B $214.12M 2.68% 0.00002853 -2.44% +0.65%
  Litecoin LTC 55.200 $2.95B $147.74M 1.85% 0.007692 -1.76% -0.95%
  Dash DASH 271.00 $2.09B $61.65M 0.77% 0.0380557 -2.23% -3.81%
  NEO NEO 25.894 $1.69B $38.32M 0.48% 0.00363635 -3.02% -8.83%
  NEM XEM 0.17019 $1.55B $5.53M 0.07% 0.00002404 -0.43% -12.60%
  Monero XMR 84.71 $1.31B $36.64M 0.46% 0.0119976 -2.91% -1.34%
  Ethereum Classic ETC 11.4476 $1.14B $187.43M 2.35% 0.00164485 -7.95% +13.07%

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported the economy generated 261,000 new jobs in October.

The “headline rate” of unemployment fell to 4.1 percent. Each monthly nonfarm payroll report includes revisions to the past 2 months. For September, the revision turned a loss of 33,000 jobs into a gain of 18,000; for August, the revision was from 169,000 jobs to 208,000.

We anticipated September would be bad because of the hurricanes and even with the revision it was bad, but the revision means the streak of monthly job gains now stretches to 85 months – a record.

To smooth out the numbers we can look at the average job gains over the last 3 months – just over 162,000 jobs per month. Companies are still hiring at a steady clip; job openings are near a record high and unemployment is at a 17-year low. Still, most economists expected a much stronger rebound in the October numbers – closer to 325,000 – so this report is a bit disappointing. Also, wages proved a disappointment.

The U6 rate fell 0.4 points to 7.9 percent. Its pre-recession low was 8 percent in March 2007, but it was lower than that earlier in the 2000s, reaching 6.9 percent in mid-2001. The U6 count covers several categories, including unemployed, underemployed and underutilized or part-time workers who want—but cannot find—full-time positions. More than 5 million Americans who would like full-time work to have only been able to find part-time positions.

The Labor Force Participation Rate decreased in October to 62.7% from 63.1%. This is the percentage of the working age population in the labor force. The participation rate is historically low and unlikely to increase significantly as the baby boomer generation continues to move into retirement.

In October, the labor force fell by 765,000. Therefore, the unemployment rate dropped down to 4.1%, because the size of the workforce shrank, not because there was a big surge in new jobs. Some people claim there just aren’t many potential workers left to pull off the sidelines. Job openings are not being filled.

Employers claim there is a skills gap, yet they are not raising wages and they are not providing training to people who might be able to fill positions. Further, they are not even considering many potential candidates who do not have a 4-year degree, or who might have a criminal conviction in their history.

Of the 261,000 total new jobs, 252,000 were created in the private sector, 9,000 in the public sector. The biggest gains in employment came from Leisure & hospitality: 106,000 – a bounce back from the hurricanes Harvey and Irma. Puerto Rico was not included in the monthly report.

Professional services added 50,000. Education and health services: 41,000.  Manufacturing added 24,000 jobs. Construction gained 11,000. The hurricanes created a demand for workers to rebuild homes, roads and other structures damaged by the storms. That led some economists to expect a surge in storm-related hiring, but we haven’t seen it yet.

Transportation jobs: 8,400. Retail lost 8,300, the eighth time in nine months that employment has declined in the sector; and this is the season when you would expect retailers to be adding jobs. Mining and logging lost 1,000 jobs – this category includes jobs in the oil patch.

State-level data for September showed that Florida’s jobs market was affected the most by hurricanes, as payrolls declined by 127,000. It’s not certain that all those jobs were regained by the reference week for the October jobs report, which included the 12th day of the month.

Before the hurricanes, employers were hiring at the pace of about 170,000 jobs per month this year. That’s down from an average of about 190,000 in 2016 and nearly 230,000 in 2015, but it still represents a solid pace of growth. The hurricanes make it difficult to draw conclusions. We probably need to wait for at least another month or two of data, and then focus on longer term trends.


The average wage for all workers slipped 1 cent an hour. Compared with last October, the average year-over-year gain was 63 cents, a 2.4 percent year-over-year increase.

The average work week for all employees on non-farm payrolls remained unchanged in October at 34.4 hours. The small drop in wages may be the biggest disappointment of today’s report. Part of this goes back to the hurricanes. When restaurant and hospitality workers were out of work for a while, the averages for wages went up slightly; now that those low paid workers are back on the job, wages shrink.

That is the very short-term explanation for disappointing wages. But wage growth, or the lack thereof, is a much longer-term trend. Over the longer run, wages have been rising faster than inflation, but slowly by historical standards.

That wasn’t a surprise early in the recovery, when there were millions of unemployed workers clamoring for jobs — and giving employers little incentive to raise pay. But the unemployment rate is now at 4.1%, lower than it ever got during the previous economic expansion. Standard economic models suggest that should lead to faster wage growth.

Many people claim that 4.1% represents full employment. While we keep getting closer to full employment, I don’t believe we are there yet. How will we know we know when we are there? Wages go up. The pendulum swings from favoring employers to favoring workers.

This might be a good time to talk about wages and taxes. There was a big tax plan announced this week, as you know. And the biggest proposed cuts were for corporations, which could see cuts over $1 trillion. Best case scenario for workers is half that amount. The plan calls for cutting corporate rates from 35% to 20% and cutting pass-through rates to 25%, while the top individual rates would still be 39.6%.

Here is an example: let’s say you have two taxpayers. Citizen A is a hard-working professional who earns $300,000 a year. Citizen B is a trust fund baby who inherited a big pile of money and lives off the dividends and capital gains to the tune of $300,000 a year. Who pays more taxes? The worker pays more – a lot more – about $63,000 more. The worker faces an effective tax rate of 34% and the investor pays an effective tax rate of 14%.

Politicians have intentionally set tax rates on wages much higher than those on long-term investment returns. The U.S. has a progressive tax system in the sense that well-paid workers sacrifice much more than poor workers on their “ordinary income.” But Americans with unearned income — qualified dividends and long-term capital gains — get a break. A billionaire investor can pay about the same marginal rate as a $40,000-a-year worker, a fact Warren Buffett has famously lamented.

There’s evidence that investors feel influenced by taxes far more than workers do. If you worry about tax incentives distorting the economy, taxes on workers should worry you less: People tend to keep going to work every day no matter what.

Investors, by contrast, are much more sensitive — at least in the short term. It’s happening now: If taxes on the wealthy drop next year, as many tax planners assume they will, then rich people have an incentive to wait until 2018 to recognize investment income by selling stocks or businesses they own.

And that seems to be what they’re doing; revenue to the U.S. Treasury dipped this year even as the economy remains strong. So, the thinking is that politicians slam workers over investors, because they can get away with it. There’s a big flaw, though, in the argument that lower taxes on the rich stimulate longer-term investment, and thus jobs, famously labeled as “trickle-down economics.”

While tax rates might affect the timing of some investor decisions in the medium term, it’s much harder to see how they affect long-term behavior. No matter the tax rate, investors ultimately look for opportunities to get richer. The most famous economic boom in U.S. history, right after World War II, occurred when the top rates on dividends were between 70 and 90 percent.

Rapid growth also followed tax hikes on wealthy investors in the late 1980s and early ’90s. And more than a decade later, the Great Recession swamped any conceivable benefits from then-President George W. Bush’s tax cuts, which dropped the top rate on dividends by half.

Even if you believe low investment taxes can spur economic growth, you might question whether lowering taxes further will have much of an effect these days. The vast majority of wealth held by the middle class is held in homes and retirement accounts.

Tapping a retirement account never triggers a capital gains tax, and selling a home only does if the gain is more than $250,000 for a single person and $500,000 for a couple. If you have less than $38,000 in investment income, you already pay a tax rate of zero.

House Speaker Paul Ryan said, “We want a tax code built for growth. We want a tax code that raises wages, keeps American companies in America, gives us faster economic growth.”

The reality is that there are many reasons why wages remain stagnant, including: automation, globalization, demographics, and even the tax code – and I don’t expect any rewrites to change that.

Friday, September 01, 2017

August Jobs, meh.

Financial Review

August Jobs, meh.


DOW + 39 = 21,987
SPX + 4 = 2476
NAS + 6 = 6435
RUT + 8 = 1413
10 Y + .04 = 2.16
OIL + .12 = 47.35
GOLD + 3.60 = 1325.40

Top Cryptocurrencies
  Name Symbol Market Cap Vol. Total Vol. % Price USD Price BTC Chg. % 1D Chg. % 7D
  Bitcoin BTC $80.01B $2.83B 31.34% $4,837.84 1 2.68% 11.49%
  Ethereum ETH $35.61B $941.45M 10.43% $377.26 0.0777541 -2.68% 14.29%
  Bitcoin Cash BCH $10.31B $461.22M 5.11% $622.85 0.128371 5.55% -2.28%
  Ripple XRP $9.29B $261.70M 2.90% $0.24 0.00004991 -2.84% 10.22%
  Litecoin LTC $4.37B $1.76B 19.50% $82.95 0.0170879 12.19% 63.35%
  Dash DASH $2.91B $60.05M 0.67% $386.19 0.0795583 1.99% 16.67%
  NEM XEM $2.84B $9.73M 0.11% $0.32 0.000065 -1.97% 18.40%
  IOTA MIOTA $2.09B $34.03M 0.38% $0.75 0.00015472 -13.02% -17.19%
  Monero XMR $2.06B $182.10M 2.02% $137.21 0.0282676 -0.66% 14.07%
  Ethereum Classic ETC $2.04B $1.01B 11.22% $21.40 0.00440996 29.90% 40.66%

The economy added 156,000 jobs in August, missing expectations for around 180,000. The unemployment rate rose a tick to 4.4% from 4.3%; last month’s rate was a 16-year low.

The government cut its estimate of new jobs created in July to 189,000 from 209,000. June’s gain was trimmed to 210,000 from 231,000. A net loss of 41,000 jobs in the revisions. The US have averaged 185,000 new jobs a month since June — more than twice as many as needed to put all the new people entering the labor force each month to work. August marked the 83rd straight month of U.S. job growth, the longest such streak on record.

The data mark the seventh straight August that the government’s initial payrolls print has missed the median estimate of economists; the figure has been revised upward in five of the past six years. The trend may be explained in part by a seasonal adjustment process for the new school year. For one thing, August is the second most popular month for vacations.

As a result, businesses are slower to respond to the government’s survey on how many workers they employed or hired. True to form the initial response rate last month was 70%, marking the lowest of 2017. By contrast, the average rate of response from January through July was 76.5%.

Government employment reportedly fell by 9,000 last month but many economists are skeptical. Labor Department bean counters try to adjust for seasonal swings in educational employment in August and September but they often miss the mark.

Not surprisingly, the preliminary estimate for August has undercounted the number of new jobs by an average of 50,000 a year. So, even though today’s report was bad, it wasn’t anything to get bent out of shape about. Not yet anyway – let’s see how the revisions go.

The report may represent the cleanest reading on the labor market for several months, as Hurricane Harvey’s fallout in the Houston region begins to affect the data in coming weeks. While the storm may depress payrolls at first, jobs will probably get a subsequent boost as construction and utility workers help rebuild housing and infrastructure.

The Labor Department data are based on surveys that reflect payrolls and Americans’ work status for the week that includes the 12th of the month. Harvey made landfall on Aug. 25. So, we can expect a negative impact to the September report.

Yet even after the creation of millions of new jobs during the current recovery and the lowest unemployment rate in a decade and a half, worker wages still aren’t rising all that rapidly. Pay rose 0.1% in August to an average of $26.39 an hour. Wages have risen 2.5% in the past 12 months, unchanged from July.

Pay usually rises 3% to 4% a year at this stage of an economic recovery, but a slew of factors including global competition and the retirement of higher-paid baby boomers may be holding wages back. Average workweek for all workers fell to 34.4 hours from 34.5 hours (forecast was 34.5 hours).

A so-called hidden reserve of unemployed Americans may also be keeping wages down. A broader measure of joblessness, the U-6, or underemployment rate, was 8.6 percent for a third month; U-6 includes part-time workers who’d prefer a full-time position and people who want a job but aren’t actively looking.

Employees working part-time for economic reasons fell by 27,000 to 5.26 million. was flat at 8.6%, but the U-6 rate hovered below 8% shortly before the 2007-2009 recession. More Americans who’ve been out of work for long periods are rejoining the labor force in light of a near record number of job openings.

Private employment increased by 165,000 (forecast was 172,000) after a 202,000 advance; government payrolls fell by 9,000. In August, manufacturers, construction firms and health care providers account for more than half of all the hiring.

Manufacturing added 38,000 jobs. Construction jobs rose by 28,000, the most since February; retail hiring was up 800, the first increase since January; leisure and hospitality was up 4,000 following a 58,000 gain.

Professional and business services added 40,000. Financial Activities added 10,000. Transportation added just under 2,000.

Manufacturing was a shining star in today’s report, posting one of the best months in a long time. The average workweek for production workers increased by a tenth of an hour to 42.1 hours, while average overtime also increased by a tenth to 4.4 hours.

Aggregate number of hours worked by production workers jumped by 0.7%, the most in three years. Hiring was particularly strong in the motor-vehicle sector, where employment rose by 13,700 on a seasonally adjusted basis, the most since February 2014.

August is always the strongest month for hiring in autos, as the plants resume full-scale production after a summer lull for retooling. On a not-seasonally adjusted basis, hiring in autos was 30,000 in August, the best since 2013. All this is great news for a beaten-down manufacturing sector.

The Institute for Supply Management’s manufacturing index surged to a six-year high in August at 58.8%. The employment index also hit a six-year high. Maybe we are starting to see an upturn in manufacturing, or maybe we are seeing some statistical noise. Give it a month or two.

Last month, when the jobs number came in at 209,000 (revised lower today) and the unemployment rate hit a 16-year low, the White House press secretary (I think it was Sean Spicer) claimed White house credit for the strong jobs report. I haven’t heard any announcement from the White House for today’s jobs number. That tells you something about the disappointing number today.

What it really tells us is that the White House really isn’t the all-important force behind job growth in the economy, certainly not this early in the administration. At this point, the things the administration has or has not done, have had little impact on the broader economy.

There are many ways that political leaders can affect the economy, but right now the federal budget has not changed and won’t for at least another month. Tax and spending policies have not changed from last year, and there are no Trump appointments to the Federal Reserve, so monetary policy has not changed from a political standpoint. Think of the economy as a big ship, a really big ship; it does not turn on a dime.

Job growth has averaged 170,000 new positions per month since February, the first full month of the administration. That is below the 208,000 new positions per month in the last six months of 2016. The slower pace of job creation should not be surprising – it is part of the business cycle. With the unemployment rate at 4.4%, employers are somewhat constrained in finding the right candidates to fill open positions.

Meanwhile, wage growth was stagnant in the August report, up just 0.1% – this is not normal at this point in the cycle. As the labor market tightens, we would expect wages to increase. We have been expecting wages to increase for over a year. It hasn’t happened.

Wages grew 2.5% year-over-year, which is right where it has been for a few years now (give or take a little), but well below normal going back a couple of decades. Millions of workers remain on the sidelines. Many of those workers have just left the market – the retiring baby boom generation is once again having a profound impact on the economy – this time the labor market, but that is not the only factor.

The labor force participation rate for 25-54-year-old workers dropped by 0.3% to 78.4% – this bit of data represents people in their prime working years. We still have people on the sidelines, or maybe working in the gig economy and not showing up in the official numbers – hard to tell which – but the result is still slack in the labor market.

Traders now assume a 30 percent chance of a rate increase when Fed policy makers meet in December, down from a 50 percent chance a few weeks ago. The Fed is set to meet later this month, but is not expected to raise rates.

That is not just today’s jobs report but also consider the PCE gauge of inflation which came in at a 1.4% rate in yesterday’s report – well below the Fed’s target of 2%. Given the usual uncertainties that are attached to these monthly numbers, this report should not change expectations of an economy that, in the absence of a major policy effort out of Washington, tracks a real growth path of around 2 percent with muted inflation.

It will, however, solidify market expectations of a continued dovish Fed, including a lower endpoint for the neutral rate and a longer path to get there, along with a very gradual contraction of the balance sheet. Janet Yellen’s best bet might be to just phone it in until February.

One wild card in the second half of 2017 will be gasoline prices. The surge following Hurricane Harvey’s devastation in Texas will leave less money for consumers to spend on other goods and services.

On Friday morning, the average price for regular gasoline nationwide was $2.52, a 7-cent increase from Thursday. Prices have risen 15 cents a gallon in the last week, and the current price is 30 cents above the national average for regular gasoline a year ago. Over the course of a year, every penny increase is equivalent to a $1 billion tax on consumers.

Friday, August 04, 2017

July Jobs Report

Financial Review

July Jobs Report



DOW + 66 = 22,092
SPX + 4 = 2476
NAS + 11 = 6351
RUT + 7 = 1412
10 Y + .04 = 2.27%
OIL + .49 = 49.52
GOLD – 9.50 = 1259.40
BITCOIN + 9.23% = 3149.74 USD
ETHEREUM + 2.85% = 229.39

The Dow closed at a record high – the 8th straight record close and the 34th record close this year. For the week, the Dow rose 1.2%, its second straight weekly rise, as well as its fourth positive week of the past five. The S&P rose 0.2% on the week, while the Nasdaq ended lower by 0.4%.

The economy added 209,000 new jobs in July. The unemployment rate dropped from 4.4% to 4.3%, that’s a 16-year low.

The government also raised its estimate of new jobs created in June to 231,000 from 222,000. May’s gain was reduced to 145,000 from 152,000, however.

Over the past 3 months, the economy has added 195,000 jobs per month on average. Payroll gains averaged 180,000 in the first half of 2017, compared with 193,000 in the second half of 2016.

During the first six months of Trump’s term, the economy has added 1,027,000 private sector jobs. July marked the 82nd straight month of job growth, a record.

The U6 measure for unemployment was unchanged at 8.6%; that reading includes unemployed workers plus underutilized or people working part-time for economic reasons.

Wages increased 0.3% in July to an average of $26.36 an hour. But over the past 12 months, wages have risen just 2.5%, the same as in the prior month. Wages usually rise 3% to 4% a year when an economy is running at full throttle.

Several factors appear to be holding wages down, including low productivity, global competition, automation, a reluctance among many Americans to switch jobs and a reluctance among employers to pay for workers.

Employment in food services and drinking places rose by 53,000 in July.

The hospitality industry has added 313,000 jobs so far, this year.

Professional and business services added 49,000 jobs.

Health care employment increased by 39,000.

Manufacturing added 16,000 jobs.

Construction, wholesale trade and financial activities each gained 6,000 jobs.

And there were 4,000 government jobs added.

President Trump tweeted self-congratulations on what he called an excellent jobs report. That might be an exaggeration. Trump once pledged he would be “the greatest jobs president”. So far, he’s off to a moderate start.

So far, he’s only the eighth-greatest among post-war presidents. In terms of relative job growth, the first six months of Trump’s term lags several of his predecessors, including (in order): Carter, Nixon, Johnson, Clinton, Bush (the elder), Kennedy, and Eisenhower.

And in terms of absolute job creation, he is lagging Clinton, Reagan, Carter, and Obama (in order). To be fair, there’s little evidence that job growth—especially so early in a president’s first term—has much to do with a new administration’s actions or policies. Recent job growth is more likely a legacy of the final stages of the Obama years.

The same goes for Obama’s first six months, which came shortly after Lehman Brothers collapsed and the global financial system seized up during the end of George W. Bush’s tenure. But we don’t measure with a lag.

It was a good jobs report. If there was a blemish in the month’s numbers, it came from the distribution of jobs to lower-income sectors. Job creation was strongly titled to part-time, which gained 393,000 positions, while full-time fell by 54,000.

The Labor Force Participation Rate increased in July to 62.9% from 62.8%. This is the percentage of the working age population in the labor force. A large portion of the recent decline in the participation rate is due to demographics. The Employment-Population ratio increased to 60.2%.

It’s unclear how long the current growth can continue. The monthly jobs figures are volatile; only two months ago, the May jobs report showed less than 150,00 new jobs. But beyond the month-to-month data, there is reason to think the recovery can keep going.

The labor force participation rate for workers age 25-54, workers in their prime working years, increased to 78.7%. New post-recession high for share of working-age adults who have jobs.

The labor force grew by 349,000 people in July; the so-called participation rate — the share of adults who are either working or actively looking for work — has been essentially flat for the past year and a half.

That’s an impressive trend given the ongoing retirement of the baby boom generation, which puts downward pressure on the participation rate, and it is a sign that the labor market is strong enough to pull workers off the sidelines.

The Federal Reserve will likely look at the July report as confirmation that everything is on track for one more rate hike later in the year. A mild nudge in wages not enough to worry about inflation. With unemployment so low, economists have been watching for signs that the economy is nearing “full employment,” the point at which essentially everyone who wants a job has one.

That mark is significant because standard economic theory suggests that once the economy runs out of spare workers, companies will have to start boosting pay to attract employees. That would be a welcome development for workers but would also likely spur the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates to try to keep the economy from overheating.

Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari suggested the report doesn’t change his mind that the Fed should hold off raising interest rates anytime soon. Kaskhari has said all year he wanted the Fed to hold off hiking rates until inflation firms.

He said this jobs report showed no hint inflation would move higher. In fact, the Fed’s inflation gauge has softened as the year has progressed, even with strong job gains. Kashkari said the Fed has repeatedly declared the unemployment rate has fallen as far as it could, only to be surprised by strong job growth and labor force participation and weak wages.

If Kashkari is correct, it would mean the labor market has more slack than the unemployment rate suggests.

And if you need proof that there is still significant slack in the labor market, look no further than Amazon. Thousands of Americans lined up in the searing heat on Wednesday for Amazon’s Jobs Day, when it had said it would hire 50,000 workers for fairly low-paying, physically demanding jobs in high-pressure warehouses.

Perhaps the Fed could have sent a staffer to observe the lines and talk to some of the people in them for insight into the real economy. The jobs offer between $12 and $15 an hour, well above the federal minimum wage. Crucially, they also offer healthcare benefits, absent in a lot of lower-paying jobs.

Workers know all too well the labor market is far from great, but policymakers in Washington are bent on insisting otherwise. With the official unemployment rate at a historically low 4.3%, Fed officials seem determined to raise interest rates and shrink their balance sheet despite inflation that continues to slip below their 2% target, indicating more room for the economy to grow more evenly.

Companies big and small are rushing to fill a near record number of job openings, but what they aren’t doing is offering bigger paydays. Less skilled workers are much easier to find and companies are unlikely to pay them more than they must.

Underemployment is still rampant, and wages have long been stuck in a rut. The number of persons employed part time for economic reasons (sometimes referred to as involuntary part-time workers), at 5.3 million, was essentially unchanged in July.

There are 1.79 million workers who have been unemployed for more than 26 weeks and still want a job. This was up from 1.66 million in June. But consider that the economy only needs to add 100,000 new jobs per month to keep pace with population growth, if we continue at the current pace, we will get to full employment – that mythical place where everybody who wants a job gets a job.

We’re not there yet, but it was a good jobs report.

Friday, May 05, 2017

April Jobs Report

Financial Review

April Jobs Report


DOW + 55 = 21,006
SPX + 9 = 2399
NAS + 25 = 6100
RUT + 8 = 1396
10 Y – .005 = 2.35%
OIL + .89 = 46.41

Today is a Jobs Report Friday. The economy added 211,000 net new jobs in April. The unemployment rate dropped to 4.4% from 4.5% in March. This was a better than expected report. The consensus estimate was for 190,000 jobs.

The March report was weaker than expected, initially reported at 98,000 jobs, it was revised even lower today – down to just 79,000.

So, the big question heading into this report was whether March was a fluke, was it just a single, off month? And the answer is, yes. So, to smooth out the numbers, we can look at the first four months of the year and the average job growth is 185,000 new jobs per month, right in line with the average for 2016.

So, this was a good report. The reaction on Wall Street was muted, even as the Nasdaq and the S&P 500 closed at record highs. Bonds were flat. The yield curve between two-year notes and 10-year notes flattened to 103 basis points, from 105 basis points before the data.

The U-6 unemployment rate dropped to 8.6% from 8.9%. The U-6 includes unemployed plus underutilized or underemployed workers, people who are working part-time but would like to be working full-time. The U-6 is now at its lowest level since November 2007. The headline rate, the U-3, is at its lowest level in more than a decade and close to the lowest level in 16 years.

The unemployment rate fell by 0.1 percentage points, but this was in part because fewer people were looking for work. The labor participation rate fell slightly to 62.9 percent last month from 63 percent; this indicates that the labor market is not strong enough to pull potential workers off the sidelines.

The labor force participation rate for workers age 25 to 54, the prime working years, rose to 78.6, but still a bit low historically. This means many people have not participated in this jobs recovery. Certainly, demographics are at play. The boomers are retiring. Younger workers may be staying in school longer, rather than being tempted into the workforce.

But it likely includes workers who have been marginalized, out of work so long that it is now difficult to get a job, or scrimping along on part-time work. We’ve seen some increase in labor market fluidity, meaning people leaving one job for another, (median job tenure fell from 2014 to 2016 after rising steadily since 2000).

In recent days, we have seen a couple of real estate reports showing single family home prices still have not recovered from the downturn, meaning that many people are not able to move to change jobs.

Jobs gains were broad, with basically all sectors posting at least a few new jobs. Leisure and hospitality added 55,000 jobs. Employment in professional and business services continued to trend up in April (+39,000). Employment in health care and social assistance increased by 37,000 in April.

Financial activities added 19,000 jobs. Employment in mining rose by 9,000 in April (this sector includes jobs in oil exploration and drilling and support and there were even a few coal mining jobs added) Employment in other major industries, including construction, wholesale trade, transportation and warehousing, information, and government, showed little change over the month.

Manufacturing managed to add 6,000 jobs, nothing to crow about. The retail sector slashed jobs in February and March, cutting 56,000 positions over the two months combined and contributing to fears of a “retail apocalypse.” So, it was a relief to see retailers add jobs in April, albeit only 6,000 of them.

The retail industry has lost as many jobs in the past few months as there are in the entire coal industry. Among the major worker groups, the unemployment rate for adult men declined to 4.0%, adult women 4.1%, teens at 14.7%, Whites, 3.8%, Blacks 7.9%, Asians 3.2%, and Hispanics 5.2%.

The average workweek for all employees on private non-farm payrolls increased by 0.1 hour to 34.4 hours in April. In manufacturing, the workweek edged up by 0.1 hour to 40.7 hours, and overtime edged down by 0.1 hour to 3.2 hours. The average workweek for production and non-supervisory employees on private non-farm payrolls edged up by 0.1 hour to 33.7 hours.

In April, average hourly earnings for all employees on private non-farm payrolls rose by 7 cents to $26.19. Over the year, average hourly earnings have risen by 65 cents, or 2.5 percent. Just enough to keep pace with inflation, meaning real income barely budged.

Employers keep complaining about a shortage of workers, but they don’t seem to be willing to pay enough to attract them. At some point, a tight labor market should result in higher wages but it hasn’t happened yet. In a healthy economy, we would expect to see wages growing at 3.5-4 percent.

Over the past year, the unemployment rate has fallen sharply for those with only a high school degree or those with less, and that trend continued this month. The long-recovery has also led to a decline in the long-term unemployed, and a sharp decline in people working part-time jobs who would prefer full-time work but it hasn’t necessarily lead to an increase in wages.

The Economic Policy Institute published a report yesterday on the Class of 2017, finding young high school graduates on average are still paid less than they were in 2007 (adjusted for inflation), while the average wages of young college graduates have finally surpassed the 2007 level. “Yet the economy of 2007 is a low bar for economic opportunity.

Relative to the full employment economy of the late 1990s and 2000, the shares of young graduates who are unemployed and underemployed, and generally “idled” by the economy (neither working nor in school), are still quite high.” For young high school graduates, the unemployment rate is 16.9 percent (compared with 15.9 percent in 2007 and 12.1 percent in 2000).

You may or may not be surprised to discover that more than 60 percent of all private sector jobs created in this recovery have been in low-paying service industries of the economy. It may be more surprising to know that this share is lower than during the prior two labor market recoveries. This is perhaps the most disappointing development of the current cycle.

In the wake of the financial crisis, job losses were so high that getting people who lost their jobs back into the workforce hasn’t required a good deal of cajoling on the part of employers. Although wages have strengthened over time, it’s been a painfully slow process.

The general lack of business dynamism in this recovery has been well-documented. The Bureau of Labor Statistics, for example, shows that the number of jobs created by new businesses (those less than one year old) has declined from upwards of 4 million in 1994 to 3 million in 2015, partly because of a slow rate of new business formation.

Whether this has been related to a lack of credit availability or an increased regulatory burden (likely both), the fact is that small- and medium-sized businesses (those with less than 500 employees) have not led the pack in hiring throughout much of this expansion, which is quite abnormal. A recent and encouraging development, then, has been the long-awaited emergence of hiring among small employers.

April marked the 79th straight month of job growth, by far the longest such streak on record. The U.S. has added 15 million jobs over that period, nearly 200,000 per month. When the streak began in October 2010, the unemployment rate stood at 9.4 percent, and it would have been higher if government economists counted the millions of Americans who had stopped looking for work; today, the unemployment rate has fallen so far that many economists question how much lower it can go.

Perhaps more remarkable than the recovery’s length has been its resilience. Time and again, one or two weak months of hiring have sparked fears that the recovery was nearing its end; time and again, job growth rebounded. The past two months are a good example: Hiring slowed sharply in March, when employers added just 79,000 jobs, but quickly rebounded in April.

There are still weak spots in the job market, even after six and a half years of growth. Wages are rising, but their recent growth has been disappointing. At this late stage of the recovery, it is reasonable to think wages would be higher.

This might represent a significant shift in how we think about wage growth and wage push inflation. There are signs of trouble in the retail sector, where hiring has been weak. And joblessness remains high among certain groups, such as young black men.

It’s unclear how long the strong job market will last. The current economic recovery, which dates to mid-2009, is already among the longest since World War II. And hiring could slow even if the recovery continues: The Federal Reserve has been raising interest rates to prevent inflation, which could also lead to reduced hiring.

Fed Chair Janet Yellen gave a speech today at her alma mater, Brown University. Her chief point: America needs better policies to encourage more women to work full careers. Sustained careers could help narrow the gender wage gap and boost growth overall. Women working full-time still earn about 17% less than men per week, Yellen said.

Even when comparing men and women in the same job positions with similar backgrounds, the wage gap is 10%. Yellen has a good point. Even though the jobs recovery has been long, it has not yet reached out to everyone.

Friday, April 07, 2017

March Jobs Report

Financial Review

March Jobs Report


DOW – 6 = 20,656
SPX – 1 = 2355
NAS – 1 = 5877
RUT +0.14 = 1364
10 Y + .03 = 2.37%
OIL + .65 = 52.35
GOLD + 2.20 = 1254.80

The economy added 98,000 net new jobs in March, far fewer than expected. The unemployment rate dropped from 4.7% to 4.5%, and that is the lowest level in 10 years.

The January report was revised lower, from 238,000 to 216,000. And the February report was revised lower, from 235,000 to 219,000; or a loss of 38,000 jobs from earlier reports.

A more accurate measure of the pace of hiring, the three-month average, shows the US is adding 178,000 jobs a month so far in 2017. That’s down slightly from 187,000 a month in 2016 and well below the recent high-water mark of 250,000 a month in 2014.

In March, the year-over-year change was 2.13 million jobs. Decent job growth. Despite weakness in March, the labor market is healthy, and it would be difficult to maintain a hiring pace above 200,000, at least for any length of time.

There are a couple of explanations for the weak number – and it basically boils down to statistical noise. February was unusually warm and pleasant weather for much of the country, resulting in a surge of hiring, especially for construction jobs. In March, the East Coast was hit by a blizzard during the time when researchers were gathering data. There will be revisions to the March numbers, so it is too early to call a trend.

Economic growth has been steadfastly sluggish, not matching the strong jobs numbers from January and February. So maybe it was just a reversion to the mean. The latest report will only add to the debate over whether so-called soft data, like stronger sentiment among businesses, is actually prompting companies to hire more workers.

March’s data suggests it is not. The weak headline number is also a stark reminder that it will be difficult to add significantly more new jobs to the economy at this late stage in the jobs recovery. It is highly unlikely that the US will start adding 300,000 to 400,000 new jobs each month. Not gonna happen.

The change in the jobs numbers really is the best single number to understand the state of the economy. While it has a lot of month-to-month statistical variance, it is a reliable indicator — especially if you average a few months together — of whether the economy is growing, contracting or stagnant.

Now, with the jobless rate at 4.5 percent, the binding constraint is the number of available workers; and that is a combination of demographics, skills, and pay. The demographics boil down to birthrates, death rates, retirement rates for the boomer generation, plus immigration.

The skills are constantly evolving and employers are constantly bemoaning the lack of skilled workers; yet as much as they complain, there has been a movement away from job training programs which were once the forte of unions. And the wages component – if wage growth were stronger, you would expect it to have the positive effect of pulling people on the bench into the labor force.

People who don’t see the value in working for $10 an hour might do so for $15. Wages are rising, but slowly, grudgingly. The Federal Reserve may think we are near full employment but wages do not confirm that stance.

Hourly earnings for the average American worker rose 0.2% to $26.14 an hour. And the increase in hourly pay over the past 12 months slipped to 2.7% from 2.8% in the prior month. Although wages are rising faster now compared with a few years ago, they still aren’t increasing as much as they normally do in periods of economic prosperity. In good times, wages tend to rise 3% to 4% a year.

The retail sector continued to contract, with department stores in the process of closing up to 3,500 stores . About 29,700 retail jobs were cut in March, and the clear majority were from department stores that sell everything from furniture to vegetables. Meanwhile, online retailers, the big competitors to physical stores, gained 2,200 jobs. Retail also lost 30,000 jobs in February, so we are seeing a trend develop.

And hiring in the construction industry almost came to a standstill, just 6,000 new jobs, after a huge gain in February. It was the second warmest February in the US since the 1890s. Meanwhile, March roared in like a lion, and the bad weather was likely a factor in hiring for many sectors, not just construction.

Most of the hiring was concentrated in white-collar professional jobs, with 56,000 jobs. Health care and education added 16,000. Mining, which includes oil production – added 11,000. Also, 11,000 new jobs in manufacturing. Manufacturing accounts for only 9 percent of employment but punches above its weight, because factory jobs pay considerably more than many service positions.

In recent months, blue-collar fields like manufacturing and construction have been very solid, a sharp contrast with late last year when service industries like education, business services and health led the way.

Private payrolls increased by 89,000 – which means government added 9,000 jobs. It also means there is a big disconnect between today’s report and Wednesday’s report on private job growth from ADP, which showed 263,000 new private sector jobs.

There are 1.69 million workers who have been unemployed for more than 26 weeks and still want a job. This was down from 1.80 million in February. This was the lowest number since 2008. The U6 unemployment rate dipped from 9.2% in February, down to 8.9%, the lowest level in almost 10 years.

U6 measures unemployed plus underutilized workers, or workers who are working part-time for economic reasons. Of course, many of those part-time workers would like full-time jobs – so this indicates that there is still slack in the labor market.

Part-time work is still a contentious alternative for many workers. There were some 5.6 million involuntary part-time workers in March 2017, little changed from the month before, but down from 6.4 million a year earlier, per the Bureau of Labor Statistics. That number is up from 4.5 million in November 2007, but off the peak of 8.6 million in September 2012.

These figures are almost entirely due to the inability of workers to find full-time jobs, leaving many workers to take or keep lower-paying jobs. And 54% of the growth in these involuntary part-time jobs between 2007 and 2015 were in retail, leisure and hospitality industries, per the Economic Policy Institute, a nonprofit think-tank in Washington, D.C.

The EPI report found a prolonged “structural shift toward more intensive use of part-time employment.” Aside from the frequent lack of sufficient work hours, these part-time workers must also “navigate unpredictable and/or variable hours,” with their work schedules varying week-to-week at a rate more than double that of full-time workers.

What’s more, part-time workers suffer from a lower rate of pay and benefits coverage than full-time workers, such as access to health insurance and paid time off. Compared to similar full-time workers, men working part-time earn 19% less and women working part-time earn 9% less per hour.

Involuntary part-time workers tend to earn less than their voluntary part-time counterparts. Approximately 40% of involuntary part-time workers report a total family income of less than $30,000, compared with just 18% of voluntary part-timers and 29% of the population.

Part-time workers who can’t find full-time jobs struggle to earn enough money to get by, even when they have multiple jobs. More than four out of every five involuntary part-time workers say it’s hard to save for retirement and about seven out of every 10 say they earn less money than they and their family need to get by and pay bills.

The persistence of such large numbers of involuntary part-time workers is an indicator of underlying weaknesses in the labor market, and the weak hand of labor in the labor market. Involuntary part-time workers are twice as likely as voluntary part-time workers to be forced to work on weekends and holidays, and to be given unfavorable work schedules and job assignments.

More than half of Americans (53%) are burned out and overworked, per a survey of more than 2,000 workers by Staples Advantage, a division of office supplier Staples. One reason for this exhaustion does not look like it will be changing anytime soon.

Some 34% of workers took a vacation last year, down from 42% the year before, according to a separate survey of more than 2,000 American adults released in February 2017 by Skift using Google Consumer Surveys. (Nearly 40% only took 10 days or less.)

One theory: Roughly one in four workers don’t get any paid vacation from their employers. Many are low-income workers and are the least able to afford to take an unpaid vacation day. Under The Fair Labor Standards Act, the US is also one of the few developed countries that does not require employers to provide paid time off.

The Labor Force Participation Rate was unchanged in March at 63.0%. This is the percentage of the working age population in the labor force.   A large portion of the recent decline in the participation rate is due to demographics. The participation rate for workers age 25 to 54 (considered the prime working years because people are out of school and too young to retire) was unchanged in March at 81.7%.

Overall, the March jobs report was disappointing but hardly a disaster. Remember that over 8 years ago, the economy was hemorrhaging about 800,000 jobs per month. In March, we added 98,000, and the unemployment rate has been more than cut in half at 4.5%.