Investorideas.com

Call 800 665 0411 to learn about our services for your stock

Search   Follow Investorideas on Twitter   Investorideas is on Facebook   Investorideas is on Youtube   Investorideas is on Pinterest  Investorideas is on stocktwits   Investorideas is on tumblr   Investorideas is on LinkedIn   Investorideas Instagram   Investorideas Telegram   Investorideas Gettr   Investorideas RSS




Share on StockTwits

Unemployment data triggers recession indicator

Today's market analysis on behalf of Michael Brown Market Analyst at Pepperstone

 

August 2, 2024 (Investorideas.com Newswire) "The July US jobs report pointed to a continued cooling in labour market conditions, consistent with the signals sent recently by a range of other employment indicators. Headline nonfarm payrolls rose just 114k on the month, towards the bottom of the forecast range, and significantly below the 'breakeven' pace required for employment growth to keep pace with expansion in the size of the labour force. At the same time, unemployment unexpectedly surged to 4.3%, triggering the so-called 'Sahm Rule' recession indicator, though some of this rise will be down to a modest increase in labour force participation, to 62.7%.

Earnings growth, meanwhile, continues to cool, at 0.2% MoM, and just 3.6% YoY, data which is consistent with a slow but steady easing in employment conditions, and which will likely provide the FOMC with increased confidence that earnings pressures are becoming more consistent with a sustainable return to the 2% inflation target.

On the whole, there is little in this report that is likely to dissuade the FOMC from delivering this cycle's first 25bp cut at the next meeting in September, as was hinted at in this week's statement, and press conference, with the Committee now increasingly attentive to both sides of the dual mandate, as opposed to the prior laser-like focus solely on inflation.

Of course, there remains one more jobs report, along with two further CPI prints, before that decision, though a significant adverse data surprise would now be needed to deter policymakers from a cut next time around. Current market pricing, however, seems rather over-done, with the OIS curve now fully pricing 4 25bp Fed cuts this year. The Committee will be careful not to over-react to one data-point, as markets appear to have done so, instead preferring to normalise policy at a significantly more gradual, and steady, pace, barring external shocks.

In turn, the likely eventual pricing out of some degree of easing which the curve now discounts is likely to provide some support for the dollar while, despite recent weakness, the supportive policy backdrop - across DM, not only in the US - should continue to see the path of least resistance lead higher for equities over the medium-term."

More Info:


Disclaimer/Disclosure: Investorideas.com is a digital publisher of third party sourced news, articles and equity research as well as creates original content, including video, interviews and articles. Original content created by investorideas is protected by copyright laws other than syndication rights. Our site does not make recommendations for purchases or sale of stocks, services or products. Nothing on our sites should be construed as an offer or solicitation to buy or sell products or securities. All investing involves risk and possible losses. This site is currently compensated for news publication and distribution, social media and marketing, content creation and more. Disclosure is posted for each compensated news release, content published /created if required but otherwise the news was not compensated for and was published for the sole interest of our readers and followers. Contact management and IR of each company directly regarding specific questions.

More disclaimer info: https://www.investorideas.com/About/Disclaimer.asp Learn more about publishing your news release and our other news services on the Investorideas.com newswire https://www.investorideas.com/News-Upload/

Global investors must adhere to regulations of each country. Please read Investorideas.com privacy policy: https://www.investorideas.com/About/Private_Policy.asp