It’s the big day as investors brace for the jobs report that could be anything but big.
Coming into the week, the Street was looking for 164,000 non-farm jobs created last month. However, after the ADP jobs release, whisper estimates are now much lower.
ADP Employment Report
There were 102,000 jobs reported when the Street was looking for 143,000.
ADP Employment Report
Small businesses are the weaker link for several reasons, including a lack of qualified workers, competing against higher paying, larger businesses, and weakness in construction and brick-and-mortar industries. The report also suggests that lower consumer confidence has hurt the leisure and hospitality industries:
- Small: -23,000
- Mid: +60,000
- Large: +65,000
Goods Producing: -15,000
- Mining: -4,000
- Construction: -18,000
- Manufacturing: +7,000
Service Producing +117,000
- Trade: +23,000
- Financial: +7,000
- Professional: +32,000
- Education: +55,000
- Leisure: +3,000
- Information: -3,000
Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) Jobs Report
Because of all the guessing over the next move by the Federal Reserve, we find ourselves back to wondering if the Street is rooting for good news or bad news. Lower job creation would be good news because it would cement rate cuts this year, and if the number is awful, perhaps a 50-basis (bps) point would cut this month.
I say root for good news because of its strong economic underpinnings that will drive top-line growth and earnings.
Of course, coming into the day, the question is: what’s a “good” jobs report? There have been numerous times in the past year when the Street was bracing for the numbers to plummet, they instead rebounded. There were only a few times when the results were astronomical. I think the number will be around 150,000, which means more rate cuts, but it’s also enough to keep the consumer flush.
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Today's Session
The June jobs report smashed estimates, adding 224,000 jobs compared to the estimates of 160,000. June was revised lower to 72,000 from 75,000. The unemployment edged higher to 3.7% as well as the underemployed nudged up to 7.2%, still around its lowest level since early 2001. Labor for participation was 62.9, and wages were up 3.1% slightly below the expectations of an increase to 3.2%. It's important to point out why rate nudged higher, 335,000 Americans reentered labor force.
Private sector added 191,000 jobs. Professional and Business Services +51,000
- Healthcare +51,000
- Retail -6,000, the fifth consecutive month with job losses.
Market now pricing in small chance of rate hike due to robust job market. We aren’t going to force the issue here.
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