Not Goldilocks: Jobs Report Misses, Wage Growth Comes In Hot

It was a mixed week for the US economy headed into August payrolls, as the first contractionary ISM manufacturing print in three years (Tuesday) was juxtaposed against solid a solid services PMI and a very good ADP report.

Jerome Powell will speak later in Zurich, and Donald Trump is keen on having his cake and eating it too, where that means the economy holds up, but the White House still gets the rate cuts the administration insists are necessary to turbocharge things ahead of an election year.

Consensus was looking for 160k on the headline for August NFP, and it’s a miss. Payrolls rose 130k last month, and the unemployment rate held steady at 3.7%. Revisions lopped 15k from June’s headline and 5k from July’s.

AHE came in hot, rising 0.4% MoM. The YoY change was 3.2%, well ahead of estimates.

Generally speaking, the combination of a disappointing headline, downward revisions to the prior two months, and hotter-than-expected wage inflation is not great. That doesn’t qualify for “Goldilocks” status.

Temporary hiring for the census added 25k workers in August. Manufacturing payrolls rose 3k, missing estimates. Job gains have averaged 156k over the last three months. Private payrolls rose just 96k – that’s a three-month low, and well below estimates of 150k (the range was 110k-185k). July was revised down to 131k.

With consumer sentiment printing a Trump-era low in August and manufacturing in contraction, Trump desperately needs the labor market to hold up – especially if the dour sentiment data presages retrenchment by the consumer, which shouldered most of the burden for the economy in the second quarter.

The data comes as the presidential Twitter feed is littered with lamentations about the deleterious effects of a strong dollar. Thankfully in that regard, this is on track to be the worst week for the greenback since June.

All eyes (or ears) will turn to Powell’s speech. He’ll have the last word (among Fed officials anyway) going into the blackout period ahead of the September FOMC, where “just” a 25bp cut is expected, despite the market, Jim Bullard and Trump wanting more.

Estimates and priors

  • Change in Nonfarm Payrolls, est. 160,000, prior 164,000
  • Change in Private Payrolls, est. 150,000, prior 148,000
  • Change in Manufact. Payrolls, est. 5,000, prior 16,000
  • Unemployment Rate, est. 3.7%, prior 3.7%
  • Average Hourly Earnings MoM, est. 0.3%, prior 0.3%
  • Average Hourly Earnings YoY, est. 3.0%, prior 3.2%
  • Average Weekly Hours All Employees, est. 34.4, prior 34.3
  • Labor Force Participation Rate, prior 63.0%
  • Underemployment Rate, prior 7.0%

Actual

  • U.S. Aug. Nonfarm Payrolls Rose 130k
  • Nonfarm payrolls forecast est. 160k, range 110k-232k from 77 economists surveyed
  • BLS says federal govt employment boosted by hiring of 25k temporary workers for 2020 Census
  • Participation rate 63.2% vs prior 63%
  • Avg. hourly earnings 0.4% m/m, est. 0.3%, prior 0.3%
    • Y/y 3.2%, prior 3.3% est. 3.0%
  • Nonfarm private payrolls rose 96k vs prior 131k; est. 150k, range 110k-185k from 30 economists surveyed
  • Manufacturing payrolls rose 3k after rising 4k in the prior month; economists estimated 5k, range -5k to 12k from 18 economists surveyed
  • Unemployment rate 3.7% vs prior 3.7%; est. 3.7%, range 3.5%-3.9% from 74 economists surveyed
  • Underemployment rate 7.2% vs prior 7.0%
  • Change in household employment 590k vs prior 283k

Leave a Reply to Arthur JensenCancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

2 thoughts on “Not Goldilocks: Jobs Report Misses, Wage Growth Comes In Hot

  1. This calls for action by the Fed to do….nothing. But we all know that won’t happen, not with the Twitter in Chief (TIC) Trump drooling for at least a 50bp cut if not more and his lap dog Bullard barking incessantly for a bigger cut. Jeez, what a mess and all created by the TIC.

NEWSROOM crewneck & prints