At 8 AM EST, Friday, 12/2/16, traders are focused on the imminent jobs report the last jobs
data before the expected FOMC rate hike on Wednesday, 12/14/16. The wage data
is critical. Wages must continue to increase for a rate hike path forward to be
viable. Inflation cannot exist without wage inflation.
Fed Funds futures indicate a 96% chance of a rate hike on
12/14/16. More importantly, the Federal Reserve’s comments on future hikes will
impact global markets. The current thinking is that the Fed will hike twice in
2017 and three times in 2018. The FOMC has lost credibility since Fed Chair
Yellen and company had communicated the intent to hike four times this year and
there has not been one single rate hike as yet. The 12/14/16 meeting is the
last chance for the Fed to hike rates in 2016. The first rate hike off the zero
bound (ZIRP; zero interest-rate policy; 0.00% -0.25%) occurred last December
with the key rate currently at 0.25%-0.50%.
The consensus of traders and analysts expect 170K jobs
compared to last month’s 161K jobs. The unemployment rate is expected to remain
unchanged at 4.9%. Private payrolls are expected at 155K compared to the prior
month’s 142K. The Labor Participation Rate should remain at decade lows at
62.8%. The Average Workweek is expected to remain unchanged at 34.4 hours.
The critically-important Average Hourly Earnings are
expected at +0.2% month-on-month versus last month’s robust +0.4% gain. The
wage data is more important than the headline numbers since it dictates whether
the Fed’s desired inflation will appear, or not, going forward.
Wages are increasing at +2.8% per year. The three-month uptrend
in annualized wages are as follows; August at 2.5% annual wage increase,
September is +2.7% and October +2.8%. Wages are rising so Yellen touts the rate
hike line. Any move backwards from the +2.8% gain per year in wages will
disappoint the Fed.
As a rule of thumb, wage increases of from +4.0% to +4.5%
per year create sustainable and longer term inflation. Thus, wages are
increasing but Fed Chair Yellen and other FOMC members know they cannot sleep
until wages continue moving higher and the annual wage gains start running far
above to +3% and above +4%.
If the wage number comes in less than the +0.2% month-on-month
expected, or less than the annualized +2.8%, it will throw a wrench into the
works for the proposed 12/14/16 rate hike that everyone expects. A portion of
this year’s wage gains are due to the minimum wage increases at MCD, WMT and
many other companies and businesses. These adjustments may have run their
course. The Federal Reserve will be extremely disappointed if the wage data now
trails off as the year ends and 2017 begins especially when they appear ready
to raise rates.
S&P -3. Dow -16. Nasdaq -14. VIX 14.32. WTIC 50.58.
Brent 53.30. Gold 1172. Silver 16.46. Copper 2.6065.
Treasury yields are;
2-year 1.13%, 5-year 1.88%, 10-year 2.42%, 30-year 3.07%. German bund 0.329%.
Japan 10-year yield 0.035%. UK gilt 1.44%. France 10-year yield 0.79%.
One minute before the data, the S&P futures are -2. Dow
-8. Nasdaq -8. Euro 1.0643. Dollar/yen 114.00. Pound 1.2621. Gold 1173. Silver 16.47. Copper 2.6095.
Treasury yields are;
2-year 1.14%, 5-year 1.88%, 10-year 2.43%, 30-year 3.08%.
At 8:30 AM EST (1:30 PM London and GMT; 2:30 PM Frankfurt
and Paris; 10:30 PM Tokyo), the Monthly Jobs report is 178K jobs with an
unemployment rate at a low 4.6%. The rate will be the headline news number with
4.6% the lowest since August 2007. The jobs number is right in line with the
170K expected with the rate far lower than the 4.9% estimate. The unemployment
rate for adult men is at 4.3%. The prior two months of job gains are revised
lower by a net 2K jobs. September is revised higher from 191K to 208K and
October is revised lower from 161K to 142K.
Wages fall out of bed. Average Hourly Earnings drop -0.1%.
Employees lose about three cents per hour. The annualized wage number drops
from 2.8% to 2.5%. Wages are going the wrong way. The clock just fell off the
wall in Janet Yellen’s office at the Eccles Building. Inflation cannot exist
without wage inflation.
If the Fed goes ahead with the hike in a few days, and
inflation is a mirage, and wages and job opportunities sink, Yellen may have to
lose face in early 2017 reversing the hiking path and considering ZIRP again.
That would destroy Fed credibility. Yellen has a lot to think about over the
next 11 days; it will be the most important decision she makes as the Fed Chair.
The projected two-hike path for 2017 may be reconsidered by the Fed due to the shaky
wage data.
Private payrolls are at 156K exactly in line with the 155K
expected. The gains in jobs came with professional and business services up
63K, healthcare up 28K jobs and construction gaining 19K jobs. Retail jobs
decrease by 8K and 4K jobs are lost in manufacturing. Interestingly, retail
jobs are lost at bricks and mortar stores but increase for those providing
support to online retail sales.
The Labor Participation Rate is lower to 62.7%. The number
of people working in America remains the lowest since the 1970’s. The U-6 rate
is at 9.3% the lowest since April 2008. The Average Workweek remains unchanged
at 34.4 hours.
The low unemployment rate of 4.6% is immediately plastered
across internet news sites. This number is very revealing but not in the happy
context everyone is now touting. First of all, any number at 5% or lower is in
essence full employment. There are always folks that are unemployed due to
factories temporarily closing, seasonal layoffs, workers taking time off to
help with a sick relative, a host of reasons, so there is always a base
unemployment rate at 3% to 5%.
Therefore, the 4.6% rate is simply a more full unemployment
number. Typically, the low rate portends a vibrant growing economy running on
all cylinders but that is not happening. In fact, more high-paying
manufacturing jobs were flushed down the toilet last month. There are no animal
spirits in the economy and markets. People are not running out to look for
jobs. An interesting phenomena occurs with the rate after recessions and
prolonged slow economic periods.
When the economy is truly improving and ramping higher to
receive its glory, the unemployment rate actually pops higher for a short
period of time. The reason is the way the data is compiled. The rate is based
on whether the person is actively looking for a job. When economic conditions
improve and ‘Help Wanted’ signs are in every window, unemployed workers run
back to the workforce finally confident that better times are ahead; they have
animal spirits of hope and confidence in the economy and future.
The unemployment rate climbs higher since these folks are
now counted as seeking employment but in the near-term they are also counted as
unemployed. So a more encouraging number for the unemployment rate would have
been a rise to 5.2% or higher (rather than drop to 4.6%). An increasing rate would
prove that people really believe the economy is in great shape since they are running
out confident that they can finally find a job. With a lower and lower full
employment number occurring, now down to 4.6% the lowest in decades, it is more
of the same- same-o with the economy.
Unemployed folks continue to see a slow stagnant lackluster
economy; there is no reason to pound the pavement since there are no jobs.
Nothing has changed. The unemployed are sitting at home waiting for the economy
to improve. They are watching television, losing skills, and wondering why the
government and Federal Reserve rewards the wealthy each day at the expense of
common people. The rich become richer and the poor poorer.
American society will pay for the growing income inequality
gap; it already is. The wealthy may find that having money is not much fun in a
society that is bifurcated into the very rich versus the very poor without a
middle class remaining. Human greed is destructive to any economic system. The
Federal Reserve has created this rich versus poor society with their eight years of obscene Keynesian money printing and
spending that only rewards the wealthy.
S&P -3. Dow -16. Nasdaq -8. DAX -0.7%. CAC -1.2%. FTSE
-0.7%. USD 100.79. US 2-year yield is 1.11%. The 10-year yield drops to 2.40%.
Yields may be dropping (bonds rallying) due to the weak wage data.
At 8:34 AM, markets are calm after the data. S&P -1. Dow
-10. Nasdaq -5. Russell -1. VIX 14.15. DAX -0.7%. CAC -1.1%. FTSE -0.7%. MIB
-1%. USD 100.81. WTIC oil is down -0.4% to 50.86. Brent oil is down -0.7% to
53.55. Natural gas is down -1.1% to 3.47. Gold 1172. Silver 16.52. Copper
2.609.
Treasury yields are;
2-year 1.11%, 5-year 1.85%, 10-year 2.40%, 30-year 3.06%. The 2-10 spread is
129 bips.
At 8:36 AM, S&P -4. Dow -21. Nasdaq -11. Russell -3. VIX
14.17.
Euro 1.0653. Dollar/yen 113.75. Pound 1.2645. USD 100.86.
Mexican peso 20.7340. Canadian dollar 1.3273. Dollar/yuan 6.8877. Aussie dollar
0.7431.
At 8:48 AM, 18 minutes after the data, S&P -4. Dow -25.
Nasdaq -12. Russell -2. VIX 14.27. DAX -0.8%. CAC -1.2%. FTSE -0.8%. Euro
1.0640. Euro/yen 121.32. Dollar/yen 114.04. Pound 1.2644. Euro/pound 0.8415.
Aussie dollar 0.7421.
WTIC oil is down -0.3% to 50.91. Brent oil is off -0.6% to
53.65. Natural gas is down -0.9% to 3.47. Metals sink. Gold 1168. Silver 16.44.
Copper is down -1.6% to 2.60. XLF -0.8%. GS -0.4%. JPM -0.5%. WDAY -15.3%.
Treasury yields are;
2-year 1.13%, 5-year 1.87%, 10-year 2.42%, 30-year 3.08%. The 2-10 spread is
129 bips.
Fed’s Brainard discusses new technologies that benefit data
collection and analysis in the financial industry. She says the Fed and other
institutions must remain on guard against cyber threats and computer hacks.
Brainard avoids commenting on monetary policy ahead of the FOMC rate decision
meeting in 11 days.
At 9:15 AM, markets are steady. A rise in oil helps
stabilize the futures. S&P -2. Dow -16. Nasdaq -5. Russell -1. VIX 14.15.
DAX -0.6%. CAC -1.2%. FTSE -0.8%. MIB -0.9%. WTIC oil 51.09. Brent 53.81. Gold
1173. Silver 16.58. Copper 2.604.
Treasury yields are; 2-year 1.13%, 5-year 1.87%, 10-year
2.43%, 30-year 3.09%. Markets are sanguine after the jobs data. German bund
0.33%. UK gilt 1.44%.
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