Solid US Jobs Report In Line With Expectations


The US jobs report was largely in line with expectations. February was the second consecutive month that the US economy created more than 200k jobs. It is the first time since last June and July. The 235k is just below the revised January 238k gain (initially 227k).   

The unemployment rate ticked down to 4.7% from 4.8%, which is notable as the participation rate increased to 63.0% from 62.9%. The underemployment rate slipped to 9.2% from 9.4% and matched the cyclical low recorded at the end of last year.  

A shadow of disappointment comes from average hourly earnings.  They rose 0.2% compared with a median guesstimate of 0.3%. However, the disappointment was blunted by the upward revision to the January figure to 0.2% from 0.1%. This means that the year-over-year pace stayed steady at the 2.8%, which is still the upper end of the recovery.  

Of note, the manufacturing sector added 28k jobs, matching last January’s high, which was the most since a spike in 2013. The January figure was revised to 11k from 5k. This will likely translate into greater manufacturing output.  

There is nothing in the report that ought to cast doubt on the likelihood of a Fed hike next week. The market has it discounted, and given the recent string of commentary from Governors as well as regional presidents, not to move would be destabilizing and undermine the credibility of the Federal Reserve.  

Canada also reported its February employment data.  It is too good to be true. Canada says it created 105k full-time positions. To put this in context, it would be as if the US created one million jobs in a month.  It takes the US 5-6 months to do so. Canada says that of the 105k new full-time positions, women accounted for 101k. Even if this overstates the job creation in Canada, the underlying trend is strong.  And the unemployment rate slipped to 6.6%, matching the January 2015 cyclical low. Note that like the US (and many other high income economies with improving labor markets) wage growth is poor. The average hourly earnings increase in Canada stands at 1.3% year–over-year (1.2% in January). It is less than half the US pace. 

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