描述

US Feb payrolls blowout suggests max employment, yet tame wages

scanning: author: from: time:2022-03-04 classify:新闻2
U.S. employers hired far more workers than expected...

NEW YORK, March 4 (Reuters) - U.S. employers hired far more workers than expected in February, pushing the labor market closer to maximum employment, but rising headwinds

 from geopolitical tensions could hurt business confidence and slow job growth in the months ahead.


The Labor Department's closely watched employment report's survey of establishments on Friday showed nonfarm payrolls surged by 678,000 jobs last month, much more than the

 400,000 economists polled by Reuters had forecast. Data for January was revised higher show 481,000 jobs created instead of 467,000 as previously reported. The unemployment 

rate fell to 3.8%, the lowest since February 2020, from 4.0% in January.


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MARKET REACTION:


STOCKS: S&P e-mini futures seesawed and were last off 1.05%, deepening an early loss


COMMENTS:


LIZ YOUNG, HEAD OF INVESTMENT STRATEGY, SOFI


“The reaction here is that this was a strong labor report. (Fed chair) Jerome Powell this week basically said that we're at maximum employment and this further reinforces that, if not, 

makes it even more maximum employment.”


“It basically tells the Fed you have no excuse, aside from possible contagion risk out of Russia and Ukraine. You have no excuse not to go hard at this inflation problem.”


JJ KINAHAN, CHIEF MARKET STRATEGIST, TD AMERITRADE, CHICAGO


“If Chairman Powell were going in front of Congress again today, I don’t think he would change anything he said over the last couple of days.


“The last couple of (unemployment) reports we've been a little bit disappointed at times with some of the numbers. This one is kind of evening out that a little bit in terms it is truly a 

blowout number.


“If Ukraine wasn’t out there this report would be telling us the economy is pretty red-hot. Without Ukraine there would probably be more pressure to have a 50 basis point rate hike 

than there will be with Ukraine.”


BRIAN JACOBSEN, SENIOR INVESTMENT STRATEGIST FOR MULTI-ASSET SOLUTIONS, ALLSPRING GLOBAL INVESTMENTS (email)


"There’s a lot to like about the employment situation report except that wages are still falling short of consumer price increases. With higher food and fuel prices, consumer budgets 

will still be under pressure. Thankfully the consumer looked to be in a pretty good position going into this conflict."


MICHAEL PEARCE, SENIOR US ECONOMIST, CAPITAL ECONOMICS


“The stronger-than-expected 678,000 gain in non-farm payrolls in February and upward revisions to previous months gains is another sign that the real economy has considerable 

momentum, with the Omicron wave having surprisingly little impact. That will give the Fed greater confidence to push ahead with its planned policy tightening but, with wage growth

 now leveling off, there is arguably less pressure for officials to front-load an aggressive series of rate hikes over the coming months.”


“The one big surprise in this report was average hourly earnings, which were unchanged in February, with the annual rate dropping to 5.1% from 5.7%. With the composition of payroll

 gains broad-based, most of that deceleration appears to reflect a genuine easing of pay pressures. While that might seem at odds with the falling unemployment rate, the job openings

 and quits rates and broader survey evidence have suggested labor shortages are leveling off a bit, which is consistent with pay growth stabilizing.”


SAM STOVALL, CHIEF INVESTMENT STRATEGIST, CFRA RESEARCH, NEW YORK


"Already there are concerns with the Ukraine crisis and this would’ve put additional pressure under the Fed to be more aggressive because of the number of jobs being added and 

unemployment rate coming down that could put more upward pressure on wage growth. But, because the average hourly earnings actually came in lower than expected it has caused

 investors to breathe a sigh of relief."


"We have yet to see a capitulation in share prices and we will need to see that before we can say that the worst is behind us."


"We've seen bond yields initially decline and are at 1.78% right now for the 10-year and that actually has been supportive of more of the growth oriented sectors because of the flight to 

safety by investors. However, because investors are gravitating towards bonds at the same time that we are seeing a surge in oil prices, rise in inflation and the expected start to a rate

 tightening cycle this also threatens a flattening yield curve which is usually not a good sign for the markets.”


PETER CARDILLO, CHIEF MARKET ECONOMIST, SPARTAN CAPITAL SECURITIES, NEW YORK


“The good news is hourly wages were actually flat and up 5.1% on a yearly basis, which still high, but today’s numbers seem to be diminishing that fear of wage inflation. That’s something

 that the Fed is obviously look at very carefully.”


“It’s a strong report, no question about it, no further increases in hourly wages suggests wage growth that we’ve seen might be coming to a halt.”


“Unemployment was down to 3.8% and the participation rate is up a bit.”