Blue Or Red: Maybe Gold?

 | Nov 06, 2018 04:31PM ET

h3 Hourly Earnings Jump Above 3 Percent

U.S. nonfarm payrolls accelerated in October. The economy added 250,000 jobs last month, following a rise of 118,000 in September. The latter number was revised down, but that change was offset by the upward revision in August. Job gains have averaged 218,000 over the past 3 months, or 211,000 over the prior twelve months. It means that the US labor market tightened further, adding more jobs than the Fed needs for a continuation of its monetary policy of gradual interest rate hikes.

The gains were above the expectations. And they were widespread: education and health services added 47,000 jobs in October. Leisure and hospitality added 42,000, professional and business services – 35,000, manufacturing – 32,000, construction – 30,000, transportation and warehousing – 25,000. Other sectors also added jobs – actually, not a single major industry shed jobs.

Moreover, both the labor force participation rate and the employment-population ratio increased by 0.2 percentage point, to 62.9 percent and 60.6 percent, respectively. Meanwhile, the annual pace of job creations remained positive and generally in upward trend, which started in the fall of 2017 as the chart below shows. And, importantly, the strong hiring kept the unemployment rate at 3.7 percent, the lowest level in 48 years.

Chart 1: U.S. unemployment rate (red line, left axis, U-3, in %) and total nonfarm payrolls percent change from year ago (green line, right axis, % change from year ago) from September 2013 to October 2018.