6 Most Important Takeaways From The February Jobs Report

International Business Times

Published Mar 07, 2014 10:45AM ET

Updated Mar 07, 2014 11:35AM ET

6 Most Important Takeaways From The February Jobs Report

By Moran Zhang - After two months of huge disappointment, the stronger-than-expected February jobs report now pretty much guarantees that the Federal Reserve will maintain the pace of tapering at its March 18-19 meeting.

Employers added 175,000 jobs in February, the Labor Department said Friday, even as the inclement weather kept millions of Americans from getting to work. Wall Street called for a 149,000 gain for last month.

“With this employment number, it makes a $10 billion taper when the Fed meets this month, all but guaranteed,” said Stuart Hoffman, chief economist at PNC Financial Services.

Data from the previous two months were revised higher. Employers added 129,000 jobs in January, up from 113,000, and 84,000 jobs in December, up from 75,000. After revisions, payrolls grew an average of 129,000 a month in December, January and February, slower than the average for the last year of 189,000 a month.

Private employment, which excludes government agencies, rose by 162,000 in February after 145,000 the prior month.

The jobless rate in February climbed 0.1 percentage point to 6.7 percent, slightly higher than the 6.6 percent economists expected, while the labor force participation rate remained the same at 63 percent.

Here are six takeaways from the employment report:

1. Yes, it is the weather, not fundamental weakness.

“The question this winter has been, whether it’s the weather or not,” Hoffman said. “And I think it’s the weather and not fundamental weakness in the economy.”

“This makes me believe that the spring months will probably average better than 200,000 each month,” Hoffman added.

Harsh weather in February, particularly during the survey’s reference week when a snowstorm hit the East, muddied the reading. The snowstorm was particularly brutal for the Southeast, as many businesses were forced to shut operations.