The January Employment Situation report showed an increase of 353K non-farm payrolls more than double what had been expected. The Unemployment rate stayed steady at 3.7%, which was less than the estimated 3.8%. Average Hourly earnings increased by 0.6% in January, double the consensus estimate of 0.3%. The Average work week declined to 34.1 hours from 34.4. The robust payrolls report on Friday sent US Treasuries lower across the curve and induced a sell-off in the interest sensitive sectors of the equity market. Interestingly, the stronger payrolls number came after a weaker than expected ADP number and a slight up tick in the job openings data. The high frequency data of Initial Jobless Claims and Continuing Claims weakened last week as headlines showed substantial layoffs in corporate America. The increase in wages on the Payroll report were tempered by the first look at Q4 Productivity, Unit Labor Costs and the Employment cost Index. Productivity came in at 3.2% vs. 1.8% while Unit Labor Cost and the ECI came in less than the consensus estimates. US manufacturing data was also better than expected coming in at 49.1 versus the estimate of 48. The final reading of the January University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment index came in at 79, the best level since July of 2021.
|