The economic calendar was full this week. The Employment Situation Report surprised to the downside. Non-farm Payrolls increased by 175k versus the consensus estimate of 250k. Private Payrolls were up by 167k versus the estimate of 175k. The Unemployment rate ticked up by .1% to 3.9% higher than the expected 3.8%. Average Hourly Earnings increased by 0.2%, but was lower than the expected increase of 0.3%. The Average Workweek was also lower than expected at 34.3. The report supports the idea that the economy is still doing well and also supports the idea that the next move by the Fed will be a cut. That said, the week started with a stronger-than-anticipated Employment Cost Index, which increased by 1.2% and catalyzed a broad sell-off in the markets. April Consumer Confidence fell to 97 from the prior reading of 104. Initial Claims and Continuing Claims were flat over the prior week, coming in at 208k and 1.744m, respectively. ISM Manufacturing came in at 49.2, indicating that the manufacturing sector is in contraction, while the ISM Services reading came in at a surprising 49.4, also indicating that the services sector has entered into contraction.
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