This week, the economic data calendar was stacked, with investors focused on the PCE print and the Employment Situation Report. Headline PCE increased by 0.2%, in line with expectations. On a year-over-year basis, the figure increased by 2.1%, down from 2.3% in August. Core PCE, which excludes food and energy, rose by 0.3%, slightly above the expected 0.2%, and was up 2.7% over the last year, unchanged from the prior two months. The Employment Situation report was viewed with some reservations, given the impact expected from hurricanes Helene and Milton. The report showed that non-farm payrolls increased by just 12k, well below the estimated 125k. Private Payrolls fell by 28k versus the estimated 115k. The Unemployment rate came in at 4.1%, unchanged from September. Average Hourly earnings increased by 0.4%, slightly higher than the expected 0.3%. The Average work week came in at 34.3 hours versus the expected 34.2 hours. These two reports gave the green light for the Fed to cut rates in their upcoming meeting. Initial Claims fell by 12k to 216k, while Continuing claims fell by 26k to 1862k. Personal Income increased by 0.3% and Personal Spending increased by 0.5%. Consumer Confidence showed a nice uptick to 108.7; the street was looking for a print of 99.3. ISM Manufacturing showed an acceleration in contraction with a below-consensus reading of 46.5%.
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