In a very strong showing in which wage pressures may be less severe than
they look, October's nonfarm payroll growth easily surpassed
expectations, rising 250,000 in the month and with strength centered in
two sensitive components to economic pivots: manufacturing with a much
higher-than-expected 32,000 gain and professional & business
services where payrolls rose 35,000. And available labor in construction
is now more scarce with payrolls here up a very sharp 30,000.
Average
hourly earnings posted an expansion high year-on-year rate, up 3 tenths
to 3.1 percent. But, importantly, this reflects an easy comparison with
October last year. The month-to-month pace actually eased, rising at
0.2 percent vs two 0.3 percent gains and one 0.4 percent gain in the
three prior reports.
The unemployment rate held at a low and
favorable 3.7 percent with the labor participation rate improving 2
tenths to 62.9 percent.
The monthly slowing in wages removes at
least some of the urgency felt by the hawks at the Federal Reserve who
were voicing their views at the September FOMC that policy may, in a
need to cool the economy and the labor market, have to rise beyond
neutral and into the restrictive zone. The Fed may not raise rates at
their meeting later this month, but today's report does confirm, and
strongly so, expectations for a rate hike at the December FOMC.
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