The numbers: Private-sector employment slowed a bit
in February, according to an estimate from ADP and Moody’s Analytics
released Wednesday. The private sector added 183,000 in February, down
slightly from 209,000 in the prior month. The February gain was higher
than the 165,000 job gain expected by economists surveyed by Econoday.
What happened: Large
businesses did well in February, adding 133,000 jobs. Small businesses
added 24,000 jobs and medium-sized businesses added 26,000.
According
to data on 10 major industries tracked by ADP, education and health
care had strong job gains, along with leisure and hospitality.
Big picture: It is still too soon to see any impact of the coronavirus impact on the data.
Economists
expect a 170,000 rise in nonfarm payrolls in February, down from
225,000 in the prior month, according to a MarketWatch survey. The
unemployment rate is expected to tick down to 3.5%.
Economists
have become wary of using the ADP data to predict the government’s
employment data because there have been large deviations recently. For
instance, the January ADP report showed that 291,000 jobs were added in
the private sector, while the Labor Department showed 206,000.
What ADP said? Mark Zandi, chief economist of
Moody’s Analytics, said the slowdown in jobs in February was caused by
the trade war with China. He said the ADP estimate was boosted by warm
weather.
“We’re going to get much weaker job numbers going
forward,” Zandi said, as there will be a payback for the warm weather
gains. “Even without the virus, we were going to get weak numbers and
now with the virus, we’re going to get much weaker numbers. It is just a
matter of time,” he said.
“Economists have a really hard time
saying over 50% probability of recession. I assure you, almost every
economist out there is thinking over 50% probability,” Zandi said.
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