Back

NFP: Should the Fed be concerned about the state of the economy?  - NBF

National Bank of Canada analysts, Krishen Rangasamy pints out that  February’s US employment reports were mixed, with a strong household survey contrasting sharply with an awful establishment survey, adding that wage inflation heats up again, as full-time employment soars.

Key Quotes:

“Should the Federal Reserve be concerned about the state of the U.S. economy? While Q1 GDP growth is set to be weak because of the government shutdown last January, a subsequent rebound is more likely than not. More importantly, even February’s ugly NFP had a pretty side to it in the form of continued gains in temporary employment.”

“Also the Fed will be encouraged by hourly earnings which were up 3.4% on a year-on-year basis, the highest since April 2009. The increase in wage inflation comes courtesy of a tightening labour market as evidenced by the household survey’s +255K print in February which pushed the jobless rate down to 3.8%, i.e. close to multi-decade lows.”

“With the household survey’s job creation tilting towards full-time positions (which tend to be better remunerated than part-time positions), nobody should be surprised that wage inflation is heating up once again.”

WTI pared back approx 50% of March's decline to close week higher (+0.5%)

WTI was extending its losses after the nonfarm payrolls data, reaching a low of 54.55 before recovering back to the 56 handle.  The nonfarm payrolls 
Baca selengkapnya Previous

UK week ahead: Key Brexit votes and some data - Danske Bank

Next week in the UK, the critical event will be related to Brexit with key votes at the Parliament. According to analysts from Danske Bank, the most l
Baca selengkapnya Next