US jobs trail forecasts; wages climb least since mid-2018

Bloomberg

The US labour market ended the year with less momentum, as payroll gains cooled by more than forecast and wages rose at the weakest annual pace since 2018, even as unemployment held at a half-century low of 3.5%.
Nonfarm payrolls rose 145,000 in December, the least since May, after a downwardly revised 256,000 advance the prior month, according to a Labour Department report. That compares with the median estimate of 160,000 in Bloomberg’s survey of economists. Average hourly earnings climbed a below-forecast 2.9% from a year earlier, the first sub-3% reading since July 2018.
Futures traders maintained the amount of easing they expect from the Federal Reserve. Stocks were up, while Treasury yields and the dollar were lower after fluctuating in the immediate aftermath of the report.
While the payrolls figure may be consistent with forecasts for gradual moderation, the wage numbers suggest that the labour market isn’t as tight as the unemployment rate indicates.
Federal Reserve policy makers are likely to keep holding interest rates steady after cutting three times in 2019 to insure against risks from trade-policy uncertainty and sluggish global growth, though further weakness could raise concerns about the durability of the record-long US expansion.
“It’s a real question why wages haven’t accelerated more,” said Jay Bryson, acting chief economist at Wells Fargo & Co. “Part of it may be just due to the underlying fact that inflation expectations among folks just remain very low.” Even so, more broadly, “the labour market remains solid at this point.”
“While the rate of hiring is due to moderate over the course of 2020, it is still running at a pace sufficient to drive unemployment lower. This should help to stabilise the aggregate income deceleration vis-a-vis moderately firmer wage pressures, even though the latest average hourly earnings data continued to show muted labour inflation,” says Carl Riccadonna, Yelena Shulyatyeva and Andrew Husby of Bloomberg.
Although job gains picked up steam in the second half, hiring in 2019 was the slowest since 2011, at 2.11 million. The strength of the labour market will also factor into Donald Trump’s re-election chances in November, with the president repeatedly touting economic gains as a reason he deserves a second term.
Wages for production and nonsupervisory workers rose 3% in December from a year earlier, slowing sharply from the decade-high 3.6% pace in October and potentially throwing cold water on the idea that lower-level employees were seeing bigger gains.
White House chief economic adviser Larry Kudlow put a positive spin on the earnings data, saying on Bloomberg Television that “the fact remains that the production workers’ and the service workers’ gains in wages continue to outstrip the gains of their managers.”
One bright spot was the U-6, or underemployment rate, which fell to 6.7%, a record low in data back to 1994. Some analysts see this as a more accurate reflection of the true labour market as it includes part-time workers who’d prefer a full-time position and those who aren’t actively looking.

Moderating Gains
Economists surveyed by Bloomberg last month expect job gains to moderate further in 2020, slipping to a 127,000 monthly pace compared to 176,000 in 2019. In addition to uncertainty stemming from trade, geopolitics and a presidential election, a shrinking pool of available workers makes it tougher for employers to find qualified applicants
for more than 7 million open jobs.
On a monthly basis, average hourly earnings increased by 0.1% in December, missing estimates for a 0.3% gain.

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