Job openings, a measure of labor demand, also fell to its lowest level since May 2021 and data for January was revised lower to show 10.6 million job openings instead of the previously reported 10.8 million. "The U.S. labor market is definitively cooling off," said Indeed economist Nick Bunker, noting that job openings have now fallen by about 1.3 million in two months. "At this rate, we’d return to a pre-pandemic level of openings by this summer." Welcome relief on the job market front follows a key report last week that showed while inflation ebbed in February, it remained high enough to possibly compel the Fed to raise interest rates one more time this year.
A crucial reading on national payrolls for March will be
released on Friday. The unemployment rate in February was 3.6%,
still near a 50-year low.
At their March policy meeting, most Fed policymakers
signaled they expected to need to raise rates one more time, to
5.1%, and not to cut them until 2024.
The chances of a 25 basis point hike had jumped on Monday as
oil prices after a surprise announcement by OPEC+ to cut more
production, seen likely adding to inflationary pressures.
But for Tuesday at least, the hope of some Fed officials
that job openings can fall without what would typically be a
rise in the unemployment rate, given the elevated level of job
openings, gained steam, bringing them nearer to closing out
their hiking cycle.
"The sharp fall in job openings in February shows that
labour demand was cooling even before the recent banking turmoil
and provides another reason to think that the Fed’s tightening
cycle is nearly over," said Andrew Hunter, deputy chief U.S.
economist at Capital Economics.
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A shift in the Beveridge Curve? A shift in the Beveridge
Curve? Odds point to no May rate hike Unemployed to job openings More jobs than jobseekers in the US ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>
(Reporting by Lindsay Dunsmuir and Ann Saphir; Additional
reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Franklin Paul and
Josie Kao)