Hiring in the private sector is slowing, manufacturing activity neared a three-year low in March and job openings are dropping. A lot is now hinging on Friday's employment report. A Reuters poll of economists offers a forecast for a rise of 239,000 for March, down from February's 311,000 increase.
Wages are expected to have grown by 4.3%, the slowest rate since 3.6% in June 2021, while the unemployment rate is forecast to have held at 3.6%, which could prove music to the Federal Reserve's ears. If wage growth is gently moderating and the labour market isn't getting tighter, it would indicate that the rate rises are working and the economy isn't that much worse off for it.
With any data release, there's always room for surprise and
the memory of January's monster 500,000-plus reading that
prompted a 180-degree turn in market expectations for monetary
policy back in February is still fresh in everyone's mind.
And it should be. In the last 23 months, NFPs have delivered
an upside surprise on 16 occasions and in the last year, they've
undershot forecasts precisely once.
Expectations around wage growth have become closer to the
mark as the reality of persistent inflation has struck home.
Average earnings have missed forecasts three times in the last
year. In the year before that, they delivered an upside surprise
every time.
Key developments that should provide more direction to U.S.
markets later on Thursday:
* Weekly initial jobless claims (0830 EDT/1230 GMT)
* Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President James Bullard
gives presentation on the U.S. economy and monetary policy
before the Arkansas State Bank Department's Day with the
Commissioner event. (0900 CDT/1000 EDT/1400 GMT).
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(Reporting by Amanda Cooper; Editing by Christina Fincher)