Published on Sep 1, 2016
The
August labor report is released on Friday by the Bureau of Labor
Statistics. Economists expect nonfarm payrolls to rise by 175,000. The
economy created 255,000 jobs in July. 'We're looking for 180,000 jobs
created in August,' said Emanuella Enenajor, senior economist, North
America at Bank of America Merrill Lynch. 'It would be a bit of a
slowdown from the last couple of readings, but it would be more in line
with the 6-month trend.' Job creation has been volatile in recent
months. Some 292,000 positions were created in June, while only 24,000
were added in May. The August report is the final major data point
before the Federal Reserve's all-important September meeting, in which
the markets are pricing in a 38 percent chance of a rate hike, according
to Bloomberg data. 'There's no magic number and the Fed is looking at a
variety of indicators in this report,' Enenajor added. Enenajor said a
five-figure reading on Friday would likely put a September rate hike off
the table. Regardless of what August jobs growth stands at, Enenajor
expects the Fed to hike interest rates in December. The markets agree
and have priced in a 61.1 percent chance of a liftoff in December, per
Bloomberg data. Aside from the headline jobs number, Enenajor also has
her eyes on wage growth, as the latest reading on average hourly
earnings will be released in Friday's report. 'We're looking for a 0.2
percent increase in August wages, which is somewhat in-line with the
broader trend,' she said. 'If you look at wages over the past 2-5 years,
you will see very clearly evidence in average hourly earnings that
wages are accelerating.' In July, wages grew 0.3 percent
month-over-month. She said jobs in lower paying sectors are seeing wage
growth, another healthy sign for the labor market. Analysts will also
keep an eye on the labor force participation rate, which stands at 62.8
percent, up from 62.4 percent roughly one year ago. An increase in the
rate would push the unemployment rate up, but indicates that more people
who had initially given up looking for work, are making attempts to
reenter the workforce. TheStreet's Scott Gamm reports from Wall Street.
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