U.S. jobs report shows Fed tightening still a work in progress
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[October 08, 2022] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -After a drop in job
vacancies, a dip in rental costs and signs of growing consumer caution
seemed to show the Federal Reserve's strict monetary medicine beginning
to kick in, a strong September jobs report has left policymakers waiting
for clearer signs their efforts to cool the economy are working.
The Labor Department's report, which showed a gain of more than a
quarter of a million jobs, a drop in the unemployment rate, and
continued healthy wage growth, points to a job market U.S. central bank
officials will likely continue to see as out of line with declining
inflation.
Job creation is slowing - a bit - and wage growth is ebbing - a touch.
But in comments on Thursday in advance of the jobs report, Fed Governor
Christopher Waller said an expected payrolls gain of around 260,000,
well above the pre-pandemic norm, would not "alter my view that we
should be focused 100% on reducing inflation."
Nonfarm payrolls grew by 263,000 last month.
Traders in contracts tied to the Fed's policy rate boosted bets the
central bank will hike its benchmark overnight interest rate by
three-quarters of a percentage point for the fourth consecutive time at
its Nov. 1-2 meeting.
"They're going 75 (basis points) because that unemployment rate is going
to bother them. The job growth is slowing, but that doesn't matter. In
their mind, we're still at full employment if not through it," said
Joseph Lavorgna, chief U.S. economist at SMBC Nikko Securities in New
York.
In projections issued at the end of the Sept. 20-21 policy meeting, Fed
officials at the median expected the unemployment rate to rise to 3.8%
by the end of the year and to 4.4% by the end of 2023 as the "pain" of a
slowing economy took hold. The median Fed policymaker projection
considers a 4% unemployment rate roughly consistent with stable
inflation.
The unemployment rate in September, however, dropped to 3.5% from 3.7%
in August, partly due to a decline in the number of people looking for
work. That dealt a separate blow to the Fed and its hopes that the
supply of willing workers would improve and help reduce the pressure on
businesses to raise wages.
Though month-to-month changes in the employment report are often within
the statistical margin of error for the survey used to prepare it,
Vanguard economists said the labor force data in September indicated
that a large August jump in the size of the workforce was an apparent
"head fake."
Average hourly earnings grew at a 5% pace on an annualized basis last
month, slower than the pandemic peak but still higher than Fed officials
have said they feel is in line with their 2% inflation target.
Like Waller, other U.S. central bank officials have remained adamant
inflation is the singular focus. Even as they cite what Atlanta Fed
President Raphael Bostic this week called "glimmers of hope" inflation
will improve, they say rate hikes need to continue even at the risk of
rising unemployment and financial stress.
Those "glimmers" include a recent decline through August and September
in rents, a major component of the consumer price index (CPI), as well
as evidence consumers may be pulling back. Consumer spending in August
barely grew after adjusting for inflation, and recent census surveys
have shown 40% of people struggling to pay bills - and perhaps ready to
tighten their wallets.
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Thousands line up outside a temporary
unemployment office established by the Kentucky Labor Cabinet at the
State Capitol Annex in Frankfort, Kentucky, U.S. June 17, 2020.
REUTERS/Bryan Woolston
Job vacancies in August dropped by 1.1 million, the largest decline
outside the onset of the coronavirus pandemic and a trend, if
continued, that would fit a central piece of the Fed's narrative for
how inflation could be brought down without workers paying too steep
a price.
The hope is that companies trim their employment plans without
resorting to layoffs.
GLOBAL REPERCUSSIONS
The Fed had not raised rates by 75-basis-point increments since the
early 1990s, but pivoted that way after the preferred measure of
inflation spiked in the spring to more than triple the central
bank's target. The credit tightening underway now is the fastest
since the 1970s and early 1980s.
The repercussions have been global - a soaring dollar, rising
concern of a worldwide recession, signs of stress in some financial
markets, and calls for the Fed to at least slow the pace of upcoming
increases in borrowing costs.
The rhetoric of Fed officials has remained strict so far, with
promises to "keep at it" until inflation is falling and little
indication that concerns about global financial conditions were
causing them to rethink the game plan.
In remarks on Thursday, Fed Governor Lisa Cook said that despite
things like falling rents and job vacancies she still needed to see
"inflation actually falling," while Minneapolis Fed President Neel
Kashkari said the bar to any policy change is "very high" at this
point.
In a recent look at the globally important market for U.S. Treasury
securities, Piper Sandler analysts Roberto Perli and Benson Durham
said that even if there were signs of "illiquidity," trading would
have to become "dysfunctional" for the Fed to react.
"Illiquidity will not sway the Fed; dysfunctionality could," they
wrote. "However, the market is not dysfunctional; Yields still move
in the direction they should given the macro outlook," particularly
the uncertainty about inflation.
Policymakers will get another key statistic to digest next week when
the Labor Department releases its CPI report for September.
Economists polled by Reuters expect core consumer inflation,
stripped of the most volatile food and energy components, actually
rose last month, with prices forecast to increase at a 6.5% annual
rate versus 6.3% in August.
Harvard University economics professor Karen Dynan, in a forecast
prepared for the Peterson Institute for International Economics,
said that to control inflation the Fed would need to raise the
benchmark overnight interest rate perhaps a percentage point higher
than policymakers themselves expect, into the mid-5% range, likely
triggering a mild recession with a half-percentage-point contraction
in gross domestic product in 2023.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Additional reporting by Ann Saphir
and Herbert Lash; Editing by Paul Simao)
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