U.S. jobs report breathes life into Fed's 'soft landing' scenario
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[January 07, 2023] By
Howard Schneider and Ann Saphir
NEW ORLEANS/SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - A jump in the workforce and easing
wage growth suggests the U.S. job market is starting to move the way the
Federal Reserve has hoped it will, to bring the supply and demand for
workers into better balance and help in its battle against inflation.
After a year in which many basic metrics of the jobs market stalled at
levels the U.S. central bank feels are inconsistent with stable prices,
employment data for December published on Friday brought a hint of
relief.
Nearly 165 million people were either in jobs or looking for them last
month, a record high that showed a long-hoped-for improvement in labor
supply. U.S. firms added 223,000 payroll jobs to cap a year in which 4.5
million people were hired, a total exceeded in the post-World War Two
era only by 2021's 6.7 million.
At the same time, hourly wages - the price of labor - grew at the
slowest annual pace in 16 months and has dropped by a full percentage
point since the end of the first quarter of 2022. Weekly average
earnings gained 3.1%, the slowest pace since May 2021.
The jobs report is "the embodiment of the soft landing narrative - this
idea that can you have a strong labor market with slowing wage growth,"
said Simona Mocuta, chief economist at State Street Global Advisors.
"You can kind of, in this case, have your cake and eat it too," she
added, with earnings growth coming off the boil but no collapse in labor
demand or widespread layoffs.
Ideally, she said, that should allow the Fed to slow and soon pause its
interest rate hikes.
Traders took the report as evidence the Fed's work is near to being
done. U.S. stocks rose and interest-rate futures traders added to bets
the Fed will slow its rate hike pace further at its Jan. 31-Feb. 1
meeting and ultimately stop short of the 5.00%-5.25% policy rate range
that nearly all U.S. central bankers have signaled they believe will be
needed to bring inflation to heel.
'FAR TOO HIGH'
Fed policymakers, however, had a decidedly more sober take on Friday's
data, signaling they are locked into further rate hikes and will want to
see a lot more data confirming easing of price pressures before they
stop the tightening.
Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic on Friday said he expects the
policy rate this year to get to the range just above 5.00% that he and
his colleagues signaled last month and stay there until "well" into
2024.
That's a stark contrast to traders' expectations for the policy rate,
now in the 4.25%-4.50% range, to top out at 4.75%-5.00% and then for the
Fed to begin cutting borrowing costs in the second half of this year.
"Today I would be comfortable with either a 50 or a 25 (basis-point
increase)," Bostic told broadcaster CNBC, referring to the Fed's
upcoming rate-setting decision. "If I start to hear signs that the labor
market is starting to ease a bit in terms of its tightness, then I might
lean more into the 25-basis-point position," he said, adding that at
this point he doesn't see wages as driving inflation.
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The U.S. Federal Reserve building is
pictured in Washington, March 18, 2008. REUTERS/Jason Reed/File
Photo
Minutes of last month's policy meeting, which were published this
week, reflected the anxiety the Fed has over how the labor market
was affecting its inflation fight, with officials worrying that core
inflation components "would likely remain persistently elevated if
the labor market remained very tight."
The U.S. unemployment rate fell back to a pre-pandemic low of 3.5%
in December.
The employment data, while only reflecting a single month,
nonetheless presented a welcome easing in some of those dynamics
that have weighed so heavily on officials' minds in their bid to
keep reducing inflation, which was running at the highest rates in
40 years in the middle of last year.
By the Fed's preferred measure, the personal consumption
expenditures price index, inflation rose at an annual rate of 5.5%
in November, down from earlier in 2022 but still more than twice the
central bank's 2% target.
The Fed pulled out all the stops last year in its bid to quash
inflation, taking its policy rate from near zero in March to the
current level in the swiftest series of rate hikes in more than a
generation.
More inflation data due next week will play into the Fed's calculus
about where to go in the months ahead, with the Labor Department's
Consumer Price Index expected to show price pressures had softened
further in December. The annual CPI rate is expected to have dropped
to a 14-month low of 6.5% in December from 7.1% in the prior month,
and the month-to-month rate is forecast to have been unchanged, an
abrupt turnaround for a measure that had been running at its highest
rate since the early 1980s just six months earlier.
"We have seen the inflation dynamics in the U.S. slow
significantly," Robin Brooks, chief economist at the Institute of
International Finance, said on Friday at the annual meeting of the
American Economic Association (AEA) in New Orleans. "That is a very
real development. And it has more or less persisted."
"That's really good news."
That may be true, but Fed officials - who got caught flatfooted in
their early response to inflation's surge - are far from chiming
victory bells.
"Recent data suggest that labor-compensation growth has indeed
started to decelerate somewhat over the past year," Fed Governor
Lisa Cook told the AEA meeting.
Still, she said, "inflation remains far too high, despite some
encouraging signs lately, and is therefore of great concern."
(Reporting by Howard Schneider and Ann Saphir; Additional reporting
by Lindsay Dunsmuir; Editing by Dan Burns and Paul Simao)
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