Fed seen waiting to cut rates as job growth picks up
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[June 08, 2024] By
Ann Saphir
(Reuters) -A U.S. job market scorecard that exceeded all forecasts has
undercut confidence over when, or even if, the Federal Reserve will
begin easing policy this year, putting the focus for the policy outlook
on next week's Fed meeting and Fed Chair Jerome Powell's own guidance.
The latest monthly Labor Department report did break the economy's
2-year string of below-4% unemployment, a run not seen since the 1960s.
But it hardly seemed to matter: Hiring across the economy was broad, and
the 272,000 jobs added in May topped even the highest-guessing economist
in a Reuters poll. Wage growth accelerated.
All that flew in the face of growing expectations that the labor market
had begun to cool, which would help the Fed reach its 2% inflation goal
faster and pave the way for a reduction in borrowing costs before
summer's end.
After the report, traders slashed bets on an initial Fed interest-rate
cut by September, taking the probability down to just a bit stronger
than a toss of the coin, from about a 70% chance seen previously. A
second rate cut by December is also now seen as only barely more likely
than not.
U.S. central bankers meeting next Tuesday and Wednesday are still widely
expected to leave the policy rate in the current 5.25%-5.5% range, where
they have kept it since last July.
Most analysts have also predicted that Fed officials' quarterly
projections published at the end of next week's meeting will reflect
expectations for fewer rate cuts this year than the three that
policymakers had penciled in in March.
The jobs data raises new questions over that outlook.
"We had been anticipating the start of rate cuts in September, totaling
50 basis points of cuts this year, but the persevering strong employment
gains raises the likelihood of later rate cuts,” wrote Nationwide chief
economist Kathy Bostjancic.
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A hiring sign is seen at the register of Burger Boy restaurant, as
many restaurant businesses face staffing shortages in Louisville,
Kentucky, U.S., June 7, 2021. REUTERS/Amira Karaoud
U.S central bankers have said they do not plan to cut rates until
they are more confident that inflation is declining toward their 2%
goal. Friday's data suggests pressures are pushing prices the other
way, with average hourly earnings up 4.1% in May from a year
earlier, after an upwardly revised 4% rise in April.
Still, Bostjancic and other analysts pointed to weaknesses in part
of Friday's report that cloud the picture. One of the report's two
surveys showed a massive 408,000 drop in employment in May, which
helped push the U.S. unemployment rate to 4%, from 3.9% in April.
The rate had been below 4% for more than two years.
On Wednesday the Labor Department will publish the consumer price
index data for May, giving policymakers fresh insight on whether
inflation data is breaking lower after disappointingly high readings
in the first several months of the year.
"The ambiguity on the May labor market front will place even more
attention on next week’s CPI inflation data and how Jay Powell and
the FOMC (Federal Open Market Committee) are factoring in the latest
numbers into their rate-cut expectations," wrote BMO Capital Markets
economist Scott Anderson.
(With reporting and writing by Howard Schneider and Dan Burns;
Editing by Jan Harvey and Chizu Nomiyama)
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