“US payrolls stagnate as manufacturing contracts, signaling weakening labor momentum and rising expectations for policy easing.”, — write: www.fxempire.com
The data release was delayed more than six weeks due to a federal government shutdown, although survey collection was largely completed beforehand.
The household survey showed 7.6 million unemployed, with long-term unemployment steady at 1.8 million, or 23.6% of the unemployed population.
Participation edged up to 62.4%, but the employment-population ratio remained pinned at 59.7%.
Hiring strength was concentrated in health care (+43,000), food services (+37,000), and social assistance (+14,000). Losses in transportation and warehousing totaled 25,000, with declines in both storage (–11,000) and courier services (–7,000).
Federal payrolls fell another 3,000, deepening the 97,000 decline since January.
The general activity index improved but remained negative at –1.7, while both new orders (–8.6) and shipments (–8.7) turned negative, reversing earlier gains. Employment conditions were somewhat firmer, with the index rising to 6.0, supported by 16% of firms reporting increases; however, the workweek softened to 3.7.
Price pressures remained present but less intense. The prices paid index climbed to 56.1, while the prices received dropped to 17.7. Firms also reported lower expectations for price increases over the next year, revising forecasts for their own selling prices down to 3.0% from 4.1%. Future activity expectations strengthened, with the six-month outlook index rising to 49.6, its highest reading in a year.
Market Forecast: Bearish Near-Term Outlook For traders, the combined data signal softening on two fronts: payroll growth remains narrowly concentrated and insufficient to offset losses in transportation and government, while manufacturing orders and shipments indicate waning demand.
Wage growth remains steady but not accelerating, and business price expectations continue to cool.
Overall, the combined indicators support a bearish short-term view on US labor and industrial momentum, increasing the probability of market positioning that anticipates further economic easing pressures.
