Wednesday, September 7, 2016

A Record In Job Openings

Financial FAQs

Not only are Nonfarm payrolls averaging some 200,000 jobs per month this year, but the Labor Department’s job openings and labor turnover survey showed 5.87 million openings, an all-time high, while hires increased to 5.23 million from 5.17 million in June. Businesses are creating jobs at a much faster rate than they can be filled, in other words.

The number of job openings are up 1 percent year-over-year. Quits are up 9 percent year-over-year. Quits are voluntary separations, which usually means workers must have found better paying jobs.


The number of people quitting jobs voluntarily was flat at 2.98 million, but that’s still up substantially from the depths of the recession, which signals more worker confidence in the ability to find another job, as I said.

Less heartening was yesterday’s ISM’s Non-Manufacturing (i.e., service sector) survey for July, down 4 points to 51.4. This is the lowest rate of composite growth for this sample of the whole cycle since February 2010. But that may be a fluke, as new orders in past months were as high as 60 percent. It could be a catch-up month, in other words, as businesses sell off past months’ inventories.

Graph: Econoday

This should also keep the Fed from raising interest rates until at least December, since the jobs report of last week was a letdown, as well. The composite score is no fluke, says Econoday, with new orders for service sector products falling nearly 9 points to 51.4 for their lowest score since December 2013. New export orders are a particular disappointment, also down a steep 9 points and in contraction at 46.5 which is also the lowest score since December 2013. And backlog orders are also in contraction, down 1-1/2 points to 49.5.

Moody’s Investors Service, the bond rating firm, doesn’t see this lull as more than a blip, at least. The U.S.’s Aaa credit rating is safe no matter who wins the presidential election, according to Moody’s in a new report on Wednesday.
“The outcome of the forthcoming presidential election will not impact the Aaa stable credit rating of the United States, regardless whether Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton is elected,” the report says. “This is because the U.S.’s rating reflects the country’s very high degree of economic, institutional and government financial strength and its very low susceptibility to event risk,” says Moody’s, naming the four factors in its sovereign bond rating methodology.
What to make of the current weakness? It could be a summer lull, as businesses wait for the results of Brexit negotiations, the Presidential election, and maybe even China’s growth to resume.

Harlan Green © 2016

Follow Harlan Green on Twitter: https://twitter.com/HarlanGreen

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