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 Published by: Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)  Frequency: Monthly  Period Covered: prior month  Market significance: very high › First complete.

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Presentation on theme: " Published by: Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)  Frequency: Monthly  Period Covered: prior month  Market significance: very high › First complete."— Presentation transcript:

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2  Published by: Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)  Frequency: Monthly  Period Covered: prior month  Market significance: very high › First complete look at economic activity.  http://stats.bls.gov/news.release/pdf/em psit.pdf http://stats.bls.gov/news.release/pdf/em psit.pdf

3  The most eagerly awaited news on the economy that has great economic and political significance.  Tells us whether production, employment, orders, etc., are higher or lower than in the previous month.  Provides a wealth of information about virtually every sector of the economy, which is used to formulate forecasts for many economic indicators.  Gives basic employment statistics for nine major sectors of payroll employment.  Allows us to discover how many hours people worked in each category and how much they were paid (average hourly earnings).

4 Information About :  Household Survey – Government conducted survey which calculates unemployment rate.  Establishment Survey – Payroll Survey, in which companies are directly queried about recent changes in staffing.  Market Impact › Bonds › Stocks › Dollar

5  Employment news is very timely. It’s released only a week after the end of the month.  Rich in detail about the job markets and household earnings. This information can help economic activity.  We know nothing about the construction industry or services, which make up over one-half of our economy, until this report is released.  Economists use this report as one method of estimating industrial production and change in personal income.  Helps refine GNP forecasts for the quarter and assists in estimating almost every other economic indicator.

6 Employment Hours Worked Hourly Earnings Industrial Production Personal Income Housing StartsGNP

7 Household SurveyLabor Force Household Employment Unemployment RateEstablishment SurveyPayroll Employment Average Hourly Workweek Aggregate Hours Index

8  Household Survey › Calculates labor force, household employment, and unemployment rate. › The government contacts 60,000 homes. 95% of the responses based on the information comes out of this survey, which shows who has a job and who does not.  Unemployment Rate Number of People Unemployed Total Labor Force  What Constitutes Unemployment? › You must be unemployed. › You have to be actively seeking employment.

9  Establishment Survey (Payroll Survey) › Calculates payroll employment statistics, average workweek, overtime, average hourly earnings, and aggregate hours index. › More accurate than Household survey because businesses have nothing to lose for providing accurate information.  Payroll Employment › Information gathered on the job market comes directly from business establishments, not household. › Very accurate because it contains latest changes in employment and income. Information shows how well the US economic machine is working.

10  Bonds › A strong report reflects that the economy is already operating at or near peak capacity. We’ll see a drop in bond prices and an increase in interest rates. › A weak employment report reflects a more sluggish economy, which is bullish for bond prices and interest rates will lower.  Stocks › As the number of people holding jobs increases, workweek increases and employees easily slip into the role of consumers and spend more money. › Little or no growth in employment is bad for stocks. Households will be less inclined to shop. Weak sales can shrink income and shares will be reduced.  Dollar › A vigorous jobs report could drive interest rates up. › An anemic jobs report could put downward pressure on interest rates.

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13  The labor market is cooling off from the early Easter.  We don’t foresee any inflationary pressure or recessionary pressure from the labor market.  Since the unemployment rate stays unchanged at 4.5%, the Nonfarm payroll employment had shift from (+177,000) in March to (+88,000) in April. We expect that the policymakers at this week's Federal Open Market Committee meeting (May 9), will leave the Fed funds target rate unchanged, at 5.25% due to the strong March and weak April jobs reports  We think the Fed may wait for another month for their decision making. Any surprises in the May jobs report could play a big role in the two days of FOMC deliberations in June(27/28), where the bias statement could be put on the table if payrolls come up short again.  Since there are no changes in the Fed funds rate, we believe that there will be no big changes in the bond, stock, and dollar market.

14  Any Questions?


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