Contributors Fundamental Analysis A Hot Canadian and U.S Jobs Market

A Hot Canadian and U.S Jobs Market

  • US Labor Oct non-farm payrolls +261k; consensus +315k
  • US Oct Unemployment Rate +4.1%; Consensus +4.2%
  • US Oct Average Hourly Earnings -0.04%, or -$0.01 to $26.53; Over Year +2.4%
  • US Oct Private Sector Payrolls +252k and Government Payrolls +9k
  • US Oct Labor-Force Participation Rate 62.7%
  • US Sep Payrolls Revised to +18K; Aug Revised to +208K

U.S. employers hired at a strong pace last month, and revisions showed the labor market weathered hurricane damage better than previously estimated.

Disappointing was wages, it failed to break out, rising +2.4% from a year earlier, a slowdown from last month.

Strong revisions

Payroll growth was significantly stronger than previously estimated in recent months. Upward revisions showed +90k more jobs were added to payrolls in August and September than previously reported.

September hiring was revised to a gain of +18k from an initial estimate of down -33k. When combined with August and September’s job growth, data show the economy added jobs over the last three months at a pace of +162k a month.

Despite being a strong print, it did not beat market expectations. The dollar is trying to gain some traction across the board (€1.1663, £1.3030 and ¥113.34), with the one exception CAD (C$1.2742).

Canadian Job Market on Fire

  • Canada Oct net jobs +35,300 from Sep vs. forecast at +15,000
  • Canada Oct full-time jobs +88,700; part-time -53,400
  • Canada Oct jobless rate +6.3%; Sep +6.2%
  • Canada Oct avg. hourly wages +2.4% y/y

Canada added jobs (+ 35.3k) in October at a stronger-than-expected pace amid a slowing economic backdrop, with full-time employment surging and wage gains accelerating for a second straight month.

The unemployment rate rose from a post crisis low of +6.2% to +6.3%, but that was due to more young people searching for work.

October’s advance marked the 11th straight month of job gains, which is the longest streak in over a decade. All of the net new jobs added were in the private sector and of the full-time variety, which tend to offer higher pay and steady benefits compared with part-time work.

The ‘loonie’ has strengthened across the board +0.64% to C$1.2729 outright and +0.74% EUR/CAD to €1.4832.

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