weekly earnings

Payrolls Still Slowing Into A Third Year

By |2017-03-10T11:51:33-05:00March 10th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Today’s bland payroll report did little to suggest much of anything. All the various details were left pretty much where they were last month, and all the prior trends still standing. The headline Establishment Survey figure of 235k managed to bring the 6-month average up to 194k, almost exactly where it was in December but quite a bit less than [...]

Where’s The Momentum?

By |2017-01-31T11:34:22-05:00January 31st, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The Federal Reserve in early 2012 altered longstanding monetary policy. In January that year, the FOMC had voted to make explicit what everyone already knew, that it considered 2% inflation to be the definition of “stable” consumer prices, casting off one of the last vestiges of 1980’s era regimes where central bankers felt silence was the best course. It had [...]

The Denominator Prevails

By |2017-01-06T12:46:54-05:00January 6th, 2017|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The BLS reported what was on the surface another lackluster payroll report. All the headline numbers conformed to the slowed economy view of 2016. The Establishment Survey gained just 156k in December, following an upward revised 204k in November. The 6-month average, a far more appropriate interpretation given inherent statistical volatility month to month, is just 189k. The Household Survey [...]

Labor Market Questions Get Bigger As The FOMC Vote Draws Closer

By |2016-12-07T18:49:20-05:00December 7th, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The JOLTS survey continues to show a lack of acceleration in the labor market. Even previously robust Job Openings estimates have plateaued. After surging throughout 2014 and into the middle of 2015, the level of estimated job openings has been more or less the same since. That might indicate the labor market reaching saturation, or it might suggest, as all [...]

Maladies Of Unemployment And Its Rate

By |2016-12-02T12:41:06-05:00December 2nd, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The headline writers for this morning’s payroll reports can’t really help themselves. In a clickbait world, any kind of record or new high or low is bound to make its way into every article title. The unemployment rate fell to 4.6% in November, the lowest since 2007, therefore it isn’t surprising to see reporting on the labor statistics to have [...]

Slowing And Even Contracting: Hours & Earnings

By |2016-09-02T16:28:56-04:00September 2nd, 2016|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The primary symptom of the economic malaise or depression that has developed since the Great Recession (which wasn’t a recession) is an economy that works less and thus earns less. Such a condition would suggest a shrunken system or at least vastly diminished potential. That much is well-established even in the orthodox literature though it isn’t ever talked about publicly. [...]

Full Wages, Updated

By |2016-03-04T16:40:18-05:00March 4th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Having established the farcical nature of wage interpretations on the shortest time scale, a wider contextual framework leads in the same direction of doubt. The point of any interest rate hike for monetary policymakers is to head off “inflation” before it gets out of hand; the economy “overheating.” Having undertaken sufficient (it is assumed) stimulus to surpass whatever hysteresis calculations, [...]

A View To The Downside

By |2015-04-14T17:05:07-04:00April 14th, 2015|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

With retail sales and some other recent indicators flashing deeper warnings about the current economic climate, the concerns I raised last week and before about the “bunker mentality” have increased in relevance as well as probability. Specifically, if recession on the consumer side is rightfully characterized by households taking on a “bunker mentality” then it is appropriate to suggest what [...]

Instability Is Not Growth

By |2014-11-07T16:37:28-05:00November 7th, 2014|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The other part of payrolls, the far more important piece actually, is of course wages and income. Here there is nothing to speak of an increase in the jobs market to anything like what the Establishment Survey suggests. To that end, disconnect is apparent when comparing wage rates with (adjusted) estimates for utilization: The average hourly wage has been stuck [...]

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