Pepperstone logo
Pepperstone logo
  • 简体中文
  • English
  • 繁体中文
  • Español
  • Tiếng Việt
  • ไทย
  • Português
  • لغة عربية
  • 交易方式

    概览

    定价

    交易账户

    Pro

    高净值客户

    活跃交易者计划

    交易时间

    维护时间表

  • 平台

    概述

    交易平台

    集成

    交易工具

  • 市场与符号

    概述

    外汇

    股票

    交易所交易基金

    指数

    大宗商品

    货币指数

    指数差价合约股息

    股票差价合约股息

    差价合约远期

  • 分析

    概述

    市场导航

    每日简报

    会见分析师

  • 学习交易

    概述

    交易指南

    网络研讨会

  • 合作伙伴

  • 关于我们

  • 帮助和支持

  • 简体中文
  • English
  • 繁体中文
  • Español
  • Tiếng Việt
  • ไทย
  • Português
  • لغة عربية
  • Launch webtrader

  • 交易方式

  • 平台

  • 市场与符号

  • 分析

  • 学习交易

  • 合作伙伴

  • 关于我们

  • 帮助和支持

USD

Test Market Analysis

Michael Brown
Michael Brown
Senior Research Strategist
2024年10月28日
Share
Test Market Analysis

Headline nonfarm payrolls are set to have risen by +110k in October, a considerable slowdown from the +254k pace seen in September, while also being substantially below the breakeven pace of payrolls growth – around +225k – required for employment growth to keep up with the increasing size of the labour force. As always, the range of estimates for the payrolls print is incredibly wide, from -10k to +165k. A negative print, which would be incredibly surprising, would be the first MoM decline in employment since 2020, were it to occur.

Preview

As noted, there are numerous downside risks to headline employment growth in the October labour market report.

‘Mother Nature’ presents the first, with Hurricanes Helene and Milton both likely to depress employment, particularly in southern parts of the United States. While Helene arrived in late-September, the significant impact it had in North Carolina likely means that many were likely still off payrolls by the time that the survey week came around. Hurricane Milton, meanwhile, made landfall in Florida during the survey week, likely depressing employment in the state, with jobless claims having risen by a third from the YTD average during the week in question.

Secondly, there is the impact of ongoing strikes. While there are several to consider, those ongoing at Boeing are by far the most significant, with estimates pointing to over 30,000 Boeing workers taking industrial action. While the specific impact of this action on payrolls growth will hinge on how Boeing is handling salary payments, there is nevertheless likely to be a detrimental impact from this, and from the knock-on impact of the strikes on other companies in the Boeing supply chain.

Combined, these two factors could act as a drag of between 80-100k on headline nonfarm payrolls growth, with Fed Governor Waller having flagged the latter figure as his ballpark estimate earlier in the month. This means that, mentally, the FOMC are likely to add around 100k on top of whatever the NFP print is, before deciding its policy implications.

In terms of leading indicators for the jobs report, risks also tilt to the downside. Due to the timing of the report, the ISM PMI surveys are not due until after the employment report is released. Furthermore, as always, the ADP employment print should be ignored, while the NFIB hiring intentions metric – which has been an accurate gauge of employment growth this cycle – points to an NFP print of close to +270k, which seems far-fetched, at best.

Jobless claims, though, could be of some use. Initial claims rose by 20k between the two survey weeks, while continuing claims rose by a more sizeable 70k over the same period, again suggesting a significant degree of downside risk to the headline payrolls print.

Preview

Meanwhile, average hourly earnings are set to have risen by 0.3% MoM in October, a tick slower than the 0.4% pace seen in September. There is, however, the risk of a faster-than-expected pace of earnings growth, particularly if hurricane-related layoffs have disproportionately impacted lower-paid workers in southern states. On an annual basis, though, earnings growth is set to hold steady at 4.0% YoY.

In any case, it seems unlikely that the earnings figures will materially alter the policy outlook, with FOMC members having already obtained sufficient confidence in inflation returning towards the 2% target over the medium-term, and with incoming data continuing to point to a relatively rapid pace of disinflation.

Preview

Turning to the household survey, measures of labour market slack are likely to remain largely unchanged in October.

Unemployment, consequently, is seen unchanged at 4.1%, though there is some risk of a small tick higher to 4.2%, depending on the impact of the aforementioned downside risks. Participation, meanwhile, is expected to have continued to hold remarkably steady, just shy of cycle highs, at 62.7%. The adverse weather, however, could well detrimentally impact response rates to the household survey, increasing volatility associated with the data.

Preview

For financial markets, the October jobs report comes in the middle of a risk event bonanza, which includes earnings from 5 of the ‘magnificent seven’ stocks; the UK Budget; a BoJ policy decision; the presidential election; and, decisions from the FOMC and BoE. This plethora of event risk is likely to limit conviction behind market moves for the time being, particularly with the jobs report coming just two trading days before the election.

Nevertheless, in keeping with recent reactions to US economic data, the jobs report seems likely to be another case of ‘good news is good news’, and vice versa, for risk sentiment, as participants focus on the macroeconomic picture that the figures paint, as opposed to any potential dovish policy implications of the report.

In terms of those policy implications, they are likely to prove relatively limited. Given the incredibly skewed nature of the figures, it seems unlikely that those on the FOMC will read too much into the data, and draw any significant conclusions from the report. Recall, policymakers tend to focus on trends in the data, and not a single data point; those trends, even after the October jobs report, are likely to point to a continued normalisation in labour market conditions, as opposed to any significant or sudden weakness.

Consequently, my base case remains that the bar for another 50bp Fed cut is a relatively high one, and that the FOMC will instead proceed with 25bp reductions at every meeting from here, until next summer, when rates are likely to reach a neutral level around 3%.

此处提供的材料并未按照旨在促进投资研究独立性的法律要求准备,因此被视为市场沟通之用途。虽然在传播投资研究之前不受任何禁止交易的限制,但我们不会在将其提供给我们的客户之前寻求利用任何优势。

Pepperstone 并不表示此处提供的材料是准确、最新或完整的,因此不应依赖于此。该信息,无论是否来自第三方,都不应被视为推荐;或买卖要约;或征求购买或出售任何证券、金融产品或工具的要约;或参与任何特定的交易策略。它没有考虑读者的财务状况或投资目标。我们建议此内容的任何读者寻求自己的建议。未经 Pepperstone 批准,不得复制或重新分发此信息。。。

其他网站.

  • The Trade Off
  • 合作伙伴
  • 组.
  • 职业生涯

交易方式

  • 定价
  • 交易账户
  • Pro
  • 高净值客户
  • 活跃交易者计划
  • 交易时间

平台

  • 交易平台
  • 交易工具

市场与符号

  • 外汇
  • 股票
  • 交易所交易基金
  • 指数
  • 大宗商品
  • 货币指数
  • 加密货币
  • 差价合约远期

分析

  • 市场导航
  • 每日简报
  • 会见分析师

学习交易

  • 交易指南
  • 视频
  • 在线讲座
Pepperstone logo
support@pepperstone.com
+17866281209
#1 Pineapple House, Old Fort Bay, Nassau, New Providence, The Bahamas
  • 法律文件
  • 隐私政策
  • 网站条款与条件
  • Cookie政策

©2025 Pepperstone Markets Limited |版权所有。公司注册号177174 B |SIAF217

风险警告:差价合约(CFD)是复杂的工具,由于杠杆作用,存在快速亏损的高风险。 81% 的散户投资者在于该提供商进行差价合约交易时账户亏损。您应该考虑自己是否了解差价合约的工作原理,以及是否有承受资金损失的高风险的能力。

您没有基础资产的所有权或权利。过去的表现并不代表未来的表现,税法可能会发生变化。本网站上的信息具有一般性质,并未考虑您或您客户的个人目标,财务状况或需求。请在制定任何交易决定之前阅读我们的RDN和其他法律文件,并确保您完全了解风险。我们鼓励您寻求独立的建议。

Pepperstone Markets Limited位于巴哈马新普罗维登斯市拿骚桑迪波特B201海天巷,并由巴哈马证券委员会(SIA-F217)许可并受其监管。

本网站上的信息以及所提供的产品和服务均不打算分发给任何国家或地区(如果其分发或使用违反当地法律或法规)的任何人。